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):
That was actually really, really funny.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
Does your next smell like baloney? Again? I just peede.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
Laughing Sam, everyone was thinking it.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
I don't think anybody was thinking that my next smelled
like baloney.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
I don't know why. It was the first thing that
came to mind.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
I don't either. If you miss any part.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Of the show, yeah, why would you want to miss
any part of this?
Speaker 3 (00:38):
Well, balooney neck.
Speaker 4 (00:40):
You could go back and check out the podcast we
posted right after the show every single day, and then
over the weekend you get to hear the Gas Weekend
Fix as well, which is a segment of the show
that does not air during the rest of the week
for well, for legal reasons.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
To be honest, we've got a reckless dui suspect that
there is a poo of right now in the San
Gabriel Valley Southwest and Montabello Monabella Boulevard. Anyway, they lost him,
so the TV stations have pulled away. If they find
him again, we will keep you abreast. Would you like
(01:16):
your Jeopardy question? Here. Your category is back to school
prep for four hundred dollars. Answer geometry. The three interior
angles of a triangle add up to this many degrees?
Speaker 3 (01:32):
What is one hundred and eighty?
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Yes, good job you're onto triggonometry.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
Loved those classes, did you? I loved him?
Speaker 1 (01:43):
How coume? You didn't do anything with them? I could
see you in glasses, the glasses you used to have teaching?
Speaker 4 (01:49):
I don't know, didn't I was good at it. I
always liked it, and I did well at math. Maybe
you could pick up teaching in your spare time. You
ever thought about that. I'd have to get a I
gotta get more college time, do you.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:01):
You can't just have a masters to be a teacher
oft of college though? Right?
Speaker 3 (02:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:08):
What about if you did, like a like adult education
or something, have a credential? What if he was like
Robin Williams and you know Vietnam?
Speaker 3 (02:19):
What who's a radio guy?
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Oh right, nobody taught he taught English?
Speaker 4 (02:25):
Oh he taught English to the to the I don't know.
I'm sure I could probably teach in another country. They're
going to have fewer restrictions.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Do you need a master's to teach at any college.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
I don't know about it.
Speaker 5 (02:35):
Any masters incorrect because I have a bachelor's and I
did teach a broadcasting class at cal State North, which
in the same place where Aaron.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Yeah, exactly. I'm like, you're telling me Aaron Bender as
a masters. You're all wrong. There's no way.
Speaker 5 (02:51):
Now there are certain colleges, believe it or not. I
was trying to get a job, I think at a
junior college at some point in between broadcasting stints and
require a master's for certain broadcasts classes.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
But what about maths? Do you think Gary could step
into a math class?
Speaker 3 (03:07):
And I don't think anybody would want me to teach math.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
I think you would do well with children.
Speaker 3 (03:12):
I don't. I don't know if I have the patience
for it.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
I think you do. You have great? Are you kidding?
You don't have the patience? Oh I do.
Speaker 4 (03:20):
You're mistaking my squashing feelings for patients. Just because I
don't blow up at people doesn't mean that I don't.
Oh really, Yeah, it's time for swamp watch.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
I'm a politician, which means I'm a cheat and a liar.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
And when I'm not kissing babies, I'm stealing that lollipops
here we got.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
The real problem is that our leaders are done.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
The other side never quits.
Speaker 3 (03:44):
So what I'm not going anywhere? So that you train
the squad. I can imagine what can be and be
unburdened by what has been. You know, Americans have always
been going, but they're not stupid.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
A political plunder is when a politician actually it tells
the truth.
Speaker 3 (04:00):
Have the people voted for you? With na swamp watch?
They're all counterning a couple of thing. Why are you
looking at me like that?
Speaker 4 (04:06):
You're afraid, only worried for my safety? A couple of
things that are going on out of DC. A judge
has set a hearing for tomorrow morning on Fed Reserve
Board Governor Lisa Cook's request to block the President from
firing her. This hearing was scheduled after Lisa Cook filed
this lawsuit against the President Trump that challenges his attempt
(04:26):
to remove her from the Central Banks Board of Governors.
If you remember, she hasn't been charged with any crime,
but there are allegations that she was fraudulent in some
mortgage applications.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
So we'll see where that goes.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
All right. They have found that dui reckless driver suspect.
