Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
You're listening to the John Cobel Podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
Every day you can hear the show from one until four,
and every day you can. If you miss it any
part of it, you can hear it again. John Cobelt
Show on demand on the iHeart app. That's the podcast version,
same as the radio show. Well, today's today's a big day.
We've been talking about it all show. Another poll came
(00:25):
out that Nathan Hakman is no wait.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Was it no? No? Another poll came out that Prop
thirty six.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Is winning by a three to one margin, all right,
and that is going to bring back penalties for retail
theft and drug use and create new penalties for fentanyl dealing.
So that is winning three to one according to the
latest Berkeley poll. The other thing involved in gascon was
the La Times embarrassed themselves and soiled themselves by endorsing
George Gascone.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
If you could believe it.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Let's talk about another great thing that's happening. A crooked
criminals raced loser of a politician, a city councilman named
Jose Wezar is going to prison. We got Daniel gus
On the line. Guest report is what he writes on
the internet, right, it's called the guest Report.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
Still yes, Sir Daniel Gust substack dot com and at
the Gust Report on Twitter.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
Thank you Guss.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
And he's one of the very few journalists who are
covering the politics in La City and County. And this
was a big deal city councilman going to prison, Jose Weizar.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Did he actually surrender? Is he now locked up somewhere?
Speaker 3 (01:37):
Well the answer, the short answer is yes, but apparently
only in the past hour or so. According to CANBC,
I have been up since before dawn checking the Bureau
of Prisons. I spoke with their media relations person at
ten o'clock this morning and he was still not there.
But within the past hours, so CANBC is saying, and
(01:59):
I quote A Louise squeeze Ar is currently in the
custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons lump hop. So
just now and and so he he took every last
minute of the day to finally pay the piper.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
Yeah, well a Lompoch's not that far boy.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Maybe I could organize a field trip and we could
go visit him, and.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
Yeah, and so and so can the family members he
tried to use to allegedly launder the money. I mean,
this guy took down everybody in his path. Uh, and
he destroyed everything in his way, and.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Nobody had greater good luck in.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Life until we are uh you know, but this the
roots of this problem. John surfaced you know, more than
a decade ago with sexual harassment allegations of the girls
in his office uh and LEDs dui where we're not
sure where he sobered up before giving up sobriety test.
(03:06):
So the roots of what causes we's are to be
in prisoned today seven four go back more than a decade.
And this guy squandered every blessing, every bit of good luck,
and every bit of hard work that he put into
his rags to reach his storyage. It's really Shakespeare in
(03:26):
this guy's story.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
He was.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
He was accused and convicted of taking over a million
and a half dollars in bribes, in cash, gambling trips,
gambling chips and luxury trips, political contributions, prostitutes, extravagant meals,
and all kinds of services, concerts and other guests. I mean,
he took everything that the developers would give him, right.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
And you know, I'm working on a story right now
about all of the ironies about this ironic is it
that that that that things went over a cliff for
him about six years ago when the security team and
the security software at the Palazzo in Las Vegas identified
him as what's called a PEP, a politically exposed person
(04:15):
for gambling with ten thousand dollars and twenty five thousand
dollars casino chips bought by his billionaire Chinese developer, and
he refused to sign an affidavit confirming that his two
hundred and twenty five thousand dollars salary was you know,
was used to buy these chips. So this the downfall
(04:39):
really took hold in twenty eighteen. But this guy was
grubbing and even more iron irony everybody around him, his
bag man, the lobbyists, the people who worked for decades
for the city, everybody was skipping something off the top,
and virtually, if not all of them are basically going
(04:59):
to wind up in with him, but maybe not with
him time talk, but with him in prison in general. Yeah,
about a dozen different people were ensnared in this right
and either pleading county or got convicted.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
I mean that was that was a big haul.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
In fact, one of the top characters just was was
this guy Chan, Yeah, Raymond Chan, the LA deputy mayor.
He was deputy mayor in thunder Garcetti. He was just
sentenced on Friday to twelve years in prison. And Jose
just started his thirteen year sentence today.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
Right and let me let me identify a little nuanced
that the public may not know of the year twelve
years and thirteen years. Chan's story is really mind boggling.
