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December 17, 2024 32 mins

More info on the shooting at a Christian school in Madison, Wisconsin yesterday. Chicago residents are upset over the migrant situation in their city. A man who killed his wife is up for parole and he finally came clean about cooking her. People are getting tattoos in honor of Luigi Mangione.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can't. I am six forty. You're listening to the John
Cobelt podcast on the iHeartRadio app. We're here from one
until four after four o'clock. We transformed into a podcast,
John Cobelt's show on demand. Uh, it's posted shortly after
four o'clock. It's the same as the radio show, so
you can hear whatever you missed, and you can have
Debora and Eye into your ear as you're going to

(00:21):
bed tonight.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Oh that's exciting that.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
We'll put you to sleep, we'll wake you up. The
shooting in Wisconsin, it's a girl. I remember yesterday I
was kind of mocking one of the television newscasters. We
were sitting in the crazy box there, and they said

(00:46):
something about whether it was I forget how they they
didn't want to say that it was was a boy.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
It's a boy.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Of course, it's a boy. It's a definitely a guy.
And I was wrong, and it was a girl. And
in fact, according to there's actually a database called K
twelve School Homicide Database. It details three hundred and forty

(01:17):
nine homicides at school since the year twenty twenty, and
only twelve of the perpetrators were female, so it is
pretty rare, and the first case in the records. You
might remember this if you're old enough. Nineteen seventy nine,

(01:38):
a sixteen year old girl opened fire at Cleveland Elementary
School in San Diego, killed two, injured nine, and the
girl explained why she did it. I just don't like
Mondays And that became a hit song. Do you remember it?
Tell me why I don't like Mondays? Eric find that song? Yeah,

(02:01):
tell me why I don't like I'm just gonna shoot, shoot,
shoot the whole day down. That's really playing that on
the radio. You think the culture is pretty debased now,
I remember that. I remember back then. He turned on
the radio and you've got I forgot who recorded that song.
So they so the girl's name in this case fifteen

(02:25):
years old Natalie Rupp now, although she calls herself Samantha,
don't know what that's about. Now here's what's spooky. So
Jeff Rupp now is the girl's dad. And he looks
kind of like a weirdo. I don't know if you
saw the photo that was published of him. He took
a photo of himself. Looks like he's driving, and he's

(02:45):
got his he's got long hair all pulled back. I think,
in a ponytail, dark glasses, funky looking beard. All right,
weirdo looking guy. And he posted a snapshot showing his daughter.
Now this is some time ago in August, showing his
daughter Natalie pointing a shotgun at a clay pigeon. Oh,

(03:08):
and she's wearing a black top with the name of
the band KMFDM. Well, one of the Columbine Killers, Eric
Harris was wearing a KMFDM T shirt. KMFDM is a
German industrial band and he was a big fan. And

(03:32):
she's wearing the same kind of T shirt that Eric
Harris was wearing. Now, she's doing this while shooting the
clay pigeon in August, and I don't think that was
an accident. Eric Harris was two of the Columbine Killers.
They killed thirteen people, and that unleashed the modern age

(03:52):
of school shootings in America. I remember we were on
the air when that happened, and I remember, you know,
I remember somebody was dangling from the window. They tried
to escape out of the classroom and they were holding
onto the window afraid of falling. So she killed a
substitute teacher, One teenage student wounded six others and then

(04:13):
killed herself. And there is some manifesto going around online,
but cops don't know for sure if it was written
by Rupno. And in the Facebook post that the dad
put about his daughter, somebody asked if his daughter's if

(04:36):
that's your daughter, and he replied, joined the North Bristol
Shooting Club this spring. We have been loving every second
of it. You could get a family membership for just
ninety dollars and the club has more than six hundred members.
And rupnow shared a picture of one of his daughters
being encouraged to handle and fire guns with her father,

(04:59):
and the police are now talking to the parents because
if you remember, there's there's precedent in Michigan a couple
of years ago and those parents where we're put in
prison for enabling their son to go to school and
shoot people up. Yeah. KMFDM is a German industrial rock
band and they were idolized by Eric Harrison Dylan Kleebold,

(05:22):
that was the other guy from Columbine. Did you able
to find any clip of their music? I can't imagine
that a German industrial band sounds makes pretty music.

