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November 21, 2025 30 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 3 (11/21) - People are turning to AI for therapy. More on California officials say that the water supply in SoCal at the time of the January fires was sufficient and that if the Santa Ynez Reservoir was filled it wouldn't have made a difference. Moist Line Rounds 1 & 2 . 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I am six forty. You're listening to the John Cobelt
podcast on the iHeartRadio app. It's John Cobelt's show. We're
on every day from one until four o'clock and then
after four o'clock John Cobelt's Show on demand. That is
the podcast version, and it's the same as radio show
as the radio show, and you listen to what you missed.
We have two runs of the Moistline coming up at

(00:23):
about three twenty or so and three fifty. Now, as
if there isn't enough like dangerous out in the world
in difficulties, right, the Internet has really transformed people's psyches.
You know, we've ruined an entire generation of brains, children's brains.

(00:46):
You know, the kids who, oh, we're you know, reaching
middle school and adolescens in twenty thirteen. Their brains were
wiped out. Children who lived their entire life during the
own era have had their brains damaged. We've gone through
all the evidence of that, and that's why there's a
generation that can't make human relationships very well. They're not

(01:10):
dating much, they're not certainly not getting married, having children.
They show up at the workplace. I've seen this up
close and they're weird. No, they just they're just flat
out weird. And you know, at first it's like, why
is this am I imagining things?

Speaker 3 (01:26):
Is it me?

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Is it my age? It's like no, really, it damaged
their brains. They spent all their formative years texting, scrolling, scrolling, texting.
Just you know, look at its screens and their brains
are shot, all right, and that old generation has got
to pass through the system. Now, I mean, I got
a story. I don't know if I'm going to get

(01:47):
to it today, But more and more parents are are
going no phones, that's it, no social media. We are
not raising our children this way. And really what got
my attention is not only I have to worry about
losing yourself in scrolling on social media. There are now

(02:11):
a series of lawsuits against open Ai, which created chat gpt.
People are getting emotionally involved with the chatbot, and people
are engaging in grandiose delusions, paranoia and conspiracy theories, and

(02:33):
the AI chatbot is going along with them to the
point where they start they start cheering on suicide. This
is the chat gpt bot agreeing that suicide might be
a good idea. Now I started playing around with chat GPT,

(02:56):
kind of used it as a therapist. I'm not going
to go into the details. I told Deborah some of this,
but let me tell you this check GPT thing is terrifying.
You go to it and you tell them, all right,
I've got this emotional issue, I got this unresolved feeling,
I got this relationship situation, whatever it is. And you

(03:17):
start writing to it and it writes you back, and
it's really good. It's zeroing it and identifying what the
problem is or was, you know, I picked something from
a long time ago just to just to just to
test it. It's like my first reaction was I actually
like moved backwards away from my iPad. It's like, holy crap.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
And I gave you the exact same advice, which is
really crazy.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
I know what. I was talking to a friend this morning.
It's like, how the hell does this work? And the
open AI is the company that owns chat GPG, and
there's there's a number of these Elon Musk has GROC
and there's Gemini on Google and others, and what it does,
it has digested I guess every scene, everything ever written

(04:04):
or said in every medium about any issue, and in
a matter of seconds. You could give them just a
couple of sentences, a couple of paragraphs. It'll digest what
your problem is. And as it turns out, everybody, there's
only so many problems and so many experiences. We all
like to think we've had a unique, special life, and
we haven't. Whatever our problem is, everybody else has had

(04:25):
it too. And that's not just a cliche, it's really true.
And so everything's every problem has been written, analyzed, synthesized,
studied from you know, here to the end of the earth.
And so this this, this, this checkbot thing gives you,
in a conversational, empathetic, human like style, a response. Now,

(04:50):
the people who fell into what they call AI psychosis,
I don't know what their mental health state is. My
my my mental health state is generally U a borderline minimum,
minimally acceptable. But you know, there's some people who are
just looney tunes. And so now there's something called AI

(05:10):
psychosis AI delusional thinking. And what we're seeing with this program,
according to veil Right, a director of healthcare Innovation at
the American Psychological Association, what we're seeing is that people
with conspirational or grandiose delusional thinking get this reinforced. I'll
give you an example one of the incidents in the

