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October 8, 2024 28 mins
Does Latinos(as) really call themselves Latinx? The last time Florida experienced a severe hurricane was in 1921. California Proposition 36, Drug and Theft Crime Penalties and Treatment. Talking about the Roadkill cook-off…the rules are simple. Prepare a meal featuring an animal normally found dead on the side of a highway. For example: snake, armadillo, groundhog, possum or squirrel. We took some talkbacks about what “Roadkill” they ate. “Demure” is trending on TikTok!
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Transcript

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. Meteorologist who's job is to track hurricanes,
broke down on the air looking at the information he
had about this hurricane extremely serious threat. Tampa Bay hasn't
been hit directly by a major hurricane since nineteen twenty one,

(00:25):
and like you mentioned earlier, a great point. We have
done numerous stories about Tampa Bay being just completely nearly
washed away and inundated and the storm surge with no
direct hit.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Yeah, the Tampa Airport shut down a few hours ago,
I think about four hours ago, and I was I
don't know how I got on this yesterday, but on
Twitter I noticed that the airport said anybody who's traveling
in and out of Tampa, just so you know, we're
shutting down at nine am Eastern Standard Time on Tuesday,

(01:00):
which means no flights land here, nobody's taken off and
were the airport is not to be used as a shelter,
so get out, stay out kind of thing. And people
kept writing questions to the Twitter account of the Tampa
Bay Airport or the Tampa airport, which is Tampa Saint Pete,
which was like, so if my flight is scheduled to

(01:20):
land at nine point fifteen, and they would just post
the same thing. Our airport is closed at nine no
flights in or out. Okay, But my mom has a
flight scheduled at ten forty five on Delta. It's flight
number sixteen forty four. Sport is closed. Our airport is closed.
And they just had to keep saying, listen, talk to
your airline. We're just telling you they're not leaving and

(01:41):
they're not coming in. You want to deal with your
airline and figure out how to fix it that you
do tear it out, Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
So Prop thirty six is probably the most high profile
measure on our ballot here in California because it involves
dealing with crime. It is going to increase punishments for
drug possession and theft.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
What we do that, or we will do that if
this we will do that. If this passes, that's why
you want to vote yes.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
Of course, opponents argue that this is returning to tough
on crime policies of the eighties.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
So what it would do is it would roll back
parts of the measure that has caused us so many problems.
When you look at the smash and grab robberies. That
was a measure approved in twenty fourteen that downgraded drug
possession and theft's worth less than nine hundred and fifty dollars,
that downgraded them to misdemeanors. What was it called Prop

(02:41):
forty seven. If you've been paying attention, you know that
the reason every day we've got a new home invasion,
we've got a new smash and grab, we've got dodgers
getting robbed of watches at Santa Anita, it's because all
the criminals are hipped to the fact that they can
get away with most of this. It's all misdemeanor. It's
a slap on the wrist. You get your picture taken

(03:02):
and you're sent on your way. And if you get
rid of this and you actually go after criminals for
these things that I just mentioned, guess what's going to happen.
They're going to get hip to it. They're going to
know that they can't commit those crimes anymore. And I
won't be scared to go to the freaking mall.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
They said, this is interesting.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
Mark ty Camillo is the director of the poll and
shows that Democrats and young people tend to be pretty
split on this issue. But there's no demographic that proposes
Prop thirty six outright unless you get into the extreme
left strong self identified strongly liberal category. The largest support
base is Republican. That's not a surprise, but Latino voters

(03:47):
eighty three percent for Republicans, seventy three percent of Latino voters. Now,
the way that they write this is I have not
seen this in print, googling it, I know what it is.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
Latin Latin is do you say Latin? Okay? Hold on?

Speaker 1 (04:01):
I got this from a Hispanic executive applying amplifying the
voices of Latino leadership in America. Here we go a
brief explainer on Latin and LATINX.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
And I don't know anybody who claims Latin heritage Latino
Latina who who honestly describes themselves as Latin X or
in this case, Latin.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
It became common in Latin America to use Latin when
referring to a group of people rather than Latino, as
using the E ending isn't masculine or feminine. Latin is
used when referring to a group of people of multiple genders,
or for someone identifying as non binary, gender fluid, gender
queer by gender, a gender, and gender nonconforming.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
Some of those some of those gender words are new
to me.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
I'll bet you that that's even less likely in the
Latino community.

