Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am six forty. You're listening to the John Cobel
podcast on the iHeartRadio app. We're on from one to
four every day. I got stuck in the traffic yesterday
because of that four h five closure hour and forty
minutes hour and forty minutes to get from here to
the west Side. Some idiot got out of their car
(00:23):
on the side of the four O five and then
again got run down by a truck. What are you
doing getting out of your car on the four h
five And it said alcohol was involved, but didn't say
it was the driver or the guy who started walking
on the freeway. Look, I understand these things are traffic,
(00:47):
but once the guy's gone, he's gone. Just scoop up
the body, open the lanes. It was six hours of day,
I know. I never can understand that man, and the
ways app sent me on to these very narrow winding
roads between uh Santam No Sherman Oaks. Yeah, going up
(01:09):
the hill and you come down and I guess I
guess it was in bel Air Beverly Hills. I'm not sure.
Oh God, it just I was. There was a choke
point there because everybody was trying to make a left
turn on Beverly Glenn Boulevard out of this narrow mountain road.
You couldn't make the left turn. I stopped dead for
half an hour, and I had to. I had to.
I had to make sure I had my foot hard
(01:31):
on the break because if you let go started sliding
back down hill. I didn't notice once and the guy's
ponking behind me because my car is rolling back down
on him. She's just get the body off the road already.
Oh come on, ah, yes, he's next. As I wake up,
(01:52):
I couldn't believe this. I couldn't believe that Karen Bass
has decided to endure us, of all people, to be
the next governor of California. They actually had a press conference.
They did this in public. They didn't hide this. They
did this in uh, you know, in the middle of
the day. They didn't do it like in the dark
(02:13):
somewhere or with a press release. They wanted people to know.
This where the women at guys and Karen Pass has
the worst instincts for hiring personnel from the woman who
brought you Genice Quinon, Yes, who left the reservoirs drive.
Speaker 3 (02:31):
Is she still around?
Speaker 2 (02:32):
She's still around? And how much does she make? Seven
hundred and fifty thousand dollars? But the woman who brought
us Brian Williams, the deputy in charge of public safety
who called in a bomb threat and is now in jail.
Oh from the woman who brought us Felicia Adams Kellum,
(02:53):
who blew billions of dollars in homeless money that nobody
can find and gave millions to her husband's nonprofit. I
worked for somebody who had atrocious hiring judgment. I won't
need names. Would cause too much trouble, Yes it would,
But there are people who are terrible at it, and
not even by accident do they have a good one.
(03:14):
That's what's fascinating. It's like, wow, that's the seventh one
in a row. That's bad. How do you do that?
It's a talent. It is some kind of inverse talent,
and Bass is one of those. She's really bad at hiring.
So of course maybe this makes sense. Of course you
would pick Tony Lallar to Big Governor.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
They've been friends forever BFFs.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
Yeah, even worse than that. You got to hear these
descriptions they use. Let's play cut eleven.
Speaker 4 (03:45):
For me, this is a special moment. I know I
have stood at a podium endorsing my brother from another
mother on numerous occasions, because in fact we have known
each other and work together, are in entire adult lifes.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
Many many years before we ever.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Thought that we would one day be elected officials, but
when we were fighting on issues that were common to
South LA and to East LA, we have always believed
that the way you bring about change is you do
it together, you build coalitions, because our issues and our
problems are similar.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Lifes. The plural of life is lives right, yes, life? Okay?
What is the change they brought? Massive homelessness, out of
control crime? What are these changes that she's so proud of?
This is she always talks about like organized thing in
community and bringing change. And I'm looking around and it's
like life is way worse than it was ten years ago. Now,
(04:49):
like nobody disputes that. Nobody disputes that life was better
in Los Angeles ten years ago. So what's this change?
And of course he wants to be governor and she
wants to get re elected. Can you imagine the next
four years? Bass?