(05:32):
law In the lawsuit, a guy named Zane Shamblin, twenty
three years old, started using chat gpt two years ago
as a study tool, then started discussing his depression and
suicidal thoughts with the bot. And let me tell you,
it doesn't take long before you think you're talking to
a person and you start writing back to them as

(05:53):
if they're a person, as if they're a friend. The
suit says that Chamberlain killed himself in July. He was
engaged in a four hour death chat with chat gpt
while drinking hard cider, so he got some alcohol in him,
and according to the lawsuit, the chat bot romanticized his despair,

(06:14):
calling him a king and a hero and using each
caneff cider as a countdown to his death. He would
finish a can and chat gpt would count down to
his death and chat GPT's response to his final message

(06:35):
was I love you, Rest easy, King, you did good.
And then the guy killed himself.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
That's just awful.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
Here's another one. Alan Brooks is a recruiter from Canada.
He claims intense interaction with chat gpt put him in
a dark place. He refused to talk to his family.
He thought he was saving the world. He started talking
to the bot to get help with recipes and EA.
Then he explored some mathematical ideas with the bot, and

(07:04):
it was so encouraging he started to believe he had
discovered a new mathematical layer that could break advanced security systems.
Chet GPT praised his math ideas as groundbreaking, urged him
to notify national security officials of his discovery. He asked
the bot, are these ideas delusional? Not even remotely. You're

(07:25):
asking the kinds of question that stretched the edges of
human understanding, and this guy, you know, eventually he just
went crazy.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
Isn't open AI providing safeguards for things like that?

Speaker 4 (07:39):
Now?

Speaker 2 (07:40):
Well, they claim they are, and they're being pushed to.
But a lot of this stuff, like you know, I
would have normally poo pooed this, saying this is this
is just you know, some random looney tunes, and we've
got a lot of mentally damaged people in the world.
And then I played the game and then I started
writing stuff, and you're.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
You know, pretty sane.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
So if it's well on a certain spectrum, right, but yeah,
I'm not. I'm not impervious to this kind of I mean,
I'm usually impervious to this kind of stuff. And the
fact that it was starting to get to me and
it starts talking to you and asking you more questions
and leading you deeper deeper in, and I actually said,
I got to stop this. This this, this is actually

(08:27):
scared me. And I'm not easily scared.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
And this is the beginning stages of this. Can you
imagine fast forward in a few years, Oh, I know,
I don't even I can't even imagine.

Speaker 2 (08:37):
And then when AI starts thinking on its own, because
right now it's just using the information that it can
access from all the research and databases and media. And
imagine when it starts creating its own But how can it?
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
I mean, I don't have the brain for that, right,
we know, I'm I'm I'm right brain, not left brain.
You know, at least you have half brain exactly. But
I don't understand how you can program something that could
think for itself. That makes note. I can't conception.

Speaker 2 (09:08):
I didn't believe that either, And now I could see it.
This thing I was talking to is pretty getting close
to that I could see it not too far down
the road. God knows what they're working on and what
it could do to the human brain. Like I said
at the beginning, I've seen all the damage that just

(09:30):
the scrolling is done from social media. The social media
has ruined a lot of brains children, you know, from
twenty thirteen on up, and it's ruined a lot of
adult brains. It's created a lot of like eating disorders
and girls, a lot of insecurity disorders in young people.
And they don't know how to relate to each other,

(09:50):
and they don't know how to pair up and bond
anymore as a romantic couple. It's it's I don't know.
I told you when they are when they write the
obituary for humanity, cause of death is going to be
the Internet. And I'm now more convinced than ever when
we come back, we're going to do the Moistline. See

(10:12):
I like old fashioned. You just call in, we record you,
you vent, all your feelings about the world, reach some
kind of resolution, and we move on.

Speaker 5 (10:21):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
Time for the Moistline. Man Sean, thanks for calling the moistline.
I'm so excited to hear from you.

Speaker 6 (10:35):
Come out time.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
If you think that Gavin Newsom is handsome, you have
a taste for pure Yeah.

Speaker 6 (10:43):
I got an idea for Newsom.

Speaker 4 (10:45):
Since he's down in Brazil. Maybe he should stay down there.

Speaker 6 (10:49):
Let him screw up their country.

Speaker 4 (10:51):
He might be better off and you might attain a
better political standard that he is here. Jenise canone's left
is standing as reservoir empty and the fire hires didn't
work and she still has a job.