Weas are you know, drag this thing out for years?
The FBI rated his office around twenty eighteen and his
home and he was He took a plea in I
(05:56):
believe in January of twenty three, sentenced in January twenty
or thereabouts. Weez Are got thirteen years on a plea deal.
He faced at least twenty years if I'm not mistaken,
Chan knowing this and knowing that basically weez Are the kingpin,
(06:17):
got thirteen years on a plea deal, still went to
trial and was found guilty of all I believe twelve accounts.
So how dumb is it if the kingpin takes a
plea deal and you still go to trial against the
federal government. The Chan thing is more mind boggling because
(06:38):
he's going to do twelve years and he's sixty seven
years old. Chan will probably never get out of prison
because in the federal system, you have to serve eighty
five percent of your central you do, assuming you get along.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Yeah, yeah, there's any joke before that weez are a
probably I mean ay joke that we's are probably be
out in five months, But that's not true. In the
federal system, they say, is a real Yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
That's eighty five percent if you are a quote unquote
exemplary I could you know what's the phrase here that
they use. Well, you have to be in a lot
of principlery right compliance with institutional disciplinary regulations, and then
you get fifty four days off for each year, meaning
(07:24):
wes Are will be out in time for his seventieth birthday.
But he's fifty six years old. But chances Channa's sixty seven,
he ain't getting out.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (07:36):
And and there are the other people more Regoldman, Georgia
Sparza and all of these other players. But John, make
no mistake, these are just the people, and these are
just the bribes that we know about what I want
and what I do when I'm not on the John
Cobalt Show is figuring out what else hasn't been discovered,
(07:58):
because the government does a great job at this stuff.
But it's only the stuff that we know about England
or Ridley Thomas, current price. All of these things are
the ones we find.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
Out about all council people, yes, who are either convicted,
in prison or they're under indictment. Let me ask you,
how does Garcetti He must know, my opinion, He must
know that all this stuff was going on. He must
have known it was during his administration. This all happened.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
It goes right up to his there right, Oh, come on,
He didn't see his right hand guy grabbing and kissing
very important staffers around him. He didn't see him put
his hand in front of his bodyguard's private parts. Listen, John,
At the risk of sounding like a conspiracy theorist, there
(08:47):
are people who are elevated enough who are protected by
other very powerful people on all sides of the Ledger
who want to protect it from things. How Garcetti managed
to still get an ambassadorship despite everything we know, despite
(09:11):
the sexual harassment, despite all of this with Ray Chan,
how he got to be an ambassador if his mommy
and daddy paid for it for a lobbyist, and it
took a couple of years of zero shame on his part.
But there are people who sometimes just get away with it,
and that's how life really is. But today is a
(09:32):
really good day.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
It is all right.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
Well, Daniel Gush, thank you for coming on and explaining
all this.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
It is a good day.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
We got the political criminals going to prison. Thank you,
Daniel Guess. And Gus reports substack. That's where you could
read his stuff. It's good stuff. He gets deep. He
does real news. More coming up.
Speaker 4 (09:52):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
All right, here's a terribly disgusting story. And this is
such a baffling story because we people, we residents in
California get lectured more about the environment than anywhere else
in the country.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
I mean the.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
Climate change lecturing that goes on. And they took away
our plastic straws because one turtle got a straw up
the nose. You know, it was just one turtle, a
nine year old. He started, he started that hysteria. She
(10:36):
can't get a plastic straw can't have plastic bags after
next year. It's all about pollution. It's all about plastics
landfills right meantime.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
At the in San Diego County, at.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
The border between San Diego and Tijuana, the Tijuana River,
for years and years, there have been millions and millions
of gallons of raw sewage pouring into the Tijuana River.
That is caused all kinds of disgusting damage to the ocean,
to the river, and to the beaches. Beach closure is
(11:16):
total more than a thousand days. Also, it's affected the residents.
You can't live with a river of ross sewage flowing
by your community. So the people who live near the
river say they've been suffering unex excuse me, this is
so stupid. I choke on it. That they've been suffering
(11:38):
unexplained illnesses, unexplained including gastro intestinal issues, chronic breathing problems
because of the stench of the hydrogen sulfide. There is
not only ross sewage all that pooh coming in from
the Tijuana area, you also have all these chemicals being
(12:01):
dumped in the river. I guess how else would you
get hydrogen sulfide unless people are starting to defecate that chemical.
