Speaker 1: This is Gary and Shannon and you're listening to kf I AM six forty The Gary and Shannon Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
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Speaker 2: Garry and Shannon kfi AM six forty Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio Today from the Seller's Advantage Studio.
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Speaker 1: You know, it's funny Elmer is out of town. He's in Korea and sound way out of time.
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Speaker 3: That's true. That sounded I way undersold.
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Speaker 2: That out out of town.
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Speaker 3: Yeah.
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Speaker 1: Anyway, when Mario came in last week for the first time, that was the first intro he played. Was was the the volleyball scene. And then Sam's in today is that Sam I can't tell, okay, he's kind of incognito. He's got a beard and a hat. He doesn't always have all of that, and and and that was the one which I like.
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Speaker 3: I like that, I like the energy, I like the vibe. It snapping me out of my case of the mondays.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, what's going on with that? Kind of a rictus fake smile on And usually it's because you heard something in the hallway and you're going to come in.
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Speaker 1: I didn't realize I was smiling. I guess I was just trying to smile. I don't know nothing's wrong. I just I think it was last week's seasonal effective disorder.
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Speaker 3: Still trying to shake it off.
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Speaker 2: I'm waiting for it to get warm. I don't know about you.
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Speaker 3: Well it is. It's going to be eighty degrees today, at least at my house.
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Speaker 2: A eighty is fine.
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Speaker 3: Oh yeah, that's child's play for you. I like a ninety you're a lizard person.
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Speaker 2: It's mid May.
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Speaker 3: You like it to be ninety seven.
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Speaker 2: I'm fine with that. I go live in Baker I'm not so certain about that, but I do feel like it's an opportunity for us to warm up.
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Speaker 3: Now, well, you're wearing your winter clothes.
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Speaker 2: I have to. I have to. We haven't turned the heat.
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Speaker 3: You do run, you do run cold. I'm learning, which is weird.
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Speaker 2: Well maybe that's.
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Speaker 3: It's not weird. It's you know, there's something wrong, but at night I run hot. Interesting. Yeah, well that's because you're all you know. I don't know.
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Speaker 1: I was going to make it appropriate comment and it's too early on I'm listening.
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Speaker 2: If you watched any of the sports over the weekend, that was Rory McElroy told someone to shut the f up. At the PGA Championship.
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Speaker 1: I don't know anything about him, but from what I've gleaned, that seems to check out.
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Speaker 2: I was surprised by it. I mean, I've seen that he's had temper issues before. Yeah, but after everything that happened with his wife and they were going to file for divorce and then they pulled that back and he was accused of having an affair with Amanda Balionis and that was not true, and then he had calmed down quite significantly. I think.
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Speaker 4: I don't know.
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Speaker 3: I don't think you go through all that and whether it's that much smoke there's an a hole.
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Speaker 2: I don't know. If that's that's the exactly the rule, that's the rule right up there with the Golden Later this out, we're gonna get it. We have a terror in the skies to tell you about. Specifically. We'll start with the Navy jets that crashed over that Air Force base in Idaho. I've never seen two F eighteens sorry ea eighteens. They look like they connected. I mean, and I don't mean like they contacted. I mean like the planes looked like they were stuck together.
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Speaker 3: Yeah, they look like they interlocked somehow.
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Speaker 2: How do you do that and how do all four crew members eject safely.
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Speaker 3: Out of that?
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Speaker 1: It's very rare from what I've read the margin for air for a safe ejection of that scale. For four people in that kind of situation, to eject and walk away from that thing is like a miracle.
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Speaker 2: I mean, the one thing that they have going for them among it clearly had a lot of things going for them. They weren't going six hundred miles an hour. I mean, they were much slower speed than that, because that in and of itself, ejecting out at a speed like that is as damaging is getting hit by it.
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Speaker 1: Man, those saying sixty seven million dollars apiece poof eh.