Speaker 1 (04:56):
Yeah, Latin is what's commonly used among Spanish speaking as
it's more easily pronounced in Latin X and can be
used in plural form because you can say latinae and
mean Latino or Latina right.

Speaker 3 (05:09):
Because it's more standard, or it sounds.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
Genderqueer by gender. What's the difference between by gender and
non binary or gender fluid. I'm not trying to be cute,
I'm not trying to be ignorant. I legitimately want to know.
If you're by gender, that to me means you're a
gender fluid. But apparently there's a delineation.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
You know what a delineation is. And non binary that's
the other one.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Non binary, gender fluid, by gender, those are all or
gender non conforming. Those are all the same things, though, Gary.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
If all of your friends are gender non conforming, maybe
you want to be by gender. Or maybe if all
of your friends are by gender, maybe you want to
be gender fluw.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
My god, you're so right. What will make me more interesting?
What label can I give myself to make me more interesting?
Because I am boring and different and different and special,
and therefore I get more attention?

Speaker 3 (06:07):
How did we get on prop? Thirty six?

Speaker 4 (06:11):
What are you?

Speaker 3 (06:11):
What do you want to be? Today? I'm going to
be I'm gonna be boring.

Speaker 1 (06:15):
I'm going to be by gender because we've talked a
lot about masculine things.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
I don't think you are. You don't think I'm by gender.
I don't think you're gonna be by gender.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
You don't get to tell me what gender pronouns that
I get question.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
Do I get to say what gender my dog is?

Speaker 5 (06:34):
No?

Speaker 3 (06:35):
I get to say what sex he is, but not
what gender he is.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
By gender refers to a person whose gender identity is
a combination of more than one gender, or sometimes one
gender and sometimes another. By gender, people may express two
or more genders at the same time or at different times.
So I could choose, like hour to hour, Like that
first hour we talked a lot about sports, right, and

(07:00):
then maybe we you know, feminize this show and the
next day.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Talk about demure fashion. Later this mere fashion.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
I don't like your face when you do these things,
when I switch genders on you again. The poll, the
UC Berkeley Institute of Government's Governmental Services Poll like your
face sixty percent because there's a weird part of you
where you look like deadly serious when you say things
like that. Sixty percent do support Prop thirty six right now?

(07:33):
Twenty one percent are opposed, and we still have about
nineteen percent undecided.

Speaker 3 (07:37):
So this thirty six looks like.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
It's yes on thirty six, yes on thirty six, and
yes on Hawkman Latine and maybe we can get some
civility back. Latine Is it Latin? Is it Latin or Latine?
So I think it's Latina because that would be that
would confusion with Latina.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Latine is more accessible to Spanish speakers because the word
ending is a vowel sound that is standard in Spanish,
and it would be parallel to other gender neutral words
in Spanish amblow studiante for example, student see come on,
no Latine latine studiante, studiante, la biblia teca.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Lava.

Speaker 6 (08:29):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
A M six forty.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
Have you heard about the exhale and scream challenge. I
don't know. This is very big on TikTok are people
falling unconscious with this?

Speaker 6 (08:46):
What is it?

Speaker 1 (08:47):
It's you exhale and then you try to scream. So
I excel all your breath. No, like, don't tell me
how to exhale. Okay, well, just take a deep breath.
That's not a deep breath. I have large nostrils breathing
a deep breath. Now, slowly exhale all of it, all

(09:12):
of it.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
Now, scream.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
UCLA is warning students that there have been possibly some
drug students at local parties. Chris Adler from KFI News
is on it and joins us now with the information.

Speaker 7 (09:39):
Chris, what do we know, Shannon, You can't toss it
to me after Gary's breathless scream, that's gonna haunt my dream.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
I know, I'm trying to be serious here, you got,
I know, I apologize. I didn't know that it was
gonna come out like that. It was haunting.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
So yeah.

