Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am six forty.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
How are you welcome? Everybody tired? Right?
Speaker 3 (00:11):
I didn't stay up until midnight?
Speaker 2 (00:14):
You didn't? Yeah? Well, I mean you're a girl? Would
I figured out? Sure?
Speaker 4 (00:18):
There are girls?
Speaker 2 (00:18):
You probably checked out at the sixth inning?
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Right, I'm sure there are girls that stayed up until midnight.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
I made it to the seventeenth, and my head was
so heavy and hurred. Go really well, I thought I'd
stay at other inning, but then there might be three
more after that.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
I gotta, I gotta.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
I have to get up early in the morning to
help produce this this mess.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Every day you get up early in the morning.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Five thirty usually really yes, okay? Know that you Well,
I have to back it up.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
You send me irritating texts I did four six o'clock
in the morning, so you're up.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
I'm up. Well.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
Sometimes you take a long time to respond. Sometimes you
don't even respond.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
Am I supposed to respond to everything you said? Why?
Why are so many people demand that it's you know? No,
I can't acknowledge. I can't.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Then then I'm gonna get rid of my phone. Eric
made it too well, you made it all the way right.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
Yeah, I was up. I was up to like one
thirty watching replays and highlights. I was up long after
the game was over. I figured that I that that
was such a crazy game.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
And and then by time you got to the eighteenth inning,
you forgot it all because you know, the last few
innings were just one two, three out, one two three out,
one two three out. Well, I could seemed like everybody
was exhausted.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
It goes eighteen innings and you forget that show had
two home runs earlier in the game.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
It's like, yeah, at the beginning of the game seemed
like it was from a week ago.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
You ever seen someone get intentionally walk five times in
one game? No, I didn't. It would mess me up.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
I'm still not used to them not throwing the four pitches. Yeah,
you know. And it's like I looked down for a second.
I look up, there's a guy on first, and I'm
always saying, well, how did that guy get on first?
Speaker 2 (01:57):
I was an intentional walk. I missed the.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
Wave and I don't know what's going But yeah, that
was something else last year.
Speaker 3 (02:02):
I'm not going to be too tired to play really
well today, I mean, I was saying that to my
husband and he said, they probably went to bed at
two in the morning and they can sleep until, you know,
the afternoon, and they don't start until five. But that
doesn't I don't know, it doesn't seem like enough.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
If it was a normal starting pitcher, they would have
sent show hey home, you know, early in the game.
He rest up for the next day. But he was
out there to the to the very end because he
has to be. So I don't think any pitcher has
ever played eighteen innings and then started a World Series
game the next day, So I know that for sure.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
That was That was fun.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
Now, yesterday, at this time, we opened the show with
some Gavin Newso clips, and we played a couple of
clips of Gavin on the CBS Sunday Morning Show trying
to explain how, you know, I think by next year
I'll be considering whether I'd run for president, and we
all know that's a load of pooh.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
He's already running.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
And we also played a clip which I'm going to
play again for those of you didn't hear it, because
this has sparked a lot of blowback from people interested
in the truth. Now this is Newsome, who's I guess
addicted to going on these odd ball podcasts. And there's
(03:21):
one called All the Smoke, hosted by former NBA players
Matt Barnes and Steven Jackson. And he started talking about
how poor he was, how he struggled.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
As a kid. Yeah, because he had dyslexia.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
He had a low SAT scorer, which we figured out
yesterday means he has a low IQ score. And you
listen to this closely and listen to how he describes
what he used to eat all the time as a
kid and what kind of student he was.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Now, you gotta pay close attention. There's a lot going on.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
There's cross talk, and there's some references that may not
make sense to you. But this is Gavin Newsom on
All that Smoke.
Speaker 5 (04:02):
I was out there kind of raising myself, turning on
the TV started, you know, just getting obsessed, you know,
sitting there with the you know, the wonderbread and five
stacks of you know, like the.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
White come.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
Every day every day in the backyard, just bouncing the basketball,
throwing the ball against the wall until the ball is
just like fraying, man. And that's it whole thing.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
So just in the street.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Then the student that was students in the back with
his head down all of a sudden started throwing the
baseball a little fashion and everyone else and started, you know,
make a few free throws because I was sitting there
practicing five hundred of them every damn night. And in
high schools, I look up in the stands, my dad's
back up there, okay, and it's like man, And then
he's bringing his friends and your captain of the team,
(04:59):
and you're like, gee, you know, and it just saved me.
