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January 26, 2023 35 mins
Ozempic weight loss drug can cause your face to shrink. An audit of LAHSA’s homeless count shows big differences in Venice and Hollywood. Another dead homeless person was found in Sherman Oaks. A man torched his wife in a domestic violence case and Octomom’s kids are now 14 years old and they are vegan.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
We're on from one to four every day, and after
four o'clock you can hear the podcast at the iHeart
Radio app or on the CAFI website. It's called John
and kennon demand anyway. Welcome demand. We actually show up
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living room. Whatever topics you want. Just that's not a

(00:23):
bad get. Cost million dollars. Start doing that to a
road show. We'll take a million dollars. I would a
million dollars a house. Shure, we'll take request do a
three hour show for somebody in their house from their
living room. Yeah, you decide what we talk about, all right.
We got, of course money available. The caf I Cash
Refilled contest is coming up in about fifteen minutes. You'll

(00:44):
do one each hour, of course, with the keyword you
need to win some money. We're gonna start out a
little different today, only because I got fascinated reading these stories.
If you watch any commercial TV these days, you can't
miss the drug commercials, right, yes, and the one that
sticks in my head is because it comes from a
pop song of the nineteen seventies and it's oh, oh ozampic.

(01:10):
You remember it's magic. Oh yeah. They took that song
and turned it into a drug commercial. I've seen ozempic commercials.
I know people on ozempic, but I haven't heard the song.
I didn't know they. Oh you haven't seen the TV
commercials where they're singing, oh no, not ompic. No, you know.
It was designed for people with the type two diabetes

(01:31):
to improve blood sugar. That was I guess that. But
John knows people on it because it is helping people
with weight loss. She lived on the West side of
LA and ozempic is all the rage now. And when
I saw this story and then I read the whole thing,
I said, yes, I've noticed that for years and some people,

(01:52):
and the story is about ozempic face. It's a greater
you know. In fact, we just got an email from
I guess he's a doctor. I don't know, you know,
we get all these emails pitching show segments and he's like,
he can talk about ozempic face. And that got interested
again and look up the story because I saw it
the other day in the Daily Mail, along with the

(02:12):
illustration of people's face is just sinking in. And it's
not something you wouldn't This could have happened to you
even if you didn't take ozempic, but you had some
kind of dramatic weight loss. It's actually called facial aging.
You shrivel, you shrivel so. And this is the reason
I said, I've noticed this. I've run into people I've

(02:33):
known for years and they lose it's not a few pounds.
You have to lose a more dramatic amount of weight, right,
And I looked at their face and I said, God,
they look older. Yeah, your face. I don't say anything,
but it's like, your face looks like it's kind of
like really saggy, or it's wrinkly, or it's kind of aged.
Fat is a really good skin filler. And that's exactly

(02:54):
what the experts say in this story. If you keep
some weight on as you get older, you look younger. Yes.
The New York Times had a plastic surgeon doctor or
In Temper or in that's a good name. He said,
it's common for key areas of the face to deflate
with weight loss. The head looks like a basketball it's

(03:16):
losing air. Yeah, you look like a shriveled up browne.
When it comes to facial aging, fat is typically more
friend than foe. Weight loss can turn back your biological age,
but it tends to turn your facial clock forward. Well,
there is a bad side of that, is your facial clock.
And you know how probably a lot of people John

(03:37):
that you're talking about the you know Rono Zempic would
not want to have Zempic face. I see some women
who are very thin, like really thin, but as they
get older, they look shriveled and what they need is
to they need to I thought they do they do
face fillers. Isn't there some type of plastic surgery that

(03:57):
they can do like face fillers? Saying you have to
go get in jack actions injections right so they can
bloat your face back. I think, well, what are they?
What are they injections? There's there's no expert. Actually I'm
not an expert on this, but I know the different types.
But I'm not even exactly sure. What is in good