Speaker 7 (09:56):
So we've got two students from UCLA to have reported
being drugged. The first one was on October third, where
one student went to three different parties on Gaile Avenue. Now,
Gaily Avenue has a lot of frat homes sorority homes,
so it's party time in that area. And so this
first student started having some symptoms they didn't feel was

(10:18):
from alcohol, and two days later, on October fifth, a
second student says they went to a party on the
six hundred block of Gaily in the same area. Says
they also developed symptoms that they didn't believe was from
alcohol or marijuana. Both of them went to the er
for treatment. Right now, the campus police says they don't

(10:38):
have a suspect. They don't have an I'm sorry, a car.
They don't have a description of the person. They don't
know if it was may have been male or female
or multiple people, so there's no description there. They say
it is under investigation and police are warning students to
be vigilant when they're going to parties, not taking drinks
from older people, and kind of just watching their surroundings.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
They did go to the hospital, at least at least
one of them, right so they did they do both
of them went.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
So did they do tests on them to see what
it was? We're not clear on that right now.

Speaker 7 (11:09):
We know that they were receiving some kind of treatment
from the hospital.

Speaker 3 (11:13):
We don't know what kind of substance this is.

Speaker 7 (11:15):
We're still waiting to hear back from campus police, so
we don't know what type of drug, if there was
a drug, what kind of drug this may have been,
whether it was a datebreak drug or something else that
was used. But what the two students are saying is
that both of them felt that this was not caused
from alcohol or marijuana. So we are still waiting to
hear from the police on what this may have been.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
These stories are awful and I love them because while
I feel horrible for these two people that we know about,
it's a reminder to people that you should not take
drinks if you don't know the chain of custody of
said drink. And that is a rule that I tell

(11:58):
young women that going off to college or what have,
you buy your own drinks, see the chain of custody.
You can't trust anyone. Certainly, don't just accept a red
solo cup from a frat guy at a party. Not
to put down frat guys, but you know what I mean.
It's just a nice reminder to and also that you
can't take anything anymore, you know, you just have to

(12:20):
be very careful.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
They've put fentanyl and all the pills and all that
stuff's true. It's true.

Speaker 7 (12:25):
And you know, back in my undergrad when I was
at cal State Fullerton, just a few years ago, I
actually did a really big story on a woman who
claimed to have been date raped by at one of
the local bars. And it got so much attention because
she says she, you know, she had a few drinks,
she was knocked out, she woke up in a parking structure, raped,
and we interviewed her and she told us her story.

(12:48):
We interviewed the bartender because there were a lot of
claims in that area. It's also a very big college town,
cal State Fullerton and downtown Fullerton, and you know, there
were a lot of claims that there was a lot
of date going on in his bar, so much so
that he ended up shutting down, closing both of his locations.
But now bars we've seen in the last in this

(13:11):
last year are starting to hand out date I'm sorry,
a drug testing kits where people can test their drinks.
But like you said, Shannon, the big thing is, don't
accept drinks from anybody you don't know, because date raping is,
it's out there, it happens, and it Also, you know,
there's a lot of crime going on around colleges, you guys.

(13:31):
I'm a grad student at USC. We get an alert
almost every every other day that something is going on
around the campus, and so I think it brings up
a bigger issue too.

Speaker 3 (13:40):
There's just a lot of crime around colleges.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Yeah, Chris Adler, thank you so much. Always good to
hear from you, and a good reminder there on that
story for you.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Got it to be careful. We were talking earlier about
that the new word that we saw a lat teenage.

Speaker 5 (13:57):
Oh hey, Gary, Shannon, Latina here. That is the biggest
pile of horse manure.

Speaker 3 (14:02):
I have ever heard.

Speaker 5 (14:03):
Latinx Latin crap, absolute crap.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
It really does bother.

Speaker 5 (14:09):
Nobody listens to it, and it's crap.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
Yeah, it really does bother. Latino and Latina's the most yo.

Speaker 8 (14:18):
Yo yo, Garyan Shannon Man.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
I haven't called in in a few weeks.

Speaker 6 (14:23):
I know.