And it got me into college baseball. It was I
got a zero scholarship, but it was the ticket. Man.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
I was going to College of Marine. It's gone on
to JC. Man. I was ninety sixty or nine eighty
on my SAT and that was cool. He's got a
weird accent.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
Then huh, Suddenly he was trying to hang with his
NBA buddies. So he raised himself on wonderbread and macaroni
and cheese. He was a crappy student. Well you may
not know this, we mentioned it briefly yesterday, but Katie
Grimes from the California Globe, she reviewed the life of
(05:39):
Gavin Newsom. I can't tell you what a mountain of
horseman door was. In that little minute and twelve second clip,
she says most poor families back in the seventies and
eighties eight store brand bread, discounted canned soup, government cheese,
and news was trying to put himself in the same
(06:02):
category of these poor, lower class kids. Well, Gavin was
featured in an article in nineteen ninety one at the
age of twenty five. Children of the Rich was the
title of the article. Twenty five years old and Gavin
(06:22):
Newsom's father, William Newson, was the attorney for the billionaire
Getty oil family.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
Can't do much.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Better than that. He managed their assets. The Gettys trust
had been split four ways and one of the Gettys,
Gordon Getty, got a trust worth two billion dollars and
he picked William Newsom, Gavin's dad, to manage the trust. Now,
(06:54):
if it was conservatively invested, you know, at two percent
a year, that throws off forty million dollars in gas.
And that's what Gordon Getty any one of his wives
within the party on for the year. But guys who
manage money and manage trusts, they take a percentage. It's
a real nice income he's making big money if you're
(07:18):
managing the Getty Trust. Somehow, Gavin didn't mention that yesterday,
and I don't know why he shouldn't be embarrassed. I mean,
he's talking to two NBA players and they certainly made
millions of dollars, so they'd understand they're part.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
Of that world.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Now, Newsom's father was not only the attorney for the Gettys,
he was a judge and an associate judge on the
California Court of Appeals. Yes, at the age of twenty five,
Newsom and his investors created Plump Jack Associates LP.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
But they help But Gordon.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Now there's another article out there from two thousand and
three entitled bringing Up Baby Gavin, and somebody found the
article and I'll give you a little tease here and
then I'll read you more of it. Gavin got his
start with Gordon Getty's money. In fact, Gordon Getty invested
(08:26):
in ten of Gavin's first eleven businesses. The primary money
came from the Getty family, So he didn't work hard,
you know, from the projects to become wealthy. His dad
was wealthy because he was imagining a billionaire's trust fund
(08:46):
and then the billionaire decided to create ten businesses, wineries
and restaurants that Newsom could quote manage.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
So he's not a self made man.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
Anybody that poor could could not put together eleven businesses
by the age of twenty five. It's complete nonsense. Steaming
piles of horse manure. Now there's a there, Katie Grimes found.
Uh there's a guy on X and his handle is
(09:27):
May's m A. If you want to find the full story,
I'm going to read you excerpts. But what Mays did
is he he uh reprinted Bringing Up Baby Gavin, And
I've got some excerpts to read to you so you
understand how pathological Newsome is about lying. Just what a
(09:49):
narcissistic psychopath. He sits with two NBA players that he
assumes started out poor, and so he wanted to match
them with his own poverty story, even started adopting their
their type of speech, total line sense. So you got
(10:10):
to be there, Come back and I'll read you excerpts
of Bringing Up Baby Gavin. Oh, and there's an obnoxious
photo of him and three other rich kids, because remember
I told you the second article I mentioned was was
about yeah, children of the rich him and three other
guys all looking smug, arrogant, obnoxious.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
The world was handed to them.
Speaker 6 (10:34):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
All right, so yesterday we played Jet Cliff, and we
just played it a few minutes ago again. Gavin Newsom
on a podcast with two NBA players trying to relate
to the struggling childhoods that so many have when they're poor,
and claimed he raised himself on wonder breaded macaroni and
cheese and was a crappy student that sports helped him
(11:07):
find the way. This was on the All the Smoke
podcast hosted by two former NBA players, Matt Barnes and
Stephen Jackson. So somebody found an article which detailed just
how rich a family Newsom came from, because Gavin Newsom's father,
William Newsom, was an attorney and managed the two billion
(11:31):
dollar trust of Gordon Getty, who is one of the
heirs to the Getty oil fortune. Two billion and you
know someone like will Newsom, William Newsom would get a
hefty cut for managing that. That's a full time job,
that's two billion dollars worth of investments and turns out
(11:54):
that Gavin had Gordon Getty invest basically create ten of
Gavin's first eleven businesses. Here's something else that Gavin lied about.