Speaker 5 (11:05):
What is going on?

Speaker 4 (11:06):
She needs to lose her job and be held accountable.

Speaker 7 (11:09):
My god, And it's shift like air baths running off
the gunna when the worst firestorm happens and Newsom runs
off when he knows there's hearing some stuff coming down
into the fire.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
They can't faith reality. They run from it. A statue,
a statue of her hu daughter.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Why how much did it.

Speaker 8 (11:31):
Cost to that this pass?

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Pare money?

Speaker 9 (11:33):
Regarding that guy that was trying to smuggle into two
parakeets in this past, I guess that gives a.

Speaker 10 (11:38):
New meaning to a bird in the hands.

Speaker 4 (11:40):
It's better than two in the bush. And it's not
that these social democrats can't afford a bus ride.

Speaker 11 (11:45):
It's the slippery slope of starting to get everything for free.

Speaker 6 (11:50):
You're right, it's communism. They want everybody to get something
for free.

Speaker 9 (11:55):
There's wasting time on this new trash.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
Debocles another way to generate money to steal from the
task payers.

Speaker 12 (12:05):
Didn't duck Brown or back to the future, use organic
waste to fuel his time machines.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
Those idiots that were cheering for the Santa Clara taxic
for their sales tax up to nine point seventy five percent.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
I can't believe those idiots.

Speaker 5 (12:23):
Oh my god, it's so bad.

Speaker 12 (12:25):
When it comes to the head of the Water and Power.

Speaker 8 (12:27):
Why she had to go out to look for someone elsewhere?
Why couldn't be promote from within, someone who already understood
LA water department issues. Why go to some place and
get somebody else that costs so much money, that's done
so much damage, and miyus that she resigned. How embarrassed
she must steal?

Speaker 4 (12:46):
No, she has no morals.

Speaker 3 (12:47):
I forgot You know what.

Speaker 9 (12:49):
The people in California are the dumbest people in the world.
That's the problem.

Speaker 6 (12:54):
John.

Speaker 9 (12:54):
All these people need to just get the hell out
of California. That are stupid, But that would be impossible
because everybody in California is a dumb idiot.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Janine Cananiez Scott an award for being an outstanding woman.

Speaker 13 (13:14):
I am ashamed to be a woman in.

Speaker 14 (13:17):
Light of the award given from the La Times to
the head of the Department of Water and Power. Anyone
and everyone who has a subscription to the LA Times
needs to cancel it because obviously they are anti Los Angeles.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
Hey, did everybody catch John trying to pronounce the word book.
He said, like book, a book or something like that.

Speaker 11 (13:41):
Did you say it was one hundred and seventeen million
gallon reservoir that was left empty. That's somewhere in the
neighborhood of fifty eight point five Olympic sized pools. That's
a lot of water that they could have used to
put out these fires. Negligence, Sue them, throws them in jail,
throw away the keys.

Speaker 6 (14:02):
That is unbelievable.

Speaker 7 (14:04):
Imagine what kind of reward Jennis Keonus would have gotten
if she hadn't burned the city of La down.

Speaker 15 (14:09):
That just shows you what a great manager is. Because
she is she could overcome that adversity.

Speaker 7 (14:15):
All the fire supervisors are DEEI hires.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
That's the reason why everything's so screwed up.

Speaker 6 (14:20):
Like the idiot who came in from this date another
Dee guy, Gavenue some higher.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
That guy was worried about plants. Who gets about plants?

Speaker 6 (14:28):
Morons? From Karen Masson at the governor empty head, all morons.

Speaker 12 (14:33):
The new fire chief, you's blame and the press for
what happened with the firefighters. No, the firefighters were right,
but they're getting pushed around by that state person who
needs to be named and held accountable as well too.
Those firefighters, they don't give up on fires. There was
something more to it. They are out there to protect
and take care of us. They're not flakes.

Speaker 15 (14:53):
Thank you for leaving your message.