Speaker 1 (05:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (05:06):
They both there breathed up in twenty twenty six to
run so Basque gets re elected in twenty twenty six
via ghosta becomes the governor same year, and then that
is life until twenty thirty. Oh no, I believe in me.
And then here's uh Vira Gosa. Oh all right, let
(05:26):
him describe the relationship.
Speaker 5 (05:28):
Fifty two years we met, We've been working together across
this town, focused on the issues that people care about.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
Save streets, clean neighborhoods.
Speaker 6 (05:42):
What where stop clean neighborhoods. LA was just voted second
dirtiest city in the country, behind only San Bernardino.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
What what saved streets? What clean streets?
Speaker 1 (06:00):
I like that?
Speaker 2 (06:01):
What? What are you talking about? Fifty two years? What's
fifty two years ago? Nineteen seventy three? I don't know.
I'd have to go, I'd have to use my brain,
don't exhaustion. Yeah, nineteen seventy three is nineteen seventy three.
(06:22):
Is there anybody, because both of them are around seventy
two years old, is there anybody who remembers nineteen seventy
three in Los Angeles and can say that life is
better now? Even just go back ten years to twenty fifteen,
life was much better than Oh my goodness, we didn't
(06:47):
get to his descriptor. Oh, that's right, that's right, all right, continue,
fair distribution of resources.
Speaker 5 (06:54):
We've stood up together decade after decade, and I couldn't
be prouder to have been one of her first endorsements
for mayor, actually one of her first endorsements for.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Every office he's ever run.
Speaker 5 (07:09):
And the same is true for me. You see, we
are like brother and sister. We've always understood that together
was stronger.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
There's not just creepiece as.
Speaker 5 (07:20):
Individuals, but the communities we represent.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
Why don't they want to be brother and sister so much?
That's weird, that's that's verypind Do you know who else
she endorsed a few years ago? George Gascone? Do you
know who endorsed her a few years ago? George Gascone? Oh,
come on, it's all the same family. I guess. Gasconne
(07:47):
was a brother too. Shame on you, the ahole brother.
And he's got this new hair thing going on. We
were debating it. Yeah, we're the women guys, all right,
because his hair was slick black years ago, twenty years ago.
And then he went into hiding for a while and
came out and did an interview and it was all
white like he'd gotten very badly frightened.
Speaker 5 (08:09):
Looking good, baby, looking real good.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
And then it got dark again and now it's black
with some gray in the front. Yeah, so guys can
get away with that. He's going for a certain effect.
And you thought it looked blonde on TV.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
When I saw him this morning, But maybe it was
an old Maybe it was when you said he was gray,
it looked it looked kind of a blondish.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
Maybe he changed hair colors in the middle of the day.
Maybe he did fantastic. You ever started out the day
one color? And I have not? Oh, actually I have right,
you got the hair dress? Hey, weren't you blonde this morning? Yeah?
All right, we gotta do this more. Karen Bass and
Tony Vallar Bass for Mayor, Valar for Governor. Happy dazzer
(09:01):
here again.
Speaker 7 (09:02):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
Eight seven seven Moist eighty six eight seven seven Moist
eighty six, who used a talkback feature on the iHeartRadio
app to vent your frustration. And there's a lot of
frustration to be had here. You wake up this morning
and Karen Bass is endorsing Tony Villar. I mean, these
are two of the worst mayors, the worst politicians in
California history, and both of them have such low IQs.
(09:31):
And I just got a is somebody ever going to
do some kind of doctoral thesis of PhD as to
why California voters choose idiots to run big cities like
Los Angeles? Why do they do this? I mean, if
(09:51):
you put you put Karen Bass and Tony Vallar together,
I don't know, do you hit one fifty total on
the IQ chart between them? I don't think you do.
