Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app. Despite Gavin Newsom constantly saying, well,
you know, we're the fourth largest economy in the world.
I told you yesterday that a good deal of the
state is barely surviving. We've got about a third of
(00:22):
the state on medicare. We have about thirty five percent
of the state says every month they got to choose
between either food or paying the rent. And it's even
it's middle class, it's it's Laura, middle class, working class. However,
you define yourself poor people, you get you're getting screwed
(00:44):
by the government, and then you keep voting in the
people who are screwing you, which is it's really curious.
You know, we know about the four fifty five dollars
gas which is going to get worse, and the extreme taxes.
But one of the reasons, now yesterday I had spent some
I'm telling you how unemployment is at five point four percent.
We are tied for number one in the country. We
(01:07):
have one of the worst employment pictures here. You think
that might be tied into the fact that California is
rated number fifty in terms of business climate. Yes, if
you talk to business owners and they're polled regularly every year,
(01:27):
California has the worst climate to start or run a
business in the entire country. Number fifty, number fifty, huh,
and we're number one in unemployment. There you go, and
there's a story that's tracked the number of companies that
(01:51):
have left the state. Dure of Labor Statistics has found
that California has been losing more companies than it's been
gaining since twenty fourteen. This is ten years of companies
fleeing the state. In fact, in twenty twenty two, we
(02:14):
lost net seven hundred and forty one companies. And he
added all the companies that left the state and then
looked at all the companies that came in. Seven hundred
and forty one more companies left, so we were at
minus seven forty one. That's a lot of businesses, and
(02:35):
that's a lot of employees. How many tens of thousands
of employees out of work? That's just twenty twenty two.
In twenty twenty three, the net out migration was five
hundred and thirty three, So in a two year period
we lost almost thirteen hundred more companies than moved in here.
(03:00):
California is ranked among the top three states with the
highest rates of out migration since twenty fifteen. Corporate executives
say too many taxes. The state taxes its highest earners
at thirteen percent of their regular income, again an attack
(03:21):
on people who are smart and talented and do well.
That's on top of the thirty seven percent federal tax.
So if you do well in the state of California
and you hit a certain point in income, you lose
over fifty percent. Over fifty percent. That doesn't include sales tax,
(03:42):
property taxes, gas taxes, and all the thousand and one
other taxes out there. They also apply the thirteen point
three percent rate to profits from the sale of investments
under the sale of business asset. It is a constant theft,
(04:04):
constantly stealing money from successful people. They talk with John Lonsdale.
He has a venture capital firm, and he moved out
to Texas in twenty twenty, and he says, I could
either put that money towards things that are fixing the world,
in other words, other venture capital investments, or give it
to the California state government. And that's the thing. Even
(04:31):
even if you give them the money, you don't get
anything for it. It gets sucked into the government. Right.
I was talking with somebody the other day. We're both
from the East Coast, and we knew that grown up
New Jersey and New York were wildly corrupt. But the
difference was and this is why the mafia operated wherever
they controlled things in New York and New Jersey. Yeah,
(04:53):
they're going to take their cut. They're going to take
ten percent off the top, but you'll get your road, right,
build you the road here. They take most of the
money and there's no road. That's the simplest way to
put it. Old style corruption they skimmed off the top
and they gave you the road. New style corruption they
(05:16):
take almost everything and there's no road. Here's some other examples.
Kevin Cloden from the Milkin Institute said, when businesses complained
about dealing with regulations in California, they're not kidding. There's
lots of overlapping authorities and lots of businesses find it
really hard to operate, so they just get out of here.
And that means no jobs. We're losing tens of thousands
(05:39):
of jobs. Right. A few years back, Carls Junior said
it was relocating to Tennessee. Now in and out, it's
partially relocating there. And at the time the CEO, Andrew Puzzder, says,
it takes five times as long to open up a
Carl's Junior in California than it would in Texas or
(05:59):
other state. Five times as much, Cluden said, lower tax
rates in Florida and Texas, fewer regulations, other incentives. Why
can we have it here? More jobs, more tax revenue,
a fair tax burden, the uh. But they will keep
(06:26):
selling you on the Silicon Valley companies doing well. You know,
the ones who like you go to work at Facebook.
