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December 12, 2024 26 mins
Gary and Shannon start the second hour with then news of Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in LA County possibly closing after it failed inspection. Gary and Shannon talk about a gold rush in the Mojave Desert and speak with actor and comedian Paul Reiser about an upcoming show.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Gary and Shannon and you're listening to KFI
AM six forty The Gary and Shannon Show on demand
on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
We've been talking about a lot of stuff already this morning,
a few things. When we'll get into swamp watch and
talk more about the commutations and pardons.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Joe Biden set a record with the number of them. Today.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
We're keeping an eye on the Franklin Fire, of course,
burning over four thousand acres now in Nalibu. Two good
days weatherwise, the expectation is even. We might see a
slight chance for some showers today.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
Shanna Kobyashi's family ready to put this whole ordeal behind
them because she just wanted to live her life.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
And don't forget they still have to mourn the loss
of their dad.

Speaker 1 (00:38):
They're offering now to return funds they raised as part
of the search for her. They raised upwards of fifty
thousand dollars. But yeah, yesterday was the news. She did
get in contact with her family confirmed to them she
is safe and she's just living her life.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
They say.

Speaker 1 (00:57):
The family says that they have rest their heartfelt thank
you to people who assisted during this trying time. They've
offered to issue refunds for people who want their money back.
You just have to get that refund request in by
December eighteenth.

Speaker 5 (01:11):
Okay, Hey, Gary Channet Tim six four five, graduated seventy nine,
played high school and college ball. Did you know that
Bill Belichick's dad was the head coach at North Carolina.

Speaker 6 (01:31):
Oh, Tim, He's going back to where his dad coach.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
That makes sense.

Speaker 1 (01:35):
That's cool.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
Yeah, that would make sense as to why why unc
as opposed to some other place that was higher.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
I think West Virginia hired a new coach again.

Speaker 7 (01:43):
Hey guys, And talking about caroline addiction. I have been
sober for a number of years now. I was an
IV drug user and it can't be done. And it's
not just about getting physically sober. It's about getting to
the causes and conditions of what took me there in
the first place. Yes, I have an allergy when I
take painkillers. I just love them.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
But I was able to get sober.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
That The reason I wanted to use that one is
because you've talked about this before. The fear of that
feels too good when you get into some of these,
you know, higher acuity pain killers and things the oxy
cotones and percocets and stuff like that where you take
it and you go mm hmm, that's I've never had that,
your brain feels something it shouldn't.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
I haven't had to take one of those ever, but
I had a girlfriend that was prescribed those for some
sort of minor operation, and she took one and it
was the first time she'd ever taken an OxyContin, and
she took it, and she found herself the next day
thinking about where the pill bottle was in the bathroom cabinet.
She started just thinking about it and fixating on it,

(02:51):
and she knew she had to get that crap out
of her house. I mean, if you had to take
those for pain management, I can't imagine.

Speaker 5 (02:58):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
And a top la Aunty probation officials says, you can
stick it in your ear. Chief Deputy Probation Officer Kimberley
Epps has told a group of several dozen probation officers,
we are not moving talking specifically about the state's order
to vacate Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall today. This is going

(03:19):
to set up what we believe to be some sort
of illegal showdown between the state and the county figuring
out what's going to happen. Probation officials have not publicly
said what's going to happen, but if they do not
vacate Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall, it's going to defy the
order from the California Border State and Community Corrections which

(03:41):
said Los Padrinos down and Downey has to shut down
by today unless the county improves the staffing levels. A
spokesperson for the State Board confirmed that the Probation department
failed the last chance inspecting inspection because it didn't have
enough officers on site to monitor the kids inside. As

(04:02):
of right now, about two hundred and sixty kids in
their late teens early twenties from Los Padrinos. Could lead
to a bunch of legal fights about what kind of
liability the county has under state law regarding housing juvenile
offenders like this. Luis Rodriguez runs the Juve Juvenile Division