(04:20):
way of saying you have not had them? No, I
have not, Okay, I do need something tells me you've
considered them. Yes, of course you can't get too thin. Well,
I don't think I have to worry about it. I
have a few pounds here that just will not go away,
So I don't have to worry. You don't want to
call shriveled down? No, I definitely. I don't want to
have that face, the shrivel face. I don't want. Doctor

(04:43):
Paul Jared Frank, a dermatologist in New York, told The
New York Times. Everybody is either on it or asking
how to get on it. We haven't seen a prescription
drug with this much cocktail and dinner chatter since Can
anybody guess biagra bag? Which turns out the other there's
a good side effect of viagra? Oh what less likely

(05:04):
to die of a heart attack? Oh, I didn't know.
It's not true. Yeah, that was not a real intensive
study that's been duplicated. It just a headline from some website. No, no, no, this, this,
this was all over the place the other day. Really. Yeah,
I'll find it. But I guess you know, you have
to choose. Your heart will be a little healthier, but

(05:25):
you're gonna end up with well a permanent Oh you
have to take that much of it? Well, I would
imagine just a little bit, you know, that's what it does. Yeah, right,
different things up and now there's many competitors, so there's
not just the brand named Viagra. No, the doctor explained,
I see this every day. A fifty year old patient

(05:47):
will come in suddenly she's super skinny and needs filler,
which she never needed before. I look at and saying,
how long have you been on ozempic? And I'm right,
one hundred percent of the time. It's a drug of
choice these days for the one percent refers to. These
are wealthy people who obsess over their looks to the
point where if they hear a friend is losing weight

(06:07):
on those empic, oh yeah, they run and go get
I've heard a lot of chatter on the West Side
about a zempic and it's called an off label prescription.
Sometimes with drugs, doctors just find out that there is
a side effect that wasn't advertised, wasn't explained, and and
and you know, obviously if you control your your your diabetes,

(06:29):
your sugar, you also might lose weight. Yeah, turns out
it works. Even if you don't have diabetes, you can
lose weight. It's like they always say, the weight loss
drugs it'll trigger something in you to make you think
you're full, so you won't keep gobbling down the food.
And that's the key to weight loss. People just eat
too much, they overeat, they have to clean off their
plate or whatever. They're not even thinking. They just fill

(06:50):
their face. Then here's the part we were just talking about.
There is a non invasive thing that they do injections
of red serades and hyerlonic acid. These are fillers. Another
one is called Sculptra, which simulates collagen and oh yeah, yeah,

(07:13):
well yes, yes, they restore volume in your face. That's
how this acts. So the so the wealthy people that
went for the ozempic drug and loss later now coming
in for the face fillers to make up for their
ozempic face, which is shrinkingzepic face. Is that sounds polish?
My dad used to yell some word at me that

(07:33):
sounded like it sounded like ozempic. Yeah it wasn't azempic,
but it has that same sound, that same rhythm to it.
Looks like even uh Elon Musk used ozempic for some
weight loss. Kim Kardashian supposedly use the other product that's
we go Vi to lose weight. Um, so that's why
this had she had button plants, didn't she? She says

(07:57):
she did not. That's what she's always said. I mean
that naturally, you know, I've actually seen a lot of
women seriously in California with butts like that. Oh, it's
all fashion trend. Well, I don't know if it's a
fashion trend. I mean, it's just the way you're born.
Unless you do a lot of squats, they move fat
from one part of your body to the other. It's
not technically an implant. But I don't know if if

(08:19):
the people that I'm seeing have had that. What I'm
saying is maybe they they that's just the way that
they're they're built, or they've done a lot of squats.
It's not a natural. There are plenty of girls these
days in their twenties and thirties flying to different countries
to go get Brazilian butt lifts, the BBL surgeries. I know,
but these are older women. I don't know. Maybe they
are too, I don't know. Yeah, they're trying to compete

(08:39):
with Chris Jenner. Did she have a BBL two? She
might have, I don't know. I don't get her on
the show and ask her. That's right. Segment on Kardashian
body parts. All right, I found the viagra thing heart
Male heart attack survivors who took viagra had a low
risk of having another heart attack. The more frequently the

(09:00):
viagra doses, the more protection and offered against heart issues,
and it actually can help extend your life. People who
take viagra live longer than people who don't. Well, look
at that, because this has been around like twenty five
thirty years now, I think you've just got to get
the larger size pants. It's only a live with it.