That's that's the sound of hydrogen sulfide going down the drain.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
The uh So, the CDC.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
The CDC, remember that hapless, useless agency that completely botched
the COVID crisis. Well, now after all these years, they're
very proud to announce that they're going to do a study.
Two hundred and ten households will be surveyed about their
mental and physical health as well as the pollution's effects
(12:43):
on property values. You need to do a study to
figure that out. I'm going to give you a hint.
The property values suck. The property values have crashed because
I think even desperate people.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
I don't think homeless people.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
Would take homes along a sewage river where it's nothing
but pooh and hydrogen sulfide.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Who's gonna they're homes are worth zero?
Speaker 2 (13:09):
And we're gonna we're gonna have a community assessment for
a public health emergency. That's what they call this, the
Community Assessment for public Health Emergency response. So they're gonna
knock on doors of over two hundred people.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
Do not feel well. The guy's coughing up a lot.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
Do you have gastro own testimony issues?
Speaker 1 (13:29):
Yeah? I do, can't you smell it, do you have?
Speaker 2 (13:34):
It's just causing like a depression because you're you're inhaling
all these chemicals and all this pooh every day. This
is what they're I don't know why they can't clean
up the river. Just spend the money and clean up
the river. They are printing fake money by the billions
and billions every day. They're borrowing billions and billions from China.
(13:59):
Just spend a few bucks for some kind of waste
processing plant, a water treatment plant something. But what do
you why are you going to spend money on this
stupid survey? Thirty officials, thirty thirty CDC officials, they got
nothing else to do. Fifty graduate student volunteers. Those guys
(14:19):
aren't getting paid. They're from San Diego State, the School
of Public Health. Well, you know what they're going to
be getting out of the business. They're going to go
door to door over three days in October and ask people.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Hey, does it really smell here?
Speaker 2 (14:35):
Oh? That's sue as that goes by, that make you sick.
The CDC could take weeks to months to release the
preliminary results, and the results isn't stupid? Everybody knows what
the results are going to be these two hundred people
are going to say, yes, life is horrible here.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
It smells really bad.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
It's a mixture of pooh and deadly chemicals, and it's
ruined by insides.
Speaker 5 (15:03):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
Who's this Bethany case, she's one of the residents. She goes,
I'm hoping that they're survey shows that oftentimes it doesn't
just smell like sewage. She doesn't want to focus on
the sewage to distract from the industrial waste that is
dumped into the river that might be making people ill.
Oftentimes it smells like a chemical. It smells like a
(15:24):
bite in the air. It burns your sinuses. How long
would you live like this? Seriously, I am shocked that
people live in these areas for even five minutes. And
I know people don't necessarily have the means to move.
Speaker 1 (15:40):
Boy, but if.
Speaker 2 (15:41):
This doesn't inspire you to figure out a way to
make more money, it's not that hard to make more money.
I mean, look at the guy we talked about last hour.
You know, he drives his a sports car on a
live stream and has one hundred and eighty five thousand
people paying him money to do it. I mean, you
just got to get. You gotta get more stupid and
then you'll make the money. You got that other lady,
(16:03):
she's pretending to shoplift at Walmart and she's making money online.
I think these people in this neighborhood could come up
with something. Maybe you should live stream all your illnesses,
live stream your gastro intestinal disorders or more coming up.
Speaker 4 (16:23):
You're listening to John Cobel's on Demand from KFI, a six.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Forty run every day from one until four and then
after four o'clock John Cobelt's Show on demand. All right, yeah,
you know there the southeast is getting battered with a
series of hurricanes. In fact, there's another monstrous one coming
to Florida. They just had Helene blew through. Helene, Yeah,
blew through, which actually did seem to do even more
(16:51):
damage to North Carolina than Florida.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
It was strange.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
It veered inland and just destroyed this mountain town, this
entire region in western North Carolina. And of course everybody
is squawking there that FEMA has not shown up and
brought along enough help. And there's you know, it's always
tough to tell what's being whipped up by people online
(17:20):
or maybe the media is not covering it properly. You know,
obviously the media would cover up a Joe Biden screw
up in North Carolina. With FEMA, I don't think they're
going to go after him the way they rightly went
after George Bush when Katrina happened. So it's hard to
tell if you're there what happened. But what I can
(17:42):
tell you for sure is that Alejandro majorcis who is
the Department of Homeland Security and he oversees FEMA. He's
the big boss over the FEMA agency. Back in July,
he claimed that they were tremendously prepared.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
Listen to this clip.