Speaker 3 (14:24):
I listen to you guys every day, and I listen
because you guys make me happy. When I listened to
Gary and Shannon, I am at last Namida.

Speaker 5 (14:34):
And by the way, no Latino Hispanic Mehicano ever.

Speaker 3 (14:38):
Uses that term.

Speaker 6 (14:39):
At least not anyone, I know.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
I'm just Fernando, Great American, and that's it.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Yes, well, thank you, Fernando saying all right, I don't
know you're the one who suggested we do this next story.

Speaker 6 (14:56):
We don't have to.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
It's I thought it would be fun to open it
up and find out what people have eton.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
I think that was my idea too, But I also
felt it was like a shot at my ancestry.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
It is a shot at your ancestors as well.

Speaker 6 (15:08):
Sure you're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from
KFI AM six forty World War three.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
There's a new front on World War three we haven't
heard about for a while. North Korean leader Kim Jong
mun is warning that he could use nuclear weapons and
potential conflicts with the South Koreans or even the United
States if necessary. He gave a speech at a university
called the Kim Jong un University of National Defense. He
said that North Korea will, without hesitation, use all its

(15:40):
attack capabilities against its enemies if they attempt to use
armed forces against the North Koreans. That being said, there
was also a very strange hack attack on American water works,
a supplier of drinking water and wastewater services to more
than fourteen million people, some of them here in California.
This New Jersey based company said it became aware of

(16:02):
the unauthorized activity. Hackers breached its computer networks and systems,
so they took the protective steps.

Speaker 3 (16:10):
They shut down certain systems.

Speaker 2 (16:12):
They said the company is currently unable to predict the
full impact of this attack.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
Well to Marlinton, West Virginia, we go where the rules,
they say are simple. Prepare a meal featuring an animal
normally found dead.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
On the side of a highway. Yeah, now it doesn't
You don't have to pick it up from the highway.
It's just one that you would normally find on the highway, like.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
A snake, an armadilla, a groundhog, possum, squirrel. Your dish
has to be at least a quarter meat cooked on site.

Speaker 3 (16:51):
Yeah, you can hunt it, you can farm it.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
This is the thirty third annual roadkill cookoff in Marlinton.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Now, what have you eaten? Roadkill? Wise?

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Because you come from a family of knowing how to
live off the land, not wasting the various rodents and
creatures that you find in the wild.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
Never done squirrel, the most wild well gator, I've had alligator,
wasn't road killed though, nake, I've had rattlesnake.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
Did you guys ever eat the bat that was in
the freezer? No, there's not a lot of meat on that.
So why were we keeping it? Again?

Speaker 2 (17:35):
Because it was pretty? How many times I have to
tell you that the bat had blonde hair?

Speaker 3 (17:42):
Rare very? I guess.

Speaker 5 (17:44):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (17:46):
Now would they take the bat out of the freezer
from time to time and admire it?

Speaker 3 (17:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (17:51):
Really?

Speaker 3 (17:51):
Why are you going to just keep it in the freeze?

Speaker 1 (17:53):
Well, no, that's great, that's great. And they show it
to people, showed it to me. Did they didn't name it?

Speaker 3 (18:00):
Don't name a bat. That would be ridiculous. I'd call
him Bruce. Get it? Oh right? See birds? You ever
eat a bird? I've had bird? You have think?

Speaker 2 (18:14):
I think the most exotic bird was quail probably, But
you know, duck and chicken, sure, cornish game, hen that
sort of stuff.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
My mother loves duck and it makes me sad because
I like ducks.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
Well, we always had stories. Grandma used to tell stories
about how she would eat squirrel. But they were they
were capital P poor. They were Capital dp DP dirt poor.
That's they were. Whatever you can, and you you would
eat whatever you could. Whatever the Lord provided in the
tree outside is what you could eat. Yeah, and you
don't say anything.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
I was listening to Rogan and Rodney and Eric Dickerson
was on talking about speaking of Dixie and Dickerson your grandparents,
and he was talking about growing up in Texas and
that you know, he would come home and there would
be just like random animals with onions stuck in their
in their mouths getting ready to be cooked. And he'd

(19:09):
be in with the hair still on him and everything,
and he would be like, I'm not going to eat that,
and his mom would say, yes, you are.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
You're going to eat whatever I give you.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
In this roadkill cookoff in Marlinton, they say there's a
croken deer stew Marlinton, West Virginia, Croken deer stew which
mixes frog and venison in a spicy at two fa.
A Bamby bumper rap takes ground venison and puts it
in a burrito, comes with deep fried Bamby tail, which

(19:41):
actually is battered and fried marshmallow.