(09:23):
More coming up, Yes, the eternal. You're gonna do commercials
now with more de Martin. Well maybe those will be okay.
Then it's not just for erections. It'll make you live longer.
The keyword is next. Johnny Ken caf I am six
forty live everywhere, the iHeartRadio app. Oh this just in.
We're gonna get more water pop the Champagne bottle. The

(09:45):
Department of Water Resources, after saying a couple of months
ago they could only give five percent of requested water supplies,
now says they can give thirty percent out but hope.
So this is for the twenty seven million people to
get water from this source, and I think one of
them is like the Metropolitan Water District, which was a
biggie in southern California. We had twenty four trillion gallons

(10:06):
of rain, we did, yeah, so they should have kept
some of it. As of Thursday, the statewide snowpack is
two hundred and sixteen percent of normal for the date.
And that's really good because the adults melt slowly, so
that can be captured. That's the idea. Lake Shasta is
at fifty five percent of capacity, like Orville sixty three.

(10:27):
So this means all those things that they found with
the drought, Like remember out there in the Hoover Dam
area and they found like body Lake Meade. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Those mob killings, those mob killing people, they've had a
tough time. They were identifying for sure, every one of
the bodies, but I think, well, that collective belief was
that a lot of them were mobster after fifty years,
who else would do that? Who Well, stumps a guy

(10:49):
in his car in Lake Mead could have been a
boating accident. Now they suicide or not. I think they
found one guy in a in a drum yes, fine, drama, Yeah, yeah,
that's that's mom, all right. So uh as we mock
the annual homeless count of people on the streets of

(11:11):
LA County. We were so right about this. Yeah, and
you know, the RAND Corporation, they're not like some right
wing outfit. So anyway, by the way, the RAND people
are geniuses. They're very smart. I met a RAND researcher
once at a party, a woman, most intimidating woman I
ever spoke with. Seriously, she was so smart and analytical.

(11:37):
I was like, I even knew more than me about baseball. Gosh, yes,
she knew more than me. She was. She also very
good looking too. It was quite a package. Well, here
I hear the results of this report that they put out. LASA,
the inept corrupt Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, put out

(11:58):
the news. It was late last year. Member was supposed
to come out in June. I don't think it came
out to August. That homelessness seems to be leveling off
in the county. There was just a five percent edition
during the two years of the pandemic, and we said, liar, liar,
pants on fire, right, And then we got word that
some took taking a look at a tract in Venice
where losses people said no, no homeless here, and everybody

(12:19):
went there and counted like dozens of homeless people. It's
like that doesn't make any sense. So they actually they
actually registered zeros in some neighborhoods where there were clearly
lots of homeless and you realized that this thing was
either botched or they were just lying to cover up
the problem. So what RAN did in this study they

(12:40):
went out time and time again, dozens of times over
a year to some areas of the county, and in
particular they found big problems with the homeless count from
Lasa on skid Row and in Hollywood and in Venice.
And they saw thirteen percent more on skid Row, fourteen
and a half percent more in Hollywood, and thirty two

(13:01):
percent more in Venice more. And that's where they had
the zeros. That's where they claim, They claim that things
were getting better, that there was less homeless. Do you
think there's a bone headed Bonden leading on Lassa to
make my count lower out there on the West Side
and in Venice. What you can do for me I do,
Plus they're incompetent. I gotta show that my plan is
working well. You get volunteers. I question anyone in the