Speaker 5 (18:01):
FEMA is tremendously prepared. This is what we do, this
is what they do. And the key here, Rebecca, is
also to make sure that the communities who are potentially
impacted are prepared as well. And it's not just hurricanes
and fired wildfires, also extreme heat, which certainly some parts
(18:23):
of the United States are already experiencing.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
All right, that's July. He's claiming FEMA is tremendously prepared.
Now he is claiming that FEMA is out of disaster funds.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
That they're out of money.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
On October the second, he said, we're not expecting another
hurricane hitting. We are expecting another hurricane hitting. We do
not have the funds. FEMA does not have the funds
to make it through the season and what is imminent.
And you know, if this new hurricane Milton lives up
to half its hype, he's going to need billions and
billions of dollars. Well, the inspector general there is actually
(19:03):
an inspector General of Homeland Security, and inspector generals are fascinating.
They're fascinating jobs because most of the time, whether it's
for a city, a county, state, they.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
Tell the truth.
Speaker 2 (19:15):
They're like a super auditor investigator, and they usually lay
out the truth and the story lasts for about a
day and nothing changes. Nobody's embarrassed, nobody's fired, no policy
is adjusted. They usually say, hey, it looks like a
lot of money has been wasted or a lot of
money was stolen, or it's not accounted for. It's like, wow,
this is corrupt and crooked. That's what the inspector general does,
(19:38):
and then story disappears. Nobody follows up. Well, here's the
follow up. After mayork has claimed that Feena has had
of disaster funds The Inspector General released a report almost
at the same time saying that FEMA is sitting on
at least eight billion dollars in unspent money.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Unspent.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
See, there's been many crises, many hurricanes and natural disasters,
and every time there is one, the Congress appropriates another
pile of money, another billionaire, another billionaire, and it goes
into a bank account and then sits there, sometimes for
many years and has never spent. And eventually the need
to spend that money for that particular disaster is gone,
(20:29):
but it's still sitting there. And most normal people say, well, hey,
if you have an extra billion from a hurricane five
years ago, why don't you spend it on the new
hurricane that just destroyed a city last week? And you see,
I'm kind of mixed feelings in this. I think eventually
(20:49):
people ought to learn not to build their homes in
certain hurricane zones or certain fire zones, or next to
a river that floods every year.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
That's just me.
Speaker 2 (21:01):
I always ask is like, I'll give you like one
free disaster, one free house rebuild, But if you build
in the same place and the area is well known
for these kind of disasters, then the next house is on.
You shouldn't be on the taxpayer, but I'm in a
minority there.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
Anyway.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
FEMA has got eight billion dollars from other emergencies and
they never spent the money, so it sits frozen. Hurricane
Heleen killed at least two hundred and twenty people. Several
towns were wiped off the map. Entirely six hundred people
still reported missing. It doesn't mean they're dead, it means
(21:42):
they live in such a remote area and they have
no phone service, no electricity. In August twenty twenty four,
report from the Inspector General says that there are eight
zero point three billion dollars worth of money for disasters
declared in twenty twelve or earlier twenty twelve. For example,
(22:08):
Superstorm Sandy happened twelve years ago. There's four and a
half billion dollars sitting in a bank account and FEMA.
Usually there's deadlines. You have to spend the money by
a certain deadline, but FEMA has been extending deadlines by
up to sixteen years without explanation occasionally, so they don't
(22:29):
know why THEMA extends the deadlines. But they never spend
the money and they never use it on the new disasters.
They just ask for more money, and then mayorc has
claims like, well a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Well, all these things can't be true.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
You can't claim that you're successfully reacting to the disasters.
