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April 7, 2025 26 mins
People in this rural California town are dying of the virus that killed Gene Hackman’s wife. Micheal Monks joins the show to talk about the LA homeless chief resigning after the county guts her agency. These SoCal vintage motels have found new life. But you can’t sleep there.
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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 (00:09):
A lot on the agenda today for President Trump. He
has already greeted the Los Angeles Dodgers, honoring them for
their World Series win.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
From last year. They got a little tour of the
Oval office.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Clayton Kershop presented him with a Trump forty seven jersey.
Then Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Nett Yahoo is also in town.
The expectation is they're going to hold a news conference
a short time from now. I think it's probably about
eleven thirty is when we're going to see some of that.
But obviously tariffs are going to be a big issue
that they talk about. Of course, Israel was one of

(00:42):
those countries that was hit with an import late levy
as a result of this, although they have said that
they would be willing to negotiate of the war in
Gaza's back on again.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
That's going to be a topic.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
So are you feeling a headache? Are you feeling have
you been coughing? How's the old abdominal area? How's your
temperature hot?

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Cold?

Speaker 1 (01:11):
And norm normoush normish. Have you been You were in
mammoth right recently? Was the beginning of Were you exposed
to urine when you were there?

Speaker 3 (01:24):
Probably?

Speaker 2 (01:25):
Yes, Yes, he did urinate other other your other people's,
other people.

Speaker 3 (01:30):
Are there other things? Doubt it. They urinate that.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Droppings of saliva. Did you get into any of that?

Speaker 4 (01:39):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:39):
I did.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
Okay, wait, questionnaire is over.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
So we talked with the death of Gene Hackman and
his wife about this whole rodent born virus threat. Apparently
in New Mexico it's a thing because of the environment
and what have you. It's a apparently a thing hantavirus, hantavirus,
whatever you want to call it, and mammoth as well.
In fact, three people have died from this, and health

(02:09):
officials say that it's very rare to have three deaths
like that at this time of year.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
Well it's rare.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
I mean, hantavirus itself is pretty rare, and there have
been those fewer than one hundred residents in the state
diagnosed with hantavirus since nineteen eighty.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
There was an outbreak.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
This is what I remember because I was in college
and there was a concern that it was happening on
the Four Corners region New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Utah.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
That area specifically.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
Represented the first confirm instances of the haunt of virus
endemic to the Americas that could cause disease. Following the outbreak,
they described this as hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, and I remembered
it because there were so many warnings that were put
out in California, and again these cases weren't even in California,

(03:04):
but there were places that geographically mirrored that location, and
they said, there could be problems here because we have
some of the same rodents, we have some of the
same conditions, and you can't, for example, be careful when
you're sweeping out your cabin or something like that from
the winter, because this is how you disturb the haunt

(03:27):
of virus tainted droppings of these rodents, and then it
gets in your lungs and then you're sick.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
Health of visuals.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Believe that a boom and the deer mouse population may
be to blame. I'm gonna throw this out there. Squirrels,
what about them? Squirrels carry this and we all know.
Let me believe my eyes and my ears when I
say that squirrels have become out of control.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
Their behavior, their bravery, their courage.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Their readencourage make it sound like they're positive qualities.

Speaker 3 (04:03):
And I think you mean in the negative way. They're pretentious.
They think that they they think you want.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Yeah, they're precocious was the word I was looking for.
They think that I want them, and they think I
want them in my life and I don't. They think
they that you want them to live outside with you
on your deck and eat with you, and you don't.
They are aggressive, They're more aggressive. They've become more aggressive. Yeah,

(04:31):
there's more of them. I see them everywhere.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
Are you seeing them at home?

