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 kf
I am six forty the Gary and Shannon Show on
demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Val Kilmer having passed away, and I was trying to
figure out what the movie want.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
Hey, Gary and Shannon, you guys seem pretty knowledgeable about Kurt.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Well, we'll get into that here in a second. Where
did the one go where he's talking.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
About Hue And I don't want to be called Gary anymore.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
I want to be called Arthur Funds already.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Joanie loves Chachi.
Speaker 5 (00:29):
Wah wah wah Wow.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
There's a lot there, Hey, Gary and Shannon, Lisa here.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
I loved Val Kimmore in The Saints.
Speaker 4 (00:40):
I can watch that movie over and I've never seen
her again.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
Loved him, got to meet him once.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
Great guy. God rest his soul, bless his heart. I
have a great day.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
I would check that out today. But Eabeth Subeck, Oh,
I love her too. But Love on the Spectrum season
three is out today, So that's going to be my afternoon.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
That's going to eat up some time.
Speaker 6 (01:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Well, remember when we were in Huntington Beach for the
air show. Yeah, and we met those two guys that
play yes, Maverick and Iceman from the original Top Gun.
I mean those two guys look they exactly they do,
like Val Kilmer and Tom Cruise from nineteen eighty six.
I wonder what he's is he going through some stuff today?
Speaker 6 (01:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:26):
I don't remember him being a MENSA member.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
No, I mean it's time for swamp what's a politician?
Speaker 3 (01:33):
Which means I'm a cheat and a liar and when
I'm not kissing babies probably I'm.
Speaker 7 (01:38):
Real problem is that our leaders are done.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
I never quit.
Speaker 6 (01:45):
I'm not going anywhere so that.
Speaker 4 (01:48):
The squad I can imagine what can be and be
unburdened by what has been.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
You know, Americans have always been going president, but they're
not stupid.
Speaker 8 (01:56):
A political plunder is when a politician actually tells the
truth the people.
Speaker 6 (02:00):
Voted for you.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
With swamp Watch, they're all count ofal.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
Hey, Gary and Shannon, you guys seem pretty knowledgeable about
current events and what have you. Ma, I'm just curious
what was the Corey Booker clown show all about? And
how much did that cost the taxpayers? Hopefully you can
enlighten me.
Speaker 6 (02:19):
Thanks.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
I don't think it any this I mean, there wasn't
business that wasn't done. Again, what Corey Booker did was
he stood up on the floor of the Senate and
he spoke for twenty five hours.
Speaker 4 (02:31):
In five minutes and five minutes.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
It wasn't because he was trying to prevent legislation from
being heard or voted on. That would have qualified it
as a filibuster. This just qualifies as the longest Senate
floor speech in the history of the Senate of the
United States of America.
Speaker 4 (02:49):
You mentioned it.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
He surpassed a strom Thurman speech that lasted twenty four
hours and eighteen minutes and fifty seven. He said he
was speaking in spite of the previous record holder's remarks
against the Civil Rights Act. He said, since I've gotten
to the Senate, I always felt it was strange shadow
hanging over this institution at the longest speech, all the
issues that have come up, all the noble causes that
people have done, the things that typically that they try
(03:12):
to stop. I just found it strange that he had
the record, which is true. It does seem wrong absolutely.
This is the way he wrapped it up last night.
Speaker 5 (03:22):
When our founder said we must mutually pledge, pledge to
each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.
We need that now from all Americans. This is a
moral moment. It's not left or right, it's right or wrong.
It's getting good trouble. He needs food, my friend, Madam President.
Speaker 4 (03:41):
He needs water, He needs to go to the bathroom.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
He says he did not eat for days, that he
purposefully dehydrated himself in preparation for this, that he stopped
eating on Friday, stop drinking any fluid Sunday so that
he could stand up there for that long. And yes,
it was a dog and pony show, make no doubt
about it. But at least it's a Democrat who's standing
(04:07):
up for something for a day and five minutes, somebody
who's actually getting some sort of attention on that.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Side of the aisle. It's a like I said earlier.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
It's the Democrats showing they have a pulse, which is
more than I can say they've been showing.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
I would call it faint and thready, but it is
a pulse.
