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July 17, 2025 29 mins
#WHATSHAPPENING – Police seize firetruck in posh L.A. neighborhood in case with bizarre twist. The event of the year? A ‘diva’ bookstore cat’s 10th birthday party. #STRANGESCIENCE – World’s biggest Mars rock sells for $5.3 million at auction. What are ‘blue zones’? 5 places on Earth where the healthiest people live
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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):
What else is going on?

Speaker 3 (00:11):
Time four? What's happening?

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (00:16):
What is happening? Brought to you by Trajan Wealth.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
Trajan Wealth will help you set and achieve your financial
goals for retirement your local trusted financial Fiduciarytrajanwealth dot com.
Oh my goodness, it is Disneyland's birthday, y'all. It is
the seventieth birthday of Disneyland opened its doors July seventeenth,
nineteen fifty five. Seventeen million dollars is what it costs

(00:43):
to build that theme park, one hundred and sixty acres
of what were once orange groves there in Anaheim. And huge, huge,
soon brought in huge profits that make seventeen million look
just silly.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
In fact, I believe the last.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
Estimate was disneyly makes about three billion every year. Wow,
what a great investment. While Disney, of course born in
Chicago back in nineteen oh one, worked as a commercial artist,
set up a small studio in Los Angeles to produce
his animated cartoons. It was nineteen twenty eight when his

(01:25):
short film Steamboat Willie, starring the character Mickey Mouse, became
a national sensation. It was the first animated film to
use sound, and Disney himself provided the voice for Mickey.
From there on, Disney exploded. In fact, his first feature
length cartoons, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in nineteen

(01:47):
thirty eight, that took three years to complete, went on
to be obviously a great commercial success, and then you
had Pinocchio and Dumbo and Bambi and Fantasia and all
of the things. But in the early fifties, that's when
Walt Disney began designing this huge amusement park to be
built near La He intended Disneyland to have educational as

(02:08):
well as amusement value.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Actually, the area I'm sitting right.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Now was one of the first ideas for the location
of Disneyland. But then they bought the land and that
farming community of Anaheim at the time twenty five miles
southeast of Los Angeles. Construction began in nineteen fifty four,
and then in summer of fifty five, special inventation invitations

(02:32):
were sent out for the opening of Disneyland. Unfortunately, back
then people were just as crooked as they are now,
and that special invitation the pass was counterfeited and thousands
of uninvited people were admitted into Disneyland on opening day,
and they found they were not ready for the public.

Speaker 2 (02:50):
No food and drink ran out.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
A woman's high heel shoe got stuck in the wet
asphalt of Main Street, USA. Oh the horror. And people
used to wear high heels to Disneyland. Mark Twain's steamboat
nearly capsized from too many passengers. Anyway, that's very fun.
Happy seventieth anniversary to Disneyland. Elsewhere, news not so great.

(03:15):
Judge in Idaho has lifted a sweeping gag order in
that Brian Coburger quadruple murder case that happened today. This
was the guy that avoided the death sentence by pleading
guilty earlier this month. Remember we told you he's the
one who killed those four University of Idaho students at
that off campus house. And the families were pissed off

(03:35):
that the death penalty was taken off the table. They
say they weren't even really told about it. A number
of news organizations had asked the court to lift the
gag order because a trial's no longer on the table,
and so they renewed that request after the guilty plea,
and during a hearing this morning, the judge agreed that

(03:55):
lifting the gag order would protect the First Amendment rights
of the public and the press. So expect to hear
more details coming out of that horror. This is going
to be a fun one to stay on top of.
Police and federal agents raided a Brentwood home yesterday and
they seized, among other evidence, a fire truck.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
It was kind of a faulty fire truck.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
It was tied to a Chino Hills man who was
arrested about two years ago for impersonating a law enforcement
officer and creating a fictitional fire department. We reported about
this on the show at the time. Major Crimes for
the LAPD confirms that they executed the search warrant in

(04:38):
Brentwood on South Rockingham, Yes that one, and they said
they would only say that a person at the home
was arrested on charges related to firearms violations, government fraud,
and impersonating a first responder. One of the items was
that fire truck registered to the San Muerte Fire Department.