These are two idiots. They speak in platitudes and cliches
and nonsense. They compulsively lie, They take no responsibility for
(10:13):
anything they've done. My favorite Tony Vallar story just be
personally well. One of my favorites was when he was
claiming he planted a million trees. This is going back,
you know, probably fifteen years, and I was constantly and
I were scoffing at this idea that he planted a
million trees, but they were sticking to it, and finally
(10:36):
he had one of his lackey's actually come to the
station with a huge sheaf of papers, a print out,
and this was supposed to be a print out of
all the trees they planted, right the address for locations,
and he's sitting right across and I said, well, wha,
look at that, and I could tell he didn't want
me to look at it. And finally I looked at
(10:59):
like the top sheet and they had the total number
of trees planted, and it was fifty eight thousand. Oh,
come on, it was fifty eight thousand, like two hundred
and something right, And on the air, I said, well,
fifty eight thousand, you're nine hundred and forty two thousand
trees short. And the guy on the other guy's just
looking at me, what there's something wrong with me. It's like, no,
(11:21):
you're the one who said it was a million trees.
Via Grosen said it was a million trees your own
documents here. I assumed that it would befoged documents. They
were actually accurate. It was fifty eight thous which is fine.
If it was fifty eight thousand trees, I would say, okay,
that's better than nothing, right, But he didn't respond to that. No,
he tried to like double talk around it, and I
(11:43):
just kept pointing out, it's like and this is what's
wrong with them. It's like you could, you could show
them to their face, their own paperwork, and they just
they just deer in the headlights.
Speaker 3 (11:53):
Maybe the other thousand, nine hundred thousand, maybe via Gosa
planted himself and they didn't have documentation of that.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
You're gonna feel it inside here. I'm telling you you
should get a job. It's one of these spokesholes. It
pays better than this. I know you know, trust me.
I've thought that and only have to do is speak nonsense. Yeah,
oh I can do that, well, I I know better
than anybody. But you missed me though, Oh I would
miss you. But we play your clips all the time, oh,
(12:21):
over and over again. Got plenty of them. Yeah, if
we already have a good library. All right, So let's see, uh,
let's let's go into some of the Rhos's comments here,
let's play cut fifteen. Immigration.
Speaker 5 (12:37):
Tell you, in my lifetime, I've never seen military style
raids in this town or any town.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
In the United States of America neither.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
I've never seen people covered up like the Klan from
head to toe.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Wait wait wait wait wait wait wait the Klan. That's
why I put it in here. They were not in
white sheets and hoods. The Klan come on, they're covered
up like the Klan. What a jackass. They are running
(13:20):
out of extreme comparisons and metaphors. Besides, it doesn't matter
what these people say. They lost the Supreme Court case.
It's over. You're done. Do you know the ICE is
gonna have ten times the budget that they used to have.
They're hiring tens of thousands of new agents. They have
(13:40):
like one hundred thousand people that have applied for work there.
It's over. The illegal alien era is over. And what
a dumb ass the Klan because they wear masks. They
wear masks so the Churla rioters can't take photos of
them and then track down their homes and families and
(14:05):
drive them out of a neighborhood. It's Karen Bass's taxpayer
paid terrorists at Churla. They wear the masks to prevent
Turla rioters from doxing them from chasing their families. And
they all know that too. They are Viergosa and Bass.
(14:27):
They're all friends at Churla. They all know what their
role is. And everybody's supposed to pretend, Oh, I know,
I've no such thing. Yeah, And Carl Demo the Republican
assemblymen hadn't investigated the line by line budget. He was
the only one who found that they were getting thirty
four million dollars in state tax money at CHURLA to
(14:49):
organize riots, because that's what it does. And the first
people I played this clip before that Bass thanked at
her immigration press conference yesterday. Charlot, all right, I got
I got a couple more I want to play because
he talks going to I was going to fix the
(15:11):
homeless problem. That ought to be a good one. Oh,
and how the governor has to focus on safe neighborhoods.
See sure, okay, you do that. We'll get to that next.