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Speaker 2: You know they got two. They'll make more. I think Iran continues to make news. The president has said in a social media post that Iran has to move fast or there won't be anything left, and that the clock is ticking, both clock and ticking capitalized. For some reason, did not set a deadline, and we've seen this type of threat before, like you better do it now, or I'm gonna don't make me come back there, whatever it is. Negotiations have been stalled. Iran has repeatedly rebuffed American terms for a deal that would address uranium curbing and uranium enrichment and end any attempts to blockade, to unblockade, I should say, the straight up horror moves. All of this has continued to see gas prices continue to go up, so at this point we don't know. There was a headline today that Democrats in Congress are a little bit closer to making some sort of progress when it comes to a War Powers resolution that would curb the ability of the military ties do what it is doing simply because of the time element. So all that's going on. Dodgers had a great weekend. They outscored the Angels. I think it was thirty five to three. Yeah, that's the slump is thirty one to three. The slump is over. It's interesting because I think the Angels took them all from the Dodgers last season. So if that does sound right now.
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Speaker 1: Louis AMANNGIONI, you want some law in order news for your Monday morning, we got it for you. What in that backpack gets to be presented to jurors. This is a guy who's facing state charges in two separate states, I think. And then as well as federal charges. But it's interesting this if you're into legal minutia. The contents of his backpack that was searched at the McDonald's not admissible, But the contents of the backpack searched at the police station the same backpack admissible.
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Speaker 3: Yeah, just good, and the search goes down.
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Speaker 2: The stuff in the backpack at the police station is arguably much more important than the stuff they found when they were at the.
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Speaker 3: McDonald Gary and Shannon Wilkin.
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Speaker 2: Today reminder, don't forget Friday. Friday, we're going to be live at Bravery Brewing in Lancaster for our latest news and brews. We'll be out there from nine till noon, and then stick around right afternoon. If you're out there, we're going to do our podcast recording that we need your help with. So come on out and say hi and say hi to our friends. It's Bravery Brewing.
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Speaker 3: Gary and Shannon will continue.
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Speaker 2: Garyn KFI AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio. There is a fire burning. The biggest fire in California right now happens to be out on one of the Channel Islands, Santa Rosa Island. It's over ten thousand acres as of right now, a couple of historic structures that have been burned, some rare plant species that only exist out there on the Channel Islands as of right now, zero contemn. I mean there's not there's not much out there in terms of buildings or anything to burn, but it is a concern and we will see some significant fire conditions today as well. We are expecting gus he wins across La in Ventura County Mountains, Santa Clarita Valley, San Fernando Valley, Eastern Ventura Valley's gusts today somewhere twenty five to forty possible. That also with the humidity levels that are down below ten twenty percent something like that, so we could see some fire danger today.
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Speaker 3: We do have your shot at one thousand dollars.
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Speaker 1: Brought to you by Sweet James Accident Attorneys Office in Los Angeles, California, and Sweet James dot com.
00:07:41
Speaker 2: Again that keyword bills goes on the website and just an hour from now, we'll give you another shot to win one thousand bucks.
00:07:47
Speaker 1: You remember December twenty twenty four, that was when Luigi Mangioni shot and killed the United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a sidewalk in Manhattan. Well, the legal cism takes its time, and that is the case here as well, and they're going through some pre trial motions right now. And today it was ruled upon some evidence found in Luigi Mangioni's backpack at the time of his arrest will be excluded from his upcoming trial. This, according to a New York judge is ruling this morning. However, other key items, including OH I don't know the murder weapon, and the writings that express frustration with the health industry will be allowed.
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Speaker 2: SAM give me this computer app issues.
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Speaker 4: I find that the search of the backpack at the McDonald's was improper warrant the search, that the backpack was not within the immediate control or graveable area of the defendity, and further that people fail to demonstrate exeguging circumstances. Therefore, those items found in the backpack during the search at the McDonald's will be suppressed.
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Speaker 2: Okay, So that's the difference is whether or not the backpack. There's a weird technical thing, correct me if I'm wrong. If it was within grabbing distance, they could have searched it, but because it wasn't within grabbing distance, it was considered off limits because they didn't have a warrant at the time. Now, he gave them a fake name, which was what prosecutors had said. Once you do that, everything's off the table or everything's on the table, depending on how you look at it. And they had every right to search the backpack. The judge said that's not necessarily true until they get him to the police station, which is where they found the other stuff.
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Speaker 1: Police officers also argued that they searched the bag at the time in McDonald's because they feared it may contain a weapon. The judge found that that justification did not hold up to scrutiny.
