Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Caf I Am six forty. You're listening to the John
and Ken Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. I'll
find the radio one to four after four o'clock the
iHeart after the Johnny Cannon on demand podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Yeah, so you've tuned in. It's a big hour. It's Friday,
which means this three o'clock hour brings us the Moistline people.
They returned for the first time in a couple of weeks,
so we have no idea what's in the bag of
Moiceline callers. We'll open part one at about fifteen minutes,
and then the other half at the end of the show.
We're also back with hack in a dumpster. How about that.
(00:32):
We haven't done that in a while. And it is
somebody that just came to our attention and a story
that made national news in the past couple of weeks.
But when we did some digging and we found an
interview this person did we knew you had to hear it,
and we knew you'd want to throw this person to
the dumpster. So all that is coming up later on
this hour. And right now we have some confusion. I'm
(00:54):
stopping the show. Do we have a guest. We don't
have a guest. I am completely confused. I'm not aware
of a guest. Okay, I've been texting producer Ray and
he's completely confused.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
Me.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Let me just read the guest is coming on Monday. Yeah. Well,
he wrote me a text that she can do three pm,
and I thought he met him at today and he
clarified at ten minutes later when I'm getting ready for
this hour and said, oh, it's Monday. She's coming on Monday.
It's another one of those stories where we have a
murderer that's going to be released who was involved in
a heinous crime which killed several people. It was a
(01:26):
group of young thugs who committed this crime, so it's
kind of that youth offender thing, and this man is
going to be released after trying numerous times to get
out of prison on parole. If Piers at Newsom has
given the okay, Newsom passed, sent it back to the
pro board and they've already granted this guy's release. So
he's been released. So we'll talk about that coming up
(01:48):
on Monday. The els are going to do Times did
one of those stories that we talked about recently. It's
like you know you can't win if this is the
way you're going to do it. And what we're talking
about here is taxing cigarette smokers. In nineteen ninety eight,
Proposition ten passed easily with the voters. This, of course,
(02:10):
was the work of Rob Reinder, The and the Do
you remember we covered this big time when the measure
passed in nineteen ninety eight. It slapped cigarettes Prop ten
with a hefty surcharge to try to get people to
give up smoking and to use the money to improve
the health and well being of young children and their families. Well,
(02:33):
back then, there was one and a half billion packs
of cigarettes that were sold and taxed annually in California.
You know what the sales were in twenty twenty two,
fewer than five hundred and fifty million.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
Packs, A billion, a billion less, a billion less pos
a cigarette sold in the States times.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
Twenty cigarettes in a pack. Don't you think those people
just got their cigarettes from the Vada or other places?
A smoker's day was common belief. A lot of them
are dead from all the smoking, that's true, but the
belief was that they would just go buy their cigarettes
somewhere else.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Twenty billion fewer cigarettes, yeah, minus whatever cigarettes they got
online are out of state.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
Well, of course the quote the downside of this is
that there's less money for early childhood programs. Proposition ten
is approaching its twenty fifth anniversary. Oh my god, and
the first five public agencies it's created, they're going to
have at least a twenty percent decline in their revenue
by June of next year. Yeah, but what has anybody
(03:39):
elected eleven billion dollars from smokers? It says here for preschools,
homeless family housing? Oh no, is that in everything now?
Homeless family housing, pediatric dental and mental health services, and
key infant mother home visiting programs. They just write that
like it, it happens, and it's working and it's great.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
That was my first question. How do we know that
all these pros worked well? And I was reading like.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
One of the posts we warned everybody this. I remember
seeing this on the air in nineteen ninety eight, that
if you do drive off the smokers, it's gonna lower
the taxes. And what are you gonna do with these
programs that you're setting up forever?
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Right?