Speaker 7 (15:32):
You're listening to John Cobel's on demand from KFI AM sixty.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Coming up after well. In the next segment, about two fifty,
we are going to have the state Senator Tony Strickland
on to explain another new tax that Sacramento Democrats want
to impose. And I'll try to explain. This is a
tax that you would pay if you move into a
(15:59):
new housing development, and then based on where you work,
you're going to be text on your vehicle miles traveled. Yes,
really they're gonna they're gonna tax you if you move
into a new development based on where you work. It's
like another gas tax. It's hard to understand, but Tony
(16:22):
Strickly will be able to explain it. And it's really
a bad one. It's really stupid. That's next segment. Okay,
Uh woke up to this, to this horror this morning.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (16:33):
Karen Bass endorsing Tony Vellar to be the next governor?
I like that. Does he think this is gonna help him?
Can you feel it? Don't People in the rest of
California know that we're we're like a permanent disaster area
because of these two and Garcetti, all right, play cut sixteen.
(16:55):
All right, if a Rial Grocers governor, he's gonna focus on, say, neighborhoods.
Speaker 5 (17:00):
We need the next governor to focus on the challenges
we face that we've created. And I've said to people
it starts with safe neighborhoods. Every neighborhood does deserve safety.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
By way stop.
Speaker 3 (17:16):
Okay, John, you and I we threw up our words sometimes.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
He said like Biden here though I mean he is
a lot older than us. Yeah, but he also said
we have to solve the problems that we created. Yeah,
So was this some kind of weird omission that he
admission that he and Basque created all the all the
disasters that we live in the tongue? How did Bass
(17:44):
look when he said that, all right, place some more.
Speaker 5 (17:47):
It starts with safe neighborhoods. Every neighborhood does deserve safety.
That was mayor of this town. Ali was one of
the most violent big cities in the country.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
By the time we.
Speaker 5 (17:59):
Left, we had a fifty percent dropping violent crime. And
everybody likes to talk that I grew with the police department,
and I did, and we took guns off the streets.
But we did prevention programs, intervention programs, summer night lights
parts were open all over South and LA and the
east Side and the Northeast Valley. We invested in after
(18:22):
school programs.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
She just endorsed him, and he's pointing out that he
used to have ten thousand cops and you know she
has eight thousand. Now. I don't understand way more.
Speaker 5 (18:35):
And after school programs and some are youth jobs because
we believe when you give somebody, oh, when you invest
in them, when you educate them, when you train them,
they'll go on to be productive.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Oh they can make way more money selling drugs for
a gang. What are you talking about. You have to
put them in prison and never let them out, that's
what you do. And the homeless people, what about the
homeless people?
Speaker 5 (18:58):
Well, Cut will work hand in hand with you to
address the homelessness we have in this town, which we
ought to be ashamed of, every one of us, because
it's not just here in this town, it's in every
town in California.
Speaker 2 (19:15):
Stup. So she was nodding her head when he was
talking about shame. Yeah, as soon as he said we
should be a shamed of this. You can see Bass
in the background. She's nodding her head yes, in agreement. Yeah.
And she's got two billion dollars missing from the homeless
funds that she will not talk to, she will not explain,
and she's got fifteen lawyers protecting her so she never
(19:37):
has to explain it in court. He should have brought
that up.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
You know.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
He tries sometimes to position himself as the maverick Democrat
and he's going to tell the truths that nobody else
wants to tell. Well, why don't you tell the truth
about Bass, that she's blown billions of dollars. It actually disappeared.
That can't find it. Nobody can find it. Not even
a federal judge can find it. Not even a team
of investigators, that accounting firm that he hired, Judge Carter,
(20:08):
they can't find at dinner where the money is. And
they want to ask her and she's got fifteen lawyers
so she doesn't have to testify. Yeah, she's ashamed. Well,
let's see, if it's not via Regos's fault and Bassi's fault,
why don't at least one of you talk about Garcetti
because much of this started with him twice some more.
Speaker 5 (20:30):
You see, we're the fourth largest economy in the nation
with the highest effect of poverty rate because of the
cost of living. So everywhere I go, I'm going to
say affordability is the number one.