And this is now in Southgate East LA area, Montebello Parkway,
Whittier Boulevard. This guy's doing sixty miles an hour in
thirty five Now he's on smaller surface streets there. It's
a sedan idiot. It is a Kia. Okay, it is
(05:01):
a gray metallic Kia sedan. And all we know is
obviously it's a reckless driver. They say it's a DUI suspect.
And they're blowing through stop signs. They're driving in the
median the middle, you know the turn lane there that's
in the middle, back onto one of the major arteries there,
Olympic I believe they're in Southgate, East LA. Shows no
(05:25):
signs of slowing down, No black and whites right behind him.
They're just kind of backing off of this thing and
following it from the sky and at a distance.
Speaker 4 (05:33):
About seventy five miles an hour in what would normally
be a forty mile an hour zone there along East
East Olympic Boulevard and right up through to intersections, ignoring lights,
et cetera. And while they said it's a potential duy suspect,
reckless duy maintaining control of the vehicle at this point.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
Yeah, who knows, who knows? But blowing through stop signs
left and right, isn't it. You can't do that.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Can't do that.
Speaker 1 (06:07):
You can't do that.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
Flopping over.
Speaker 4 (06:11):
Speed bumps too, going through, cutting through alleyways and parking lots,
going right across that street right there.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
Oh, and he's going to pass a cop.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
But I don't know if that officer had anything that
had any idea what was going on behind him. It
kind of looked like they were pulled off to the
side and doing something else. But this person drove right
past them.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Southgate Stay started in the San Gabriel Valley and made
its way to Southgate East LA.
Speaker 3 (06:42):
Another stop sign.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
Oh boy, Oh there's a roundabout. It's not often we
see a roundabout in a chase.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
Would be funny if they just kept going around the roundabout. Yeah,
that European vacation, that would be cool.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
That would be something I'd get on board for. We
could count how many times parliaments. My husband did that
to me when we were in Spain. I was supposed
to find the hotel and I said, I think it's
around here, and we kept taking a street and wasn't there.
Taking another street and around about was kind of the
middle of the town. He said, We're going to go
around here till you find it. Totally unhinged. And my
(07:17):
husband doesn't get unhinged. He was unhinged. So I had
to be real to you for a while. Not at
that point. We weren't even married at that point. Oh,
and he said, I'm going to go round this roundabout
till you find the hotel. And we went around that
thing about six times, but.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
You found it.
Speaker 5 (07:35):
I did.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
I did.
Speaker 4 (07:38):
Wittier Boulevard. Now it looks like still in the Southgate
East LA area again a gray It looks like a
gray metallic Kia big four door sedan, So probably in
Kia Optima.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
And oh, they're dealing with the trash trash day.
Speaker 1 (07:57):
They're aggressive with their cans. They put those trash cans
out in the middle of the street.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Those are way out there.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Yeah, my goodness.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
All right, we'll keep an eye on this again.
Speaker 4 (08:05):
Police pursuit of a reckless potential dy suspect out in
the Southgate East LA area.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
Maybe this guy's wants to stay in his car because
he heard us talking about this rare new Zealand snail
named Ned that is searching for a mate and we
haven't gotten to it.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
He's just hoping we get to it.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
He's looking for a mate. One in forty thousand snails
have left coiling shells, so he's got to find another
mate with a left coiling shell to do the deed. Really, yeah,
and so it's like one in forty thousand that he
can find to make babies with. I'm doing the story
(08:45):
now in the hopes that this gentleman has been sitting
in the car evading police to hear the story because
we didn't tease it, so that he knows it's safe now.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
To pull over. Oh, I see what you're saying. You know,
no license.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
The rare shell does keep the birds at bay for Ned,
but it means he'll probably live a life of celibacy.
Snails are hermaphrodites. They have both male and female genitiliya.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
He doing looking for somebody else.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
But the spiring spiraling of the shell for lefty snails
means that their bedroom bits are reversed and unable to
match up with those of a righty partner.
Speaker 3 (09:26):
Got it right.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
There's a scientist named Angus who studies snails at the
University of Nottingham. He likened the situation to buses approaching
from opposite directions. That the driver of a London double
ducker bus can pause and chat through the window to
another driver as they pass each other, But that wouldn't
work with the driver of a bus from New York.
Speaker 4 (09:51):
That's exactly the way I would describe snail sex buses
driving towards each other on the street.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
Well, are you us scientist who studies snails at the
University of Nottingham.
Speaker 3 (10:03):
Clearly I'm not.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
I think it's a pretty good analogy.