(04:22):
of the La County Public Defender's Office, and he said
they're going to go to court to ask for the
release of all one hundred and seven of their clients
housed at Los Padrinos if the Probation Department doesn't shut
this place down by today.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
They said.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
The immediate release of our clients to their families or
to the noncarcoral housing that provide trauma informed care, access
to education, and consistent rehabilitative support. The State Oversight Body
in the middle of October found Los Padrinos was unsuitable
to confine young people because it failed to meet the
staffing requirements. State Oversight Board gave the Probation Department sixty

(05:01):
days to fix the problem or shut it down.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
And that's where we find ourselves today.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
Just a bit of a correction, not a huge correction.
Bill belichick'sad Steve Belichick, did coach at North Carolina, but
he was a position coach. He coached the backfield from
fifty three to fifty five head He's not the.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
Head coach, he did say in a statement did Bill Belichick?
He grew up watching his dad coach college football and
that was one of became one of his great loves.
But in his ascension to being one of the best
coaches in the NFL, he never coached in college.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
No, he said, He's always wanted to coach college and
it is a different energy.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
The McDonald's restaurant where the man charge and the killing
of United Healthcare CEO was arrested this week has hired
private security around the restaurant. Two private security guards were
at that restaurant in Altoona, PA when a reporter visited
there yesterday. A police in Altoona have said that officers
and locals involved in the arrest have been receiving threats

(05:56):
since Luigi Mangione's arrest.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
You know, I was wondering why we haven't heard about
the employee or the people that saw this guy inside
the McDonald's that reported it, because usually you'd run out
there and they would love to run to a microphone
and tell their story, and they're the hero and the story,
but they're the anti hero in this story for many people.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, has donated
a million dollars to Trump's inaugural fund. The move comes
just a couple of weeks after Mark Zuckerberg went to
mar A Lago and dined with the President elect.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
Well, it looks like there is a new gold rush.
It's sparking a mini real estate boom in the Mojave
Desert when it comes to these old mines.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
Yeah, this is like in the town of Johannesburg, tiny
little town in the Rand Mountains there in the Mohave.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
David Treadwell, as a real estate agent based in hemet
sit in that for a minute. The market is heating up.
He says, I get two three leads per month on
buyers looking for patented mind claims. If you can get
the gold out of the ground, there's money to be made.
What a gold mine for David Treadwell, who is non
intended right though. I mean you're selling real estate and Hemmett,

(07:12):
and all of a sudden there's this rush for land
out in the desert.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
That's a pretty dark right time.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
He says that he's sold minds to amateurs and professionals.
The smaller claims can sell for less than fifty grand,
Bigger properties with more potential can be a few hundred
thousand dollars or more.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
He said he got started when he helped sell his
uncle's forty seven acre property in twenty seventeen and people
he put the ad for it in a local mining
journal to get the word out right, and then he's
just started getting inundated with people saying, I see you're
selling a gold mine, want to sell mine too. He
has sold minds to amateurs and professionals. Small claims sell

(07:54):
for less than fifty grand, but some bring in a
few hundred thousand dollars or more.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
Gold prices after the Great Depression hovered under forty dollars
an ounce for most of the twentieth century under forty
dollars an Now we're up over two thousand, I think
it is. And that's when the gold rush rushed out
of here. People left, or at least they weren't attracted
to California like they had been in the middle of
the nineteenth century. Gold is over twenty seven hundred dollars

(08:24):
an ounce right now.

Speaker 4 (08:25):
Reminds me of bitcoin.

Speaker 3 (08:28):
Well, it is kind of, yeah. And then.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
My grandfather Dickerson owned at least owned a portion of
a gold mine up in northern Calot.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
Of course he did, because that's what you do. Of
course he did. I could have told you that before
you told me. That kind of makes you want to
go into an old saloon.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
And pay for my whiskey with a little chip of
gold or something dirty glass.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
There always seems to be dirty glasses and saloons. Well,
i'm your uncle Berry. Sorry, I got wrapped up.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
We could start doing that all day you want to
do that tombstone for the rest of the day. Stone line,
let's do it. Let's dude out the total of getting gold.
The total cost of getting gold out of the ground
is at about twelve hundred and twenty dollars per ounce,
and the price of gold is about twenty, like I said,
twenty seven hundred dollars per So you've got a fifteen

(09:24):
hundred dollars profit margin for every ounce of gold you're
able to extract from the earth. The question is has
the technology changed far enough in the last hundred years
to actually make a difference and to get the gold
that would have otherwise.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
Been left in the earth without it.

