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. President Trump said he's directing the
opening of Guantanamo Bay now to hold the.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Worst of the worst.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
They say they've got thirty thousand beds for criminal illegal
immigrants living illegally in the United States. After again, this
is some people who came here and are criminal because
they came here illegally. It's because they came here illegally
and committed heinous crimes. We made this announcement right before
he signed that Lake and Riley Act into law.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Bottom of the hour, we're going to talk a little
bit more about the ASAP Rocky trial. Rihanna was a
pretty high profile attendee today. We also have what you
Watch on Wednesday coming up later on in a few minutes. Actually,
Tony Robbins, motivational speaker, philanthropist, author, entrepreneur, he's going to
join us. We're going to be talking more about the
millions of dollars that he's donated to Dream Center LA
(00:57):
for relief efforts after our wildfire.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
What else is going on?
Speaker 4 (01:02):
Time four?
Speaker 5 (01:03):
What's happening What's Happening is sponsored by Abner Gat Water
Damage Fire Damage.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Burglary called Public Adjuster Abner Gat eight one eight nine
one seven five to two five. You heard it here
a short time ago the Amber alert that has been
issued for a couple of little kids out of the
San Joaquin Valley after their mother was found dead. Officials
believed that dad is responsible for the kidnapping and for
killing the mom. This would have happened yesterday afternoon. The
(01:33):
sheriffs in Sheriff's Deputies in King's County went to a
house in Hanford for a welfare check and they found
the woman dead with a gunshot wound. They believe that
twenty three year old Jonathan Maldonado Cruz of Hanford left
the home earlier that day at about one in the
morning with his two kids after allegedly killing their mother.
So they're looking for three year old Aria Maldonado and
(01:54):
two year old Alena Maldonado. Described both of them small kids,
one twenty five pounds the other twenty pounds. I mean,
they're beautiful little girls. This guy is apparently driving a
gray Hyundai Elantra twenty twenty Hondai Elantra with a license
plate that is eight lz D zero eighty four, and
(02:16):
they said yes. Even though this happened in Hanford, the
assumption is that this guy may be headed to Mexico,
which is why it's such a big deal here in
southern California.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Harvey Weinstein is begging a judge in Manhattan today to
put him on trial earlier than planned. He says he's
not sure he'll live until the spring while incarcerated in
the hell hole that is Riker's He said, while sitting
in a wheelchair, to the judge, every day I'm at
Riker's Island. It's a mystery to me how I'm still walking.
(02:47):
I'm asking and begging you, your honor. I can't hold
on anymore. I'm holding on because I want justice for
myself and I want this to be over with.
Speaker 3 (02:54):
He's got to wait until mid April, the judge said.
The murder trial is set in Stone. Yep, you're screw
bad person. The suspect in the Gilgo Beach murders is
trying to bar DNA evidence and then have seven separate
trials for the seven deaths that he is accused of.
(03:14):
Rex Huerman's lawyers have argued that DNA analysis relied on
by prosecutors is not actually widely accepted in the scientific
community and should be excluded from the trial they've been investigating.
Police have the deaths of at least ten people, most
of them female sex workers, whose remains were discovered along
and isolated highway not far from Gilgo Beach.
Speaker 6 (03:33):
There on Long Island's south.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
Shore, a Pakistani YouTube star was gifted a lion cub
on his wedding day.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
How has avoided jail.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
He promised to judge to upload animal rights videos for
a year.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
That's an interesting sentence, isn't it. This young.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
Lion cub, resembling Simba from The Lion King was it
presented to him in a gold chained cage in front
of thousands of guests who had partied late into the night.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
On the wedding day.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
A captioned a video of the event, It's raining. Gifts
racked up nearly ten million views. But the morning after
the wedding, the police raided his home, confiscated Simba and
kept the newly wedding custody overnight. They say that the
animal was in poor condition. It was very cold, it
(04:30):
was just roaming around the garage. That's unfortunate, though you're
given the gift. It's not like he acquired the lion.