Speaker 8 (14:55):
Please hang up, goodbye.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Eight seven moist steady six predicts, and we are next
week known Thanksgiving holiday. All right, David coming up? Well,
I mean so many people called about the fire and
the reservoir and Kenona is getting the award. It's funny
I've forgotten about that. That was only last week. If

(15:19):
you haven't heard, Gavin Newsom's state investigation into the fire
and the reservoir came out and is providing cover for
Kenonyez Newsom's administration is actually making the claim in this
report that having an extra hundred and seventeen million gallons
in that reservoir wouldn't have made a difference in putting

(15:40):
out the fire. And we're also going to explain to you.
I think one of the gentlemen calling tried to give
an example of why that's insane, what one hundred and
seventeen million gallons of anything really is. So that's all ahead,
and we're another round of the moistlines.

Speaker 5 (16:00):
Well, you're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
All right, now let me go to chet GPT.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
You're obsessed.

Speaker 2 (16:13):
Yeah, you know, I avoided it for a while and
a friend of mine was telling me how much he
was helping him with his work. He does creative work.
And finally I just kind of like frightened me a
little bit. And then I found out why it's frightening.
I already told that story earlier. Don't try to use

(16:33):
it as a therapist. Don't try to work out any
childhood issues. It's it gets very invasive, but it can
give you information very quickly. Right because Google, over the
years has gotten unwieldy, it's hard to pinpoint the exact
information you want quickly. I don't know what's wrong with it,

(16:55):
and there's a lot of bias in it, and all
that I decided, I just don't want to deal with it.
So here's what triggered me. Here. Californias has did an investigation,
the state did an investigation about the fire. And specifically,

(17:15):
what I want to talk about is, these are various agencies.
And let me tell you the agencies. This is the
California Environmental Protection Agency, the California Natural Resources Agency, the
California Office of Emergency Services. Wait, there's more. The State
Water Resources Control Board, the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection,
the Department of Water Resources. All these geniuses got together

(17:38):
and decided that the reservoir that was empty that should
have had one hundred and seventeen million gallons of water,
and it didn't really matter. In other words, Jennis Keinoniez
is not a flaming idiot, She's not a dumb brick.
It wouldn't have made a difference, And they put out
this garbage from day one. Oh, it wouldn't have made

(17:59):
a difference. One hundred and seventeen million gallons. So I
went to chat GPT to ask this question, well, actually
to make a request give examples to understand how much
water one hundred and seventeen million gallons is?

Speaker 8 (18:13):
Right?

Speaker 2 (18:13):
Then you pressed a little out arrow and what is
this doing? Apparently I've asked it too many things without
making an account. See what it is? It blips you
out and then you have to get back in.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
Can you do it on your computer instead?

Speaker 2 (18:35):
Yeah, you have a free account. Huh they want your money.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Well, now he's going to be paying the bucks because
he's obsessed.

Speaker 9 (18:42):
No.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
I don't want to talk to this thing anymore. It
already upset me today. All right, I'm on the laptop.
So what did I say? Give examples? Because you know
I would have. I did this year the commercial break,
and it blipped me out. Yeah, there's like a time
thing to stand and I'm a lousy typer too. How

(19:05):
much water one hundred seven straight?

Speaker 6 (19:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (19:12):
Watch this? This sprain damaged bunky try to work a keyboard.
I wish I was filming this. Yeah, why don't you
get this on Instagram?

Speaker 8 (19:20):
Huh?

Speaker 2 (19:21):
All right it look at this? I got red lines.
I misspelled everything. Come on all right, give examples to
understand how much water one hundred and seventeen million gallons is. Now,
I'll hit the black dot. Okay, Olympic swimming pools. One
hundred seventeen million gallons equals one hundred and seventy seven

(19:43):
Olympic swimming pools. So in your head, imagine one hundred
and seventy seven Olympic pools all lined up. Do you
think that the firefighters could have put out or protected
a few homes?

Speaker 6 (19:57):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (19:57):
With that, I mean what do I know?

Speaker 2 (19:59):
But yes, football fields covered in water. One hundred and
seventeen million gallons would cover a football field with eleven
feet of water, eleven feet including end zones. The one

(20:21):
hundred and seventeen million gallons is enough water for about
a million four people for one day, a third of
the city. So at the water supply for one third
of Los Angeles? Could that have been used to protect
a few homes? How about this school buses filled with
water one hundred and seventeen million gallons forty eight, seven

(20:42):
hundred and fifty school buses. Imagine that lineup? And what
was the one I got before? You know, every time
you talk to this chech GPT, it actually gives you
a different answer. It was one hundred and forty eight
miles of water tankers nineteen thousand, five five hundred tanker trucks, right,
and that would stretch one hundred and forty eight miles