(13:25):
right mind who wants to work in the middle of
the night counting homeless people. Odds are they can't count?
And I do think it was people who couldn't count lazy.
They couldn't had this stupid app, and the app would
malfunction and people would would enter their numbers, which may
have been off to begin with, and then the numbers

(13:46):
would come out of the back end and it's It
was a bad system with bad people, I mean not
bad people, incompetent people doing it. Look, LASSA is a
terrible organization and I don't think anybody of any decent
talent would work there. I don't anyone. I don't think
anybody of any decent intelligence would work there. If you
had your choice of all the jobs in the world,

(14:08):
and you were smart and you were sharp, and what
would you work at LASSA? Of all the places you
could work now in in this tech age, you pick LSA.
This study is basically not picking on the people as
much as it's saying the methodology has flawed because they
kept returning to what they called problem homeless areas time

(14:29):
and time again to get a more accurate look at
the homeless. These people walk around with the tablet one night.
It can't possibly be accurate. The methodology is created by people.
Some bonehead at LASSA. That was his idea, Let's go out,
you know, one night a year and in the dark
and see what we come up with. Now, so imagine

(14:50):
you're at that meeting. You'd look at him and goo,
are you nuts? But there was another trick that they
got caught. There was a three day cleanup that removed
tents from Centennial Park in Venice in June. Next month,
COUNT said thirteen percent declining homeless here. The decrease was
driven by fewer tents and makeshift shelters, but the number
of cars, vans and RVs remain the same. But by

(15:13):
later that month the population had rebounded to its formal level.
So and this is something we always talk about, you
know that. If that's true, it almost sounds like the
fix was in, let's do a clean up and then
when the COUNT people come through here, sure I'll come
up with a smaller number. Clean Up's okay if they
come back. That's after the COUNT clean up in June,
count it in July, and then in August everybody's back
and you know what, but we put out a number

(15:34):
that says, oh, we're doing great, and that is a
scam that I'm sure is arranged by the city council
members because you know what, these boobs have feelings too,
and people like Bonnen or Nitthi Aramin or Garcetti, they
get tired of getting constantly roasted and complained and dealing
with all the emails and phone calls, people talking them
all the time. What are you going to do something?
What are you going to do something? So they get

(15:54):
they get sick of it, and they just say, let's
fake the numbers. Who's gonna know, how are they going
to prove it? And here comes Rand Corporation. It's like, yeah,
they proved that your numbers were fake. Rand also found
out that there was a much higher incidence of chronic
homelessness that's a soft term for a vagrant, transients that
never go away. Nearly eighty percent told them they've been
homeless more than a year, fifty seven percent more than

(16:17):
three years. But what does that tell you? LASSA had
a lower number for those that is not then rising
rents rights. It's a lifestyle. No, it is a lifestyle.
It's a lifestyle. They've chosen. They've chosen to take the drugs.
They've chosen not to treat their medical and mental problems.
They've chosen to live in the street because they like it,

(16:38):
and they can get away with it because we have
no rules anymore. I'm telling you, a little by little,
all the myths, all the propaganda myths that these left
wing anarchist progressive jerks had been feeding through the media
to us are being proven to be nothing but lies.
It is a bunch of drug addicts and mental patients.

(16:59):
They've all been out there a long time. They come
from all over the country. This collectively is not our problem.
Society did not fail them. They failed themselves. And as usual,
they asked people, well, what would it take to get
you up the street? The Rand study said eighty percent
want their They want their private room. They told them

(17:20):
that I'll accept a hotel or a motel or a shelter,
but the shelter has to offer privacy. No group shelters.
A lot of sober living homes, a lot of them
will accept a private tent. And this is where I'm thinking,
this is what the desert's for. Why we got to
make the homeless City, Homeless, homeless village out in the desert.