He was just given the gift of the cub.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
New York City guy admitted to stealing more than one
hundred thousand dollars dollars worth of sports memorabilia while on
the job as a Postal Service sorting clerk. Thirty four
year old, a resident of the Bronx, leaded guilty to
theft by mail of mail by a postal service employee
said that several parcels designed for a consignment auction house
that was located in Clifton, New Jersey, went missing, and
(05:03):
they said that the company specializes in the sale of
trading cards and sports memorabilia that it receives from customers
around the world. That they said this guy swiped at
least ten parcels that contained valuable trading cards and sports memorabilia,
including trading cards of Michael Jordan, Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays,
current NHL star Connor McDavid, jerseys worn by Reggie Miller
(05:24):
and other NBA athletes, and autograph pictures of Rafael Nadal
and other famous players. He's been ordered to pay one
hundred and eight almost one hundred and nine thousand dollars
in restitution.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Your Jeopardy question of the day Your category is inventions
for one thousand dollars. Bench a blindness prevention advocate, Doctor
Patricia Bath invented a laser device to treat this clouding
of the eyes lens?
Speaker 2 (05:54):
What is glaucoma cataracts?
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Sorry, okay, roll, I need to hammer yourself over the
head with a negative sounder. Well, as you see with
natural disasters, man made disasters, what have you? Usually, the
community rises above and makes you feel good no matter
where it is. Well when it happens here in LA,
(06:19):
you see a lot of big names do good. Tony
Robbins is one of those big names. Tony Robbins is
actually from Hollywood, born in North Hollywood, went to Glendora
High as well, and has gotten very involved via the
Dream Center LA to help people and he's going to
match is it up to a million dollars?
Speaker 6 (06:40):
Tony? What are you thinking?
Speaker 4 (06:42):
Well? Nice to meet you guys, Listen.
Speaker 5 (06:44):
I was there on Tuesday and Wednesday when the fires
broke out to visit some friends I don't live in
LA have them for twenty five years, but it's you know,
my upbringing, so I wanted to donate a million dollars.
Actually what I found was people are been really generous
with clothing, but the big problem is, you know obviously
how that's the most expensive piece, and then food. So
I'm actually donating four and a half million dollars. But
(07:04):
the Dream Center I found out about from iHeartRadio and
I went and did my homework and they're doing such
an amazing job reaching the people that need it most.
So if people go to Dreamcenter dot org and want
to donate, I'll match your dollars. Then it's all double
whatever you put out there during that up to a
million dollars of that group. But I've also done it
with Airbnb and they're going to donate five thousand rooms
I believe to Dream Center as well, and also with
(07:26):
Beyonce's group Big Good or Be Good rather should say.
And I'm donating thirty five million meals also through farm
Length for the next year because when the media goes away,
people are still going to be hungry. And then I
lost my own home years and years ago, so I
know what it feels like, and so I have three
tools that I give people to help their kids and
themselves get through the emotion of it as well. That
we're not charging for anything, obviously, it's all just.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
A gift when people. I mean, there's eleven million people
in La County, and several thousands of them have been
impacted by these fires. There's still another ten and a
half million who are not necessarily impacted but feel the
emotional toll of this. Perhaps could you talk about how
(08:10):
how important it is for recording and you talk all that,
how important is it for you to be involved in
the recovery effort?
Speaker 5 (08:19):
Well that's you know a few years ago when I
lost my own home, I had three children, and you know,
we got out with the clothes on our back, and
you know, obviously you feel grief and anger and frustration
and all those pieces because everything I had in those days.
I'm old enough when your pictures were just your pictures.
They weren't on the web or anywhere else. But I
you know, I had to discipline my disappointment, right, I
had to show my kids that, look, you know, we
(08:40):
lost things, we didn't lose each other. Things are replaceable.
And so as a result of that, I also worked
on different tools and so I built. I'm sure you're
familiar to acupuncture of five thousand year old you know,
healing process. There's something called energy tapping. Well, you can
tap without needles in those same locations. There's three hundred
scientific studies and it will wipe out fear or in trauma.