Speaker 1 (04:35):
Or you talking about seeing I haven't seen this guy
in a long time. I think he is gone.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
He has left us. He got rabies and died from it.
Probably he clearly had rabies us. No, he's dead. I'm
pretty sure he's dead.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
All those squirrels live a very long time, and we
learn that they learn like they live like eighteen twenty years.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
Squirrels do, right, I think, so did we learn that? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (04:57):
But uh, I think I don't think it's a mouse.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
I think it's these crazy ass squirrels.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
I think it's perfectly normal to just come up with
you and like like they're no longer just like hunting
for nuts or hiding their nuts in your planter boxes.
They're like trying to live amongst us. And I bet
those little those those those little roadents are spreading this
thing well. But here's the thing, the squirrels we're dealing
with in New Mexico.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
Here's the thing that we're that makes this unusual.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
And that's what doctor tom Boo, the Mono County Public
Health officer, says. The timing and the circumstances are atypical
because you're not going to see a lot of those
mice rolling around or definitely not squirrels rolling around this
time of year in the Mono Lakes area or or
Mammoth Lakes area because there's snow on the ground. They

(05:47):
don't get out and party like they would in the
late spring early summer, which is much more common for
these but.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
With climate change, no, but yeah, but it's still cold
up there. It's still I've.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Seen squirrels in the cold. Here's the thing. You think
it's the flu? Is the other thing? Fatigue, fever, muscle eggs, headaches, disneyness, chills,
all of that, and then you just die. About one
in three people who contact the virus die.

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Air out your spaces. That's one of the things that
doctor Boo says is air out your space.

Speaker 3 (06:27):
Doctor Boo, I just told you. He's the Mono County
Public Health Office. Sorry, I was a catastrophized.

Speaker 5 (06:32):
I know.

Speaker 3 (06:32):
Is that the right word? Yes, you did. You nailed it.
They said.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
The incubation period following a haunt virus infection usually last
weeks and begins as flu like symptoms.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
You mentioned all of those things that cant to you
and then die and then death.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
In the summer of twenty twelve, three visitors to Yosemite
died from an outbreak of hantavirus. They stayed squirrels up
there in Curry Village.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
Yeah, my husband's going to go stay in one of
those in a couple of weeks, is he really?

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Yeah, that's where he stays up there.

Speaker 2 (07:02):
Ten cabins crack the window when he starts sweeping out
the old uh mouse poop.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Yeah, if you want him to survive. I don't know
how the things are going at home right. Well, it's
day to day, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Today I may want him to survive the Unta virus tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
I may not. I don't know. You know how marriage is. Yep,
you rushed to pick you up after you fell on
the ground. He just left me there, are you kidding?
He's like looking around, like do do?

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Which would I suppose it's better than laughing, Like pointing
and laughing would have been better.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
When they ignore it, then it's like you don't want
to embarrass the old person who fell down. If you're
young and spry and you fall, it's funny. Hah, you
fell down. If you're legit of falling age, no one
laughs at you. The last time you laughed at an
old person falling down. You don't do that. Young people,
you get the laughter. Old mother in law was in
town a week and a half ago. She fell down

(07:59):
and laughed. No did she fall down?

Speaker 3 (08:03):
No she did not. Oh that I saw she may have.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
I wasn't home all the time, but it was not
announced that she fell down. But if she did, that
would have been pretty funny. That is not true. That
would not have been funny at all.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Now you're going to be in the tent cabin. Dian
of the rodent droppings.

Speaker 5 (08:23):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
Am six forty.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
We are watching what's going on in the White House
with a little bit of a head scratching going on.
Benjaminett and Yaho, Israeli Prime Minister is at the White
House and is meeting with President Trump. The White House
just announced though a short time ago, that there will
not be a news conference, and we don't know why.