Speaker 2 (04:17):
You're gonna hire all these people to help all these
children around the state. And if the revenue shrink a
you're gonna lay them off, and that they don't want
to do that, of course, because they're going to tout
that these programs work, they're having an amazing effect on
helping children. All right, Here's the thing.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
No nobody ever checks to see if the program is
functioning as advertised.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
There are.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
One of the programs is they'll send somebody to your
house after you've given birth to make sure that the
breastfeeding is going well, to see if you're suffering from
postpartum depression.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
Right, Well, there were seven hundred.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
And fifty thousand children under the age of five eligible
for their mothers to get their service. Seven hundred and
fifty thousand fewer than thirty seven thousand got a home visit. No,
I this program, or is this one is oriented more
(05:16):
to the kids than the mothers. I should correct that
they these home care workers come and see that the
kid is healthy, make sure they're hitting the developmental milestones,
avoid mistreatment, be ready for kindergarten. So there's seventy five,
seven hundred and fifty thousand children eligible, only thirty seven
(05:39):
thousand got the visit.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
So where's the money going? In fact, now, they're one
of those industrial complexes.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
California ranks forty third out of fifty states in the
percentage of eligible children who get home visits, only less
than three percent. So we've spent no, I mean, we've
spent billions of dollars and three percent of the kids
got a visit. Where'd the money go?
Speaker 2 (06:09):
Money? Rob Riders not interested in that? Is he? Apparently
there's this angle on the story since the state has
massively expanded public preschool because they do have the new
TK Transitional Kindergarten, and they're paying more money for childcare providers.
(06:29):
There's one guy in the story named Pedro Nagira, who's
dean at the US's Rossier School of Education, who says, well,
I guess first five is done with. Then the work
of first five has been done. It's time to know
what it's the moment to declare victory and make an adjustment,
meaning that well, if the revenues drop off and we
will spend many of those programs, we have other programs.
We have other government spending programs now that can help,
(06:52):
like the preschool that they're the TK that they're not
going to offer.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
Can you imagine how many programs there actually are that
duplicate one another.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
Yeah, I remember when we covered this last time we
covered First five. It's been a while, but they were
some counties were trying to figure out ways to spend
the money. They were taking kids on tours of M
and M plants to candies and they do because they
didn't They had a pot of money.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
And can you imagine people in government they couldn't find
a way to spend the money because there was so
much excess, because they were just stealing it from cigarette smokers,
because cigarette smokers were declared not cool. Oh you're not cool.
We're gonna take your money because we don't like you.
We're gonna use it for the children, except they don't
use it for the children.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
You're right. Apparently what's left to First five is mostly
these home visits that you were just talking about. Right,
it's at the last and the largest direct service offered
by First five Los Angeles, but your right, visits have
taken a back seat. Until twenty nineteen, First five LA
funded more than half of the home visits in the county,
but now the majority visits are paid for by federal
(08:00):
stateon county funding streams. Do you want to hear how
these visits work.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Alba Morasco is one of these home visit people, and
she packs her car with toys, diapers, pamphlets, and she
goes visit mothers in South LA and she runs into
Ilsea Achoa and her family in a Compton apartment is
(08:26):
a ten month old and Morascal is a parent coach
for the Welcome Baby Home visiting program. When she saw
mom was reading her daughter a book, the coach Mariscal said, yes,
literature is the most important thing for babies, and she
(08:47):
started going over the developmental assessment. The girl's language development?
Is she making sounds like ga and bah? She might
be a sheep? Does she say the same sound over
and over like God, Got Got Got got? Her motor development?
Is she crawling picking up small objects?
Speaker 2 (09:11):
You want somebody to visit your home to tell you
this or why can't you figure that out yourself?
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Really, if you can't figure out whether your child is
saying bah and go, maybe you ought to put the
kid up for adoption. I but did you see Later
on the story, they gave a very touching example of
how this woman apparently, on one of her visited, she
noticed black mold on the bathroom walls. Yeah, the mother says,
(09:39):
sometimes while bathing her daughter, pieces of the mold would
fall into the tub.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
She doesn't notice them.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Anyway, the black mold is falling into the tub, but
mom doesn't do anything about it.