(09:00):
And so I built an application, and uh, we've had
twenty seven million people use it, and so we know
one point two million people, for example, have done this
nine minute tapping and reduce their grief by forty two percent,
give you an example. So I'm providing a year of
that for free as well. And there's a company I
don't have a portion of. It's called Newcolm that I
use every night that calms your nervous system so you
(09:21):
can sleep. I use it just to calm myself down,
has something to get you going in the morning. I
don't so much need that one so much, but I
use it every single night at six hundred dollars a year.
And I've convinced them to partner with me and they're
going to provide a year access no strings attached as well.
And then you know I do a seminars because of COVID,
I you know, five years ago I said, people are trapped.
Speaker 4 (09:40):
In their homes. Let me eliminate money, travel time. But
so not. I'm sorry, say again, did I lose you?
Speaker 2 (09:50):
No word?
Speaker 6 (09:50):
You're still here?
Speaker 4 (09:52):
Oh, I'm saying you know.
Speaker 5 (09:53):
So when COVID happened, I decided and I normally do
stadiums and they all were shut down because of COVID.
So I wanted to reach people in their home home.
So I created this Time to Rise Summit where three
days for three hours each day, kind of like going
to a movie, but you can do it from your
home or your office. You can do it an iPad
if you've been displaced, and it's for everybody, and there's
no charge for I do it once a year and
(10:13):
if anyone wants to come to it, anyone in southern
California can do the first two things. It's not for
the rest of the United States because I'm paying a
good sum for those, but anyone can come to that event.
And if they just go to Tony Helps la dot Com,
all these things they're there. So if you want to
see all the organizations we've donated money to and you
want someone who needs housing, you'll see the places you
(10:33):
can go. Dream Center be my first choice. Secondly, you'll
see what we're doing for food if you need food
or if you want to donate food. And thirdly you'll
see these tools that we've also provided that are free
for anybody. So it's all available at tonyhelps La dot
com or coach directly. If you want to do that directly,
just to Dreamcenter dot org. We'll double your whatever you
(10:54):
put in there for that as well.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
Tony.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
Specifically, people want to know when they, you know, chip
in what they can in. Where specifically is the money going.
Speaker 2 (11:02):
Do we know, yes, it's.
Speaker 5 (11:04):
Going to deliver for housing for people. There's a little bit.
There's also for some of the kids. I know dream
Center is getting some computers and elements for kids who
can't get back to school. But three million of it's
for housing and it's directly for that. There's no charges
in between. A million of it I did for food
and a half million I did for the La Fire
Department because their dispatch system was damaged and so now
(11:26):
they'll have a video dispatch system that'll be able to
use when anything like this happens. But also, as you
well know, LA's got some big events coming up with
a World Cup. You know with the Olympics of the
super Bowl, and they really wouldn't be able to handle
it without it, so we've donated that as well. So
you can donate to any of this, or if you
know anybody in need, you can go to those organizations.
All the contacts are there for you to make it happen,
and then anyone can download. Anyone Southern California can download
(11:49):
these free resources. They're pretty amazing and there's something like
you can do for your child if they're feeling trauma,
or yourself, you're feeling frustration or fear, anger, overwhelmed. It's
truly extremely effective. The event's available to anyone. Anyone can
do that because I normally do that this time of
year once a year anyway, and anyone could go to
that if they go to Time to Rise Summit dot
com Time to Rise summitt dot com and it starts
(12:10):
actually tomorrow. It's Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, three days in
a row, about three hours each. We'll have over a
million one point two million people now from one hundred
and ninety three countries participating in that.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
Number one New York Times bestselling author, life and business
strategist Tony Robbins a pleasure to talk to you. Thanks
for the work that you're doing, and thanks for encouraging
people to get involved.
Speaker 4 (12:28):
Well, thanks for what you're doing on Heart radio. You
guys are putting the spotlight. I don't know. You're doing
a big fundraiser tomorrow. I hope everybody participates.