(05:00):
Santa Muerte Fire department. There is no such thing. There
is a website that claims that there is a Santa
Muerte fire department, but that's about it. It was back
in July twenty twenty three a Chino Hills man identified
himself well. He was identified as forty two year old
Andrew Deboor. He was caught on surveillance cameras dressed in

(05:22):
a fake uniform, armed with a gun, a baton, pepper spray,
and a Santa Muerte badge, and he was illegally conducting
a traffic stop. He was arrested and booked for impersonating
a law enforcement officer in false imprisonment. Now they're not
talking about anything about this raid in Brentwood, about its

(05:43):
connection to that guy, or how the fake truck ended
up there.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
I guess we'll find out all of that.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
A judge is okay to release a woman. This was
the woman who stabbed that classmate to please slender Man.
Remember this, that was a long time now. Twenty fourteen,
when her and her friend went to a park and
stabbed another girl nineteen times. All three girls were twelve

(06:10):
years old at the time. One of them was sent
to a mental hospital and will be released. This was
all to please the horror character at the time, slender
Man just bizarre. And then we've got a retiree living
Orange County to live on a cruise ship at sea.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
This is her dream.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
She wants to move onto a cruise ship for the
next fifteen years and that's what she's gonna do. Sharon
Lane is her name, and she says it's actually costing
her less to live like that, and she says that
it's going to be nice having people take care of
me instead of taking care of everybody. About that. She's

(06:51):
seventy seven. She's a retired foreign language teacher. I started
watching this documentary on Netflix last night about a girl
that turned up missing on a cruise from nineteen ninety eight,
and I was thinking about the Keana the documentary, the
poop cruise documentary that you were talking about the other day,
and I thought, Man, it is a bad week or
bad month for a cruise industry with these documentaries coming out.

(07:15):
I mean, the one I was watching last night. I
don't remember the woman's name we went missing. Her first
name is Amy, I do believe, and yeah, she was
on a cruise with her parents and her brother. She's
twenty three at the time, and she just was missing.
And this documentary is pretty savage when it comes to
cruise ships and the rules or the lack thereof, and
just kind of the lase fair nature of the international

(07:38):
waters and when things happen out there, it makes it
sound like, you know, you could die any other cruise.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
It's wild.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
So between that and the poop cruise documentary, rough go
of things, we need something light and bright about cruises
to hit the streaming services to bounce back from that.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
What a pr mess.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
All right, when we come back, we'll tell you about
the birthday party that is all the talk in the
Montrose area and it's for a cat. I'll see your
chance at one thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
All right, I've got to feel good story for you.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
But if you don't like cats for whatever reason, you
will not feel good, So you can hate listen to
this story, all right, how about that. But for everybody else,
let's just enjoy them having something nice. This was a
party that was the result of months of preparation and

(08:40):
the site of the party was a bookstore in Montrose.
Beautiful little community there in Montrose. If you haven't explored it.
It was at Once upon a Time Bookstore in Montrose,
and it was the biggest event of the year at
the bookstore. Pippy long Stocking was earning ten years old.

(09:02):
Pippy long Stalking, you guessed it is the resident cat
at the country's oldest children's bookstore. Did you know that
at the country's oldest children's bookstores right in our backyard.
They're in Montrose Once Upon a Time Bookstore. Pippy, like
most cats are one to do, did not behave the

(09:25):
way she should on her birthday. Now she decided to
sleep through the whole thing. Pitppy long Stalking just snoozed
away on the ledge above the store's front door. The
owner of Once Upon a Time is Maureen Apolsios, and
she says, I did not get any sleep last night.

(09:47):
She was making last minute space adjustments to accommodate in
an expected one hundred guests, almost double last year's attendance.
That's right, This isn't just a double digit party for Pippy.
Pippy gets honored y every year. At our past parties,
Pippy always descended from her perch in time for the
birthday festivities, but on this go around on Sunday, maureene

(10:10):
so she was in full panic mode because the cat
was cutting it closer than ever. Pippy has only been
there for ten years. Pippy is a Calico Tabby mix
and she took up residence at the bookstore in twenty fifteen.
Apparently she had a predecessor named Kitty Mama. Difficult act

(10:33):
to follow, according to Maureen. She says, I've had cats
my whole life. None of my cats would ever make
the cut to come and be nice and gentle and
all of that, but that's how Kitty Mama was. But
then Kitty Mama died and Moraine was worried she'd never
replace her. But after consulting with the Pasadena Humane Society Elle,
who promised to put its finest behaviorists on the job,

(10:55):
her fears dissipated. Now, the shelter offered a few options,
but once Maureen laid eyes on Pippy, it was not
even a choice. Pippy was nine months old, and she
was calm and sweet and not skittish. She was perfect
now and any given weekday you can hear the term

(11:16):
where's Pippy? A dozen times over by children who turn
up at Once Upon a Time Bookstore. This is reminding me.
I think it's because we talked about Meg Ryan earlier.
But the Meg Ryan Tom Hanks movie when she you
Know You've Got Mail, the Classic, when she runs the
children's bookstore and she puts on the princess hat is

(11:38):
she doing story time? I'm just like, oh, I love that.
I love that whole scene. Seems like that is exactly
this place there in Montrose. The cat will give guests
a tour from time to time of the bookstore, even
provides her own book recommendations. Pippy is the bookstores employee
of the month every month, although recently another employee suggested

(12:02):
they give the accolade to a dog because Pippy had
been bad. I don't know how Pippy could ever be bad,
but she is a fan favorite, and she has become
synonymous with Once Upon a Time. She's a bit of
an institution there, says Laura Feston, who's gone there for
a long time. She's a local teacher as well. She
says that store is like a second home for me.