Speaker 6 (04:25):
I mean.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
The thing about it is, how many if you were
to walk out on the street of Burbank right now
and ask anyone what significant event happened in the US
Senate this week. Nine of them would say they have
no clue what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
They would not I think the from every week right now,
one point in the year.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
When you could do that and ask them and they'd
have an answer.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
But I'm saying that this is Corey Booker did this
for the other people in Washington, DC that I think
is probably who his audience would be. It's not for
the general public.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
But there's a vacuum right now in the Democracratic Party.
Somebody's got to fill it. Yeah, there's a vacuum that exists.
Nobody has stepped up to be the person, the voice
of the Democratic Party. I mean, that's why they wrote
Joe Biden into the grave.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
Speaking of which, Speaking of waking of which, the former
White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain is drawing this
picture of what was going on in the Biden White House.
And this is not a pro Trump anti Biden thing.
This is Ron Klain, the President's right hand man. So
(05:33):
we laise him out here.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:35):
He served Biden from twenty twenty one to twenty twenty three,
then returned to his side last June to run debate
prep he had done this for numerous Democratic presidents before now.
According to Klain in his book, it turned out that
Biden did not know what Trump had been saying and
could not grasp what the back and forth was. That
(05:56):
he left preparation, fell asleep by the pool. He was
obsessed about foreign leaders, saying, these guys say I'm doing
a great job as president, so I must be doing
a great job.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
That He didn't really understand what his argument was when
it came to inflation, and had nothing to say about
a potential second term other than he wanted to finish
the job, whatever it was.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
At one point Biden had an idea about the debate,
and here it was, if he looked perplexed when Trump talked,
voters would understand that Trump was an idiot, to which
Claine replied, Sir, when you look perplexed, people just think
you're perplexed, and this is our problem.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
Now that makes sense now when you think about that.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Yeah. Chris Whipple has a book called Uncharted, How Trump
beat Biden, Harris and the Odds in the Wildest Campaign
in History, comes out next week. Biden is supposedly planning
his own book, but this is just one of the
many books that's going to hit the shelves over especially
(07:06):
those last few months of what was the Biden campaign
that turned into the Harris campaign. Fight by Jonathan Allen
and Amy Amy Parnes contains reporting on the decline and
Kamala Harris's struggle to win over the other people within
the Democratic Party. Nobody thought she was a great candidate.
(07:26):
But like Parnes and Alan, the Whipple book talks about
both sides of this campaign that Trump won despite the conviction,
despite the civil penalties, despite the indictments, despite the allegation
of rape.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
Whipple says, I have fresh reporting on an hour by hour,
day by day basis of Biden's final days. He said,
I happened to think that to call it a cover
up is simplistic.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Absolutely, and they said his words. Again, this is Whipple.
I think it was stranger and way more troubling than
a cover up. That his closest advisors, many of them,
were in a full of delusion and denial. They believed
what they wanted to believe.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Yeah, I mean I heard some very smart people I
would say there's no way Biden's getting out of the race,
And I was thinking to myself, how could you not.
Speaker 4 (08:16):
I mean, what the hell are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (08:18):
Well, look at if you can have your whatever opinion
you have of RFK Junior. The Kennedy name is the
gold standard when it comes to the Democratic Party and
has been for seventy plus years. Right, the fact that
they drummed him out of the process. That Dean Phillips,
(08:38):
for example, this guy who came out as a centrist
Democrat who had common sense things to say and warned
for months and months warned against Joe Biden being the candidate.
He was also shut up and told to be quiet
and told to stand down, that it wasn't his turn.
So these books are going to be pretty as they
(09:00):
they're all going to sell like hotcakes. As they say
in the French.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
All right, coming up cakes hotcakes?
Speaker 1 (09:06):
That sounds good. I had a pancake a couple of
weeks ago. I'm still thinking about it. Why are you
looking at me like that?
Speaker 2 (09:13):
I had buckwheat pancakes when we went to Mammoth.
Speaker 4 (09:17):
What does that entail?
Speaker 2 (09:18):
Buckwheat?
Speaker 4 (09:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (09:19):
In your pancakes?
Speaker 6 (09:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (09:20):
What does that taste like?