(08:52):
The last time this happened was, of course, when President
Zelenski of Ukraine was at the White House for a
meeting and the joint news conference was called off because
we saw how that went in the Oval Office and
it wasn't great. I don't know what the reasoning is
for the calling off of the news conference with Benjamin

(09:14):
and Yahoo and President Trump, so something to keep our
eyes on. Of course, they're dealing with everything that's been
going on with the tariffs. President Trump, earlier today on
Truth Social said the United States has a chance to
do something that should have been done decades ago. Don't
be weak, don't be stupid, don't be a pannikin oh

(09:35):
which is a new again. He's writing a new party
based on weak and stupid people. He said, be strong, courageous,
and patient, and greatness will be the result.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
Stay the course, Stay the course.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Opening statements begin today in a case that we have
followed since we got wind of it, the Doomsday Mom.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Remember this. This is going on in Arizona.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
Lori Valoda Bell accused of conspiring to kill her fourth husband,
and she was found guilty in Idaho in twenty twenty
three of murdering her two kids and conspiring to murder
her husband's first wife.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
That story is just so wild every time we tell it.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
With this pretty woman who's got these bodies piled up
behind her, and you.

Speaker 3 (10:15):
Know, we've even seen them.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
We've even seen bodycam footage of cops talking to her
on the scene of one of these bodies that found
itself in front of her. And you can see how
deferential the cops are to her despite her being on
the scene of a dead body, and just there's no
way she could have anything to do with it.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
Look at her, She's this.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
Cute, young, petite blonde mom that she wouldn't be a suspect. Yeah,
and that's how she operated for years under that umbrella,
and she killed her kids, a couple husbands. I think
there's a brother in there, an ex wife.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
In subsequent interviews, you can tell she's her feet do
not touch the earth. She is not there there, no, no, no,
And it's pretty clear in some of those.

Speaker 3 (10:59):
Well, and that's her whole thing, right.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
She was the doomsday person who hooked up with a
number another doomsday person and thought that Satan had taken
over her children, which is why she killed them.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
It's just it's just odd.

Speaker 1 (11:11):
She's like one of the perfect cases of when crazy
doesn't present itself.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
We all think about.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
Crazy people, and we think of crazy presents itself as crazy.
It looks crazy, you know it when you see it.
But she is one of those people. And you know
the proof is in all those bodycam interviews. It's like
she doesn't appear. I mean, once you start listen really
listening to her, you're like, eh, there's a few beers
short of a six pack here, but she doesn't look crazy.

(11:39):
And those are the most dangerous people. Yeah, Like what, like,
you could have killed four people this weekend and look
at you, all normal, mister normal pants.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
I'll never know.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
I'll never know floating down the Brazos River right now.
I would have taken them to Lake Lake Waco anyway,
it's better hiding spots. The State Water Resources Control Board
here in California's begun holding a series of hearings on
a petition by Governor Newsom to amend water rights permits

(12:13):
so that flows can be diverted from new points on
the Sacramento River where the intake of a forty five
mile Delta tunnel would be built.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
You know, Gavin Newsom has done a couple things that
I've agreed with, and I don't remember what all of
them are. One of them was that he sat down
or he was going to sit down with Republicans for
his podcast and kind of talk about differences, and I
thought that was a great idea. He did something else
recently where I thought it was a really good idea,

(12:44):
and now I can't remember what it was.

Speaker 3 (12:46):
It's really I should you it start. I should start
writing this stuff down.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
But he has done a couple things as he gets
ready to continue running for president and move to the
middle that makes sense.

Speaker 3 (12:56):
And this is one of them.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
Yes, we should find a way to bring the water down,
but the fact that we haven't goes back to the
Delta smelt and all the things that President Trump talked
about with John Cobalt when they had that interview. This
is called the Delta Conveyance Projects, right, that's Sexy's name.