You have a lot of unspent money and you're broke.
Now here's another story along the same line. Why isn't
the money getting to the victims of Hurricane Helene. Well,
in this case, the FEMA employees were driving to a
(23:13):
town and this is for real, this is not made up,
driving to a town called Back Cave, North Carolina. It's
a real town. But FEMA refused to enter because local
officials put up a sign that says road closed. Now,
(23:34):
the road is closed because they don't want strangers and
thieves and lookie lows coming in, and they don't want
people getting hurt.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
Because of the rough conditions.
Speaker 2 (23:47):
But the road was drivable and certainly the town would
like the FEMA workers.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
To be admitted.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
Well, the FEMA workers they saw the road close sign
and they refused. They refused to enter the town. They
just stopped because it's workers are not allowed to drive
around the sign or any sign announcing a road closure.
The road was drivable, but just officially closed. But what
(24:19):
the hell can you imagine this now? I don't know
what exactly what these workers had, if they had supplies,
if they had money, if they had food.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
But they see a sign that says road closes.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
Like Harriet says road closed, We're not allowed to go
any further. You have people dying and suffering, isolated and abandoned.
Here comes the government and it says road closed, and
it says, isn't isn't there anybody from the local government
available to pick up the sign and move?
Speaker 3 (24:46):
It?
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Is everybody a boob? Yes, everybody's a boob, all right.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
When we come back, we have well, we have a
a Ditty report. I saw a new nickname for him,
the diddler.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
Uh. He has left quite a mess behind. And now
a woman, a.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
Go go dancer uh said she was pimped out by
Ditty to perform at parties, and she is naming celebrities
who attended the parties, the biggest names.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
I mean, I mean that's to tease John.
Speaker 6 (25:27):
Yeah, you're you gonna have some good names for us.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
Yes, this time I have some good names, all right? So, uh,
you see, these are the people you have to worry
about because go go dancers. They got They're not embarrassed
by what they do. They got nothing to lose. Somebody
knocks on their door and say, hey, who is at
the didty parties when they were having the freak offs
with the prostitutes.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
Oh, I'll tell you who is there. So we'll tell
you when we come back.
Speaker 4 (25:57):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from kfi A.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
Coming up after three o'clock. We're going to be talking
to the mayor Whitty. You're on about Prop thirty six
and about a bill that was killed that was supposed
to have better supervision of felons. Joe Vinatieri, the mayor
of Whittier, coming on after three o'clock. Now you heard
Prop thirty six we told you before, winning three to
(26:25):
one in the latest Berkeley poll three to one. So
stealing is going to be a crime again, a felony
if you do it three times. Drug use is going
to be a crime again third time, and you have
a chance to take an off ramp and go for
treatment instead. And fentanel dealing is going to be a
crime in some cases for the first time. So we'll
(26:49):
get all that out there. With the Whittier mayor Joe
Vinatieri coming up, but first did he and his freak
cough and allegedly, thousands of complaints are pouring in to
attorneys about things Diddy has done over the decades. And
(27:11):
now you've got a go go dancer. She's forty six.
I don't know how many goes she has left in her. Oh, Adria,
what that old.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
Jeems? Sorry? Well for go go dancers.
Speaker 6 (27:30):
Yeah, you know, forty seven is the new thirty seven?
Speaker 2 (27:34):
All right, I would draw that. Okay, thank you, let's
step down a landmine there. I just think of them
like athletes.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
Right, I get it, I get it, you know, all right?
It wasn't.
Speaker 2 (27:47):
Uh Adria Sherry English, she accused. She accused Diddy of
forcing her to have sex with guests at his freak offs,
filed a civil suit criminal complaint. She gave a bombshell
interview to The Daily Mail, and she described how she
was sex trafficked at Ditty's white parties in the Hampton's
(28:10):
and Miami. That's where everybody would dress up in white.
She recalled seeing famous stars like Donald Trump. Trump is
now involved in not only the Ditty case, but was
also mentioned in the Epstein case, he was buddies with Epstein,
(28:30):
and I think he got Epstein intomor a lago if
I remember correctly. I'm surprised Clinton's name hasn't shown up here.