Speaker 4 (10:06):
Third Street, right there, along the rail tracks in Southgate,
East la is where this latest driver is, this subject
of this police pursuit is making their way down a
little bit now onto East fourth Street.
Speaker 3 (10:21):
There.
Speaker 4 (10:22):
We'll keep an eye on this and see if there's
any conclusion to it.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
During the break, they found another snail in twenty sixteen,
another left coiling snail, and they did a whole public
service campaign about it. Ended up finding two potential suitors
for that snail.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
Oh so crowdsourcing the left handed school swirls snail.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
Yeah, snails, How cool is that?
Speaker 3 (10:42):
We come back.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
We'll talk more about the chase and also your second heart,
How do you work out your second heart?
Speaker 1 (10:50):
And why it's song fee ice cream We come back.
Speaker 2 (10:54):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
I often wondering why they don't go under overpast. Oh
he took off on foot. Yeah, he ditched the car
under the overpass. And he's wearing all black. He's got
the hoodie up and over his head. And is he
on the side of is at the five that's in
boil height. So that's like that downtown interchange there.
Speaker 4 (11:19):
Yeah, he's gonna get lost in there.
Speaker 3 (11:22):
They I'm not.
Speaker 4 (11:24):
I don't want to commend him for his tax i
do that was smart. That was a pretty good tactic.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
Yea.
Speaker 4 (11:30):
It is where like the sixty and the five and
the one on one they all come together, and that's like.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
A good intersection to ask somebody to jump into their car, Like,
that's a good freeway intersection there Downtown. You've got people
that are like, yeah, at the man, get in my car.
Speaker 4 (11:44):
No, But I don't know if you're not gonna pick
some guy up dressed in all black who just emerged
from underneath the freeway by yourself. But he ditched the car.
He got off of the freeway, got off of the sixty.
It looked like ditch the car under an overpass. The
TV helicopters that were watching saw him come out from
under the overpass wearing all black.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Yeah, oh, there he is.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
He's wearing no.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Converse or something, white tips chucks man. That was pretty
cool what he did getting off and off road there
through the freaking freeway. Medium in the in the in
the woods of the freeway, and listen the woods of
the five sixty East interchange.
Speaker 4 (12:24):
If the brilliant Highway patrol is was the original agency
that was chasing after the guy, there is a Sheriff's
Department helicopter helving around that same area. But I don't
know if they were going to be able to keep
an eye on him.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Sure, I mean, why not?
Speaker 4 (12:38):
Well, I just mean that it's gonna be harder for
them to see him when he's under the overpasses.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
Oh move around a lot of this, Yeah, well I.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Yeah, I mean I I'd travel from under overpass to
under overpass until someone could pick me up. There's some
good homeless encampments down there too, some tents that are
parked that are parked there underneath that that exchange that interchange. True.
He's gonna have to change his clothes though, I mean,
oh yeah, I don't know why he's still wearing that stuff.
I'd get naked probably and crawl into a tent and
(13:07):
put some dirt on it and just say I live here.
The police are there. The police are there. That looks
like is that the sheriff's apartment, let's say the sheriff's
apartment outfits. Yeah, And they are taking off on foot
into the woods of the freeway as well, and they're
looking for this guy and hopefully at this point for him,
(13:27):
he is disrobed, put some dirt all over his body
and entered into a tent. Maybe promise that tent dweller
a little scratch on the flip side when we get
out of this.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
What kind of scratch you're talking about? Like money?
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Money, Like tomorrow when he you know, is free and
he can go back on home, get some clothes, some money,
go back, pay it back, pay it forward to that
homeless encampment that gave him freedom.
Speaker 3 (13:52):
I don't think freedom is in his future.
Speaker 1 (13:54):
I mean, I'm not advocating for it. I'm just saying
if I was writing the movie, that's how it would
play out.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (14:00):
Again, not to compliment the guy on his tactics, but
he may have had an opportunity there to get away.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
See, And that's a that's a rough go for those
officers on foot because now they've got to go into
all those encampments that are under those freeways and be like, hey,
did you see and those people are crazy?
Speaker 3 (14:18):
Seen anybody recently.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
You got to talk, You gotta talk sense with people,
and it's going to be a hole to do.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
They'll get him out of there.