Speaker 2 (20:43):
They have a lot of poverty, in part because it's
a sanctuary city and state, and we've got two million
illegal aliens living in the Los Angeles region, two million
of them. That kind of drags down the average income level,
doesn't It kind of boosts up the poverty rate, doesn't it.
(21:03):
And they're all in favor of importing all this poverty.
If you took two million people and deported them. How
much less tax money would we have to pay out? Well,
I know, right off the top of my head, we're
blowing thirty five billion dollars in state taxes on illegal aliens.
Thirty five billion, play some more.
Speaker 5 (21:26):
I'm gonna say affordability is the number one issue we're facing.
People are working hard every day, every single day, and
they can't make ends meet.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
A right, then how about we pay three dollars a
gallon for gas instead of five? All right? Because I
told you I was in five other states and they're
all paying three bucks a gallon and we're paying five.
He wants to be governor. I kind of used to
thinking of him. I keep my brain's telling me he's
running for mayor. But he's not running for mayor. He's
(21:57):
running for governor here. So the gas price is based
on Gavin Newsom's insane set of taxes that adds two
bucks to every gallon. So what does Vira Goosis say
that he's going to repeal all these ridiculous taxes and regulations.
In fact, why doesn't one of the candidates say that,
(22:20):
Let's see what happens if you say I'm going to
repeal all the taxes and regulations that add two extra
dollars to every gallon of gas. I think you could
just run on that and do really well. All right
here he here he promises to rebuild the palisades in Altadena.
Speaker 5 (22:41):
I pledge to you, Mayor, I'm gonna work with you
to rebuild the palisades and work with the other mayors
to rebuild outa Dina. We'll take on this insurance crisis.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
That we have. It's all platitudes, it's all headlight. We're
going to work hard, we're going to fight. We're going
to do this and that. Can you feel that? I
got one more clip? Uh, this is bass. Listen to this.
After the Supreme Court said that Ice can round up
(23:15):
all the illegal aliens with the criteria they're using. Uh, this,
I guess was at the end of the speech.
Speaker 4 (23:21):
Well, we're trying to examine that now. But I just
have to say that it was an egregious decision. It
was a shocking decision because it's interesting that the same
court that said you couldn't take race into consideration for
college admission basically said you can take race into consideration.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
They didn't want to stop, stop stop. They had they
had like five criteria as a group that they can
use not they said specifically, you can't just take one
of them. All right, let's take a break. We come back.
Tony Strickland on another tax coming from Sacramento. They're going
to tax you based on your commute if you move
to a new housing development. That's next.
Speaker 7 (24:01):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI A
six forty.
Speaker 2 (24:07):
Welcome, It's the John Cobelt Show. We continue around every
day from one until four, and then after four o'clock
you get the podcast John Cobelt Show on demand so
you can hear what you missed. The hits keep on
coming out of Sacramento. Another tax bill that they're trying
to pass. And be honest, I don't quite understand this one,
(24:28):
which is why we have State Senator Tony Strickland on
Republican at a Huntington Beach's. It's some kind of tax
that's going to make housing harder to build more expensive.
Let's get Tony Strickland on here to see what kind
of genius move this is. Tony? How are you?
Speaker 1 (24:46):
I'm fantastic. How are you doing John?
Speaker 2 (24:48):
I'm good? What is this? It's a vehicles, a vehicle
miles traveled tax on housing development? That what do you think?
Speaker 1 (25:01):
So it was a budget trailer bill, and there was
a quietly added into the budget bill, Abe one thirty
that in a small section, section fifty eight in this
bill would allow local agencies to impose a vehicle miles
travel tax. And what that would mean is your local
agencies will be allowed now to tax our citizens. And
(25:24):
it projected the cost as much as sixteen two hundred
per home for new development. And so what it really
is trying to do. What they do in the legislature
is they're trying to urbanize all of California and they
really don't like suburban communities or people who drive cars
in suburban and rural California. So what they're going to
try to do is get these local agencies to do
(25:45):
a tax. For example, if you live in a suburban
community and you travel to Los Angeles, they want to
tax you because they want you out of your car
and they're going to do a mile miles travel tax.