Speaker 3 (19:43):
That sounds pretty good.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
They talk about the front Fender farm Stand stir Fry
where they tenderize a deer meat with They say they
tenderize it with the car's front bumper, but obviously you
can't do that. They get about fifty pounds off of
a black bear, and one team actually tried to grill

(20:07):
it on a flat top grill with red peppers, basil,
and eggs and called it a West Virginia omelet.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
None of that sounds awful. I think it all sounds
I'm going to push back on that. What are you
talking about? Well, that's just one of the things Venison. Listen,
that's just sounds awful.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
One of the things that you are successful at, and
it's you don't judge foods.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
It does say, oh, I ate raspberries last night that
I found had mold on them.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
Exactly. One of your special power, says.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
A cast iron stomach is recommended, though not required. That's
what you have, a cast iron stomach, and it's not
even necessarily the stomach. I believe that it's probably lower
in the GI tracks that I I don't want to
talk about your GI tracks certain strengths powers.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
But can you I still have this image of what
Eric Ed described to the guys of coming home from
school and walking into the kitchen and there's a possum
with an onion in its mouth, just in a pan, getting.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
Ready to get eat, getting ready to get cooked.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
I just a dead possum in the pan in the
kitchen with an onion in its mouth.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
I just don't think there's a lot of meat on
those And that I think is probably the issue. Is
we're so conditioned by factory farming to have our chicken
breasts completely oversized, or the turkey is completely huge, and
the amount of beef that comes off of a cow.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
I'm not going to eat any meat today.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
After that conversation, what is the craziest roadkill slash out
of this ordinary world?

Speaker 3 (21:48):
Food? What have you picked up? What have you picked up?

Speaker 1 (21:51):
Maybe you're like RFK Junior and you've picked up stuff
with the idea of taking it home and just to
stoke in it or to study it. Bear a whalehead,
I mean all of us sure, let us know, use
that talk back feature. Can't wait for this one.

Speaker 3 (22:07):
Demure fashion we still do? Demure? Is that still a thing?

Speaker 1 (22:13):
I think it's a thing because if if the fashion
world says it's going to be a thing, it's going
to be a thing that means we're all going to
be covered up. The days of sexy Halloween nights are over.
This is going to be a demure Halloween. I doubt it,
very demure, very mindful.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
I don't think it will be. I don't think so either.
Give give a woman an opportunity.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
To always saw the sexy ozempic injector. That's a cute
little tank dress. Don't worry, I've aged out of that.
Thank you know what, I will punch you in the face.

Speaker 6 (22:50):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (22:55):
A former Houston police officer is being sent to prison
for the deaths of a married couple during a drug raid.
Jerry sentenced Gerald Goins to sixty years in prison after
convicting him of murder and the deaths of Dennis Tuttle
and his wife. An investigation of the January twenty nineteen
raid showed a systemic corruption in the Houston Police Department's
Narcotics Unit LISAI. The Goings lied to get a search

(23:18):
warrant by falsely saying that the couple was dangerous drug dealers.
Goings lawyers admitted he lied, but said his actions did.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
Not amount to murder. Do you want to do those
quick things before we get into our demure fashions. Yeah,
food that people have eaten.

Speaker 5 (23:34):
Okay, you guys are talking about a cookoff specifically with roadkilled.
I am from Iowa and this often happens with deer,
believe it or hot So, yeah, that's that's a lot
of meat.

Speaker 3 (23:49):
It happens in central California too. My uncle did just that.