Speaker 2 (09:48):
The landlord cleaned out the mold, right and Marescow says,
mom's a roscou helped her contact the Department of Public
Health and they sent a letter and the landlord cleaned out.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
The mold right right. Because again, so if it wasn't
for the home visit, who knows. It's like it's like
the mom is a child too, That's.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
What they say. Often happens. They have people that just
have no experience with children. They don't know what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
Marescal says, often these moms are overwhelmed, tired, sleep deprived.
They're sending their other children. They are not sending their
other children to school because they can't make it out
of the house because of the newborn. Well, why have
so many kids?
Speaker 2 (10:30):
How about how about putting a.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Pause on the reproduction machine for for a couple of years.
All right, so I gotta spend I gotta give you
tax money because you had too many babies and you
can't figure it out.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Isn't that often the case? The people have the most
children really can't deal with me the financially or emotionally
or education. They don't don't have any of the There's
plenty of birth control these days.
Speaker 5 (10:54):
You're listening to John and Ken on demand from kf
I Am six forty on the.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
Radio one to four after four o'clock. iHeart app for
Johnny Can on demand. All right, let's not wait an
the longer. Let's bring out the voiceline. First time in
two weeks we've heard from our voistline callers and message leavers.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
You can use the iHeartRadio app, the microphone icon of call,
the tellphree number one eight seven seven moisted six.
Speaker 6 (11:16):
Hey, this is John.
Speaker 7 (11:17):
This is again.
Speaker 6 (11:18):
We're so excited to hear from you.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
It's about time.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Okra is slimy unless you deep fry it. You need
you deep fry it's slimy.
Speaker 8 (11:27):
Ok Okra looks sort of like a pepper, but they're
furry on the outside. They have little hairs on them,
a nasty they're real slimy inside with a lot of
seeds and they're gross.
Speaker 9 (11:39):
Period DeBras on the right path and instead of the
prop and al. How about we just give them an
overdose of pentanyl. The amount of pentanyl coming across the boarding.
No supply chain issue there, you know, and you can't
feel pain.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
Take that pain killers.
Speaker 10 (12:00):
You guys never played my call.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
I'm gonna stop colleagues there.
Speaker 10 (12:03):
How about that?
Speaker 11 (12:04):
The White House now says Joe Biden's ten percent cut
of hunters income was for humanitarian purposes.
Speaker 6 (12:12):
Yeah, these deed cameras.
Speaker 10 (12:13):
How thought we put a camera in every office of
every elective official.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
How about that?
Speaker 6 (12:18):
Then you'll see some real crime on camera, you.
Speaker 12 (12:20):
Know what, Debrah, Go ahead, go outside with some treats
and a little you know, clapper thing and a clicker,
and then try to get all the meets together, round
them all up, you know, shoe them out from underneath
all the all the roots they're hiding and all the
holes are in the ground, and rally them all up
and get them out of here. I mean, I think
you could do it.
Speaker 13 (12:35):
Yeah, why don't we just have AI run the supervisors
and the board here in La County? I believe, or
I think at least, that AI can be bribed. Just think,
maybe it'll get better. Just take a step further why
don't we have AI run Congress, just.
Speaker 11 (12:52):
Have to get rid of all these idiots.
Speaker 14 (12:54):
We already have laws in place that will address your
legal immigration, and that is holding businesses a town of
for hiring people that are legally hirable instead of penalizing
and exploiting poor and desperate people. The businesses should be
held accountable.
Speaker 15 (13:11):
We should have our United States political goobers hold Mexican
government and possibly China responsible for this fentanyl crisis instead
of sitting behind a desk all day and collecting a
check like our political.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Goobers gets email from Agna.
Speaker 3 (13:27):
Our rates are going up this winter because they have
to provide more resilient power and more resilient fuel for
the future, plus underground power lines. These people are relentless.