The average Facebook engineer gets four hundred thousand dollars. I mean,
what's the median income for regular people here in California
seventy eighty. But because everything's so lopsided in Silicon Valley
(06:49):
O the fourth largest economy of the world, We're a
thriving innovative Oh shut up, that's such a big lie.
More coming up. You're listening to co Belt on demand
from KFI AM six forty rough every day from one
to four o'clock and moistline is eight seven seven moist
eighty six eight seven seven mois Steady six are usually
(07:12):
talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app. We have a we
have a number of odd ball stories I want to
go through. First of all, there is there's video out
there and we have the audio. An alligator, smallest alligator
(07:33):
ended up in somebody's pool in Florida, and this really
happens because we have a place in Florida and.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
Have you done that?
Speaker 1 (07:40):
No? No, no, but there there are. We have seen
enough video that people in our neighborhood, in our section
of town have sent because like after hurricanes or a
couple of years ago that it wasn't a hurricane, but
well it was a hurricane. It had a couple of
hurricanes blow through, and then there was also just a
massive regular storm that dumped like ten inches. And once
(08:01):
you get outside the city's off the coast, you go
inland a little and it's all swampland and there's alligators.
I think there's over a million alligators in Florida, and
they get washed up into residential areas and they start
walking around the sidewalks and they walk up the walkways
(08:21):
right up to your front door. And you got to
watch it because there's one guy and I saw the
video of this. I mean, not the moment where the
bad thing happens, but he heard like a banging outside
his front door, and he goes looking, here's something in
the bush and he stuck his hand in the bush,
and well, I was it for the hand. Alligator did
(08:43):
the big jump, big jump and had a snack. And
I think I told you once that when we were
looking at to buy a house there there was a
new development and we could build the house anyway we want, right,
And I'm saying, well, this is pretty good, and she goes.
My wife says, no, look over there and there's a
retainer pond with fencing around it. And she goes, there'll
(09:04):
be alligators in there right across the street. Oh, it
has a fence. I'm then thrown into the retaining pod. No,
they're gonna climb over the fence. No, how could they
do that. So this is in Florida and somebody's backyard.
They call Florida deputies. Two of them show up, and
(09:25):
this is what it sounds like. They try to remove
the alligator from the pool and the alligator gets mad.
I'm here in your part. You go, wow, obviously you
(09:52):
up here. They have to take the mouth.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
Show and I'll take them to a pomis.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Very much. I know you're mad. That's the alligator. Now
they're carrying it out of the down the driveway and
(10:21):
they throw it in the backseat of the patrol car
like a drunken suspect. He buffled him in with the seatbelt.
That was the best part.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
Now this guy is doing the right thing. He is
taking her. He took the alligator into a pond.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
He didn't kill it, right, he didn't murder it. No, no,
but he did really use his bare hands to pull
it out of the of the water. And the alligator
is clearly pissed off. Oh yeah, yeah, he's really angry.
But they managed to suppress his jaw and tape it. Yeah.
They just look like masking tape or something.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
I love the way he was talking to the.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
I know you're mad. So it gets tossed in the
back seat and they drive off. Now completely different creature cockroaches.
This is Air India. They were flying from San Francisco
to Mumbai and they had to make a stop in
(11:22):
another Indian city, Kolkata. And when they stopped in Kolkata,
the passengers said cockroaches cockroaches. Now, Aridi has tried to
downplay this, saying, well, the passengers were unfortunately bothered by
the presence of a few small cockroaches, which I thought
(11:42):
was kind of a condescending statement. Well, they were unfortunately bothered.