(17:41):
They're all be happy in their little tents. Where's our
friend out there with the h Was it a bar
out in San Bernardino? Who was gonna he bought a
bus to take Yes? What happened with that? He said
he was gonna give them two weeks. I'm not sure
if it's been two weeks yet to clean up the
streets around his business. I think it was going to
be around the end of the month. Well, we're getting
We're gonna check back with him because I want to
see I want video of that. I'm taking homeless on

(18:04):
a trip. I was gonna drive one of the buses. Yeah,
slab City, here we come. You know that little sign
on the top of the bus. Yeah, right, welcome a
board slab City. Johnny ken CAF I am six forty
Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. I just found a
story that Diane Feinstein still hasn't decided if she's going
to run again or not. Yeah, it's getting crowded there

(18:26):
to challenge her. She says, I need a little bit
of time. So it's not this year. It's not it's
twenty twenty four. Her staff is starting to speak out
of anonymously to say it's getting bad. Her short term
memory is so poor that she often forgets she has
just been briefed on a topic and then gets bad

(18:47):
at them, accusing your staff of failing to brief her
right after they just did it. Yeah, so they tell
it happens as an element of denial. You just get
mad and you're act like, no, that didn't happen, and
why didn't you brief me? Right, So they tell her
something and then her reaction is, why didn't you tell
me what we just told you? Well, you didn't tell me.

(19:09):
So how do you think she's even gonna understand that
she has to run again next year? Or they know
that's a good question? Or will she say oh no,
and then you know a few months later, what what
are you asking me? Well, of course I'm going to run.
If if somehow she'd run and win, she would be
ninety seven at the end of her next term. She
is nine, she's ninety two or ninety three. Now she

(19:31):
is ninety she's ninety all right, yeah right, this wouldn't
be until late next year. Yeah, So if if she's
probably gonna turn ninety one, this year and ninety two
next year. Yeah, all right, then the term ends in
January of twenty ninety seven. At the end of the term,
it's a six year term. That's right, Yeah, twenty thirty.
This will take us through. Oh no, but if she

(19:53):
doesn't want to leave, well she might not win, is
the point. People keep making an issue of this. She
may not survived the primary. I wonder, but because now
we have that that Adam Schiff has jumped in, I
think we'd be better off with the dope Katie Porter.
The load from Orange County is another big one in there.
We're better off with Feinstein. Oh yeah, those two. Wow,

(20:17):
what a pair of He's a lunatic. He's a delusional loon.
He's just a creepy partisan. Whatever it is from my side,
although apparently last week or the week before he did
admit the time. Well, you know, this classified documents thing,
This is important because you think everybody would play it

(20:37):
down now that it's been found in Biden's garage. But well,
they're nervous because the Biden family is so corrupt. They're worried.
You know, these are these are random pages hidden here
and there and here, and they're thinking, Wow, what if
those pages were specifically hit on purpose? Oh because something
goods in it? Right, Yeah, that that has some connection. Well,
they're gonna open up there a Hunter Biden hearing soon.

(21:00):
And I think the publicans out that they control the
House of Representatives and that's what they promised to do.
And Jim Biden, Yeah, that's the brother. And there was
a report the other day that you know, after Biden
left the vice presidency he took in quite a bit
of money. Yeah he did. He got rich, He got rich,
and a lot of it is because his brother and

(21:21):
his son were working deals in his name yea, China, Ukraine,
among other places. I mean. And Jim Biden looks just
like Joe. I saw a picture of the two of them.
Oh really they were. They were face to face in profile,
and they were talking very close, as if they were whispering,
almost touching foreheads, and they're mirror images of each other.

(21:42):
And they look like two old mob bosses. That was
the expression on their faces. I'm thinking this picture sums
up everything. And the problem, of course is Biden's always
said I don't know where to think about my son's business.
I don't get involved yet. Just wait, I think. I
think that's why there's some criticism from his own party.
They're trying to sink them. Yeah, they know what's coming.