Speaker 4 (14:27):
Again, it's right where all of the sixty, the one, O, one,
the five, they all come together there in the floodlights area.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
If you're looking for community, if you're on the on
a chase from the cops and you're looking for community
to hide, what better community is there than underneath the
downtown interchange there at the five, the sixty, the ten,
that whole bit there and Boil Heights. To find that
community and to be embraced.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
It does seem like it's not necessarily underground technically, but
it is sort of an undergod around community there that
lives under those So we'll see where he goes would
be pretty There are Shriff's deputies that have stopped under
the overpasses and are probably on foot. I mean they
are on foot looking through uh these little cracks and
(15:16):
crevices to find this guy. So if we see him
pop out, we'll definitely.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
You know, you got to do a cost benefit analysis though, too.
If you're in that, if you're in the tents, you know,
maybe you get lunch out of this. Maybe you give
that guy up and the officers go and get you something, something,
you know.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
I don't know you have two hearts? Did you know that?
Speaker 1 (15:34):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (15:35):
No, I did not know that you have one heart?
Point to it right here, Yeah, that's where it is.
Where's your other one?
Speaker 1 (15:41):
I don't know. That's why I said, I don't know.
Farther down, all the way down my toes, not that
far down. They got it. They got him.
Speaker 3 (15:49):
I told you.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
That's unfortunate.
Speaker 3 (15:55):
He should have got naked.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
He should have gotten naked and rubbed some dirt on it.
Speaker 4 (15:58):
That wouldn't be that wouldn't raise suspicion either. The guy
who's naked.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
What do you mean if I'm homeless, you're gonna catch
me naked? Probably?
Speaker 3 (16:07):
I don't think that's gonna happen.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
I feel like my husband was driving to work, I
think it was Monday, and he said, oh, I just
saw a guy without his pants on on the and
he took the he got off this very interchange there
and and Boyle Heights to go downtown, and he he said,
there was a man that didn't have his pants on.
It looked like he was efforting putting some pants on,
(16:30):
but he was San's pants. And that's that's the thing.
When you live on the streets, when you're homeless, they're
gonna catch you naked at some point. They're gonna there,
You're gonna You're gonna be naked at some point and
maybe somebody gets a glimpse.
Speaker 4 (16:41):
I mean, that's why it's nice to live in California,
right because you could do that, you would.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Write you can't do it in Minnesota.
Speaker 4 (16:48):
Okay, moving on, second heart? Where is that second heart?
Is your calf muscles? Gastric name? Miss?
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Oh? You must you have big calves. I've got some
sizeable calves. Do you remember when one of our bosses said,
be careful on that peloton, your calves will get real big.
Speaker 4 (17:03):
Every step, every heel raise every muscle squeeze with your
calves pushes blood back to your heart heart and keeps
your circulation alive, prevents deadly clots from forming. And the
muscles in your calves work slightly differently than the rest
(17:25):
of your muscles in terms of the way that they
push blood for you know, et cetera. Yes, or just
like that, calf raises, you're making your heart work easier.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
I do these all the time. I know you do
because I have a hard time stack.
Speaker 4 (17:39):
Do heel raises at your desk, take the stairs, keep
your calf muscles strong for life, and do not wait
until it's too late. Your future self will thank you,
says this doctor, Dimitri Yaranov.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
He gets everything fired up the calf raises, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (17:55):
He said.
Speaker 4 (17:55):
When your second heart fail fails, when you stop working
like sitting down, since most of us sit down so much.
Every day you die, he said, your first heart is
forced to work even harder. Circulation slows down, swelling begins,
blood pressure rises, Your risk of heart failure can actually skyrocket.
(18:15):
Last month, US scientists studied more than eighty thousand people
found a short, brisk walk was more beneficial than walking
at a slower pace for three hours.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
Yeah, the old just to twenty minutes a day.
Speaker 4 (18:29):
The old adage of the ten thousand steps might be
too much, and they say seven thousand's probably enough if
you do it right.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
Sure, let's see or like I like to do it.
Here we go and my little pedometer. Here, let's see
how many steps I've got? Six hundred, six hundred and thirty.
That's what I like to aim for.
Speaker 4 (18:53):
Undred thirty steps. Yeah, that doesn't seem like very much.
Oh well it was they were brisk.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Oh they were Would you do walk up the stairs today?
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Your dream guy, the new dream guy? What does he
look like? Well, we've got a profile and we'll tell
you about it coming up next.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
Naked and underneath the sixty Freeway.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
Hey Gary, Shannon, John down in nornge coutty, Hey John. So,
Gary's neck smells like baloney? Yeah? What does Shannon's neck
smells like?