Speaker 6 (12:34):
Yeah, that'll be fun too, all right.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Dreamcenter dot org is where you're going to find a
bunch of information, and of course Tony's information you can
find all over social media.
Speaker 6 (12:41):
A couple of stories we're following.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
President Trump's Budget office has rescinded a memo that freeze
is spending on federal grants less than two days after
it sparked some pretty wide spread confusion and some legal
challenges across the country. The White House has confirmed omb
did pull the memo today in a two sentence notice
to its agencies and departments, but said that the underlying
executive order targeting federal spending in areas like diversity, equity
(13:04):
and inclusion, and climate change are still in place.
Speaker 6 (13:07):
The Monday evening.
Speaker 3 (13:09):
Order from the White House Office of Management and Budget
did spark some uncertainty over some of the financial lifeline
that exists for states and schools and organizations that rely
on a lot of money, trillions of dollars of money
from Washington. So the White House was kind of scrambling
to explain what would and wouldn't be subject to this
pause in funding.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
Well, Rihanna has shown up downtown La rare court appearance
at the trial of her partner, father of her children,
Asap Rocky.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
She appeared this.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Morning, sat in that criminal courthouse there next to Rocky's
mother and sister. He has been standing trial on felony
charges that he fired a handgun at a former friend.
Rocky's attorneys had said before the trial began last week
that Rihanna could appear in the audience to support him,
(14:03):
but it was unlikely that he might be too protective
of her and their family to want her present. I
guess they needed the court needed to know for security
purposes of how many bailiffs to have on hand something
like that.
Speaker 3 (14:14):
This also became a question for the jurors, which was,
first of all, do you know who this is pointing
to the defendant Asap Rocky, And do you know who
he has had made babies with? Do you know Rihanna
and a lot more people knew Rihanna than they did
asap Rockett Rockets, but they all said that their opinion
of her or their knowledge of her probably wouldn't sway
their decision one way or the other.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
Asap Rocky's legal name is Rakim Athelson Mayers. He could
get twenty four years in prison if he's convicted of
these two felonyc counts of assault with a semi automatic firearm.
He kind of snubbed his nose at the plea deal
decided to roll the dice in trial. He and Rihanna,
they're thirty six years old. They have two sons together,
(14:57):
a two year old and a one year old.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
No I was going to say their names, but they're
the children, Riza, I don't I don't know.
Speaker 2 (15:09):
I'm just gonna screw it up.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
So that's the two year old and then one year
old little girl named riot Rose.
Speaker 6 (15:16):
It's a fun name.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
So yesterday asap Relly.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
Was testifying, they both so the A SAP is the
crew that they came out of. They all came from
the same high school. Apparently that's why there's an asap
Rocky and an acep rally, And I'm sure there's other Asaps,
He described, do you want me to call you Asap?
Speaker 6 (15:40):
Gary?
Speaker 3 (15:41):
Oh? He was on the verge of talking about what
actually happened. They had been in a close relationship. They
had been friends, but that that kind of fell apart
when Asap Rocky started getting famous, and he said the
relationship was strained for years. It was getting worse in
the previous days, but he was still furious when Rocky
(16:03):
allegedly pulled a gun on him after a fight that
began the moment they met up at the w Hotel
in Hollywood.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Aceprelly testified, I told him to use it because mentally
I couldn't believe it, he said, as acep Rocky stared
at him intently from the defense table. Aceprelly testified, I
physically could not believe there was a gun in my face.
That was the breaking point for me.
Speaker 2 (16:27):
He said.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
He had expected to argue, but also to reconcile with Rocky,
and the last thing you wanted to do was get
into a fight that could ruin this management business that
he had built. I'm Aceprelly telling the court he's famous.
I'm nobody. This is a strange time for asp Rocky
right now. He's up for a Grammy Award.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
Sunday night is when they're going to be handed out
at Crypto, just a couple miles away from the courthouse.
Also set to headline the roll in Loud Music Festival.
He's going to be in a movie with Denzel Washington,
directed by Spike Lee.