Speaker 6 (09:21):
Buckwheat?
Speaker 4 (09:22):
I don't know what buckwheat tastes like.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
It tastes like wheat, but it's a more hearty, it's
a heartier grain it was.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
I had a pancake at a place in Huntington Beach.
I don't remember the name of it, breakfast place, but
oh my goodness, like if the pancake didn't even need butter,
oh cinnamon in it.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
My problem is, I'm such a sugar addict. They never
give me enough syrup. I always have to.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Got to go to the place that they put the
thing on the table. I'm not really a fan of
that kind of place.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Really, you don't know what people do to those syrup
cakes cares. I'd prefer to at least have the the
illusion that it's a fresh syrup from somewhere in the back,
like they're.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
Tapping into a tree.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
I like a place with a big canister a syrup
right on the table. But I gotta be careful because
I want the original maple syrup. I don't want any BlackBerry,
any of that.
Speaker 6 (10:19):
Stuff.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
Just give me the straight maple.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
Syrup Vermont right into my veins.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
Canadians, all right, Well, they don't keep art the syrup
from us.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
What are people using AI for, especially the image generator AI,
the pictures dark things weirdos.
Speaker 7 (10:40):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
A M six forty.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
A couple of elections yesterday, The voters in Wisconsin elected
a liberal judge to the state Supreme Court, replacing a
liberal judge that was leaving. This despite Elon Musk pouring
millions of dollars into that race to sway the polls.
But down in Florida, a couple of Republican members of
Congress who had stepped down. Mike Waltz became National Security Advisor.
(11:07):
Matt Gates left because he was nominated to be Attorney General,
but he eventually resigned from Congress. Both of those seats
went back to Republicans.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Elon Musk and Trump have recently suggested that Musk's time
in the administration may be coming to an end. Musk
says he could be done with his work at Doze
in the near future.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Well, he's My understanding was that there was a like
an original contract of one hundred and thirty days or
whatever the whatever that thing was.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Musk, by the way, did face a set back politically speaking,
in Wisconsin. Voters rejected his choice for the state Supreme
Court candidate. He poured a bunch of money into this race.
He did the million dollar sweepstakes with a couple of winners.
So this is all being talked about today because of that.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
Speaking of politics, here, Viserah, the former Secretary of Health
and Human Services, is going to run for governor here
in California. Great, keep your excitement level at about a four.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
Sorry, I was more excited to get a glimpse of
those toes.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
Tens of lucky. Tens of thousands of explicit AI generated images,
including illegally AI generated child sex abuse material, was left
open and accessible to anyone on the Internet. This new
research that came in an open database that belonged to
an AI image generation company, contain more than ninety five
(12:33):
thousand records or pictures, including some prompt data like what
did people type in to generate the picture, and then
images of celebrities like Ariana Grande, the Kardashians, and Beyonce
deaged so that they looked like children. Ariana Grande already
(12:53):
kind of looks like a small child anyway. But they
said that this was discovered by a security research. The
company is a website based in South Korea and they
host a number of different image generation and chat bot
tools for people to use, and for some reason, all
of this stuff was left in the open. But it
(13:15):
shows that in these AI image generation tools, so many
dirt bags and halfwits go on there and say show
me a naked picture of those and then whatever they
enter in there. Dozens of deep fake new TOFI websites
that are out there, bots and apps have caused thousands
(13:36):
of people to be targeted with damaging imagery and vidego videos.
And they say this has come alongside a spike in
artificially intelligence generated or artificial intelligence generated child sexual abuse material,
and the laws have not caught up with it. In
some cases that's not necessarily by the letter of the law,
(14:00):
awe illegal and it should be.
Speaker 4 (14:02):
I just realized whose toes I may be thinking of?
Speaker 2 (14:06):
Who is wearing open toed shoes around here?
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Justin? It's Justin's toes.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
Are you sure?
Speaker 1 (14:12):
I think all this time I thought I've seen your toes.
I'm thinking about Justin's toes. Hmmm, because he's worn flip
flops numerous times.
Speaker 6 (14:22):
Yeah, I wore flip flops? What time? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:25):
See, Now do you have Harry toes?
Speaker 6 (14:27):
I have one Harry toe let me see.