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Speaker 2: That's crazy to me. Yeah, if they knew that they were looking for a guy I know who was literally charged or they was suspected of murdering somebody in cold blood with a weapon on video, why wouldn't that be considered I mean, I would want a police officer to assume that there was a weapon.
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Speaker 1: Cases are thrown out all the time for things like this. That's why we say routinely when you're doing time.
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Speaker 3: It's because you did something really badly, like you did something or to just to play the other side, they think it was you that did the really bad thing, right, because there's so many ways to get out of these prosecutions. Every step of the way, there's something to help the defendant out again.
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Speaker 2: So the stuff when he was arrested at the McDonald's that will not be allowed in the state trial loaded magazine, cell phone, passport, wallet, computer chip. But the stuff that was found while they were at the Altoona, Pennsylvania police headquarters was valid, which includes the silencer, the notebook which depending on who you look at it, they say it was a the defense says it was a diary. Prosecutors call it a manifesto, and oh, yes, you're right, the murder weapon itself, the alleged murder weapon.
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Speaker 1: Now, he faces second degree murder and eight other charges in the States case.
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Speaker 3: It's scheduled to go on trial in September.
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Speaker 1: He also is facing federal charges in addition to state charges in Pennsylvania stemming from his arrest. So this is a three pronged attack here on this guy. He's pleaded guilty to all charges. His attorneys argued police did not properly mirandize him, that they did not read their client his Miranda warnings, obviously advising him of his right to remain silent before they started questioning him at the McDonald's. The judge ruled most of the alleged statements could be admitted. He found many regarded personal information or safety concerns, or were spontaneously given so that they did not fall under the umbrella of.
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Speaker 2: To give you just a quick glimpse into how broken our American society has become. There were hordes of Luigi fans lined up outside the state courthouse today hoping to get a seat, just to be in the same room with this guy.
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Speaker 3: Oh, he's a hero.
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Speaker 1: I mean, think about all the people that have been screwed over by the healthcare industry and the greed that comes along with it. I mean, we all know people in our personal lives who have paid a lot more, or their health insurance has paid a lot more than whatever the treatment was worth. And that's when people have insurance. What happens when you don't or when a health insurance company turns you away because that trial that could save your loved one's life is not covered and you need a special referral to get the okay to get you know, all that stuff can be maddening, and I think every single person has had some run up with the healthcare industry that has been wildly frustrating.
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Speaker 2: Well it's and that is not denying that. But my issue perhaps is with people who are willing to publicly declare they celebrated the murder of another human being, that they are out there on the street and they are saying, number one, this guy was completely justified in what he did, and number two, he's hot as hell.
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Speaker 1: It's a real problem that exists that people think it's okay to do that. There's a lot of people who would celebrate right if but they were doing various people that were gunned down in the streets, there would be parades and celebrations, not naming names, and everyone would think it was okay.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, yeah. And it's one thing to express something like that in the privacy of your own home or a radio studio during the commercial breaks, but it's different, but it is completely different to go stand out, oh wait, we have done that a quarter of of all of here in Burbank with a sign because you're proud justifying you're.
00:14:05
Speaker 1: Proud of your uh, you're proud of your feelings that you're that you're happy this person is dead.
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Speaker 3: It's a wild thing.
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Speaker 1: And you know, that's when the mob mentality really comes in because you see one guy on that corner, and then you know, you see two guys and they're emboldened.
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Speaker 3: So one guy's a crazy guy too.
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Speaker 1: You're feeling, okay, I'm not alone, and then there's a crowd, and then you're emboldened and that increases the mob and the and the mentality that it's okay to champion and celebrate somebody's blatant, cold blooded murder. We're so, I mean, people are a holes, but you know this doesn't mean you need to cheer their their murder in the struct and kill all the holes. If we killed all the a holes, ah my god, who would be left? We wouldn't, that's for damn sure. All right, coming up next, how about Ebola? Okay, I love a little bowler refresher.
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Speaker 2: A health department pumped the brakes warning is coming up. There's other things we should worry about.
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Speaker 3: I don't know. I kind of want to. You're afraid it hysterical for a moment, Okay, Well because it lea orifice. Well, it's the toxic mushrooms that make me nervous, because toxic mushrooms are very in right now.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, also not a good idea.
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Speaker 3: And they may come to the side of a bola.