He claims he got his start in politics after Willie Brown,
the former San Francisco mayor, read an article about him,
(12:15):
called him and offered him a position. That would be
false because there's an article where Gavin's father himself said
in two thousand and three that he William Newsom was
responsible for Willie Brown giving Newsom a start. That William
(12:36):
Newsom the dad called Willie Brown looking to see if
he could get Newsom a job in politics. The elder
Newsom is a longtime friend of John Burton. John Burton
was a big deal in the legislature for years, and
(12:56):
Burton called Mayor Willie Brown and had him appoint Gavin
to the Board of Supervisors in nineteen ninety seven. According
to Dad, it was based on Burton's friendship with me.
So that's how Gavin got his start in politics. But
he tells people it's like, oh, no, Willie Brown read
this article about me, and I'm so impressed. He wanted
(13:19):
to be want me be on a board right away.
No complete lie from one of the interviews his dad
did that the only time his dad got upset during
the interview. There had been a San Francisco Chronicle story
detailing all the Getty loans to Gavin and the Getty
(13:43):
investments in the Plump Jack businesses, which at the time
were five restaurants, a Napa winery, a Squaw Valley hotel,
and two clothing stores, and the article reinforced the view
that Newsom is a silver spooner and he grew wealthy
not as the result of his own business smarts, but
his connection to the Getties. Well, the dad said, the
(14:05):
peace enraged me. It's a delusion that the Getties raised
money on Gavin. It looks like Dad lied too. You
can see where he got from. It's entirely the Dad
raising money from the Getties and giving it to Gavin.
(14:28):
I don't looking at these articles, and there were several
of them I looked at this morning. I didn't find
one sliver of evidence that Newsom had anything to do
with creating any of the wealth that he's coasted on
all his life and now in retrospect, claims to be
responsible for after coming from this poor, hard scrabbled background.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
No evidence at all we'll see here.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Here's how plugged in William Newsoon the dad was plugged
into the Getty family. He officiated all the Getty marriage ceremonies.
He created trust funds for all the angry wives divorced
by the Philander and Getty men. He remembers family member birthdays,
He mourns at their funerals. He chaper owns their drug
(15:18):
addicts and alcoholics in and out of treatment programs. Say
he was the family fixer. He ingratiated himself. He burrowed
himself into the Getty family. So of course they're gonna
throw literally millions of dollars a Gavin, who everybody probably
could see outside his good looks, really had nothing going on.
(15:43):
He also had lobbied a Democratic state centered and named
Bill Lockyer to push a bill that allowed the Getty
Trust to be partitioned. So the trust could be cut
into four parts. Gordon Eddy, Newsom's friend would get two
billion dollars in his trust, and news Newsom's father could
(16:07):
run it. He earned at least two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a year for his work. Yeah, two hundred
and fifty thousand dollars would buy a lot of macaroni
and cheese. How much macaroni and cheese could you buy
for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year?
Speaker 2 (16:27):
Not to mention the wonderbread he could he could, he
could fill.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
He could fill a huge warehouse with all the wonderbread,
macaroni and cheese that his dad had money to buy.
And at the time they wrote this article, the pump
jack businesses were grossing twenty five million dollars. Oh I
forgot about the Maui Beach deal. Oh I got to
mention the Maui Beach deal. One more thing, we come back.
Speaker 6 (16:54):
You're listening to John Kobels on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
Moistline is eighty seven seven Moist eighty six for Friday
eight seven seven Moist eighty six. Next segment, I'm going
to tell you about the fence they're putting up around
MacArthur Park.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
MacArthur Park is.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
Filled with nothing but gang members, criminals, drug addicts, homeless people,
mental patients. You know, this is in the center of
Los Angeles and it's a beautiful park in an absolutely
disgusting area. And Karen bass As Garcetti did as well.
Let this place completely go to hell. And now she
(17:35):
wants to put up a fence. And John Alley, who's
a businessman who owns a number of businesses in that neighborhood,
is going to come on after two o'clock to talk
about it. But I don't explain you what MacArthur Park
is for those of you who've never seen it, never
been there, most beautiful park, the most terrifying population that
(17:57):
lives in it, and I mean lives in it and
around it. Uh final fight a little bit a Gavin Newsom,
somebody does because yesterday we played you the clip where
he's claiming he he grew up basically grew up poor,
eating wonderbread, macaroni and cheese every night, and he was
a bad student. And you know this is she's testing
(18:17):
out his campaign stories. It's a total lie, absolutely complete lie.