We get screwed left and right, and we allow this
to continue to happen. Thanks Govnor How.
Speaker 16 (13:47):
Can California possibly sue the oil companies for thrilling when
they are the ones who issued the permit?
Speaker 10 (13:57):
Comras, this is vladim In calling.
Speaker 13 (14:01):
I just wanted to tell you guys, I love what
you have done with the city of Los Angeles.
Speaker 12 (14:06):
You know what, Comrades, I might be losing the water
in Ukraine, But you're losing California the Bana.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
Yeah, Biden has gotten a lot done.
Speaker 17 (14:19):
He's destroyed our country faster than any other president has
ever destroyed our country.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
Brov Vo dow Some Hey.
Speaker 6 (14:26):
Remember a few years ago when Texas was trying to
get people to move from California Day Simon, that old
Grandpa Brown. Now Texas is sending people here, and there's
some stiffly having a subject with the kind of people
they're sending that maybe there's a little bit of racism
(14:48):
on the north shore of Hawaii, which is in our
drive through Honow Livelo. Gas was four thirty five a
gallon yesterday.
Speaker 11 (14:57):
Four thirty five.
Speaker 16 (14:59):
Now we're looking it's like two dollars more a gallon.
Speaker 11 (15:02):
Here.
Speaker 12 (15:03):
You go on vacation for a week and the gas
price here, it's the root.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
Our governor is a.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
Mus master class. I'm in the master class.
Speaker 10 (15:15):
I think I'm in the master class.
Speaker 13 (15:19):
Thank you for ving.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Yeah, that's a decent called the Biden administration. They master
class and had a run government.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
How come Newsom's not getting any crap for having gasoline
that costs double what they're paying on the East Vault.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
You're right, I mean, everybody's.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
Pissed off at Biden across the country over the gas
prices and the inflation.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
But Muslim has got a state here.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
You know how angry people are for paying for paying
three point fifty or four a gallon in the rest
of the country, and everybody is outraged.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
How coming six six and seven? Now seven, I haven't
seen seven seven fifty. My wife sent me a photo
of a gas station on the west side, so it's
those outliers. Well, that's the hell of an outlier. Well,
there's always an outlier. Went down when gas was four,
that guy was going for five point fifty. That's usually
what he does. But oh, those west side gas stations
(16:11):
and notorious for that.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
It's still it's like you see those prices in Europe.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
All right, next, Hacket a dumpster.
Speaker 5 (16:19):
You're listening to John and Ken on demand from KFI
Am six forty.
Speaker 1 (16:24):
We're on the radio from one until four and then
after four coming up soon. The iHeart app has the
John and Kat on demand podcast. You could listen to
whatever you missed and you can listen to it all weekend.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
All right, Well, how long will it take for this
hack to be thrown into the dumpster, and it's up
to John Coblt. The story began about a week or
two ago. Windley learned that the mayor of Burbank named
Constantine Anthony, a name that was not known to us.
You know what I remember over the years, he's been
we gonna liket. A couple of years ago, some listeners
sent stuff about him, but I didn't really read it.
(16:59):
Kind of too local. Anyway, he made news because apparently
he went to a fundraiser. It was drag night bingo,
and he got paddled by a transperson, paddled playfully. The
video went viral. People either got worked up over it
or thought it was silly and left. However, looked at
(17:22):
the story and said okay. Then a couple of days later,
Fox News Digital did an interview with this fool, and
this is the reason he's going into the dumpster. We're
going to start to play this audio. It's mostly him
talking about his ideology and philosophy of government, and we'll
see how long it takes John Cobelt to bring in
the mob.
Speaker 18 (17:40):
Here we go complete transformative change in our society to
move to a police less state, meaning the fundamental understanding
of how we convict catch, chase crime and criminology, and
treat people in jails and prisons and all of.
Speaker 2 (17:59):
That is flawed.