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Speaker 2: I don't think that's no forage for mushrooms. You get bit by a tick, you get a poison mushroom, and then the healthcare worker that's taking care of you sneezes a bola onto you. That's the trifecta. At least today, that's a good Monday Health segment.
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Speaker 3: We come back, Gary and Shannon will continue.
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Speaker 2: You're listening to Gary and Shannon on demand from KFI AM six forty.
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Speaker 3: Gary and Shannon.
00:15:58
Speaker 1: AM six forty Live ever on the iHeartRadio app. The changing complexion of the governor's race is continuing into this week. We've got Antonio via Ragosa coming in to talk to us today at ten o'clock. Obviously former mayor of La I'm interested to see his take on what is going on with this war between Bass and what I thought was a laughable.
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Speaker 3: Candidate in Spencer Pratt. But my god, this.
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Speaker 1: Turn of events and what he's been able to do to a traditional campaign in terms of using videos, viral videos, Ai Plane speaking at LA City Hall, all of it, the Trump playbook essentially is fascinating that he has been able to capture twenty two percent at last. Look at the numbers here to the powerful machine that is Karen Bass. I mean, she's obviously still way ahead of him, but he's making a race of it. Yeah, and he has no experience. He is completely unlikable when you think about the electorate of Los Angeles. He is taking this single issue of his home burnt down in the Palisades and propelling it into a city wide, oh viral sensation.
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Speaker 2: Did you see the Chelsea Handler video over the weekend? She got her two cents in this and she said something along the lines of Los Angeles doesn't need a rich, white, straight guy to be the mayor something like that. That. For her, I think she's a monster human being. I do not like Chelsea Handler, and I'd have never thought she's funny, But for her, she believes that those are qualities that automatically exclude somebody from being the mayor. Nothing about their passion, their vision, their ideas. Nothing. She thinks that it has to fit a certain thing and that you've got to be a politician. But we've said for you, I specifically have said I'd rather have non politicians take political office because they have life experience, they have reality. They didn't come with a Polycide degree and have been living in this weird, insulated world their whole lives.
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Speaker 3: I don't think. I don't think Spencer Pratt's that guy there you're talking about.
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Speaker 1: He's lived in a very insular, white privileged world, and I think he does have a Polycide degree from USC, but he's not what you're talking about.
00:18:29
Speaker 3: He's not somebody who has built a business.
00:18:31
Speaker 1: Who is you know, the guy that you're thinking of the way that the Constitution was framed with people that have real world experience, real life experience, and they go to the Capitol and they work for the people and they're the voice of their their hometown and all of that and then go home. I get what you're saying. Yeah, I don't know if that's it. I'm interested in seeing how this affects campaigns.
00:18:55
Speaker 3: As we move into the future.
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Speaker 1: If he's this successful with this kind of a campaign, you know, what role does AI have? Is it going to be blacklisted when it comes to campaigns? Well, television and I still have this question. Are television stations being approached by him? He doesn't need to spend the money on TV stations because he's just posting them on apps and stuff, But like, will traditional television stations turn away ads that are deemed AI.
00:19:24
Speaker 2: And how much it can help much? It's the whole thing, AI, part of it, AI, the voice a AI. Yeah, that's a good questions, right, and just all let's the HAUNTSA virus stuff is burned out. It's not going anywhere. There's five people I think in California that have been tested positive for haunts out of forty million. It's not a thing. Ebola is also something that because of the nature of hemorrhagic fevers like ebola, they will burn themselves out. Now that's not saying that I think that the Democratic Republic of Congo is a great vacation choice for you right now. But the risk of this outbreak in a Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda or Uganda causing a pandemic is extremely low, extremely low again, because it kills people so quickly. Yes, there are flashes, and we see it what once a year, once every other year where there's a hot moment, hot spot of ebola. It's awful. It's an awful way to die. It's an awful thing to try to contain. But it's not going worldwide. This is not going to be the thing that causes World War Z.
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Speaker 1: I think we're just in this place where these things are rising to the top of the headline pages because of COVID, whether it's hantavirus or ebola.
00:20:50
Speaker 2: Can I do cruise ship? So I was just looking up the pump your breaks music.
00:20:55
Speaker 3: No, I don't want to do or I do not want to go back in.
00:20:58
Speaker 2: Time March eleven.
00:20:59
Speaker 3: No, don't want to do it today.