Speaker 6 (09:43):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
And gold, by the way, one of the reasons gold
price is going up is because the amount of gold
that's used in technology these days, and it is that
makes it a little bit less less what would you
call it, frivolous? People don't use gold as much as
they use to Daisy, if you do, great, all right.

(10:07):
Actor and comedian Paul Riiser scheduled to join us in
a few minutes.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
I'd say, let's clean it up. You know, we've got company.
But why well, he's seen them he's seen things. He's
seen things, he's been on the circuit.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
He's been around. There's no need to clean it up.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
We were talking earlier also about opioids and heroin addiction,
and people that have beaten heroin addictions probably have stories
that we could all learn from.

Speaker 8 (10:32):
Hey, Garian, Shannon, I just had full elbow replacement surgery
and they prescribed oxy and I picked it up at
the pharmacy because I didn't know what was going to
happen as far as the pain level. But I told myself,
you know what, I can fight through whatever pain it is.
I'm not putting that trash in my body. So you know,
it's it's just one of those things. I don't know
enough about it, and I just wasn't going to do it. Yeah,

(10:54):
have a good day.

Speaker 4 (10:55):
There was a I'm terrified of needing that kind of stuff.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
A friend of mine had back surgery and when she
got into the painkiller aspect of it, I mean, that
was just the common thing.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
You're going to get pain killers.

Speaker 2 (11:09):
She was very adamant about saying to her husband, I'm
taking a half a pill, or I'm taking one pill,
or this is just like keeping it on the everything
out in the open, right, there's a certain amount of accountability, which.

Speaker 4 (11:24):
Was got any more of that stuff? I'll have to ask,
Just kidding Joe.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
Paul Reiser joins us, this is a treat we don't
always well, we'd never really have had a list celebrities
on the show.

Speaker 3 (11:37):
They hear the show and I hang up usually.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
Yeah, to the question, there was an unfortunate run in
with Richard Dreyfus when he called us dumb. I think
he called us dumb, dumb adjacent.

Speaker 6 (11:50):
Nobody else hays no offense in listener about to offend you.

Speaker 9 (11:53):
They just let you know it's coming, and they don't care.
That's like when people say, you know, I don't want
to sound racist, want to sound t want then to
stop talking.

Speaker 6 (11:59):
Why don't you stop because even you have a hunch
it's not good, don't you?

Speaker 2 (12:02):
Yeah, that's smart And Paul Riser Life Death and Rice Pudding,
which is available for streaming on Apple TV and and
Amazon and other places as you can find it. And
Paul joins us live now, thanks Paul for taking time
for us today.

Speaker 6 (12:16):
Yeah, thank you, thanks for having me. You know, I
just hung up with Richard Dreyfus. He said, nothing but nice. Thanks. Okay,
I surprising that you're still carrying that Bert he loved you.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
It was only about seven years ago that thee Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
I think I asked him do you cry every time
you watched mister Holland's Opis the way I do? And
he just just didn't even respond to that, no response whatsoever.
It was hurtful, and I haven't watched that movie since.
It used to be one of those movies I watched
every year or so, but but not for seven years.

Speaker 6 (12:51):
Well, I'll tell you. You can ask me any questions
about mister Hollins Opis.

Speaker 3 (12:56):
And you'll also remain silent.

Speaker 6 (12:59):
I will silence about cry about the question.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
Listen, I know that you studied music in college. You've
even you put out an album of original songs. You
do stand up. I mean that little piece that we
played from your stand up special is one of a
few that you've done. But you also done TV and movie,
which which is your true passion. If you only did
one of those things, which one would you do?

Speaker 5 (13:24):
You know?