His father was an attorney and handled the trust for
the Gettyes, so and and Gavin was worth millions of
dollars basically as soon as he graduated high school because
the Gettys set up ten businesses for him, ten wineries, restaurants,
(18:41):
a vineyard, some retail shops. Anybody else get that? Anybody else?
You get that in early twenties. Remember the Getty family
giving you ten businesses. And here's the final bit. I
wanted to get to Newsome's closeness to the gades and
I'm talking about the dad. William Newsom opened the door
(19:03):
for Gavin to piggyback on what turned out to be
a highly profitable real estate investment in Maui. In January
of two thousand and one, one of the trusts purchased
(19:25):
forty five hundred acres of beachfront property on Hannah Ranch
in Maui twenty four million dollars forty five hundred acres,
and Newsom says he and this is William Newsom said
he and his son invested one hundred and twenty five
thousand dollars in Hannah Ranch by December of that year.
(19:49):
Six months later, their shares were worth a million dollars.
Went from one hundred and twenty five thousand dollars to
a million dollars in six months. The land value rode
a lot more when Oprah Winfrey purchased a piece of
the ranch. Have everyone gone online and seen Getty images? Yes, yeah,
(20:12):
that is the massive library of news photos, celebrity photos
they have owned stock in Getty Images, the father and
the son, and that that library is worth a billion six.
Gavin also had a partnership stake in his dad's firm,
Newsome Associates. I fronted Gavin the money and he paid
(20:35):
me back. I had to cancel checks to prove it.
Speaker 6 (20:37):
Well.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
Of course he paid you back because he had eleven
businesses that the Getty family had set up for him.
In fact, the plump Jack businesses, the wineries and the restaurants,
grossed twenty five million dollars. And again, this story was
written over twenty years ago. And according to this story,
(21:01):
from the plump Jack businesses to the Maui Beach deal,
the Gettys have embraced and rewarded Gavin Newsom as they
embraced and rewarded his father, because that's what the Gettys
did in order to have the political clout to get
anything done when they needed their massive family trust cut
four ways among the heirs. They got a state senator
(21:24):
to pass a law that you could cut one of
those trusts four ways. And who greased that deal Gavin's dad.
So if if you want to see the article, it's
kind of it's hard to find There's an article called
Bringing Up Baby Gavin by San Francisco Weekly. It's no
(21:45):
longer on their website, but if you go on x
and search for someone named Maysz, he found the article
and he reprinted it, and you ought to read it.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
And when you.
Speaker 1 (21:56):
Ever see Gavin Newsom ever again, go on a news
or a podcast they kind of interview and Clayby grew
up poor eating wonderbread and macaroni and cheese. You then
you could study his face and look into the eyes
of a compulsive liar, a pathological liar, a narcissistic psychopath,
and you could watch him perform in real time as
(22:18):
he tells his wonderbread and macaroni and cheese story.
Speaker 2 (22:21):
Now we come back.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
MacArthur Park is one of the most disgusting places in
Los Angeles. Is absolutely frightening, and it's beautiful but terrifying.
And now Karen bass is finally going to put up
a fence around it. It's overrun with illegal aliens, criminals,
homeless people. I'll explain that next segment, and then after
two o'clock we'll have a businessman, John ally On, who
owns businesses in the neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
That's all ahead.
Speaker 6 (22:48):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI. A
six forty.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
MacArthur Park, one of the disgusting centerpieces of Los Angeles.
Even though it's beautiful looking, it's like a beautiful woman
who's a horrible, deadly drug addict. You know that's uh,
it's it's overrun with drug addicts and homeless people and criminals.
Now Karen Bass wants to spend over two million dollars
to put up a fence. Seriously, and I don't know
(23:17):
what what happens next after you put up the fence.
I don't know if they're keeping all the homeless people
and mental patients in or keeping him out.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
I can't tell.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
John Alley, he's a business owner with businesses in that district,
is going to come on with us coming up after
two o'clock.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
In fact, let me let me, let me set it
up right here.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
Well I got a few minutes, uh so we could
jump right in with John. Now have you ever driven it.
It's it's between like Wiltshire and Sixth Street, right it's
down in the little a little bit away from Koreatown.