(22:04):
We were just talking about a homelessness. A Rand study
says that this loss annual homeless count is probably way
off because they did something more exactly. They kept going
back to the same census tracks for days, and their
numbers were quite different than losses. One night, holding it
in the dark too, Yeah, holding the tablet and trying

(22:26):
to stare down into a tent anybody in there. I see.
That's my distrust these these kind of you know, government surveys.
I don't trust them. I assume they're wrong or they're lies,
because they have every motivation to lie, and well they
want to underplay the number. Of course they do. There
had to be pressure. That's why I remember this got

(22:47):
delayed and I kept saying, why is this getting delayed?
And then when he finally came out, it's like, oh,
don't worry. Homelessness eased a bit during the pandemic, only
a five percent increase. That's, you know, within the margin
of errors. I've got, I've got two eyes. Stop telling
me I'm not seeing what I'm seeing. Stop that and
keep that in mind now with Bessetti as mayor, Yes,
because they're playing are up big that it's already working well.

(23:11):
And look, it looks like they did some good stuff
there in Venice. We've talked to Venice residents who have
been all over Bonnen and the homeless problem for years,
and they're saying, so far, so good. This is a
couple of big encampments they just cleared out. But you
got to give it time. Those people could come back.
That's what the Rand survey said, that people tend to
drift back again, or there could just be another new
encampment popping up. Because you can't This has got to

(23:33):
be a permanent fix. This can't be oh for a
few months, is nobody in that park or on that
street corner? Relocate them because the meth addics are always
going to be mat Slab City, Slab City, Slab City
is the answer to everything. We should do a show
from there. No no, because you get stabbed or oh,
I'm sure we will. Oh No. The stories we would

(23:53):
hear from the people that live there, they'd probably love
to be interviewed and tell their life story about why
they lab City and after twenty seconds. It really would
be fascinating, right, yeah, no government, no rules. I mean,
come on, you'd like that, wouldn't you. You hate rules? Oh,
I understand. I understand the spirit of it. I just
don't want to sit in my own feces all day.
It'd be a giant moist line. That was the possibility.

(24:16):
It could be anyway. Anyone identify themselves as calling from
an encampment. No, no, well, well but actually, Eric, in
the past, probably before you worked it, there were people
that said they're they're homeless and they're calling from I
saw a survey the day. I think ninety percent of
homeless people do have cell phones. Well, good, we'll put
out the call here. You know, we could we could

(24:37):
have the call. We could have Homeless Week on the
moist Line, a special edition, a theme. Wow. Yeah, you'll
get a lot of people faking it for fun. But
sure you could try. That's part of the moist Line
as well. We had another dead body in Nitya Rahman's district,
her council district in Sherman Oaks for last week. Story

(25:00):
was Yeah, there were three people who died on the
streets of Sherman Oaks outside some businesses this one. Oh
man was killed by a garbage truck. So he was
probably just lying there sleeping. He doesn't say that, but
well he probably was. Maybe maybe he was under Yeah,

(25:20):
they'll put boxes and stuff on top of themselves if
not a blanket or it's been cold. It's been probably
upper thirties in the valley for the last week or two.
So he's probably rolled up in a sleeping bag or blankets. Right,
And you can't I've seen these guys and you can't
see their head and you can't see their feet. It

(25:41):
just when you're driving a sanitation truck. Sure his ability
can be limited. No, so probably rolled right over the guy.
That's what I'm thinking here. Yeah. Uh. The quote is
believed to be unhoused. Oh that's according to office. He
believed believed to be on Sure, you're in a section

(26:01):
of Burbank Boulevard and Noble Avenue. He might have lived
in a four bedroom a couple of blocks away and
he just wanted to get some air that night. Right,
believed to be unhoused. This story how many? How many
housed people have been run over by a garbage truck?
This story says that apparently the number of homeless deaths

(26:21):
has risen from two a day in twenty fourteen to
five a day in twenty twenty, and that's already three
years out of date. So five homeless people die every
day in La County. Yeah, it's getting it's getting close
to two thousand people a year dine in the streets, right,
and they're telling us, don't worry, we're taking care of it.
Just give us more money. That's all we needed. More money.