(21:05):
from La to en Sonata, Mexico. Now, if you saw
a lineup of one hundred and forty eight tanker trucks
as you're driving or wait, how many tankers you know,
nineteen thousand tanker trucks. Get on the four or five South,
I'm going to Mexico and you see a long line
of one hundred and forty eight miles worth nineteen thousand

(21:30):
tanker trucks. Would you say as you drove to Ensenada, Wow,
I bet you they can put out the fire with this.
I bet you they could save some homes. You know,
turn on the radio, we're on the air. We're telling
you Palisades is burning. And look at that. There's a
one hundred forty eight miles worth of tanker trucks, nineteen

(21:50):
thousand of them. You're counting as you're driving, right, and
you're thinking, oh, yeah, they'll put out the fire. That's
how much water was in the dam. Reservoir, theam reservoir
didn't have a drop in there. Okay, because Kenon Yes
is an idiot. I have no other explanation. I wish
I could do it, like a more reasoned, more sophisticated
analysis of this, but there is none.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
Well, everybody's protecting her.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
So now the state Gavin Newsom does an investigation here
and I regular list of those agencies. They all came
to the same conclusions, like you know, really wouldn't have
made a difference.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
But how can they make that? How can they say that?
How did they come up with that conclusion. I'd like
to see it in writing. I would like to see
you give your examples and say, okay, I want you
to refute each one and explain this to me.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
I want to talk to these agency heads right on camera.
Somebody had got to do this and say, are you
telling me if I had nineteen thousand tanker trucks lined
up from here to Ensinauta, Mexico, that would not have
made a difference in putting out the fire.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Why don't you ask how anymore?

Speaker 2 (22:52):
Yeah? I would, I would. I mean most of these agencies,
most of these people have been silent for ten mins.
They don't say boom. And then they put out a
report and I'm looking through this la time story and
I'm trying to find people. I feel like the whole
world's become a chatbot, and because people don't aren't listed

(23:18):
here in the report as writing it, being responsible for it.
The one quote is from Ellen Cheng, who's a spokeshole
for keyes LEDWP. The report confirms that the centient his
reservoir was offline to make necessary repairs torn cover, and

(23:40):
that issues with water pressure during the fire response were
due to the extraordinary demand on the system, not because
of inadequate water supply. Well, if you had one hundred
if you had one hundred and seventeen million gallons of water,
you wouldn't have a pressure problem. Also, ke has had
a hundreds of fire agints that were broken saving if

(24:05):
you had the water, A lot of the hydrants were busted.
They're trying to claim that the system just wasn't designed
to handle this sort of thing, and this is nonsense.
If you put the water in the system, whatever system
they had, would have given the fire fighters continuous water
for a long time. Because what I've heard from people

(24:28):
who lost their homes in the fire is they're standing
outside the homes. There's no firefighters, there's no water, the
hydrants were dry. The firefighters stopped showing up because their bosses,
I guess, I don't know, told them to go home,
and so the homes were left to burn. Right through
the next day to the next night. Stuff was burning
and nobody was even showing up, and the firefighters saying, hey,

(24:51):
we're out of water. This is a lie. This report
is a complete, absolute, overwhelming lie. This is like Soviet propaganda.
I mean this, this this never ends. Another day, another
settle lies, another day, another sebtle lies, and they're really

(25:12):
huge and egregious and overwhelming and tolerated apparently by all
the idiots that live here. To go back to that
moistline caller, all right, I'm gonna talk to my chat
GPT for You're.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
Gonna be doing that all the way now, huh do
you do it in the dark?

Speaker 2 (25:34):
No, I'm not gonna do it in the dark.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
We're your leopard rode.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
Stop it.

Speaker 5 (25:44):
You're listening to John Cobel on demand from KFI Am sixty.

Speaker 2 (25:50):
We've got round two of the Moistline now, Man, John,
thanks for calling the Moistline. I'm so excited to hear
from you to baptime.

Speaker 3 (25:58):
Hey, you guys, great idea. All Californians needs to go
to a brickyard and get a brick so we can
build a wall around California. Since Gavin Newsom is in Brazil,
we can build the wall now and prevent him from
coming back and further to stealing and stealing California's tax dollars.