Speaker 6 (13:25):
I think if I could only do one, it's always
been stand up, you know, That's what I That's when
I started out a thousand years ago. My goal was like,
I just want to be like you know, George Carlin
and Richard Pryor and Robert Klein. Those are my heroes.
It's like, I just want to do that. And then
all the TV and movie stuff that happened was accidental

(13:46):
and thrilling, but it's never to me as much fun.
But what's funny In the last couple of years, you know,
doing Stranger Things and the Boys and stuff, people know
me from that and had no idea that I stand up,
which I thought, that's really strange, but in a way
understandable because I had I had taken a bunch of

(14:08):
years off doing it. But that's why I finally said
I have to do a special and get it out there.
It was like, oh, yeah, that guy. I heard from
too many people that their kids would say, wait a minute,
the doctor from Stranger Things is going to try to
be funny. That doesn't sound right, I thought. I thought, Yeah,
maybe it's time to do a special and get back
out there on the playing field.

Speaker 9 (14:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:29):
Your spectrum is incredible when it comes to the roles
that you've played, and you have had that kind of
career where different people are going to say, oh I
remember from Beverly Hills cop or I Remember you from
mat About You, and and all the different characters appeal
to different people, so the breadth of people that know
you is so wide. I would imagine I remember Bye

(14:50):
Bye Love when I was a teenager was on the television.
It seems like twice a day, so like I remembered
you from that in that role. A great movie by
the way, but yeah, I mean that, just the span
of roles and television and theater and stand up, it's
just incredible.

Speaker 6 (15:11):
Well that's why I'm exhausted. It's just doing all those things.
It's exhausting. Yeah. Well, it's funny, you know what at
my live shows and I watch people coming in and
I can kind of tell, oh, they know me. Those
people know me from Men About You, younger people that
must be stranger things people, and the big guy with
the tattoos he's been watching the boys. I can, you know,

(15:33):
I can. I can kind of pinpoint it, usually pretty accurately.
But it's nice, you know, I see that the audience
does kind of grow, and it's always nice if anybody
knows you from anything, it's like, that's nice. That's really
it's always a surprise to me. It's always a surprise
to my kids. They go, wow, that guy heard of you.
I go, yes, I used to be quite big shock.

(15:57):
How did that guy know you? D I wasn't born yesterday.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
That's why all you gotta do is just pull up
your Wikipedia page and show them that you had a
life before they came into the picture.

Speaker 6 (16:08):
Yeah, they don't care.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
Yeah, that's what keeps you humble, really, isn't it the
fact that, like your kids are just going eh whatever.

Speaker 6 (16:16):
I remember reading some interview with Bruce Springsteen and he
says his kids know nothing about his music. I went,
how can that be? Even if you tried, you'd have
to know. He said, my kids know maybe two of
my songs, and that doesn't seem possible. But yeah, once
you have kids there, you're just dad to them and
all the other stuff doesn't matter, which is as it

(16:36):
should be.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Is true of the sitcoms that you were on, Like
My Two Dads ran for three seasons, Matt About You
was eight seasons, including the one that came out just recently.
When you look at that, I mean the longevity of
shows like that compared to something that you do, which
I thought was absolutely Fantastic was reboot on Hulu, which

(17:00):
kind of pointed, kind of pointed a picture put a
spotlight on those sitcoms from the eighties and and how
there had been a push to get them back together
but it only went for one season.

Speaker 6 (17:11):
This, I know, I was disappointed. Uh you know, that
was a surprise reboot was a really funny show and
had great cast, and I was really said, I would
do this for you know, as long as they'll let us.
But you're gonna find this surprising. Sometimes some TV executives,
not all. Some are dopey and a little dumb and

(17:36):
make some silly decisions. So uh yeah, that figure having
offended anybody, anybody who listened to them, but they must
mean the other people nothing right. Yeah, Yeah, that was
a go so, you know, mad about you. You know
when we originally wrap for seven years, it was it
was an experience like nothing else because you're it's creatively,
you get to do so many things that you couldn't

(17:58):
do in a movie. You know, you get to actual
sketch it out and grow over seven years. But you're
also such an intimate relationship. You're in people's living rooms,
you know, once a week for over all those years
and you really do get to feel a relationship, which
is I kind of feel like now when people come to,
you know, my stand up shows, it feels like, oh,
these are old friends. We kind of have grown up together, right,

(18:20):
we were all we got married around the same time,
we had kids growing up around the same time. So
I feel this is a real connection that I feel
now that I wouldn't have possibly felt with an audience
years ago.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
Can I ask you about the stand up portion. I'm
always fascinated with the process of stand up. Are you
somebody that constantly walks around with a notebook, writes things down,
gets ideas for bits or stories or runs or something
like that. Or do you have a designated time you
sit down in front of a computer and you start
plunking out what you think your set's going to be.