I'm really stunned. But Trump's name was there also, and
this may upset you. The Reverend Al Sharpton, now I
don't want to think about that. She said, I saw
(28:54):
Paris Hilton there. Well, Paris Hilton, that makes sense. And
the Reverend Al Sharpton. I still wonder why Sharpton was there. Well, geez,
they're sex parties.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
He's off the clock.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
He takes off his reverend head, his collar. I like
the way people think that religious people like you know, priests,
Reverend Sharpton, that they're somehow neutered, they don't have the
same sexual desires.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
That we all have.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Right, people still getting stunned by this. Why do you
think Al Sharpton was there? I mean, if you have
a guy who in his circles had the most famous
sex parties that anybody's ever seen over the last thirty years,
and you are a guest, you don't have to wonder
why the guy Diana Ross was there with her son
(29:51):
Evan Ross, her underage son. HM, that could be disturbing.
There is a going back to Trump. There's a picture
of him posing with Ditty and Millennia. She first crossed
paths and again I'm talking about Adrea English with Combs.
(30:15):
Twenty years ago, she accompanied her boyfriend, who was a model,
on an audition for Ditty's clothing line, and they were
at headquarters waiting for him to be called for the
audition when an angry man suddenly came storming out of
the room where the auditions were being held. And ten
(30:36):
minutes go by, maybe less. This is a direct quote
from her, and she goes, all of a sudden, the
door swings open and my ex oh, this is her boyfriend.
Her boyfriend went in to the audition and he came
out yelling, F THATF that. He comes storming out yelling,
and I say, what's going on? And he couldn't speak.
(30:57):
They finally got into the elevator and I can't give
you the exact language, but apparently did he did he
wanted to commit a sexual act on the guy. I
guess that was he wanted to get that in exchange
for in exchange for approving him for the audition, and
(31:21):
he just started screaming a particular phrase over and over again.
English who worked these parties said they became more raucous
and the longer they got rampant drug use and did
He eventually began asking her to do actual favors with
the party guests. And now the videos, you know, are
(31:44):
the videos may be coming out.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
I went along with.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Going to the parties because I was a fan of
all these people. So I'm like, hell, yeah, why not
go to the hottest party of the most exclusive party
not open to the public.
Speaker 1 (31:57):
At his house.
Speaker 2 (31:59):
It wasn't at a club, a lounge, or a banquet hall.
It was as his actual home that he lived in
with his children. You know, I remember Trump when he
was first running. He had this whole thing, and I
think that I think it was just a stick. Remember
(32:20):
he was supposed to be germophobic.
Speaker 1 (32:22):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
He wouldn't shake people's right, Oh yeah, okay, do you
shake anybody's hand when they offer it.
Speaker 6 (32:34):
I try not to, but sometimes I have to because
I don't want to be rude. That I have tried
the fist bump and I and I have tried. Just
I'm not the one that initiates put it out.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
You don't reach to touch anyone. I don't, I don't.
I don't need to do that.
Speaker 6 (32:51):
I don't like doing that. It's no offense to anybody.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
It's my own psychosis. Okay, okay, just trying to see
how it is.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
All right, So Trump, Trump's got this thing where it
isn't shake hands, except if he's really germaphobic. Would he
be sleeping with porn stars, going to Diddy parties and
hanging out with Jeffrey Epstein.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
That's a very good part. There seems to be an
inconsistency here.
Speaker 6 (33:18):
Well, I mean, sex is a little different than shaking hands, right,
you make exceptions.
Speaker 1 (33:22):
I guess. I don't know what I know. I don't
know what do you know?
Speaker 2 (33:30):
But I just think if you're worried about about germs,
I mean, sex with a porn star, there's got to
be all kinds of things that you could catch far
worse than you know, because most of the time people
are worried about catching a cold.
Speaker 6 (33:46):
That's true, but maybe you're using extra protection, you know what.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
I mean, hand sanitizement. All right, when we come back,
we're going to talk to the mayor of wittier Joe Vinettieri,
and we're gonna talk about Prop thirty six, which was
winning in the polls three to one, and we'll talk
to him about that and other things as well. It's
(34:11):
always fun talking to Joe's ball of energy, Deborah Mark
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 on the iHeartRadio app