Speaker 4 (14:30):
I need to I need to put this to bed.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
I do not think that him taking his shoe off
and showing you that toes.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
I'm thinking of your toes. I think you've never seen
my think you've worn flip flops, not that we did
a flip flop day.
Speaker 6 (14:45):
We did not.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
I guarantee you I would not have signed flip flop day.
Speaker 4 (14:49):
Do you not have flip flops?
Speaker 2 (14:51):
I do have flip flops. They're for my private time.
Speaker 7 (14:55):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from kf
I am.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Justin Worsham is host of the Dad Podcast. Joins us
when he can on Wednesdays to talk about parenting and today.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
This is a good one.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
Yes, what to do when your kid is dating another
kid and that kid's not supposed to be dating.
Speaker 8 (15:15):
I'm so glad that you guys were as fascinated as
about this, because I honestly, when I found it, I
was like, this is really interesting to me. But it's
not the usual like data driven thing that I will
come in here with. It's very much just anecdotal, real life,
real life, and I don't know what I would honestly do.
The example was this woman finds herself in a situation
(15:36):
where her son is dating the girl. The girl happens
to be from an immigrant family and the family is
not supposed to know that she's dating and that she
they think that the family thinks that she's going over
to another girlfriend's house, but when she's actually going over
to her boyfriend's house. I've not experienced this personally, have
(15:56):
either of you been.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
I would not feel comfortable.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
I don't think I would feel comfortable as a parent
knowing my kid was dating somebody who was not supposed
to be dating that the parents didn't know. I would
take it on my The onus would be on me
at that point to let them know.
Speaker 8 (16:10):
And the challenge that they presented is that they didn't
find out about this until like months into the like,
so then they find out late.
Speaker 2 (16:16):
I didn't know the girl was forbidden from dating, correct.
Speaker 6 (16:19):
Until that had been going on.
Speaker 8 (16:20):
Now they have to come and like try to divulge
to these people that they don't know, They don't know
if English is a barrier for them, and how they
can like communicate with them to say we just found
this out, Like what does that do to everything? It's
also a div like if I put myself. Both of
my sons are gentlemen. Comforter, not comforter Shannon. They are gentlemen,
(16:44):
but they are gentlemen, So I wouldn't I wouldn't worry
about the daughter's like well being from an intimate standpoint, right,
So that would probably be the only reason I'd be.
Speaker 6 (16:52):
Like, I'll let them work this out.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
But there's an interesting aspect.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
But under your roof, yeah, that's the thing.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
There's an aspect of it also where you have to
teach your kid. First of all, you tell them I
think you're playing with fire, like, not only are you
going to get in trouble, you're gonna get her in trouble,
and she's gonna be forbidden from ever seeing you again.
And then it turns into Romeo and Juliet or whatever.
(17:22):
Not that it ends the same way. We don't have
to get into that, hope, but you also have to
You have to let your kid know that it's his responsibility.
I mean, I actually think it would be more his
responsibility than mine as a parent. That's not to say
that I wouldn't do it, because I do think that
(17:43):
there are times when that kind of information is going
to be necessary. To protect the girl. I mean, there's
there's a reason why they don't want her to date.
I don't know what it is. I don't know they're
thinking behind it.
Speaker 8 (17:55):
Nobody knows because they can't really know. Nobody can talk
to them to really find out. I mean, it's also
it sounds like the daughter doesn't completely comprehend or understand it.
I mean, my younger son had a girlfriend about a
year ago, but this was like early middle school age,
like love, if you can call it that, And she
was never allowed to come over because she he said
(18:16):
that the dad couldn't know that she even had a boyfriend.
And I would argue that all they ever saw each
other was at school, So did she really have a boyfriend?
Like not really, so yeah, but they felt like it.
To Shannon's point, she was never in my house, she
was never under my roof, under my quote unquote care
where I'm technically responsible for her during that time.
Speaker 6 (18:35):
But I would also like, I don't know, I really
think that.
Speaker 8 (18:39):
In my opinion, I agree with the idea of using
it as an opportunity to teach your kid how to
handle relationships ethically, But I mean, they're so young.