Speaker 6 (18:51):
It's kind of both. It's kind of both. I don't
sit around and walk around the pencil hope and something happens.
But over the course of the day, you know, things
will come up, and if I'm smart, I will write
it down or you know, talk it into my phone,
because more often than not, I'll go, what the heck
did I say yesterday? That made me laugh, and it's gone.
It's gone. But even with those things, you know, you

(19:14):
do have to sit and make time and sit down
and write it out and work on it and get
on stage.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
You know.

Speaker 6 (19:20):
I'll go down as often as I can and just
go into the clubs here in LA and work out
new things. And that's always the most exciting part. You know,
when when something that you thought of at two o'clock
you get to say it out stage at eight o'clock
and you go, oh, that was that's really new and fun.
You know. I'll tell you when I had take it,
as I said, I had taken a long time off.

(19:41):
I hadn't performed through you We're mad about you started,
I kind of got distracted and busy with that, and
when it was over, I just was sort of taking
some time off. But when I went back years a
couple of years ago.

Speaker 9 (19:54):
It was what was struck me was not It felt
exactly like it did when I was eighteen about our
audition night the first time. It's like, oh, it's still
is exciting, it's still is uncertain, it's still as you know,
there are not a lot of things.

Speaker 6 (20:07):
You could do at sixty. In your sixties, I feel
like when you were eighteen, stands up is one of
those things like, oh yeah, this still feels fun. So
I think as part of why, it just is always
my first love. And I'm excited. I'm going to be
in a lovely Rancho Cucka manga on Saturday the twenty first,
and a lovely Lewis Family playhouse. I've never been to

(20:29):
Rancho Cucamonga, but I sure enjoy saying it.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
Oh, it's nice, if you should try it. The Sycamore
in we learned about that yesterday. They do a nice
martini and rack of lamb, which you don't find often
in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 4 (20:43):
Yeah, I can.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
Imagine the adrenaline that reminder of that, just sheer adrenaline.
What is what I would imagine stand up.

Speaker 6 (20:51):
Is, Yeah, and it's you know what it also, it's
it's actual people sitting in front of you. You don't
have to wait six months to find out if it's
funny or right. It's a studio, you know, it's.

Speaker 9 (21:01):
And especially you know post lockdown, you know, when we
were all so isolated. This still even now a couple
of years in it, there's still feeling like, oh, it's
really important to get out and be with people and
to be a you know, sitting with a whole crowd
of people and you're all laughing at the same things
that you all share. And you know, I've been I've
been all over the country and it's like it's really

(21:22):
people are the same, and there's a lot of differences,
and there's a lot of political and cultural stuff, but
when you get down to it, people like, wherever you go,
we're all going through the same stuff. And being in
an audience for a stand up show is sort of
reminds us all of that, Like, yeah, we're all going
to laugh about the same things because we're not that different.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
Right, Author actor comedian Paul Riiser. We've been fans for
a long time and it was great to talk to you.
You can again see Paul at the Lewis Family Playhouse
in Rancho Cucamonga coming up Saturday the twenty first. You
can get tickets at Paulreiser dot com or Lewisfamily Playhouse
dot com.

Speaker 3 (21:58):
Are you working on another book by any chance?

Speaker 6 (22:00):
I'm reading one now. I don't know. Sure, slowly, you know,
very slowly. Nothing in the work. But I will call
you as soon as I have talk about.