Speaker 18 (18:02):
Most other countries do what's called restorative justice. Most other
countries have a prison population, you know, a percentage of
what we have. We're talking like five or ten percent
what the United States has. These are developed countries, places
that are wealthy, that have you know, industrialized workers and
(18:26):
know what they're doing in full fledged democracies and all
of that stuff. They have moved past a carceral state.
We are still living in sort of a quasi you know,
twentieth century ideology of you do something bad, you got
to get punished. Yeah, that works when you're five, right,
(18:50):
But when we're talking about human beings on a massive scale,
we have to get people back into society. We have
to get people to understand that they are in active
and productive member of a larger group. They're not so
as an abolitionist, my policies resonate with the average American.
Nobody wants to go to jail. Nobody wants to have
(19:13):
rampant crime. Nobody wants to see people stuck in prison
for the rest of their lives. And as we have
an opportunity to to grow and learn.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
And we're trying that and look what's.
Speaker 18 (19:24):
Happened fundamentally changed that. And for me, it starts with
those early services.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Okay, kids, let's go, let's go pick him up.
Speaker 19 (19:38):
They give him a good spank because he seems to
enjoy it. I hear him say, I heard a flat.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
He's getting spank. Listen to that. You that he's enjoying it. No, no, no, no,
in the dumpster he's still in there, but devastating him.
Speaker 6 (20:06):
No, I'm not.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
This guy is absolete.
Speaker 11 (20:11):
Rah.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
And you can hear the confidence in his voice, like
he's yeah, class, he knows he's right. The future, he says.
You don't even hear the part came later he starts
talking about how we should all own the company and
be our own bosses. Play the rest of it. Do
you have the rest of it there? But it's probably
another two or three minutes. It was long. I played
most of it that day. I was talking about this
and I heard this. I'm like, oh my god, this
(20:33):
is an instant instant dumpster can.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
But he but but we've we've tried this, you know,
in real time. Right now, it's going on right this
is Gascon's philosophy.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
And look what's happened. And let's remind you this is
the mayor of Burbank. He really thinks he's a world
player the way he talks here. How did that happen?
What's with Burbank voters? What's going on the other day?
He says he didn't vote for the guy, but wow,
oh maybe he didn't. He's embarrassed to check his voting records. Well,
(21:02):
there you go. The Hacket of Dumpster is the mayor
of Burbank, Constantine Anthony, who's a Marxist. Burbank mayors used
to be. It's the book he talks about Karl Marx
in this interview too.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
Burbank mayors used to be these boring square balls in
great So.
Speaker 2 (21:18):
This crowd is infiltrated, even Burbank government. I mean we
know they infiltrated La City County government.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
Burbank's pretty strict. You know, you don't there's no homeless
laying around in Burbank. I know there's there's there's no
smashing grabs going on here, not too many. No, no, no.
The Burbank police are tough. They've got all kinds of
traffic rules. Oh yeah, they went after me for crossing
the light against the red.
Speaker 2 (21:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
No, they're they're like, they're like paining the ass about stuff.
So so how does this guy make it?
Speaker 6 (21:48):
So?
Speaker 2 (21:49):
Is he implementing this? I don't know how much this
is his grand scheme. This is just talking big. Oh,
he got to keep an eye on this total run
for something.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
That's the thing. You got to assume the guy's a
whack job, all right. When you're bent over getting spanked
by a drag queen, there's and and you're proud of it.
Then you know there's there's there's more than one screw loose,
and of course there's.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
I think he is running. Is he running for adams
Shift's seat? I think I did see something. Oh my god, no,
we tried it. It failed. This guy's dangerous. Yeah, I
did read that he is. I think he is running
for some other oh La County supervisor, fifth district. That's
what he's doing. Running against who? Uh, I don't know.
(22:38):
I don't know who's the who's the fifth thing? I
gotta look it up. Yeah, god, there's an unending supply
of these lunatics. Yeah. L County Supervisor Katherine Barger's district
former actor than politician. Oh so he's a loser actor.