Speaker 4 (23:53):
Hier Gary. This is Larry from Beverly Hills, Ya. We
can hook you up with some squirrels because I have
a caddo in my backyard and usually as alvacado's on
it and by the time the squirrel's finished with it,
there's about eighty to one hundred avocado's left. I'm the
happiest to start taking up eating squirrel meat for dinner
because we can provide you with a tremendous about a

(24:15):
fresh meat on a daily basis.

Speaker 3 (24:17):
I'll kill that squirrel downstairs for you.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
Pretty clean meat too, if it's the if they're eating avocados, Hey, you.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
Didn't You didn't take me up on my offer? No
to kill that squirrel down there. No, if you're hungry,
I'm not. I I don't need you to go hungry.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
You don't need an excuse to kill that squirrel. You
could just kill that squirrel.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
But if I do have an excuse, I won't feel
bad about it. You do you think I could kill
that squirrel with my burn a gun. Don't worry, I'm
not going to kill a squirrel. I can see where
this is headed. This is all a joke.

Speaker 9 (24:52):
I went to Peru and I a guinea pig. And
also I'll pack the heart post presented to me as
a delicate see it. I felt bad turning them down,
so I ate it, and it was actually delicious. Getting
pig tasted kind of like I imagine rabbit would taste,
which I've never had. And I'll pack a heart literally
just tasted like a steak.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
I'll pack a heart. If I lived in a.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
Obscure country, I would also tell somebody that this roadkill
was a delicacy.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
Oftentimes, before we die, we pop our socks into our
mouth and chew just to activate the salivary glands.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
Way for warm up the jaw. So I present to
you my dirty socks for fifty dollars a plate. Right,
that's good.

Speaker 8 (25:38):
Yeah, Because when I was seven, I went on vacation
to stay with my grandparents in Colombia. My sisters and
I row a little and my parents stayed here. My
grandfather gave us iguana eggs. They were heart boiled. They
were little, because you know, iguanas a little and they
would be strung like a necklace, like the candy necklaces,

(26:02):
and we'd wear them and just munch on them during
the day. I remember they were really tiny and.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
Green, candy candy eggs. And Shannon love you guys.

Speaker 5 (26:12):
I am from Texas and we as kids ate armadillo stew.

Speaker 3 (26:17):
Yah yum yum yum. Okay.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
So modesty is the latest fashion trend. Demure is how
the models are dressing on the runways.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
Very demure, very mindful.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Floppy bow blouses, nightgown dresses with Victorian flourishes like ruffled collars,
footwear like low heeled pumps, sensible box toes.

Speaker 3 (26:49):
I will not be fashionable this fall if this is
where we are headed.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
Misty Sidel from The New York Times writes that this
can be seen as an aesthetic counterpoint to the disheveled
chaos of this year's brat summer, which was sort of
a continuation of the sleazy chaos that defined the look
of the hot Vax summer of twenty twenty one. I
don't remember hot VAC summer.

Speaker 1 (27:11):
What was hot Vax summer I don't know, is that
when we were all dressed in hot because we had
the vaccine and so we could get out there.

Speaker 3 (27:18):
And I don't remember anyone returning to hot in twenty
twenty one. But they describe what they saw.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
This article describes what's been seen on fashion runways, things
like cardigan sweaters, except this isn't probably the greatest example,
because she's not wearing a shirt underneath.

Speaker 3 (27:38):
Yeah, and there's only one button. One button. I drink
and seen this though, and I wouldn't call it demrror.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
I was at a store over the weekend and I
just noticed that I'm just not into the trends right now.

Speaker 3 (27:53):
It's like a lot of someone's aging out. I guess
it's a lot of baggyeness. It's a lot of a
lot of fabric, like a lot of extra fabric.

Speaker 2 (28:05):
Well, they talk about Bermuda shortsight for women.

Speaker 3 (28:08):
Those big ass baggy long shorts. It falls lower on
the leg, it shows less skin. Some versions fall the
way to the knees.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
I just want to expose my cellulite personally. Thank you,
you're welcome. I still like short shorts and you're comfortable.
Cellulite needs sun.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
Is that It's true? It does If you tan it,
it doesn't. It doesn't appear as obvious. Hot tip. We'll
do swamp watch when we come back. You've been listening
to The Gary and Shannon Show.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
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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