00:21:01
Speaker 2: I wanted to read you the headlines that were written.
00:21:04
Speaker 3: I would not like to hear them.
00:21:05
Speaker 2: They were bad.
00:21:06
Speaker 3: I don't have a choice, do I. I don't have a choice.
00:21:11
Speaker 2: Go ahead. Governor Insley of Washington said no public gatherings over two hundred and fifty. New York's Governor Cuomo said schools and gathering places where can shut down.
00:21:21
Speaker 3: For two weeks. That's enough. I want to talk about foraging for wild mushrooms.
00:21:25
Speaker 2: Okay, Also, hey people, well.
00:21:28
Speaker 1: They're very in right now, and if you can get them for because they're just in on the drug scene. Like they're just magic mushrooms. But you know, mushroom infused chalk or chocolate infusee chocolate infused, mushroom infused chocolate, got lit infuse mushroom mushroom infuse chocolate. Anyway, they're in right now. These are not the shrooms I don't think of our childhood. I say that because when I look back, I really did take drugs as a child's when you look at like a sixteen seventeen year old today, you're like, wow, what the hell was I doing?
00:22:03
Speaker 2: I made some great decisions.
00:22:05
Speaker 1: Yes, But anyway, the drugs of our childhood, I think that those were more powerful shrooms. And we're talking about the mushrooms and the chocolates or whatever. The microdosing. I have no idea. I just feel like if they're that prevalent, people are not tripping balls, you know, Monday to Sunday on that kind of stuff. But anyway, people are now foraging for wild mushrooms that could have the magical elements, and the thing is is that they are poisonous and not good poison that makes you trip balls. Three people hospitalized, four people have been killed. Forty seven in California have been sick by this since November. People are going out into the fields and they're going out in Napa and they're picking these mushrooms and they're eating them hoping that they will get a free high, and they're dying because they're dumbasses.
00:22:59
Speaker 2: They're picking death cap mushrooms and something called the Western destroying angel mushrooms.
00:23:07
Speaker 1: They can look and taste like mushrooms that won't kill you, but they.
00:23:11
Speaker 2: Will now, they said. Some of the cases involved immigrants or visitors who may have confused the mushrooms with the edible species that they would find where they're from, and at least two were among according to the La Times, unhoused people.
00:23:24
Speaker 3: Okay, looking to get high ps.
00:23:27
Speaker 2: It's not like it's not because they love the mushroom delicacy on their duc A la range.
00:23:34
Speaker 1: Yeah, I'm a little confused with Some of the cases involved immigrants who confuse the mushrooms with utible species common in their home what are you talking about. These are dumbasses that went out NAPA and thought.
00:23:46
Speaker 2: That's the question. And I don't know the reason you say, NAPA. It makes me think that some people are out there looking for just wild mushrooms to add to their dinner plate. No, you think everybody's out there to get high?
00:24:01
Speaker 1: Yeah, I mean look at the other places the hospitalizations have occurred, Humboldt, Santa Cruz.
00:24:08
Speaker 2: Come on, the last major mushroom poisoning outbreak took place in twenty sixteen.
00:24:14
Speaker 3: I gotta stop saying that.
00:24:15
Speaker 1: Come on, I think I did get it from Via Ragosi, I like twenty years ago.
00:24:20
Speaker 3: I can't wait to hear you say it a bunch of times when he's here.
00:24:23
Speaker 2: Just one more thing that nature is fighting back. The tick bites have gone up significantly, especially in the northeast the Great Lakes region, but La County is one of those hot spots on the West Coast where people are seeing a lot more tick bites. Do not want to get a tick under your skin. Terror in the skies. When we come back to Gary and Shannon.
00:24:43
Speaker 1: Gary and Shannon, I am six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio WAP. Have you decided what you're gonna wear on Friday, just so we're not matching. Sometimes, if you haven't been with us for ten years, we're known to match a match.
00:24:58
Speaker 3: Unbeknownst to us.
00:25:00
Speaker 2: She's wearing a lot of tank tops and I won't be wearing a tank top. Okay, so does that?
00:25:05
Speaker 3: Well, let's see what the weather is supposed to be like ninety bike.
00:25:10
Speaker 5: Is zero and I lay at the day off or get off?