I mean, like, really, are you so sensitive? Yeah? And
then and they were small cockroaches. Like that makes a difference,
they say, they said during the scheduled fuel stop, our
ground staff immediately went for a deep cleaning process to
eliminate the problem. The incident was unfortunate. Despite our regular
(12:08):
fumigation efforts, insects can sometimes enter an aircraft during ground operations.
We're going to be doing a comprehensive investigation to determine
the source. Why are you going to determine the source?
Speaker 3 (12:18):
John, Have you ever told your cockroach story on the
air that you told me off the air?
Speaker 1 (12:22):
I don't know. Well, back at the beginning of the
radio career, when I made no money, like one hundred
and forty a week, one hundred and sixty a week,
I lived in some disgusting dumps with my roommates, and
we had a kitchen that nobody went into. We just didn't.
(12:45):
In fact, after we moved out. It blew up. But
while we were there one day there were cockroaches and
there was one, and we devised a plan and I
had a can of WD forty. My friend had a lighter,
and I took the WD forty and I sprayed it
through the flame. We got the cockroach right in the
(13:09):
rear end. Cockroach went on fire, all right, fully engulfed, terrible,
fully engulfed. Me. Yes, cruel, and we're and you know what,
we wanted to watch him burn, oh, you know, because
it's disgusting to have them, and you know, the landlord
wasn't gonna do anything. But so we watched the flame
and it's burning, and it's burning and burning, and then
the flame flickers out and the cockroach keeps walking.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
I love that. That is so funny. They are indestructible.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
So I'd like to know how they're going to get
rid of those cockroaches on that plane.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
They're not. They're just trying to ward off a lossuit.
It's say, we did all the right things, you're just
because you're a little bothered by it. No that that
I was in awe, you know, I was like, wow,
all right, you're tough, you win and we're not going
back in the kitchen ever again. No, in fact, we're
moving out. No. I would have if I could afford it,
(14:03):
but you know, you make one sixty a week. That
doesn't go very far even back then. God, the living conditions,
that's right, I don't That's why I don't put up
with anybody's complaints.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
You've been through it all.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
I had been through it all.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
I get it.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
But you know, I just got up every day and
went to work. I don't know what else you're supposed
to do. Never took a dime of welfare. We applied
for it once. It's Curl I worked with at one station.
We thought maybe we could, maybe we could get welfare
because the pay was so low, and it didn't.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
You didn't get it, and we.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
Were just slightly over the threshold. Oh yeah, I think
that place. I was making one fifty. But we thought
we were onto something. The system doesn't work for for
regular people. Okay, more animal news. This is not a
good story. You're not gonna laugh at this. And uh,
(14:56):
well this is in Germany, so take that for what
it's worth. They have something called the Nuremberg Zoo. Eric,
your eyeser bugging out? I wish I could have taken
a picture of my face. I saw it in the camera,
but I wish I could have taken a screenshot of it.
The Nuremberg Zoo they shot twelve baboons dead to alleviate
(15:19):
overcrowded You can make up your own jokes. They should
have sent them to Denmark.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
They're too big.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
That's right. In Denmark they were begging for a while
now except a horse. So twelve baboons and so the
German zookeepers cut off their heads and cut off their
legs and started serving it to all the big cats
right in front of the public.
Speaker 2 (15:47):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
So all the good German mothers and fathers who brought
their kids in the middle of summer to go to
the go to the zoo.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
Can you imagine bringing your kids and watching that.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
According to one mother, they were presented on a butcher's bench.
It was really awful. The zoo says, well, the feeding
times were posted on signs and you could have avoided them.
The heads had been removed so the brains could be
examined for research purposes. Oh nothing changes in Germany, does it? No? No,
(16:22):
same people. More than three hundred complaints have been lodged.