Speaker 2 (19:29):
I'm gonna say it smells like a dozen of red roses.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
Oh that was nice. I thought he was gonna be mean.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
It's something like five day old bacon grease or something.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
Yeah, thank you for that.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
No, No, is that what you meant.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
I haven't had bacon in quite a while.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
I know, that's why it's five days old. I'm guessing.
I don't know. He didn't have to be that complimentary
that like, you don't know John. It could be anybody.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
He doesn't know me. I could be anybody. But he
thinks I smell like roses, and that was very nice.
Speaker 4 (20:07):
The New York Times is reporting that Russia or Russian
proxies have been flying drones over the routes that the
United States and its allies have been using to move
military supplies through eastern Germany. That somehow these drones have
been collecting intelligence that obviously could be used to bolster
Russia's sabotage campaign and assist the Russian troops that are
(20:30):
currently active in Ukraine.
Speaker 3 (20:32):
That's not good.
Speaker 1 (20:34):
The new dream guy, what does he look like? Well,
according to The New York Times, there's been a return
of the hunk with a Heart of gold. For years,
he was left in the dustbin of retrograde mail figures,
sidelined in favor of something more sophisticated. The self aware outsider,
(20:57):
the flustered nerd, the romantic fit now. There is a
clear craving for the fantasy man who seems sweetly naive, simple,
almost oafish, concerned mostly with working out and the pleasure
of a protein shake. If he seems unfazed by the
(21:18):
byzantine requirements of modern masculinity, it's largely because he doesn't
know or care that they exist. Well, everybody seems to
be doing the lifting protein game right This seems to
be very in right now, So that's where that comes from.
I think the politically ambiguous box that has checked on
(21:43):
the new dream guy is because people are tired of
being involved and hearing about it all the time and
at every turn. It's one thing to be involved, it's
another thing to go home and still be involved and
politically active. When you want your downtime, your me time,
your decompression time, you can do both. And I think
that people don't want to be hit over the head
(22:03):
with it all the time, twenty four hours a day
in their private relationships. I don't know, maybe people do well.
Speaker 4 (22:10):
I'm trying to formulate this in my head before I
say it, which isn't going to work. But there's something
to be said about a quiet confidence we have this
promo running where you say, we don't need to show
our military dominance, right, it's just kind of an understood
thing about our American military, the most powerful military in
(22:33):
the world, and we don't need parades to show that off.
The most attractive qualities in people are oftentimes the ones
that they don't put on full display.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
The loudest person in the room is the weakest person
in the room.
Speaker 4 (22:49):
One way to put it, and the way that they
write this up one side politically, at least on one side,
supposedly you have the average liberal male a description is affeckless,
try hard, overly intellectual, self centered, and neurotic. And on
the other side you have someone so unbothered by things
that he seems like a human version of Ferdinand the Bull.
Speaker 1 (23:12):
Those are two polar opposites, though, yeah, you know that's
the stereotype, right.
Speaker 3 (23:20):
Well, And it's.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
The guy who is physically the strongest is not always
the one that shows it off, right, Or the woman
who is the smartest is not the one who has
to tell you that she's the smartest or physically strong,
whatever whatever quality. It's not always that person that appears
(23:45):
to be the strongest or smartest or whatever that actually
is because if you are if you do have that
quality in you where you are unusually strong or you
are unusually smart, very rarely do you have to go
around showing that to people.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
I think that, Yeah, you don't want somebody who's a blowhard, right,
that's not the new dream guy. You want somebody who
cares about taking care of himself, which is where the
beefy thing comes from. They say beefy, but I think
they just mean people in shape, guys in shape that
that work out. You want somebody who cares about to
(24:20):
be in shape, or you don't have to be chiseled,
but just who you know isn't going to be you
know using uh, well never mind, you be very nice.
Speaker 3 (24:33):
I want to know where that was going to go.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
You know, somebody who who doesn't care about their body
or whatever, or doesn't whatsoever? Right, you know, you want
somebody to just innately. You want somebody who's going to
be sticking around, you know.