(12:23):
Would be if you're a teacher and you want to
get kids excited about books, right, And she says, a
cat just makes any home a better place. Drew Deawalt
is author of the best selling children's book The Day
the Korans Quit.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Oh, what a sad day. I don't want to read
that one. That's a heartbreaker.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Drew said that independent bookstores are fighting to stay alive
and that a bookstore pet is definitely a tool for
drawing business.

Speaker 2 (12:51):
He says, this is genius.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
I mean, yes, it's wonderful, and it's cute, and Pippy
is wearing pearls on her birthday and the whole bit.

Speaker 2 (12:58):
But this as a draw the.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
Business that Pippy draws in is undeeniable. In the hour
before Pippy's party, children scoured the room on a scavenger
hunt to find nine pippies, nine different pippies, dotting disguises
from a Dodger's jersey to a nineteen twenties flapper dress.
Some parents tagged along, others peruse the bookshelves where they

(13:25):
were making purchases because of Pippy's special day.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
So there you go.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Maybe one way to keep your uh, your bookstore alive,
get some pets up and again, guys, I mean, I
think we had the idea earlier in the week and
we should probably do it. Before someone gets back that
we get a cat around here.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
Yes, yes, you're a yes. Elmer is a yes.

Speaker 4 (13:51):
Keana is a yes too, Yes, forced so forced?

Speaker 2 (14:02):
That was the most forced yes. Ever. Where would we
put the litter box? So I was thinking about this
and we'd put it in here. Oh, I was thinking
of the bathroom.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
I don't want to subject other people. I mean, I
don't want to subject our cat to other people, is
what I should say. I don't want our cat to
have to poop in front of the people that work here.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
Is it a.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
Gary and Shannon show cat or a KFI cat?

Speaker 3 (14:27):
No?

Speaker 1 (14:27):
No, no, I mean we'll share with the KFI people.
But like, honestly, do you want some of those salespeople
playing with our cat?

Speaker 2 (14:34):
I don't know. No, hard No. What about just putting
the litter box in our office? No, that's totally fine.
There you go. No, they smell right.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Yeah, but that's what you empty them. Like, we can
empty the litter, and the litter has come a long way.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
Right, you have to empty the litter. Yeah, we can
get one of those fancy ones that spins. You don't
have to touch the pooh.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
I am all in. I am all in with all
the technology of the litter box. So so we're doing this. Okay,
I want to get like a mean one, you know.
I want to go to the shelter and be like, hey,
you know, I think it would provide a little personality.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
You know, we should get more.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Maybe, yes, think about what this cat can do for
our socials numbers.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Holy hell, you're gonna make some money off this cat.
All right, just a thought, just a thought.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
We got to get it done before Monday, so maybe
today Gary will lose it. Gary will definitely not be
pleased with this development. But you know what, this is
what happens when you go on vacation.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
Look out, Peter. Wait, who's Peter?

Speaker 1 (15:49):
See, everyone's dead to be but I forgot about all
of you go on vacation.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
You're done.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
All right, we'll talk strange science and we come back
to Gary and Shannon.

Speaker 3 (15:59):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (16:05):
White House Press Secretary of the Hour Caroline Levitt defended
the Trump administration's handling of Jeffrey Epstein, saying, quoting now,
some of the most trusted voices in the Republican Party
movement reviewed the files before the Justice Department decided not
to release them publicly. She also said that President Trump
does not support appointing a special prosecutor in the case,

(16:29):
and she went after the press for covering the controversy
like it's the biggest story that the American people care about.
I don't know if you if you spend time online,
it's it's pretty up there. So there was another big
piece of information that came out of the White House briefing,

(16:50):
and it was a diagnosis for the president chronic venous insufficiency.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
I may be saying that wrong.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Venus venous insufficiency, but not common condition, particularly in the
individuals over the age of seventy. It can cause swelling
in his lower legs, which it has in recent weeks.
And that that is why he's had those bruises on
his hand that media has picked up on seeing some

(17:17):
makeup on his hand, and that is just from some
bruising that they've been trying to hide. You'll notice it
on older people's hands. It's the veins, the coloration of them.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
I think I have got a little bit of that already.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
So it happens as we get older, all right, it's
time for strange science.