They called it a culling, a culling of the baboons
because they're overcrowded and they can't find a place to
put them.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
I guess how hard do they try.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
I guess there's no adoption market for baboons. They were
anesthetized and then shot and uh, you know in recent
weeks protesters had chained themselves to the primate enclosure to
the baboon cages.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
Oh, they'll just be shot at two.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Actually, don't you don't do that in Germany. Come on,
you're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI. A
six coming up in just a few minutes, as we
get it together. Trump apparently spoke publicly there is some
kind of federal force that's going to help us out
(17:20):
with the Olympics, and he announced that today and apparently
he had some comments about Karen Bass too along the way.
But it looks like the National Guards coming back to
town help keep the peace during the Olympics. I just
enjoy that because it kisses her off so much. That's
(17:41):
the only time she got animated. I was talking before
how how angry and animated Newsome is because of the
redistricting in Texas, and he doesn't get angry and animated
over anything that's affecting our lives. Same thing with her.
She only cares about the illegal aliens being deported and ice.
(18:02):
He doesn't care about our daily hell of a life.
So we'll talk about that coming up as soon as
we can get it together.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Ah.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
So you know what, John, I wish that Trump said
to Maribas and Governor Newsom, you guys better clean up
Los Angeles or were this.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
You're just not gonna have the Olympics.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
I would love if he went on a campaign and
brought it up every week.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
The homeless situation and the crime situation need to be
dealt with.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
Yeah, just get get rid of all this. Get get
the criminals off the street, Get the vagrants off the street,
get them into mental health and drug addiction centers. Now,
build them, staff them, transport them, deport them, whatever it takes.
And that's what he that's what he should do. If
if Bass will govern this place and Newsom won't govern
(18:47):
this place, and they're both distracted by larger issues, then
maybe Trump ought to step in. I really don't care
if he declares martial law here. I mean somebody's got
to do something because this is ridiculous. Here's another example
in La County over ten million people. This is the
(19:07):
most populated county in the United States. Do you know
there are many individual states that don't have ten million
people in population. So this is its own state. It
has see worth. The budget is for emergency services. I mean,
I couldn't believe this. It's it's fifteen million dollars.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
That's it.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
That's it. Fifteen million for emergency services. Gee, what do
we have here? We have massive firestorms, two of them
in Outadena in the Palisades. We have major earthquakes when
they happen, yeah.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
Which they will happen probably soon.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
Yeah. We've got lots of flooding, right every few years, mudslide,
mud slides, rock slides. Almost had a tsunami the other day, right,
and of course the earthquakes, which are inevitable, inevitable another
day closer.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
Yes, could happen now, could happen now? Please?
Speaker 1 (20:15):
Don't? It has to happen.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Though I know, I wish there was a way that
we could solve that. I really do. I wish.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
That's a tall rader.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
I mean, I get want we want.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
To stop the Earth's tectonic plates from moving.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
No, can't we figure that out?
Speaker 3 (20:34):
The scientists creates something so they don't move.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
It's a great idea, but you could work on this.
Speaker 2 (20:41):
I don't have a scientific mind. Surprise, surprise.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
That's pretty shocking. Well, the Office of Emergency Management, which
does exist here in La County. You may not have
noticed it during the fires, fifteen million, thirty six people,
and nine of the fifteen million goes to salaries and benefits,
(21:07):
and they get a few million from federal grants. According
to one official says, and he's on the inside. LA
County has no real emergency management budget. And by the way,
the story is in the Washington Post, not in La paper.
The Washington Post from three thousand miles away figured out
(21:28):
that we do not have an emergency management system that's
worth anything. So there's ten million people. Do you know
how big the county is in square mileage four thousand
square miles four thousand. The office's budget is shockingly low
according to experts like New York City. All right, well,
(21:53):
actually Manhattan, just take the borough of Manhattan. They have
eighty eight million, and Manhattan is just twenty four miles
long and three four miles wide, depending on where you
are on the island. Cook County, which is where Chicago is,
has one hundred and thirty million. We have fifty and
(22:18):
most of it we blow on salaries. There have been
seventy four disasters over the last twenty years. According to
La County. They've declared a disaster area seventy four times.