A projection, so I represent Huntington Beach, So if someone
goes from Huntington Beach, which is a suburban COSA community,
and they go into Los Angeles and they do a
(26:07):
new development, they're going to tax on the basic estimate
of how many miles you drive to work and.
Speaker 2 (26:13):
Going to the cost is this, people are going to
be taxed individually once they determine how many miles you
drive from home to work.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
No, this is what when they do it do a
new development, They're going to allow local agencies to impose
this tax because what they really want.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Who's paying the tax? Who's paying the tax?
Speaker 1 (26:33):
Well, obviously the people who buy the new home won't
pay the tax, and we already have affordability crisis on buying.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Okay, so you have to buy the home. Now you're
subject to this tax, and they'll be able to track
where you're employed. They have your new address, and it's
just the people who move into this new development.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
Yes, and it's for new development.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
And so then who's going to want to move into
that development if you could go across the street and
that other development is not taxed.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Well, you will end up happening is people won't want
to move into new developments. And again we'll end up
doing is increasing the cost of housing everywhere in California,
especially in suburban and rural community well.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
This is nuts. So the tax, the tax at least
for now, is not on everybody. It's if you move
into a newly constructed development, correct, and then they're going
to tax the homeowner.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
Correct.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
Well, this is crazy. What mental patient fucked this up?
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Well, it was a quietly added provision within this.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
Uh who's the jackass who editing?
Speaker 1 (27:48):
You know? Well, yeah, it's it's Uh, it's a Wiener
who budget.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Scott Wiener again?
Speaker 1 (27:57):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (27:58):
Oh God, is there an way to deport him.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
It's one of those other things that, as you know,
we have affordability crisis people right now. Young people back
at the generation ago, you'd be able to save him
by your first home, and so many young people today
can't afford it, and they go in and move in
with their parents in their late twenties and early thirties,
so they can't afford new homes and they can't afford
homes here in California. We have a major affordability crisis.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
And also this makes it a lot worse, doesn't The
gas tax.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Yeah, it adds to the gas tax and everything else
that we do here in Sacramento, and they make it
more expensive and drive people away from California to the
middle of the desert to Arizona and the humidity of Florida.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
You get penalized for choosing to live in a new development,
and then you get penalized based on where you choose
to work. You get penalized for working. You get penalized
for succeeding enough to afford a house.
Speaker 1 (28:56):
They want to penalize you if you don't live in
an urbans.
Speaker 2 (29:00):
Even the Soviets didn't come up with this stuff. This
is really breaking new ground. You get penalized for living
in it. You know that means I don't understand the
hatred for people who have suburban lives.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
But you remember, as mayor of Huntington Beach, before I
got here, they put in this big, huge housing mandate
that we increased our population by fifty percent, and they
wanted us to do nothing but high rise, high density
apartment buildings and urbanized. Look, some people want that urban living,
but I know people in Huntington Beach they like the
(29:36):
suburban coastal community. And there's a lot of people that
like suburban lifestyles but they have a home, and a
lot of people like rural lifestyles, and there's many Californians
who don't want to live in an urban center and
have the problems of urban living.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
The point of America is freedom. The point of the
Soviet Union was they tell you what to do and
where to live. Correct And Scott Wiener is all about communism.
I never thought communism would make such a strong comeback
in our lifetime. No, this is a real thing.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
When the wall fell down, the wall fell down, you thought, Okay,
communism is dead, but it's alive well here in California.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
All right, Tony Strickland, thank you for coming on and
explaining all this.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Oh thanks for having me. I really appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
All right, Tony Strickland, Republican from on Agia Beach. Oh
days just horrific. Well another thing, we got a track.
Put it on the list with ten thousand others. More
coming up. Tembra Mark is live in the KFI twenty
four hour 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
(30:41):
on the iHeartRadio app.