Speaker 3 (17:36):
Strange, say shame. It's like weird science but strange.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
A meteorite that is the largest known piece of Mars
on Earth has sold at auction for five point three
million dollars. Who bought it? That person wishes to remain anonymous.
It happened at seth Ofbes yesterday. At the auction, it's

(18:07):
known as Nwa. It's pretty fun, NWA one six seven
eight eight. It's fifty four pounds, which is massive compared
with other meteorites from Mars, they tend to be small fragments. Meteorites,
going back to our science lessons, are what is left

(18:30):
when a comet, asteroid or meteorite survives its passage through
the Earth's atmosphere. It was discovered in November of twenty
twenty three in Niger, and they said that NWA sixteen
seven eighty eight is a monumental specimen, around seventy percent
larger than the next biggest piece of Mars ever found

(18:52):
on Earth.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
It's also very rare.

Speaker 1 (18:55):
Only about four hundred Martian meteorites have ever been found
on Earth.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
How does that happen?

Speaker 1 (19:01):
Like you're walking around Niger and you're like, oh, there's
a big rock that's a big rock fifty four pounds. Oh,
that looks like it's from Mars, or that just looks different.
You phone it in, Like, who do you even call?
I'm just wondering the next time, you know, piece of
Mars turns up, what do we say? You know, we're
hiking in the San Gabriels and we're like, this looks different.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
This isn't like it's supposed to be there.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
You call the police, you say, I think I've got
a rock that's different. You'd be called a crazy person.
How does that even get phoned in? But another big question?
Who spends five point three million dollars on that? Is
that something that would be cool to show if at parties?
You know, you have your friends over and you've got
this like big rock and a glass case. You like,

(19:45):
this is from Mars and I bought it for five
and a half million dollars. The Blue Zones five places
on Earth where the healthiest people live. Here they are,
and guess what, there's one that is in our backyard
or in our front yard if you're in San Bernardino,
all right. One of them located eight miles off the

(20:06):
coast of Turkey and the Aegean c Ikaria has some
of the world's lowest rates of middle aged mortality in dementia.
The mountainous highlands of Sardinia claim the highest concentration of
Centaurian men. It has an extremely low death rate when

(20:30):
it comes to sixty five. Nicoya is located in a
region of Central America the world's lowest rate of middle
age mortality, the second highest concentration of male Centurians. And
then who where do you think? In San Bernardino County

(20:54):
low Melinda Loa Melinda credited with giving residents ten more
healthy years and the average American Why well, daily meals
follow a biblical diet, grains, fruits, nuts, and vegetables, just
like what Debora markets. Grains, fruits, nuts, and vegetables. You

(21:16):
eat this stuff, I've noticed you. Yeah, you feel you
feel better, you feel lighter, you feel better. There's just
something to be said about that.

Speaker 5 (21:25):
Although you know you have motivated me to eat zero
processed foods though, because I would, I'd grab some sun chips, think, oh,
that's a healthy alternative to potato chips. But it's all
processed stuff. And I know you're you're not doing trying,
so I decided forget it. Every time I think about
certain things, I remember what you said about even though
I'm a vegan, I still eat processed foods once in

(21:47):
a while. So now I have eliminated that as well.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
I mean, I just I we do so many stories
about the processed foods and how they're so bad for
you that it kind of started sinking in for me,
and so I kind of started weeding them out. And
then once I started weeding them out, it doesn't taste
as good anymore. And I've started eating like debor and
like squirrels and grains and fruits and nuts and vegetables.
It really does make you feel better, it does. And

(22:12):
it's low, Melinda. And then these other places they're like, yeah,
heavy and vegetables, healthy fats, not as much meat.

Speaker 5 (22:21):
Avocados, key, avocados, the way to go.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
Man.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
It's brought my cholesterol down. They're gonna put me on
a statin Deborra, And I said, hell, no.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
Okay, let me just tell you this real quick. I
went to the doctor earlier this week and I had
blood work done, and even though I'm a vegan, my
cholesterol is so high.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
It's genetic. Man, there's nothing I can do. There is
it is I work out every day.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
One in three, one in three Americans is going to
have it, and it has nothing to do.

Speaker 2 (22:47):
With with your diet. How high is it?

Speaker 3 (22:52):
Nine?

Speaker 2 (22:52):
Oh, that's not that bad because two hundred is.