The emergency management budget is so low. The truth is
(22:39):
they cannot prepare for or respond to anything. And now
they got the Olympics coming, oh right, so what are
they going to do? And the World Cup. Well, this
is what I'm saying, is like we need federal intervention.
I think somehow they should nationalize this city in this county,
just have the you know, you know, like the federal
government took it controls Washington, DC. That's what we need
(23:03):
here because the whole city in the county had been abdicated,
I knew them by Bass by the county supervisors, four
or five of the county supervisors are complete vegetables, you know,
just barely functional. They're still trying to investigate what happened
(23:24):
in the fires because if you remember, nobody warned Altadena
West Althadena that the fires were coming and that's where
nineteen people died, and they didn't get a warning until
nine hours later. And some of them never got the warning.
It never happened, and they haven't explained it. And if
I remember in the city emergency Emergency Management Department, do
(23:45):
you remember, they were sending out all kinds of bogus warning.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
I was gonna say, I got one, Yeah, I got one.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
I remember Eric got one. And none of us were
in the Palisades and none of us were in Altadena.
I'd get them driving home from work, buzzer would go off,
telling me to evacuate. And it was it with some
kid who because they eventually interviewed this young guy and
he was he was like crying, what happened to him?
Speaker 2 (24:12):
Oh, I'm sure he still doesn't what happened to him?
Speaker 1 (24:15):
Yeah? What happened to him? You send out not just one,
but several false alarms, scaring the hell out of people.
Who knows how many people evacuated.
Speaker 3 (24:24):
No one ever talks about Luis Cans anymore. I mean
she still has her job, right or Deanie?
Speaker 1 (24:30):
Oh? Yeah, what did I say, Louise? That's her sister.
She's not too smart either, Denise. Yeah, how does she
have a job seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year,
didn't fill up the reservoir. That's that's not discussed. I
(24:53):
am shocked. There was just nobody had to pay for this.
And I think there's a general agreement now that the
city's response was disastrous and their preparation was more than disastrous.
And between the two, well you see, you see what's
going on here. Listen to this. They had in the county,
(25:24):
they had a notification system called Code red and they
switched it to one called Genesis. I remember looking up
on a Genesis website earlier this year when the fires
were happening, and they switched from one platform to another,
and both systems should run concurrently for about a year
so people could get trained and practiced on it. Right
(25:48):
at the time of the fire. Get this, there were
only two employees trained to work the new system, which
is the wireless emergency alerts that appeared on your phone.
Two people. We have ten million people in the county.
Two were trained to work a system to warn literally millions.
(26:11):
How crazy is that. So of course those two people,
because it was you know, overnight, they probably went to bed,
and so nobody warned the people in west South Dedana
there was a horrible fire coming and that's why you
had nineteen people died. Management emergency management system has only
(26:35):
one trained public information officer. That's the representative that the
public sees on television and radio and they give out
all the basic information. Right that's the go to for reporters,
public information officer. After twenty eighteen, the Woolsey fire, they
(26:56):
had one of these after action reports and the conclusion
was the county had to get more power, more coordination,
and more money to this office of Emergency Management. Well,
apparently none of that happens. Or coming up, you're listening
to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM six forty
(27:18):
John Cobelt's show. We all remember that one teacher who
made a difference, who believed in us, challenged us, or
just made learning fun. Now's your chance to say thank
you in a big way with iHeartRadio's Thank a Teacher
powered by Donor's Choice. Nominate an outstanding public school teacher
(27:39):
who's gone above and beyond for their students, and that
teacher could win five thousand dollars to stock their classroom
with whatever they need. Today's teacher of the day is
Jeffrey Hurskowitz, who teaches at Daniel Webster Middle School and
he's been teaching for almost thirty years exclusively with the
special needs population across all disabilities and abilities. Congratulations to
(28:03):
Jeffrey Hurskowitz. You're in the running now to win five
thousand dollars for your classroom and help us say thank
you to the educators shaping our future. Nominate your favorite
teacher now at iHeartRadio dot com slash teachers iHeartRadio dot
com slash teachers. Did you have a special teacher in school?