Speaker 6 (18:48):
I think I would just play a lot. It would
be a lot for a kid.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
But if you imagine if someone's fifteen, sixteen, seventeen years old,
they're starting to play with those ideas of being adult,
doing adult things, having adult conversations, that that would be
one of those things that you have to do. And
and you as a as a seventeen year old, you know,
it's hard to there's a lot going on, you got
(19:12):
burning desires in places you didn't think existed before. How
do you how do you then convince your kid to
respect the wishes of her parents when all you want
is to see them Jubblees.
Speaker 4 (19:29):
Yeah, I mean that's a hard the Jubbleese. Yeah, I
think that's a hard word before.
Speaker 6 (19:35):
It's probably something that is of that absolutely.
Speaker 8 (19:38):
I mean I would argue I haven't heard of it,
but I get it, you know, inherently that's the international
language of jubblees.
Speaker 6 (19:45):
Maybe it's just they.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
But how do you then?
Speaker 6 (19:49):
Of course, why would you give a mask?
Speaker 4 (19:52):
I e s.
Speaker 2 (19:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (19:54):
To your point, though, what I would tell my kid
if that was on the table, I would say, this
is definitely not the person have sex with. Like I
would definitely like that was where I would intervene at least.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
And say that's like saying, go have sex with that person.
Speaker 8 (20:06):
No, not to my kids, Okay, definitely not. It would
not because here's the thing.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
Because of this.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
Minute, I just want to point out, he is so nice.
I know, he is so nice.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
That's why he lets him have the comforter and nothing
happened because it was so cold in that house.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Yes, the house is so cold.
Speaker 6 (20:23):
All right, it gets cold in the worship house that.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
You want something going on underneath the comforter. There's sex
on the in the wind.
Speaker 8 (20:29):
No, there's no nothing active. Not doing that with your fingers.
Speaker 6 (20:33):
You two, you grow up.
Speaker 8 (20:37):
Somebody saved us with the news report police before I
have to. If I have to start telling you guys
what to do, we're in big, big trouble. But you
would say to your kid, I would say not just
because because of this story, I actually looked into it,
and it's not something I knew. I always went with
the common knowledge that there is nothing illegal about two
underage people having come sexual sex. Actually, the law begs
to differ. You cannot consent to having sex if you are.
Speaker 6 (21:00):
Under the age of eighteen.
Speaker 4 (21:01):
Now, that's because the law says or doesn't.
Speaker 8 (21:04):
I'm not saying that, but I would like for the
same reason I tell my sons, like, if a girl
ever sent you a naked picture of herself, you need
to immediately delete that and just tell that girl that
is not my thing.
Speaker 6 (21:15):
When you're when you're how dare you're how dare you're.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
Just saying it with a wink and a smile. Though,
don't you No, I tell you.
Speaker 4 (21:22):
All you can say at that moment is don't share it.
No right back, that's not.
Speaker 6 (21:27):
How dare you? How dare? You come in here Latin?
So my condescendingly.
Speaker 4 (21:33):
Jumples aren't my thing.
Speaker 6 (21:36):
I don't think I want to do this anymore. I think.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
You can make fun of her green tongue now because
of this weird thing that she's it's juice. We will
continue more on this when we come back.
Speaker 7 (21:48):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
We're talking about Justin Warsham, who, by the way, you'll
be hearing a little bit more of on Sunday and
we'll talk about that coming up. But we're talking about
parenting issues specifically, and this kind of made dovetail a
little bit with these relationships, sometimes forbidden relationships that kids
find themselves in, and what responsibility we have as parents
(22:13):
to let all the parties be informed about what's going on.
But this one I thought was interesting. Your kid comes
to you and says that they're upset because they haven't
had their first kiss, or they haven't had their first boyfriend, girlfriend,
or whatever. They haven't had that thing yet that they
think everybody else already has. And how do you assuage
(22:35):
that or tell them that they're just slow?
Speaker 6 (22:39):
I mean, yeah, a late.
Speaker 8 (22:41):
Bloomer because the plight way we like to say, bless
their heart. And again, I know I sound like just
an idiot who has no idea what my kids are.