Speaker 4 (22:11):
Let me know, Paul, what a pleasure, Thank you so much.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
Genuine guy, pauls just how he comes across in his
work right, a genuine human.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
He's one of those guys that in all of those
characters that you see, there's there's regardless of who he is,
there's a threat of happiness, there's you know, it doesn't
have to be mean, doesn't have to be cruel, doesn't
have to be you know, to get his point of.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
Cards and so grounded.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Yeah, so again Lewis Family Playout L E. W. Lewisfamily
playhouse dot com or Paul Reiser dot com coming up Saturday,
December twenty First, that was nice.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
It took the bad Richard Dreyfus taste out of my mouth.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
Gary.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Kimberly Guilfoyle's got some baggage. She has faced allegations that
she engaged in sexual misconduct when she was at Fox.

Speaker 4 (23:07):
I could see her getting hansy.

Speaker 3 (23:09):
I do remember this.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
It was something like she ordered a producer or somebody.

Speaker 4 (23:14):
Working for her to take his pants off.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
No, it was her to work from her home.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
Had this staffer work from Kimberly Guilfoyle's home during COVID
and then would walk around without any clothes on. Yeah
that checks out, and show the worker pictures of dudes
that she had been with.

Speaker 4 (23:36):
Like naked dudes.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (23:38):
Wow, I wonder if she had one of gavit.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Now I'm you know, I wanted to eat lunch and
now I will not be eating lunch.

Speaker 3 (23:45):
It's not my fault there, it's not Huckleberry. Oh boy,
why don't you check?

Speaker 4 (23:50):
Here we go again.

Speaker 3 (23:52):
I just thought i'd bring that up. Didn't we have
this discussion? Was we sure? Did Huckleberry versus huckle Bearer?

Speaker 1 (23:58):
Yes?

Speaker 8 (23:59):
Over up, Come on, wretched slugs. Don't any of you
had the guts a piper blood?

Speaker 2 (24:06):
I'm your huckle bearer.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
Huckleberry refers to a small, round, dark blue fruit or
the shrub that produces it, while huckle Bearer refers to
a piece of hardware on a casket.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Val Kilmer's biography or memoir whatever was called I'm your
Huckleberry Berry Verry, Verry.

Speaker 6 (24:28):
I didn't think you had it in you.

Speaker 3 (24:30):
I'm your huckle bear. Oh come on, it's the greatest
at that movie.

Speaker 4 (24:35):
I just but we're not getting into that debate again.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
That was almost like the day when we debated apples.

Speaker 4 (24:40):
Yes, I have two gums one.

Speaker 3 (24:44):
Kilmer.

Speaker 4 (24:45):
I guess, good old days. I think I thought he
had aids.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
He does not in that movie though, because it was
around the time that tuberculosis.

Speaker 4 (24:54):
Yeah, but when you're a kid inundated with it.

Speaker 3 (24:57):
It was released. Yes, that was take good.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
It was like early nineties, right, and if you lived
in northern California, holiday I did.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
I was a youth.

Speaker 10 (25:11):
Hey is the course I came orange. Yeah, back when
I was in my twenties, I got a I separated
my shoulder and I got prescribed Norco's man was at
a mistake. Not only did I get hooked on those,
I started buying them off the street when I got
denied my refills. Yeah, that's bad news. Sc stick to

(25:35):
being addicted to cours light. Now's no harm, no foul.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
Don't get that turn.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
That's the other thing is once you get addicted to it,
and like him saying, you're buying them off the street,
then that's the problem. Then you start getting into your
you know, fent andl laced ones. That not that the
clean ones would have been good for you, but but
that brings with it a new element of Danger.

Speaker 6 (25:57):
Pardealer, Billy, Bob Thornton, Bully in the bar and Whyatt
slaps him.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Yeah, said you're just gonna stand, You're gonna do something,
and I just stand there and bleed.

Speaker 5 (26:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (26:07):
I love that, you guys show.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
That's a great part, that whole that whole movie. Man,
that's a great movie. And once you find out that
he's not suffering from AIDS, it makes a lot more sense.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
That was one of our very first COVID theater movies.
Oh yeah, not the first, maybe, yeah, it may have been.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
But uh yeah, it's a good movie. Part swamp wise
when we come back. You've been listening to The Gary
and Shannon Show.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
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.

Gary and Shannon News

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