Speaker 3 (28:21):
I had, you know what, My broadcast journalism teacher in
college was the one that stood out for me.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Oh, you're lucky. I had nobody and that was it.
Speaker 3 (28:30):
I had nobody in elementary, junior high, not really in
high school.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
That's it.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
College, kindergarten through college, I had zero zero. No, I'm sorry,
nobody inspired me. Well.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
My professor in college, he he sadly passed away at
a young age, but he was he was very he
was great, he was very helpful, and he believed in me.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
And it was awesome. Wow, that's wonderful. I'm I'm envious.
Nobody I spent most of my school years looking out
the window. After a while, I wanted to.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
Jump through the winds.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
That was it was close, that was rough. I was
in a one I was in a one floor school.
So he was going to do any good when we
we come back. After three o'clock, Trump signed an executive
order a task force to oversee the twenty twenty eight
Summer Olympics. The members of the task force are mostly
(29:30):
his cabinet members, so he is going to take the
administration is going to take direct control over preparing Los
Angeles to execute the Olympic Games. So this ought to
be highly entertaining. They've already they've already announced well. Trump
has said that they're going to take over Washington, d C.
(29:54):
If that government doesn't get its act together. And he's
sick of the gang members and the teenage kids. He
says they're randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and shooting. It isn't
citizens and knowing that they'll almost immediately be released after
getting arrested, and so he's told city officials they better
(30:18):
start charging miners as adults, and if they don't, Trump
will take over Washington, d C. Which he has the
power to do because it's not a state, and if
there's some way that he can take over Los Angeles,
he'll find it and use the Olympics as an excuse.
So I am all for this task force. We will
give you details about the task force coming up after
(30:40):
Dever's three o'clock news, and we'll also talk more about
Newsom's new obsession. He's obsessed with Texas redrawing their congressional
districts and you're thinking, why, how does that affect us? Well,
it doesn't. But all the time he should be spent
on finding all the money that he's wasted, or getting
(31:04):
the drug addicts and mental patients off the streets, or
the criminals. He's spending on the Texas redistricting controversy. That's
what that's the governor you elected. Good choice there, huh
he is, so all right? I found this entertaining. NASA
(31:29):
says they are going to build a nuclear reactor on
the Moon. The Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is announcing expedited plans.
He's running NASA now as an interim administrator, and they're
going to put a nuclear reactor in the lunar surface,
and they're going to have a definite timeline and they
(31:51):
want to beat the Russians and the Chinese. There, how
about that. We're going to end up blowing up the
moon or making the moon radioactive. It'll probably turn green.
Remember that kid's story, The moon is made of green cheese.
Oh yeah, yeah, it's going to be. It's going to
be made green. It's going to be glowing with nuclear energy. Great,
(32:17):
And of course China and Russia will land their nuclear
reactors and that will have nuclear war on the moon.
On the moon, yeah, and then they'll all shoot lasers
at us. And they they they had a previous plan
and they want to launch this by twenty thirty, a
one hundred kilowatt nuclear reactor, and then we own the moon, right,
(32:42):
first one to get a nuclear reactor wins and bring
a few nuclear missiles up there while you're at it.
And then if anybody comes by you just you nuke
them on the way to the moon. That'll show our dominance.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
And when will it percolate down here?
Speaker 1 (32:58):
The radiation? Yeah, I don't know how that works.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
I don't either.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
I would I would think it would bounce off the
app because there's always radiation, you know.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
Right, But I mean never, then that would be harmful.
If there's a nuclear war on that, you.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
Know, something would have to go really wrong.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
I'm sure it would, but that's it's part of the
thing to worry about.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
Yeah, right, well, there you go. Debora Mark is live
in the CAFI twenty four our newsroom. 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, and of
course anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.