(26:43):
We did account, Yeah, we did account Things are getting better.
I will clear out one encampment and then just go
away and leave us alone. Yeah. So now Bassetti got
the big headline for cleaning up the encampment near the
bridge Home Venice. What has she done since then, because
that's been about ten days now, right until she went
off to some mayor's conference. I know she's probably back now,
but I don't know what she's doing, all right. You know,

(27:04):
they really treat the public like children. It's like here's
a little shiny toy, and then you hope everybody carries
that glow with them for a couple of weeks, and
in the meantime nothing's done. Shouldn't one of those happen
every day? Shouldn't be seeing TV coverage of one hundred
people getting round it up every day. Oh yeah, yeah, definitely.

(27:25):
I mean just just round it up, round it up
like a rodeo. Yeah, it's a round up. Put on
the bus to slab City. All right, we got more
covered up, John and Ken KF I am six forty
live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. Uh sorry, I just
looked at the picture that I can't get out of myself.
The Moist Line is returning tomorrow already, So if you

(27:47):
want to leave a message, you use the iHeartRadio app
as a microphone icon you can use in order to
connect to the Moist Line, and you can also call
the toll free number one eight seven seven Moist eighty
six one eight seven seven six six four seven eight
eight six. It's it's the mug shot of a guy

(28:08):
in Virginia. Oh this is oh my god, you have
to look John. It's a Fox News story West Virginia.
Man accused of kidnapping and burning woman with torch. And
you talk about crazy eyes. Oh is he the one
with the crossed eyes? Yeah, they're kind of looking inward. Yeah,
this guy's I saw this guy. Yeah, late yesterday. He's

(28:28):
got a huge beard, but he's got a completely, almost
completely bald head. In fact, he has like a little
cut on the front of his bald head that looks weird,
but it's a big zip. But yeah, the eyes and
between the eyes. His nose also has a chip off
of it. But his eyes are bugging out and they're
really creepy. I think he tried to do a pose
for the camera. Sammy Martz. They found the female victim

(28:53):
hiding underneath the Porch's just cold. Police. The suspect had
hit her in the face. She is escaped the residence
via the rear window and ran from the residence to hide.
He threatened to kill her and it burnt her with
a torch on her stomach and her leg. That's one
way to settle a domestic argument. That is one of
the most frightening faces you'll ever see. Oh, this is

(29:15):
a mugshot for all times. This makes Charles Manson looks sane.
That is kind of the comparison though, when Manson grew
the beard, and yeah, we got we got the picture
on Twitter, So go to the Johnny Ken Twitter and
you'll see it. Oh that was quick. What a lovely man. Oh,
he tortured her, struck her all over her body, sat
on her, and burnt her with a beautane torch. According

(29:36):
to the complaint, Well that's what happens when you mix
up at the wrong guy. Huh is this well he
has a girlfriend, was one of those dating app things?
Or it doesn't say what the connection was between them.
Did he break into the house or yeah? Um no,

(29:57):
it just says yeah. It just says she was being
treated by first responders. Marx was inside the residence and
possessed a gun. So oh, it is act. Did Admittie
did harm to the victim by striking and burning her? Yeah,
but one of the eyes is well they're both kind
of and they're pointing inward a bit. That's really creepy.
I get like that. Guess what happened on this date,

(30:23):
January twenty sixth, two thousand and nine. We take you
back on the John and Ken Show archives for an
event that was talked about for weeks, and particularly so
here in southern California because that's where this happened. No,
I know, I know, no, Oh no, okay, Eric shaking