Speaker 2 (13:17):
The state needs to build new infrastructure in the Delta
to protect the water supply, they say, because of climate
change and earthquake risks. A bunch of the big water
agencies here in Southern California, including the Metropolitan Water District
Southern California, support this idea because and I should say
they support it by giving some of the money originally

(13:38):
for the planning work. I mean, just a couple of
months ago, the Metropolitan Water District voted to spend one
hundred and forty two million dollars for some of the
original planning work. Now, they obviously deliver millions of gallons
of water, you know, to millions of people, But the
Metropolitan Water District probably won't even side whether to invest

(14:01):
in the building of the tunnel until twenty twenty seven.
So this is still one of those things that's a
decade out. It should have been done three decades ago.
Opponents of this plan, especially those that are in northern
California and they like their water to stay there. Environmental
advocates are against it native tribes. They say that this

(14:22):
is an expensive boondoggle that would actually harm the environment.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
I don't know if they care about the environment. I
feel like we need to follow the money here. I mean,
this has been something that governors have failed to get
over the finish line. Schwarzenegger wanted it, Jerry Brown wanted it.
Everyone realizes the water problem in California that exists, But
there's got to be the money that's held up somewhere.
And it could be absolutely the Native American poll here.

(14:51):
I don't know, but there's gotta be a reason other
than the delta smelt. I just think that that is
grade A blown but not even the kind of blowning
You and I we eat the real bad stuff, expired
stuff with the little knots and you don't know what
that is whatever.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
But if you're gonna if you're gonna pick a cause
to rally people in California behind, that's gonna be your
bigger that's gonna be a bigger poll.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
I think for people, it's not like you said, it's
not sexy. Yeah, I mean every time we talk about water,
it's like, oh my god, But it's so important and
it's it's and I guess that's why it's not politically
savvy to dive into this argument because it's not sexy.

Speaker 3 (15:31):
But it's it's it's it's literally the only thing we
need in this life is water, and I mean it doesn't.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
It doesn't generate the excitement exactly until all of it.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
It's not gonna get it.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
It's not gonna get voters to the poles unless it's
brown water like in Flint.

Speaker 6 (15:52):
Late three year old early four year old notorious South
Africa mom driving me around in the rain looking for
little fairies flying around flowers because they come out in
the rain. So Nele say, I.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Love that so much that his mom told him that
fairies come out in the rain.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
I'd love that. That's very outsized reaction to that story.
I'm sorry, are you gonna start crying? All right?

Speaker 2 (16:31):
Let us know what is your earliest memory that you
have super early, like two, three four.

Speaker 3 (16:37):
Something like that.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
Go on, you're not thinking about it little fairies like no, okay,
I'll put that to bed with the puppets.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
I doubt it. I feel like it's going to come back,
just like the puppets.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
Michael Monks, It's gonna join us let's talk about the
the head of the LA Homeless Services Authority realized her
days are numbered because she ain't going to get no money.

Speaker 3 (17:05):
We'll explain what's going on.

Speaker 5 (17:07):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (17:14):
Live everywhere below the belt iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
Dow Jones Industrial Average still down about three hundred points.
It had a brief moment in positive territory earlier today,
but it is down below zero once again, down two
hundred and ninety.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
Two at this moment.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
The White House has announced that they're not going to
do a news conference a joint news conference with Benjamin
eett Yahu and President Trump taking questions, but that President
Trump will be taking some questions. We assume that the
tariffs in the fallout from the tariffs are going to
be the main topic.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
So Michael Monks from KFI News has been on top
of the homelessness issue four years now, and they are
actually showing movement in downtown LA. Whether it's the judge
who told Karen Bass and the County Board of Supervisors
get your act together and start accounting for all this
money the voters have approved for you to fix this

(18:11):
or the heads that have rolled recently. One of the
heads that is rolling is the LA Homeless Chief. She
is resigning. Valechia Adams Kellum, the head of the LA
Homeless Services Authority, announced her resignation on Friday. Why well,

(18:31):
the County Board of Supervisors decided to say, you have
no clothes emperor. They strepped her agency of more than
three hundred million dollars and took away hundreds of workers.
Michael's on this and we see this coming, Michael, what's
going on? Where did she run a foul?