Speaker 3 (24:47):
For health reasons. Yeah maybe not for right, maybe not
for But.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
You also don't want to date somebody who's zero fun
in the food department, like somebody's like, oh I only
have macro whatever, I don't even know how to end
that sentence. You know that never seems like fun. I
remember going. I remember one of my girlfriends, my college roommate,
and her husband at the time, they would constantly get
into fights because she would take his protein. She was
(25:15):
using the same protein powder, and like he got mad
because she was using all his protein powder, and I
remember thinking, what an aile, Like awful, this is an
awful person. Now she ended up divorcing him, and now
she's a lesbian, which explains a lot, but it goes
back to that whole, Like, there's a couple problems I
have with the protein powder story. Number one that the
(25:35):
husband at the time was so interested in his physique
that he got into a fight with his wife over it,
kind of thing like that should not What should come
first is your marriage and your relationship, and then the whole.
I want to have protein powder in the morning, whatever,
and if I don't, it's not the end of the world. Right,
There's just a couple of problems with that. But I
don't want to be with a guy who's more interested
(25:57):
in his looks than I'm interested in my looks.
Speaker 4 (26:01):
There's a so everything in moderation. Yeah, you want them
to pay attention, but you don't want them to be obsessed. Yes,
there's a funny way that they said. Articles in recent
months have explored those conflicting versions of the ideal man.
They should read more novels, but they should avoid the
pointy header to European novels. They should want to show
off their partners as arm candy, but in a non
(26:22):
objectifying fashion. They should get along with their partner's friends
while cultivating passionate friendships themselves.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
You know what all I'm hearing right now is the
Barbie speech, but for men.
Speaker 4 (26:34):
Stoic but tear jerked, compassionable, sorry, companionable but rigid.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
We're asking a lot out of men.
Speaker 3 (26:42):
Liquid but gas.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Yeah, all of that? What gas? I don't want that.
Don't want that.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
I think they mean it, and it's different hard. No,
Oh my gosh, it's it is.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
That's next.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI AM.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
Six forty. Angels lost to the Rangers last night, big time,
twenty to three. They have the day off today, but
they'll move on to Houston tomorrow to take on the Astros.
Speaker 4 (27:18):
Dodgers be the Reds five to one. I guess show
Hey got his first win last night.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Pitching wise, they had about five hundred thousand strikeouts in
that game. They had like nineteen strikeouts, just a lot.
She had nine.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
I think Diamondbacks Dodgers have the day off today. The
Dodger Diamondbacks will come to town tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
I twenty seven.
Speaker 4 (27:41):
Yeah, that's pretty good before if they don't need the
ninth inning, they didn't need the night That's true, it's
even more impressive.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
More impressive, higher percentage.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
It's time for bike Naro and I are yard layer
at the day off. Roger, get off my play, Roger, Roger,
what's our rector?
Speaker 3 (28:02):
Victor Enoughismen, I have a hand with these mucky pipe
and snakes on his money.
Speaker 2 (28:09):
It's Gary and Shannon's Terror in the Skies on KFI, A.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Thirty nine year old dad from Oregon suffered a fatal
heart attack sitting next to his wife during a flight
home from a birthday in South America.
Speaker 4 (28:29):
It was from Bolivia, Andres Castro just suddenly stopped breathing.
According to his brother, the return flight from Bolivia, that
meant that the pilots had to make an emergency landing
in Columbia. The emergency crews took that off. The plane
took him to a hospital. Obviously a little too late.
He was pronounced dead.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
This is an awful terror in the sky story. I
expect nudity and fights when we do tear in the skuys.
Speaker 4 (28:57):
Well, I don't know if he was weren't clothes when
he had heart time, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (29:05):
Doesn't say in this story. So I mean.
Speaker 4 (29:09):
So now the family's trying to figure out how they're
going to get his body back from Colombia to the
United States. They're raising money. They have raised several thousand dollars.
They have enlisted the help of Senator Ron Wyden from
their home state in Oregon, so hopefully it gets done.
The other story is that Delta has agreed to pay
a seventy nine million dollars settlement for a bunch of
(29:33):
people in South LA after they dumped fuel on a
bunch of neighborhoods. If you remember this January of twenty twenty,
there was a Triple seven that turned back to lax
It had taken off from La and was going to Shanghai.
They had engine trouble just after they took off. But
they can't just turn around and land because the plane
(29:55):
is too heavy. You're going to break everything from the
landing gear up to the to the bottom of the plane.
So they have to dump fuel reserves since they exceeded
their max landing weight by about one hundred and sixty
thousand pounds. And when you do that, it's got to
go somewhere. The majority of the time, they'll do it
out in the middle of nowhere over the ocean.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
Is this the one where twenty passengers were kicked off
the flight for what?