He's a former actor. Yeah, and so now he's O.
(22:59):
Katheryn Barger is probably it's close. You can get to
normal on that board of supervisor. She wondering wants to
aust She running or is she getting turned down that?
I don't know. I'll have to have to look into all. Yeah,
she's like the last one left.
Speaker 5 (23:12):
You're listening to John and Ken on demand from KFI AM.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Six forty and then after four you could do the
John and Kenn on demand podcast and you could listen
to it all weekend if you want.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
There you go back to all the show, all the
shows this week. You can play all weekend, not long
after four o'clock. It'll be posted up on the app
and caf I AM six forty dot com. All right,
well here we go with more Moistline people. Let's see
what they had to sound off about. It's been a
couple of weeks since we played some calls. You leave
a messages in the iHeartRadio app the microphone icon. We're
called the tophree number one eight seven seven moist eighty six.
Speaker 11 (23:45):
Hey, this is.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
John and this is Ken.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
We're so excited to.
Speaker 6 (23:48):
Hear from you.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
It's about time.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
I would like to receive reparations from every idiot that
voted for Biden.
Speaker 10 (23:56):
Or News at all the economic harm. I don't know
how you guys can be critical of greasy Gavin when
he says that Biden is the picture of youth queen.
For God's sake, the guy eats soft foods, he babbles
when he speaks something, and he takes the early nappy
nap times.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
That's me.
Speaker 10 (24:16):
Is just like any two year old.
Speaker 5 (24:19):
The guy that took a knife out of his back
dab the other dude in the chest.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
Yeah, his family says that he's a paranoid schizophrate, Yet
they allowed him to have a gun to.
Speaker 6 (24:35):
Kill that deputy. Why don't we just give all the
crazies guns.
Speaker 13 (24:39):
If they really give the strikers unemployment insurance for quitting
their job, then anybody.
Speaker 10 (24:46):
Who quits their jobs should be able to get unemployment insure.
Speaker 11 (24:50):
Ridiculous.
Speaker 16 (24:51):
That's not true, John, That's not true at all. People
don't want to be in government just for power, because
I would love to be Attorney General just to show
these dumb do their job and put every single one
of those crumb in jail.
Speaker 17 (25:05):
If this guy, this cold blooded murderer, that premeditated drove
up and shot that nice young deputy, I'd just like
to know if he was so crazy, what the hell
was he doing with guns? Where was the family about
the guns?
Speaker 2 (25:18):
If he was so wacko?
Speaker 17 (25:19):
Another example of the failure of red flack laws.
Speaker 8 (25:24):
Hey, guys, you're looking for a good death penalty method.
Speaker 13 (25:27):
Let's bring back the guillotine, quick, easy, simple cuts the
guy's head off and there's no pain associated.
Speaker 10 (25:34):
Right.
Speaker 2 (25:35):
I don't know us an electricity. I spend money on
drugs when we could just.
Speaker 7 (25:39):
Go old school. Hey, you know they're pushing all this
electricity that's going on here. But I got to tell you, guys,
when I get next to one of these buses, I
totally lose the AM signal and I can't hear the
point John and Kenner making and these buses. Can that
be bad for you? That much stuff?
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Can that really be bad for you?
Speaker 13 (26:00):
So the illegals are looking for work, hug about sending
their guns at border and pick up all.
Speaker 11 (26:05):
That damn trust they left behind. That should be their
first job before they get on any damn busses. How
bad as a politician have to be where they are
still getting twenty seven percent approval ratings. Like George Gaston,
I want to meet those people. I want to meet
those people who think that these people are good people
(26:28):
are doing their job. What is wrong with society? Gone?
I agree with you. I need an exit.
Speaker 19 (26:35):
Dad.
Speaker 12 (26:36):
Every stupid chase.