Speaker 4 (18:48):
The writing was on the wall, not just for her,
but maybe for LASA overall. Last week was probably the
most consequential week in the history of fighting homelessness in
Los Angeles in quite some time, because it all fell apart.

Speaker 3 (19:01):
As you noted.

Speaker 4 (19:01):
I mean, it's been years and years of spending billions
and billions of dollars and seeing very limited, if any
results at all. And so what happened last week. On Monday,
the new half sent sales tax goes into effect. That's
to spend a lot more money on homeless programs. On Tuesday,
the LA County Board of Supervisors voted to leave LASA
and create their own internal homeless department. Meanwhile, at City Hall,

(19:23):
the city decided to scale back Mayor Bass's inside Safe program,
denying her millions of dollars that she wanted. And then
on Friday, Valicia Adams Kellum, the head of the LA
Homeless Services Authority, said I'm out and it's probably the
right decision because the agency she was brought into oversea
is not going to be that agency anymore. By around

(19:44):
this time next year, they'll have a lot fewer employees
and hundreds of millions of dollars less than their account.

Speaker 2 (19:51):
She was also considered one of the architects of that
Inside Safe program.

Speaker 4 (19:56):
Very close ally of Mayor Bass. Mayor Bass brought her
end oversee this agency. This is an agency that is
co governed by the county and the city.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
I think she's getting out before the fraud bomb.

Speaker 3 (20:07):
Strikes the froud moomb.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
Well, because inside Safe was at the heart of this whole, like, well.

Speaker 3 (20:13):
How are you spending your money?

Speaker 1 (20:14):
Remember, the mayor didn't want the city Controller to be
in charge of the audit of inside Safe for whatever reason,
and that's part of why the judge said you're doing
it wrong. And now suddenly the person that Bass placed
at the head of Inside Safe is cutting and running.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
I'm smelling something here.

Speaker 4 (20:32):
And you're right to suggest that there are a lot
more eyeballs on this spending. It seems like the folks
who were kind of letting it fly under the radar
for a little while are now pulling up their pants,
tucking in their shirts, and getting real serious about this money.
And that's what I mean about the significant development at
city Hall. They don't just write blank checks to the
mayor's program anymore. They want to see the data, they

(20:52):
want to see the results, they want to see the receipts.
And it's all pushed by what happened two weeks ago
when Judge David Carter said, y'all got to get it
together because we.

Speaker 3 (21:02):
Are not getting the answers that we want.

Speaker 4 (21:03):
I don't know if you notice, but I'm a federal
judge and I can make your life hell. And so
he was in skid row in recent days with our
new US Attorney Bill A. Saley, who was walking right
alongside him. So you can tell that the Feds are
getting real serious about this. The county has made a
very significant change. We have to see how serious they

(21:23):
are about it. And now the city is pulling up
the rear and they're gonna have to figure out what
they do next.

Speaker 3 (21:28):
What do we know about this new US attorney.

Speaker 4 (21:30):
Bill Saley, assembly member from Riverside County. He's been a
guest on KFI many times.

Speaker 1 (21:36):
I was going to say his name sounds familiar, and
I haven't done any research on it, but I mean,
if you bring in a new US attorney to this
district who has political aspirations and is looking to crucify people,
this is a good place to start.

Speaker 4 (21:49):
It's going to be an interesting dynamic because this is
obviously a liberal stronghold in general, but when there is
a Republican president, you do end up with a Republican
US attorney to be BILLI.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
Saley.

Speaker 4 (22:01):
This is more power than he has had in a
long time. He's a very outspoken Republican lawmaker and has
certainly highlighted his positions here on this station. But now
he's kind of got some authority on his own here
locally in the central district of California, so it's La County,
Orange County, and I think he'll find a way to
keep himself busy.

Speaker 3 (22:20):
Yeah, and he's definitely ambitious Yeah, what happens to LASA
if she leaves?