Speaker 2 (30:20):
Well?
Speaker 1 (30:20):
This happened on a British Airways flight. Twenty people were
kicked off the flight because the plane was over its
weight limit. And I was thinking that would suck. If
you're one of the people, They're like you, no, this
is like one hundred and sixty thousand pounds, it could
be of those would be huge people. The residents that
(30:41):
lived along the trail where the fuel was dumped all
filed a class action lawsuit arguing the plane was too
low should never have emptied over the densely populated neighborhoods.
One of the things that happens is if you dump
fuel at altitude at a high enough place, you're high
enough in the air by the time it reaches then
it is completely you know, not vaporized, but is in
(31:05):
such small droplets you wouldn't necessarily notice it. This case,
they said that they were too low when they did
it and that it caused problems, health problems, et cetera.
Speaker 3 (31:16):
After that happened.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
How excited are you for Sabrina Carpenter's new album on Friday?
Speaker 4 (31:26):
I didn't know that she was. She just put out
an album. It seems like not that long ago.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
I don't know. I don't know how quickly they do
turn around.
Speaker 1 (31:34):
On I thought this would be up your alley.
Speaker 3 (31:36):
Well, you know me pretty well.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
I would say, well, she's got an interview with Gail King,
which I think you also.
Speaker 4 (31:43):
That I did see. You know that it was on
this TV over here really earlier.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Yeah, I knew that you would be in tune with that,
at least because Gail King's involved.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
Gail King interviewing a twenty year old pop star doesn't
ring true to me.
Speaker 3 (32:00):
There's nobody.
Speaker 4 (32:01):
There's nobody else an entire network that is a little
bit closer to Sabrina's age that would be more.
Speaker 1 (32:07):
Barbara Walters interviewed people of all ages.
Speaker 3 (32:11):
You're right that's probably Katie.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
Couric Walter Cronkite. I'm just saying names journalists.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
Some of them are dead.
Speaker 1 (32:27):
Oh my gosh. Yes, I just can't get over how
this show is flying by. I feel like we just
got here, well one of us did, and I've already
been compared to the lady in Matilda, the gym teacher.
Speaker 3 (32:45):
Now, hold on a second, it's been a big day.
It was not that you look anything like the gym
teacher for Matilda.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
No, Richie said, you look exactly like that.
Speaker 3 (32:54):
I did. Not Richie said was let me translate what
he said.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Coming off the guy at Ari, I telling me I
looked like Jennifer Coolidge. It's not a good week.
Speaker 4 (33:08):
The bulky sweatshirt that you're wearing because you were cold
was giving gym teacher vibes. And his reference was the
gym teacher from Matilda.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
Yeah, like the worst gym teacher ever.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
Basicly, No, that's the worst gym teacher.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
I didn't see Matilda.
Speaker 3 (33:26):
You have to watch it.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
I know I'm gonna watch it. I'm going to I'm
gonna watch it tonight.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
You didn't even finish Blazing Saddles.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
My mother was in my home and she was repeating
things she heard. So I couldn't do it.
Speaker 3 (33:37):
That's not a great I.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
Could not do it. I feel like blazing saddles. I
don't want even round.
Speaker 4 (33:41):
I don't want to even to ruin it like his
mom's out there screaming, where are the white women at?
Speaker 1 (33:46):
Yeah? Pretty much?
Speaker 3 (33:52):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (33:52):
I would pay money to hear that. Oh, I would.
If you miss any part of the show, I understand.
But you can always go back and check out the podcast.
Every day, right after the show we put everything up, everything,
warts and all right back up there. And then on
the weekends we do the gas Weekend Fix, which, for legal.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Reasons, call it baloney neck.
Speaker 4 (34:13):
It's a portion of the show that we can't put
any we can't put on the air.
Speaker 3 (34:19):
Yeah, just like Crackle Barrow.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
Am I ever going to get rid of that?
Speaker 3 (34:23):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (34:25):
I don't know if we're ever going to do a
stories about Crackle Barrow again. Trending, we go back to
Gary and Shannon.
Speaker 3 (34:33):
You've been listening to the Gary and Shannon Show.
Speaker 4 (34:36):
You can always hear us live on KFI AM six
forty nine am to one pm every Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand.
Speaker 3 (34:43):
On the iHeartRadio ap