Speaker 6 (22:49):
Up to or doing how they feel. Well, you're laugh
big to differ in previ I just know the Sirens
song of like this about his kid. I find him
on to my radio show to tack a parting. That's
a week that wasn't it with it?
Speaker 1 (23:06):
I was just saying, I was laughing at the idea
of an adolescent boy getting a picture that a girl
sent to him of boobs or whatever and writing back,
this is not my thing. I don't think that that
would ever happen in the history of the world just
because of what's going on with an adolescent boy.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
You're right, You're right, that's all I met. I didn't
mean your kids.
Speaker 6 (23:28):
I mean she did say that.
Speaker 8 (23:29):
During the break, she goes that, maybe I think, and
that's probably the lack of perspective that I have, because
I am even.
Speaker 6 (23:34):
This, I'm seeing, like what I remember when I.
Speaker 8 (23:37):
Was in high school is that there definitely was a
pressure to buy, like I have to lose my virginity.
Speaker 6 (23:43):
But it didn't.
Speaker 8 (23:43):
I didn't feel very strongly about that, but I know
that it was definitely talked about a lot.
Speaker 6 (23:48):
And what's weird about kids.
Speaker 8 (23:50):
Today is that if you transport teenagers in a car
that they're just in the back seat, they act like
it's a limo with a closed window between, Like they
just talk like you're not even in the car. And
from hearing those conversations and just the conversations I've had
with other like other kids, that the number of kids
that are actually having sex a teenage is very very
small compared to what I feel like it was. And
(24:11):
I've seen data that says the same thing, that kids
are waiting longer in their life to have sex, but
the window from the time that they go from like
we are holding hands to full blown having sex is
now shortened.
Speaker 6 (24:22):
But I think it's also because they're older.
Speaker 1 (24:23):
Can I just say one last thing to put a
bow in the boobs thing? Yes, is your kids are
so polite? Yeah that I think that even if it
wasn't their thing, they would write back something like nice or.
Speaker 6 (24:34):
Something fits pump.
Speaker 4 (24:38):
They wouldn't want her to feel bad about it.
Speaker 6 (24:40):
You know what I said. I hope to report. I
hope to report back to you next weekend.
Speaker 8 (24:44):
This week this I'm gonna have a I'm gonna try
and have an honest conversation about what my kids would
do and see why is that?
Speaker 6 (24:50):
No?
Speaker 4 (24:50):
God, I don't know. I'm uncomfortable thinking about.
Speaker 6 (24:53):
Uh, you feel like I'm putting them on the spot.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
You have a zero problem.
Speaker 6 (24:58):
With that, zero problem with it, and I think my
kids have zero problem with you.
Speaker 4 (25:01):
What conversations start.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
I'm just gonna say, talking anti Shannon exactly.
Speaker 8 (25:06):
You know what, You're the only friends too that, by
the way, that I refer to as anti Channon. Like I,
both Natalie and I have been very opposed to like
Uncle Gary would never happen, but for some reason, because
we went to celebrate her birthday and they learned the
joys of gambling around Anti Shannon.
Speaker 6 (25:21):
I think it's cute, and the kids think it's cute.
So every once in a while when they hear your
voices on the radio or like, oh is that Anti
Shannon like that?
Speaker 8 (25:29):
So, well, yeah, I'm gonna say, don't wanna say what
would you guys do if a girl set you naked pictures?
And I'm going to say, this is not a test.
I want you to be There's no wrong answer, no
wrong answer. And then when they say to me what
I think that they're going to say, which is like
I would reply back and say like, hey, that's okay,
we don't have to do that, right like, because both
(25:50):
of them have been told by me that that girls
at this age, I believe, feel a certain level of
pressure to do things that maybe they're not comfortable in
doing because they want the guy to like them, and
they think that's how they get guys to like them.
And I said, that is not the circumstance that you
want to experience these things, right, you want to experience
them in way that.
Speaker 6 (26:09):
Both people are equally as.
Speaker 8 (26:11):
Passionate, for lack of a better word, or maybe the
best word, into what has actually happened.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Right, Yes, that is excellent. That's a really good point
to make to that. I hope that you do not
want like that where the girl thinks that she has.
Speaker 8 (26:23):
Yes, nobody wants to have sex make love with somebody
who is very nervous and like afraid, like you want
them to be very comfortable and relaxed and also into it.