Speaker 5 (22:54):
Normal, So it's twenty nine? And then is that my
good one or my bad wood? Now, I don't know,
let's make a difference. They're both high not tear Well, Yeah,
I'm on men.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Yeah, that's just genetic. That's just genetic that I think
your borderline. I think you're okay, Uh, I am a doctor. Now, okay,
well we come back. Why does the food by the
campfire taste so much better?

Speaker 2 (23:16):
Also?

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Why do kats love concrete slabs? You're going to get
a kick out of that one. I promise.

Speaker 3 (23:24):
You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
The hits just keep on coming.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
Mike Pence now is the latest to go on CBS.
It looks like and said, I think the time has
come for the administration to release all of the files
regarding Jeffrey Epstein's investigation and prosecution. Of course, we've got
Laura Lumer calling for this, saying this is not a
complete hoax, given the fact that Gleayne Maxwell is currently

(23:55):
serving twenty years in prison for her crimes and activities.
We know he's convicted sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein. So we've
got Mike Mike Pence now joining that. And now we've
got the videos of Maga people burning their Maga hats
because they are not letting up. They want answers, they

(24:17):
want this is just not going to go away. We'll
have the latest for you on that coming up tomorrow,
because it seems like with every day somebody else piles
on there in terms.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Of just let us know what's in it.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
If it's all boring, okay, boring and sorted, we know
it's sorted, but then just release them, all right. Why
does food by the campfire taste better? The answer turns out,
has less to do with the food itself and more
to do with the atmosphere.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
Of course it does.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
It's the chemistry, it's the psychology, the evolution of us
sitting by a fire cooking things, nostalgia, joy, ancient pull
of the warm glow. This has gathered us for millennia
beneath the stars.

Speaker 2 (25:03):
It's all of it.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
You could eat anything around the campfire, and it would
be fabulous. Robert Dunn is an evolutionary biologist. He's the
author of Delicious, The Evolution of Flavor and How It
Made Us Human, And he says, when you're around a fire,
you're kind of in the pot.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
Well, I don't know if I want to be in
the pot with the food.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
But okay, he says, you're fully experiencing the results of
the cooking and of the eating. He says, it's the
interplay of smell, texture, temperature, sound, memory, even a narrative. Again,
this is one of those things where you know you
don't need a study, right, you just know that campfire
food tastes better. But if you are paid a bunch
of money as a researcher to study this, how cool

(25:44):
will that be?

Speaker 4 (25:45):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (25:45):
I got to go back out to the campfire and
eat a hot dog and see if it tastes better
than the hot dog I just had in the kitchen
or the backyard. All right, And then finally the one
that you know you're gonna just be dying to hear about,
why do cats love concrete slabs? This is going to
be one of those moments that I write down for
when Gary rejoins us.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
Yeah, Gary, things got a little dark.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
At one point, I heard myself say why do cats
love concrete slabs? And then proceeded to elaborate on that.
But it's it is comical. If you are on Instagram
or TikTok, if you are into the more specific subgenre
of cat talk, shoot me, you may have come across

(26:27):
some crazy feline behavior. There are apparently numerous videos of
excited cat owners presenting their pets with concrete slabs.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
Where's the off button? Where's the off what? Well, I'm
glad somebody cares.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
I care so much.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Even taking trips.

Speaker 1 (26:53):
To the hardware store, these people are to pick up
some pavers and then when presented with their new gift,
these investigate it and ultimately seem to really enjoy their
hard new toy. But why why, you ask? It's because
they can pee on it, that's right. The porous nature

(27:16):
of concrete offers cats somewhere to deposit their scent and
smell is very important for cats. Cats use their urine
and their pheromones as a way to communicate. An individual
cat's urine marking alerts other cats of his or her
presence and makes a statement about things like what a

(27:40):
piece of property it's his, how long ago was he
in the area on that piece of property, and over time,
how many times has he peed on the slab? Is
he just a new owner of this property or has
he had this concrete slab for quite some time? Can
I take this slab from the other cat, or has

(28:01):
his urine been there for quite some time? That's how
they communicate. Feelines also use your urine to advertise when
they're looking for a mate.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
Hm.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
So there's that.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
They say that the same porous property in the concrete
might also be good for one of the most common
cat behaviors, which is scratching.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
So there you go. Man.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
If I start taking videos of myself going to the
hardware store for a concrete paver to present my cat,
I don't know. You're gonna have to put me somewhere.
Put me in some sort of center, all right. Speaking
of John Cobalt show is coming up next. We will
see you tomorrow. It is our last day before Gary

(28:44):
comes back, so I know, I know I can't wait too.
It's gonna be great, especially when he comes back and
sees that we have a show cat.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
You stay dry out there, blessings. You've been listening to
The Gary and Shannon Show.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
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

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