Speaker 6 (22:26):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (22:26):
What does I mean this is it appears to be
sort of the beginning of the disintegration because without all
the money that they were getting before, is there a
place for LOASA to exist in any sort of capacity
like it was previously?

Speaker 4 (22:38):
Even the county suggested that there would be a place
for LASSA, primarily through the federal funding that is received
to fight homelessness on the local level, and one of
those primary functions is the simple task of counting the
number of homeless people.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
And over the past couple of years, los has.

Speaker 4 (22:54):
Claimed there's been a little bit of a decline in
the number of homeless people living on the streets, so
they would still do that. But what is the organization
if it's not La County anymore and it's just essentially
an extension of the city's homeless efforts. That's yet to
be seen and we have not seen any proposals emerge
formally from the city.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
Michael, thank you, Thank you for staying on top of
all of this and playing in the weeds and then
bringing all of the things you found in the weeds
to us and the dandelions. Is it raining are there
fairies with the dandelions?

Speaker 3 (23:32):
I don't think so, what is happening? Oh?

Speaker 1 (23:34):
So do you have an earliest memory? Do you have
an earliest memory?

Speaker 3 (23:38):
I think it also, I do, I do? Okay, what
is it? Okay?

Speaker 4 (23:41):
So I'm a child, I'm walking running, young enough to run.

Speaker 3 (23:46):
And young enough to run enough. Well, the music starting,
then I wanted to play to the mood. So I'm
in the grass.

Speaker 4 (23:57):
I've got a diaper on sagging a little bit hm,
and I'm running towards my mom.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
I'm holding a.

Speaker 4 (24:03):
Cookie chocolate chip and half of it breaks off as
I'm running to my mother on the grass.

Speaker 3 (24:11):
And that is my earliest mind. What do you remember
feeling in that moment that it was probably all going
to go to hell after that, the whole life.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
Well, I remember running to my mom and that is
a memory that sticks with me every time I've run
back to her since, as recently as two weeks ago.

Speaker 3 (24:27):
Really yeah, you know, yeah, I live in LA. Can
you send a check.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
I called my mom when I was having a mental
breakdown and she said, I'm on the toilet and I said,
why are you answering the phone?

Speaker 3 (24:37):
And then that was the end of the conversation, that's
your earliest memory. If she hears this, she will kill
me and never speak to me again. But yeah, so
we're talking. We were talking about.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Earliest memories, and somebody used to talk back and said
that his earliest memory he's in the car with his mom.
It's raining and he's looking for fairies in the rain
because she told him, Oh, a'm that cute it is.

Speaker 4 (24:56):
I think that all of these are made up, right,
Like I don't know that this really happened.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
I see.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
That's thing with my memory is like did that really happened?

Speaker 1 (25:02):
Or you just think it happened and then you solidify
that in your head through the years of thinking that happened.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
Well, thanks for the question. So it wasn't a way
you never didn't give an age. I think I was
probably you two.

Speaker 4 (25:13):
I've stopped wearing diapers around fourteen, so it had to
be before then. But I'm thinking this was two the
first time. Yeah, thank you. Always a pleasure, guys. All right,
vintage motels? You ever stay in one of these places?

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (25:27):
No?

Speaker 1 (25:28):
But I love a vintage motel. And ps I think
that whoever runs what was the destiny in listens to
the show, because they've totally rebranded that place we used
to go after the destiny In pretty hard on this show.
It's right on the five there through I want to say,
like industry or oh oh, I know it and destiny
In's right, it's right there along the freeway and they've

(25:49):
since called it, I think it's called the Road Away In,
which isn't better. But they have fixed the windows and
put up some curtains in there, so they have done
some some renovation since we started tearing them down.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Road Away. That's not good.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
Then Gary Shannon will continue still maybe it's maybe there's
still cocktail napkining this whole thing, I hope.

Speaker 5 (26:14):
So you're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from
KFI A M six forty

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