(30:44):
his head that I'm going to be wrong, So never mind. Well,
go ahead, we just go ahead. I want to hear this.
I was going to say Kobe Bryant's death, not two
thousand and nine. Oh, I was saying three years ago. Okay,
I thought, oh, I thought you said three years ago, Steen,
fourteen years ago, two thousand. I need to take the
wax out of my ears. Sorry about that. What had
the birth of the octoplets? Nadya Suleiman? Remember we talked

(31:10):
about her because she gave birth on that date to
eight children, which was a record at the time. I
think it got surpassed. One case was kind of suspicious,
but I think there was somebody, a woman I had
nine Noah, Maliah, Isaiah, Naria, Jonah McKay, Josiah, and Jeremiah,

(31:32):
and there she put out a picture of them and
they're sitting on a couch and they're eating vegan donuts.
All all eight kids are vegans. They're vegans. So, yeah,
just another vegan story involving a whack job. Good thing.
I'm so normal. Something I noticed almost every day though,

(31:54):
there's there's like a vegan connection. I know. Well, that's
why you have me, so that at least there's one
normal vegan and right you imagine him birth eight kids
same time. No, hearty, you have no idea, oh gode,

(32:15):
uh yeah, exactly. So in looking at this picture. And
by the way, this story is inaccurate in some manner
because it's saying that they turned fourteen. Is my math wrong?
Or would that be two thousand and nine to twenty
twenty three? Right? Right, that would be. But then they're
saying in a picture Nadia Suliman very pregnant to twelve

(32:37):
two thousand and nine. It's impregnated artificially inseminated in two
thousand and nine. So something's not right, no well with them.
But maybe they're only turning thirteen. I don't know. But
the thing I noticed and looking at the picture, and
this has a lot to do with just how the
whole process of gestation and birth works. They don't look

(33:00):
the same age. They do somewhat look alike, but there's
a boy to the left who looks huge, and there
I don't know it's a boy or a girl in
the middle, and the couch who looks shrunken and maybe
eight years old. Did you see this picture? Yeah, I'm
looking at the picture, and you're right, they seem to
be all different sizes. Yeah, they could be like a
year or two years apart each. It's just because none

(33:21):
of them look like brothers and sisters to me. Oh,
you don't think so. I think the two boys to
the left could pass for it, and actually all four
to the left of the photo, but there were two
on the right. One looks sort of blunting, all right. Well,
who the insemination was that from? Oh and then there's
a taller girl in the back. She looks older too.
Was that was that from eight different men? Oh? You know,

(33:43):
I thought, he thought. I remember reading at the time
it was one donor. I don't think it was from
eight different men. Maybe they mixed up the vials. That
would be quite the insemination process, because basically, right, don't
you have an egg that splits into eight if they're
idad call otherwise different eggs? And you're right, she got implanted,

(34:05):
probably with a bunch of eggs to see what would
take right, right? Right? She had a whole garden in there. Yeah,
I forget how many I think. She eventually talked about
the many times she had tried this, well, and she
already has this time she hit the bonanza. Yeah, she
had six kids before the octoplets. Yeah she did. You're right, Yeah,
two is enough for me. I mentioned fourteen kids in

(34:27):
the house, and no wonder she was stripping and doing
porno for money. It's expensive to have kids. And no
guy who was going near that? I mean, you know,
you know, you know how you find a guy? Oh God,
don't go there, John, what's the data woman who was stripping,
doing porn and has fourteen kids at home? And that

(34:49):
is a tough match, tender match that up. I don't
know that that would be a tough well because it's
just a lot of responsibility you have to take on
right to help her. I guess that would be a
says they're doing well. Oh, I don't know how she
makes money these days. I haven't really kept up with
her life, but I don't want to know. We mentioned
her a few months ago, and uh, yeah, she's right.
She was doing everything that John mentioned. But then there

(35:10):
were books and stuff or I don't know, she's raising
a flock of vegans. They yeah, look at that. So
there you go, Deborah Mark more for your side, people
ate more for them? All right, more coming up, John
and ken KF. I am six forty

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