Speaker 6 (16:59):
Come up.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
He's going to co chair the met Gala in May.
Unless that is he is in jail.
Speaker 2 (17:06):
So you can't pull a gun on someone.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
Well, you're not supposed to.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
Today, acep Relly testified about the moment asap Rocky allegedly
fired a gun. They had been shouting angrily. He was
walking away after an initial confrontation and scuffle when Rocky
pulled the gun held it in the air. Aceprelli told
the jury today, he turned around and then it was
like boom. The whole thing was like a movie. He
(17:32):
kind of like pointed down and shot the first shot.
He said, I felt my hand hot, I was hit
or I was grased. I didn't have a hole or nothing. See,
you can pull a gun on someone, but you can't
fire it.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
Is that right?
Speaker 6 (17:47):
In other rap news?
Speaker 2 (17:48):
Can you can you pull a gun on someone?
Speaker 6 (17:51):
No?
Speaker 2 (17:51):
Oh, I'm just asking.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
Well, don't don't do that. Don't I don't have a gun.
You've taken all my weapons. It's better that way for
protecting you from yourself. Do you know dank demos is asap?
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Dank no?
Speaker 6 (18:08):
Dank demos no.
Speaker 3 (18:11):
A wrapper out of the Detroit area has filed a
lawsuit against Lyft after she said that a driver hurt
her feelings by denying her a ride to a Detroit
Lions watch party.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
Kind of rough to have the last name as dumbass, right,
demos whatever. Dajua Blanding is her real name. She recorded
the incident.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
She posted it to TikTok and Instagram, and then hired
an attorney to sue lift and the driver for discrimination.
Do you know what her discriminating thing was?
Speaker 4 (18:42):
No?
Speaker 3 (18:42):
The driver said that the low profile tires on his
car could not handle a lady of her stature. She
comes in at approximately her words five and fifty four pounds.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
Oh that's a lot, and said it's time for some
boil chicken.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
The driver said, yo, I don't think I can I
don't think my car can handle it, and she said
that's going to cost you. So he said, you're going
to have to go uber XL at that point, and
we haven't done this in a while.
Speaker 6 (19:13):
It's time for what you're watching Wednesday. The following program
is brought to you in living color, but you're watching
it in there. Americans love television. They win their kids.
Speaker 4 (19:23):
USA television much beta.
Speaker 3 (19:24):
You've been watching too many of those live television shows.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
So I did mention.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
Last night I started watching that documentary on HBO about
this weird thing that goes on on YouTube of families
who document their family life constantly, day after day on YouTube,
raising babies, toddlers. It was it was almost weird that
the husbands were super in on it too, in terms of, oh,
(19:52):
this will get us, this is better content, this will
get us. They're super into the analytics and the lighting
and the this couple's really good because they know they're angles.
I mean, it's just you would freak out if you watched.
I only watched part one of the documentary, and I
was thinking, oh my god, Gary would freak out if they.
Speaker 6 (20:08):
More reasons to pull away from people.
Speaker 3 (20:10):
I need to find some good people in these documentaries,
not people that I'm angry with.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
I'm going to start bringing you good.
Speaker 6 (20:19):
People, I hope. So I certainly hope.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
So wife and I watched okay, so two movies over
the last weekend. I mean, I had this whole list
of shows that we've seen since we last did this,
which was pre Christmas.
Speaker 6 (20:32):
I decided to narrow it down. We mentioned earlier.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
That that we watched a complete unknown. This is Timothy
Shallomey as Bob Dylan, and it made Bob Dylan look
like a giant a hole.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
I've heard good things about the movie, and a couple
people said that they had met Bob Dylan and he
was lovely.
Speaker 2 (20:49):
Just to pepper that.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
In well, among other things, he kind of took on
at least the character in the movie. Again, I don't
know how true to life it is, but the character
in the movie, I'm the artistic guy.
Speaker 6 (21:02):
I'm only going to play the songs that I want.