Speaker 17 (26:41):
That we hear that we get interrupted in our neighborhood
should end with them stuck out his window.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
That's the best way to take care of that. Thank
you for leaving your message. Please hang up. Oh like
that guy who got stuck in their window, Yeah, trying
to climb. What did she want? She she thinks they
should all end with somebody with them getting there. I
guess they're asked stuck in them? Oh, I see, I
think that's what she said. Got bleep, but I beleeve
that's what she said. Becau, That's what happened to the
(27:12):
guy yesterday was trying to climb out the window for that. Well,
thank you very much moistline calls and welcome back.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
By the way, did you see Biden's latest flub?
Speaker 13 (27:26):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (27:27):
He was the anything he was at the Congressional Hispanic
Caucus annual gala. Yeah, and he announced that the Congressional
Black Caucus embodies all these values.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
The wrong caucus. That's right.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
He was playing raising the Black Caucus in front of
the Hispanic caucus. Did they boom? They just stood there, dumbfounded,
babble babble. Kent Tim conways here.
Speaker 11 (27:53):
He no, he know.
Speaker 2 (27:54):
Yes, we started four o'clock every single day here on
CA fin It's true. No, when did that happens, right
like January?
Speaker 20 (28:05):
No, but I'm just saying that, you know people, some
people don't know at the right time.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Oh, the chases, right, yeah, right, you got to get
you've got to get it together with Well.
Speaker 2 (28:14):
We threw your mayor into the dumpsters, so I know.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
So this guy is like as a Marxist, right, yeah,
and he wants to abolish the police. Well not not
any the whole country. He's getting spanked by drag Queen. Right,
but it's not get a burbank.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
It's not they voted for him. No, they'd appointed him.
He's got a point.
Speaker 20 (28:34):
Yeah, you don't get voted in as they take time. Yes,
that's exactly right. Yeah, if you're a council member, you
get a year. Then the next guy gets. Then the
next guy gets.
Speaker 2 (28:43):
But they elected him council member. I mean that's better.
That's right. What is the part of town that produces this?
That's not my part of town? Supervisor Adam Shift is
one of the congressmen. That's right.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
Yes, there's a there's a bad part of town near us,
I know, but you know what.
Speaker 2 (28:58):
It's quiet. Yes, it's quiet.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
It's not la But when he abolishes the police, it's
not going to be so quiet.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
Liberals are quiet.
Speaker 20 (29:06):
I like that they mind their own business, all right.
Alex Michaelson's coming on speaking of mining his own business.
Also a good friend of mine and author Doug McIntyre
and Billy Ray to talk about the strike. The WGA
strike might all coming to an end, so we'll find
out at six thirty five to be exact. And then
(29:29):
last time I went to Petros's dad, John papadeka Is
at the Catalina Club and man, it was great. But
Sunset Boulevard at night is another country that is a
wild zone.
Speaker 19 (29:41):
Man.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
Wow.
Speaker 20 (29:42):
I mean, first of all, you can't move all the
light none of the lights are synced up, so you
sit and you wait, and you wait and you wait
and you wait, and then there's nobody moving, and then
the potholes are the size of like dump trucks.
Speaker 2 (29:52):
It's unreal.
Speaker 20 (29:53):
And then all the streets are littered with either trash
or there's homeless guys. It's literally like going into a
different in world, a different country.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
It's Catalina Club. They moved. They moved, did they?
Speaker 20 (30:04):
Because I was going to say there that was on
ventur Well, I know, we just span Kowanga. Then they
moved it again. But it's it's in a less crappy
part of Hollywood. That's how they sell it.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
I see.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
Yeah, but it's it's a cool club. Oh I've been
there a futures. No, I like it a lot.
Speaker 20 (30:19):
Yeah, it was, it was, and it was also nice
to be one of the younger people there.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Funny dang doggright we go, we got con right?
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Yeah, all right in the CAFI twenty four hour Newsy.
Speaker 2 (30:36):
Hey, you've been listening to The John and Ken Show.
You can always hear us live on CAF i AM
six forty one pm to four pm every Monday through Friday,
and of course anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.