00:25:13
Speaker 3: That's certain way of saying moving along. Guys, Hey, why don't you stop ding around and do the show? I like it?
00:25:26
Speaker 2: Guys. Well, there was a you may have seen the video. Air show at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho had to be canceled yesterday. Two EA eighteen G Growlers assigned to the Electronic Attack Squadron from Woodbey Island actually collided. All four members, two in each airplane, were able to eject safely, All listed in stable condition. The crash was about two miles northwest of the base during the second day of what they call the Gunfighters Gies air show. Parajets doing kind of a turn to the right. It looked like and the plane that was on top, if you don't call it that just kind of slowly descended into the one that was below it. Blind spot is what it kind of appears to be. But the weirdest part about this video is it looks like the planes somehow got connected and were unable to extract from each other. And while they're connected, the four crew members were able to eject, which is unbelievable.
00:26:31
Speaker 3: Are you a man who likes to just pick up a rotisserie chicken just to have it around? I've you've gone through phases.
00:26:42
Speaker 2: I've made a mess of rotissery chicken.
00:26:44
Speaker 3: Everybody does.
00:26:45
Speaker 1: If you don't make a mess of rotissory chicken, you're a serial killer. Which is funny because when you're picking that thing apart, you think to yourself, I am a serial killer, right, But you're trying meet off those bones and said you're eating hands like a freaking monster. If you were careful with a rotisserie chicken more, I would think.
00:27:08
Speaker 3: Twice about you as a person much more worrisome.
00:27:11
Speaker 1: Well, did you know that TSA allows you to bring one of those babies onto your flight in your carry on?
00:27:17
Speaker 2: For some reason, they posted something on Twitter. It said protein shakes question mark three point four ounces or less, but rotisseri chickens as many as you can fit in your carry I.
00:27:29
Speaker 1: Had no idea. What a fun thing to figure out. I'm going to bring a chicken with me all the time. You can snack on that.
00:27:37
Speaker 3: The whole flight.
00:27:37
Speaker 1: You eat the skin, you dig in, the breast, you grab a leg, chomp, chomp, chomp.
00:27:44
Speaker 2: Now, the TSA specifically says solid foods, and the rotissory chicken is obviously a solid food is allowed in your carry on with no quantity limitations, but things like gravy, hummus, jelly, maple syrup, peanut butter, salad, dressing, soup also allowed and carry on as long as special instructions are followed, which, of course any liquid or gel which those would follow in uh fall under. They have to be under three point four ounces.
00:28:14
Speaker 1: Is anybody else craving a rotisserie chicken? Just could say that the sodium alone, so I'd love us.
00:28:20
Speaker 2: Do they have the Whole foods?
00:28:22
Speaker 3: Do they have them at Whole Foods? I don't know, guys, are we getting a chicken?
00:28:26
Speaker 5: No?
00:28:26
Speaker 3: One's answering us.
00:28:27
Speaker 5: I will. They got the barbecue area over there. I'm not sure if they got a rotisseri chick. You know what they I think they have them in the bag. Yeah, you're damn right they have them in the bags. Do they make it easy to walk across the street with that little darling?
00:28:39
Speaker 2: Who's going to make it across the street and stand on that if someone watches the board stand on the corner of the waiting for that cross light light.
00:28:49
Speaker 1: I'll tell you this, the skin over the breast will not make it across the street.
00:28:53
Speaker 3: The what's my favorite part?
00:28:56
Speaker 2: You eat the skin? That's a serial killer.
00:28:58
Speaker 3: What are you talking about? You don't eat the skin?
00:29:01
Speaker 1: Nough you're missing all the fat and the fun.
00:29:04
Speaker 2: Oh okay. On Friday, we're gonna be live at Bravery Brewing in Lancaster for Shannon's famous chicken skin.
00:29:11
Speaker 1: P Vira goosis here. I wonder if he eats a rotisserie chicken. Probably he's one of those I don't eat processed foods people.
00:29:18
Speaker 2: Oh, I can tell follow follow us at Gary and Shannon. You'll find all the instructions on how to get out to Lancaster for our news and Bruce coming up on Friday. Gary and Shannon will continue right after this. This is KFI. You've been listening to The Gary and Shannon Show.
00:29:34
Speaker 1: You can always hear us live on KFI AM six forty nine am to noon every Monday through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app