Speaker 3 (21:04):
So when he shows up and starts gaining a lot
of popularity, shows up to a concert and is like,
I'm not gonna play dust in the Wind, I'm not
gonna play whatever Bob Dylan song they wanted to stuff
exactly and that, I mean, it was kind of a
kind of what you would expect from that kind of
a show about that kind of a guy, So it
(21:25):
wasn't Timothy Shallomy did great. I didn't know he could
play guitar, and I didn't know he could sing at
least an impression of Bob Dylan. But he also did
that on Saturday Night Live this last week.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
I think he was loved and revered for being the
anti play the hits guy. You get a lot of
goodwill if you're a play the hits person. Band artists,
what have you. You go, you play your hits, But
there's definitely a fraction of the musical world that refuses
to give in to that kind of pop culture desire
(21:55):
or request.
Speaker 3 (21:56):
The other thing we watched on Saturday complete change of
pace was Juror Number two. This is a legal thriller
directed by Clint Eastwood where JK.
Speaker 6 (22:06):
Simmy was in it, Zoey Deutsch's in it.
Speaker 3 (22:08):
Key for Sutherland actually has a part in this whole thing,
which crazy thing silly?
Speaker 1 (22:12):
I mean, I live with somebody spoiler alert who works
in the legal industry and sometimes when I braktre when
sometimes when I bring him things like this, he'll just
laugh through them.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
Oh yes, I mean again, And it's it. There's nothing
that stands out.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
So trite, and it was so set up and it
was just so silly.
Speaker 6 (22:31):
It's just for me.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
It was such a palette cleanser after the Bob Dylan
movie because I knew what.
Speaker 6 (22:36):
I was going to get through. Okay, I figured it out.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
I would have never picked the Bob Dylan movie for
you in a million years, I.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
Was, you know, but I picked Flight Risk for me.
So that just goes to.
Speaker 6 (22:46):
Show what I know.
Speaker 3 (22:48):
We finally finished the Agency on Showtime. Paramount Plus I
Think is where you find it, and this is a
CIA agent falls in love with somebody but can't tell
her what he actually does, and when he does tell
her what he does, she turns out to have been
somebody who is targeted by another agency that now he's
in this caught up in this whole international scheme. It
(23:09):
was well done. Michael Fassbender plays the main character in it.
There's a bunch of other people that you would recognize.
But it was a very slow. Compared to other CIA
thriller kind of things that are full of action shots.
This was very slow, very very slow, but it was good.
(23:29):
It was well done. On Tuesday, was It What's Today?
Speaker 6 (23:34):
Wednesday?
Speaker 3 (23:35):
No Monday Night, NBC it's available on Peacock now, but
NBC aired Ladies and Gentlemen fifty years of SNL music.
All of the history of music on Saturday Night Live,
whether it was the musical guests that came to perform,
or even the music that's been involved in a lot
of their skits. I mean, think of d in a Box,
(23:55):
remember when Low the Island guys started doing that with
Justin Timberlake and all of the different musicals. It was
absolutely well worth it. Stayed up way too late watching
the whole thing. It's probably I think it's about two
and a half hours, if I'm not mistaken. But it's
really well done, and just even if all you did
was watch the first eight minutes of it, the montage
(24:16):
that they're able to put together of almost every single
musical guest on Saturday Night Live over the course of
fifty years is incredible. I mean, the idea that you
can edit music together and have it make sense the
way that they did.
Speaker 6 (24:31):
It's really great.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
Questlove, who does Jimmy Fallon's band on the Tonight Show
was the one of the producers on the show.
Speaker 6 (24:40):
Very cool.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
John Cobalt Show is coming up next.
Speaker 6 (24:43):
I can't wait for that. I like listening to that
on the way home.
Speaker 2 (24:47):
Do you I do good?
Speaker 4 (24:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (24:48):
Yeah. John Cole listened to it. Well, see tomorrow stayed
Rye everybody, blessings, Hey.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
Gary and Kut, Gary and Shannon.
Speaker 6 (24:56):
Keep killing it. Peek out you've been listening to The
Gary and Shannon Show.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
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.