Because I used to see it all the time when
KFI was down in Koreatown.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Now, the lake itself is beautiful, but they've pulled more
than a few bodies from it, according to the La
Times and even the Times, and you know how they
try to whitewash all this stuff. Admits there have been
waves of gang violence, drug trafficking, and homelessness. They actually
admit to homelessness. So two point three million dollar fence
(24:16):
is planned because the park is thirty five acres, so
that's a lot of fencing, and the Board of Recreation
and Park commissioners say they want to address the ongoing
public safety and quality of life challenges.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
There is no quality of life.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
I mean there's literally thousands of drug addicts and mental
patients and criminals and gang members and tens and filth
and debris and feces and needles like whatever human whatever
form a human being can degrade into, you'll see it
(24:55):
at MacArthur Park by the thousands. Last summer, guy from
Logby stabbed to death near the park. Labor Day they
pulled a body from the park lake. I'd say you
celebrate holidays at MacArthur Park. Count the number of bodies
being pulled out.
Speaker 5 (25:11):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (25:11):
Local business owners say customers are too scared to come
into the neighborhood. The homeless want to live here, and
they don't have any shame. Now you, This is Hernandez,
who is about as stupid as they come.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
She's okay with the fence, but they want to.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
She wants to invest in outreach workers cleaning teams, which
sounds like a good idea, except you clean on a
Tuesday and there's more garbage and feces and needles on Wednesday.
Speaker 3 (25:44):
I think we're past cleaning.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
Yeah, violence prevention workers. How does that work?
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Two o'clock in the morning to drug addicted gang members
start stabbing each other? What's the violence prevention person supposed
to do? These are so stupid ideas. They're really stupid
ideas that have never worked. It's a way to create
a nonprofit and hire people with ridiculous titles, pay them
one hundred thousand dollars. What do you do well, I'm
(26:12):
a violence prevention associate, that's all it is. It's a scam.
There's a violence prevention workers who can prevent anything. This
is where all your tax money goes to this nonsense.
The neighborhood is oh, I love this working class low
income tenants who speak Spanish as their first language. Other words,
(26:35):
illegal aliens. Okay, which is why Trump made a show
of putting the ice agents in MacArthur Park. Remember, just
to let everybody know. That's how they got two million
people to deport themselves. Everybody wondered, why did he put
all those ice agents in MacArthur Park?
Speaker 2 (26:52):
What was that?
Speaker 1 (26:52):
About two million people across the country have self deported,
says The park is flanked by street vendors cooking meals
on propane grills. All that's outy huh, No bacteria and listeria. There.
Homeless people live in and around the park. They sleep
(27:13):
on the grassy knolls by the water. They have to
throw the homeless people out, and nobody's ever allowed to return.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Every night they got to do a sweep, put.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Them in the back of a van and send them
off to a mental hospital, like a homeless hospital. Now,
the advocacy groups, and remember these advocacy groups, they're the
ones who steal the money from us, the tax money
for their violence profession. A harm reduction, that's the other one.
They've never reduced a single bit of harm. They say
(27:45):
the park is the best place to provide services to
homeless people with untreated mental health issues, drug addictions.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
And other problems. Yes, you turn MacArthur.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
Park into an outdoor mental institution. You don't treat people
in a public park where they're sleeping. You take them
inside and lock them up, and that's how you treat them.
We in the harmor Oh, I go, who's this person?
El Ham julyar Elham July? What is that male?
Speaker 2 (28:13):
Female? Something in between? What is in Elham and the times?
Speaker 1 (28:19):
Because they're so woke now they will not even say
he or she right, You.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
Can say he said or she said. He thinks no,
excuse me.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
He's the harm reduction director with the social services group,
being star, being a star. Well, this person says a
fence would further criminalize the homeless.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
Well, what they're doing are crimes. They are crimes.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
You're shooting up in public, you're dropping a log in public,
you're throwing garbage around, you're screaming at people.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
Crime, crime, crime, crime. Of course they should be chronalized.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
We in the harm Reduction Commune know that the more
isolated people are, the higher a risk there is of
overdose deaths because they're less likely to seek services.
Speaker 2 (29:08):
I don't care. I'm tired of hearing about their problems.
I'm tired of all the excuses.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
Put them all in a mental institution. They will not
be lonely in there. Let them asse, scream at each
other and stab each other. Give them drugs too, let
them have at it. Here's another one, Dimitri Spider Davola,
associate director with LA Community Health Project. I should look
up and see how much tax money these organizations get
(29:38):
and outreach workers provide.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
The locks on.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
That's what reverses an opioid overdose. How much you put
them in a program to get them off the opioids
instead of giving them a way to continue on the opioids.
All right, so we'll get We'll talk with John Alley
about it. He's a businessman, owns qu few in the area.
Our debor Mark is live in the CAFI twenty four
hour newsroom.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
That's next.
Speaker 1 (30:03):
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.