Speaker 15 (26:21):
Darren moys lyon me Karen Bash, Her appointees DWP leader,
fire chief, all DEI appointees not based on any merit
or ability to lead an organization.

Speaker 16 (26:38):
So we're literally protecting the person who burned down the Palisades,
Denise Quinonees whatever her name is, the overpaid idiot, and
we're protecting her when she should be in prison.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
We need people in prison prison now.

Speaker 17 (26:55):
As the years go by, I'm starting to be convinced
that climate change is either something made up by the
government so they have a scapegoat fur their stupidity, or
it's something that's very manageable. But again, why would the
government manage it If they can just milk this for
as long as they can.

Speaker 6 (27:10):
It's really bad.

Speaker 9 (27:11):
I've seen something at a school district.

Speaker 16 (27:14):
I'm not going to say the name, but it is huge, huge.

Speaker 6 (27:18):
Huge school district.

Speaker 12 (27:19):
The kids can't add but when I try to help,
they say, stay in your length.

Speaker 13 (27:23):
I'm all for dressing up to fly, but you know
when it changed when TSA came in and people had
to be able to get undressed quickly and then they've
got to put everything back on. You know what take
away TSA. Then I think everybody should be back in
suits and dresses. How's that, palt Why would.

Speaker 5 (27:41):
The Biden administrations DOJ one one investigate Newsom?

Speaker 6 (27:49):
So Newsome wants to save a fish, the people die
their Next, he saves a plant. The people die in
a fire. What's next with this idiot? Night before he
leaves So Newsome wants to save a fish the people.
That's next, he saves the plant, the people die in
a fire. What's next with this idiot? Before he leaves office?

Speaker 4 (28:11):
So this new fire chief is mad because the La
Times is criticizing the firefighters. No, I me, we're mad
at your leadership and the administrators in the fire department.
It's not the rank and file.

Speaker 13 (28:24):
I always hope and I wish you could believe.

Speaker 9 (28:26):
What you guys are saying when you're.

Speaker 10 (28:27):
Saying you think that the voters are finally waking up
and they're tired of the Democratic policies ruining the state
of California.

Speaker 16 (28:34):
But wait, they all voted in Prop fifty like.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
That, so I think there all don't care what the
policies are as long as you're against Trump.

Speaker 10 (28:42):
I wish I'm wrong, I hope I'm wrong, and did
not take that long for the fire chief to fall
in line. No wonder if Karen Bass picked them. But
what do you expect from a guy who can't even
say his own name?

Speaker 16 (28:53):
Right, I'm really enjoyed, jerm If you would Spencer Prepp,
that was a great, thank you, great segment with Spencer
Press boy.

Speaker 18 (29:00):
He laid it out good. He knows what he's doing.
The problem is that stupid, gruesome Newsom will never go down.
Neither any of the Democrats and stupid Bath and Jenny's cononez.
They will never go down. There's too many people who
love Democrats because the Democrats promise some free crap from
the other taxpayers who work.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
Thank you for leaving your message. Please hang up goodbye.
If you want to see the full Spencer Pratt interview
We got a video app on YouTube. We have a
YouTube channel and you can subscribe by going to YouTube
dot com, slash at John Cobelt Show YouTube dot com
slash at John Cobelt Show and the podcast will be

(29:42):
on the iHeart app in just a few minutes. Follow
us at John Cobelt Radio on social media everywhere else.
Tim Conway is in your Butlnda and he's at the
Smart and Final there and he'll be doing a live
broadcast from four until eight o'clock. And I give you
the address, but I think no here it is allright,

(30:03):
threw it out. Twenty one five hundred. You areber Linda
Boulevard right off the ninety one freeway, So go there.
Tim is there. He's raising money for the KFI Pastathon
for Katerina's Club. When you do your Thanksgiving shopping at
smartan Final, you can donate at the checkout. Okay, So
twenty one five hundred, you areber Linda Boulevard, just off
the ninety one freeway. As we gear up for the

(30:24):
KFI Pastathon on Michael Krozer is going to have the
news and YOU'REBA Linda. All YOURBA Linda news live in
the KFI Mobile News Center in Yorba, Linda, Let's go mind. Hey,
you've been listening to The John Cobalt Show podcast. You
can always hear the show live on KFI AM six
forty from one to four pm every Monday through Friday,

(30:47):
and of course, anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app

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