And I said, so until you really like I don't
know why I said it this way, but I said,
until you get married. They drive the ship. The lady
always drives the ship, and every time the lady decides
to level it up, I go. My advice is you
always say, hey, I'm I'm totally down to do this,
(26:45):
but I just want you to know we don't have
to do this for me to like you.
Speaker 4 (26:48):
How does that change when you get married.
Speaker 8 (26:50):
I feel like everybody should be into it, like but
you know what I mean, like you want.
Speaker 4 (26:54):
To do your weird stuff.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
She should be down kind of. I mean, not that
you want to first or.
Speaker 6 (27:04):
It just loves to give you shovels to dig yourself
a grave. She just loves it, even when you just
gotta glance over it. She goes, Wait, wait, let's circle
back over the year.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
You've got your shovel.
Speaker 6 (27:15):
You forgot your shovel, speaking of which I guess my
own sand Boston shovel.
Speaker 1 (27:24):
Sunday, I'm excited for thanks, super excited.
Speaker 2 (27:28):
Okay, tell me, so what's coming up on Sunday.
Speaker 6 (27:30):
Sunday two to four?
Speaker 8 (27:31):
They are I'm auditioning for on Sunday April sixth and
Sunday April thirteenth from two to four that you could
listen to on your radio dial or on the iHeart
app uh.
Speaker 6 (27:40):
And I'm going to be doing a show about real estate.
Speaker 8 (27:42):
So right out of the gates, what we're going to
be talking about is how the commissions have changed within
the last year and how agents get paid in California.
I'm also going to talk about what I think the
impact of the fires are going to have on the
real estate market. Give you some projections, and then backfill
from there with other topics that I think are interesting.
Speaker 2 (27:58):
And you've been an agent for a while now, while.
Speaker 8 (28:00):
I've been I've had my license since twenty thirteen and
been adjacent to real estate. Became a full time agent
in twenty eighteen and a full broker owner in twenty
twenty one.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
And I must say I've worked with you. I am oh,
thank you, and you're fantastic.
Speaker 8 (28:14):
I believe I'm in the top six percent of all
real fantastic.
Speaker 4 (28:17):
I would not go to anybody else ever.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
Sunday from two to four.
Speaker 8 (28:21):
Sunday from two to four. Please tune in. You can
send it. Use the talk back to send.
Speaker 6 (28:25):
We're going to talk.
Speaker 8 (28:26):
We also want to hear horror stories, but I want
to hear also if you have questions about people. In fact,
if you want to just google my name, it's easy
to find my emails.
Speaker 6 (28:33):
Send me a question.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
If my husband was so impressed with what you did,
he sent you pictures of his boobs and.
Speaker 8 (28:39):
I appreciated it, but I said, that is not my thing, right,
you know what I said, thank you.
Speaker 2 (28:43):
He didn't need to do that to be friends with
you friends, but he wanted to.
Speaker 8 (28:47):
And that that's why I was and that's why I
reciprocated it. I gave them my jump Lee's Sunday more
more jumply talking. But are ubilees You can get jubilacious
about the jubblees.
Speaker 6 (29:04):
That's definitely a.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Thing, could have a jubbly jubilee. Oh but only if
everybody only everybody's into it.
Speaker 6 (29:09):
Of course, if it's your thing, consent, it's important, guys.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
Sunday from two to four, Justin and the Real Estate Show.
Good luck, good luck?
Speaker 7 (29:19):
All right?
Speaker 4 (29:19):
Yeah wait, I'm really excited.
Speaker 6 (29:22):
It's a lifelong dream.
Speaker 8 (29:23):
This is a childhood dream of mine, and I appreciate
everybody for giving me the opportunity.
Speaker 6 (29:27):
Yeah, thank you.
Speaker 4 (29:27):
Also fun because how could it not be with Justin?
Speaker 8 (29:30):
I hope, so thank you guys, because I really, honestly,
this would not happen if it weren't for you.
Speaker 6 (29:34):
Guys. I mean it's not true.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
Well it's true. I'm going to send you a picture
of my job.
Speaker 6 (29:37):
Lee.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
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 app.