Speaker 2 (05:32):
Angel Martinez just sent me the translation. No majority for
the pity.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
That's what KMFDM. Yeah in German, I guess yeah, no
majority phrase no majority. Not sure what that means.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
I don't either, but it translates to no majority for
the pity.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
Source told CNN RUP now has been dealing with problems
and expressed some of those in the writings which they
are now revealing. A document is circulating on social media.
We have not verified its authenticity. Did Dad not know
that his daughter was wearing a T shirt and it

(06:17):
was the same T shirt as Dylan and Cleebald?

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Probably not. I mean, I don't she knew, though, of
course she knew, But I don't know. I you know,
I'm tough on parents. I don't know any of these.
I would know if one of my kids wore a
T shirt like that, what it meant.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
But I've always thought that if if one of these
kids shows up at school and blows away, you know,
a dozen people shouldn't even notice something in the house.
Is it possible not to notice when somebody is that
dark and sick?

Speaker 2 (06:56):
I would hope as a parent that I would know.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
But because I if I remember, it's a long time
ago now, Harrison cleehold, I remember, I thought I'd remember
seeing the parents getting interviewed on some show, and I
just they seemed just detached, oblivious, just bland, and there
just didn't seem to be any any any spark in them.

(07:22):
And because sometimes this stuff comes out of neglect, often
it's abuse, but a form of abuse is neglect where
you just don't pay attention to your kids. You're not
interested in your kids. They feel alienated and lonely, and
they exhibit some kind of weakness when they go to
school and they end up getting bullied. But you know,

(07:44):
they got the they got nice pictures of her online,
a picture of her hugging her dog. Oh I mean,
I mean the picture of her hugging her dog. She
looks like the least likely person on the planet to
be a mass murderer.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
Well see, there you go, so the parents, Oh she
loves the dog. You, I don't.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Know, it's bafflingly, yeah, it is baffling, but she's I
don't know. I'm trying to read between the lines of
these newspaper stories because nobody's printing exactly what they know yet.
But it's clear that she had some kind of she
had some kind of issues, and eventually she kills herself
in the end. All right, we will continue.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KF I
am six forty.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Here's the story I knew I had this played. Did
the Kamala Harris word salad?

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Yeah, I'm hungry now?

Speaker 1 (08:36):
A little little while ago, can you play that last
line again? She was speaking at some community college in Maryland,
and she she had corked a line and she even
recognized it was it was ridiculous, and that's a line
she'd used before, So play it again. Yeah, I did that,

(09:01):
but can you play can you back it up? Another?

Speaker 2 (09:05):
That you will continue to fight for the promise of America,
And I ask you to remember.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
The context in which you exist. There, Yeah, I did that.
Uh huh, she's and then two lays out of big cackle. There.
What is that's the second time she uses that phrase,
remember the context in which you exist. She loves that line,

(09:38):
and then she realizes that everybody mocks her for it,
and it comes out again anyway, and she goes, oh, CRAPA,
I said it again. So here's the headlines. I had
a couple of stories yesterday, so now I've got four
stories in two days. I'm terrified of this. Democrats I
Harris twenty twenty eight presidential run as they divide political

(10:00):
comeback Party aids are confident in her ability to bounce back,
including a bid for California governor. Democratic Party aids floating
ideas for a comeback, even as they grapple with the

(10:21):
message contained in her defeat. The message that was contained
in her defeat is people don't want her in charge
of anything because she makes no sense. Really, there's nobody else.
There's nobody else in the whole party. This is this

(10:41):
lady's the last one left. She had a billion freaking dollars.
Actually she had more than that. She had a billion
and a half because there was another five hundred million
spent by a political action committee that she had no
direct control over. Although I doubt that.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Oh, we have the Agragosa.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
There, Gohoes. Yeah, I'll take via Rego, said ten out
of ten times over Kamala Harris, no question about it.
And he's as dumb as a rock. But she is
just Then here's the other story. This is out a
Washington Post. Kamala Harris grapples with her future in a
wounded Democratic Party. Can't she get a job somewhere. She'd
be a perfect human resources director. She's got the perfect personality.

(11:26):
She can sit all day at meetings and spew all
kinds of cliches and generalities and lecture people and scold people.
That's perfect. That's all I saw when I watched her
speak or whatever. She'd carry on about something, one of
those irritating human resource directors. And then they compare it,

(11:47):
it's like, well, well, Richard Nixon made a comeback under
similar circumstances back in the nineteen sixties. He was vice
president for two terms under Eisenhower. Then he ran against
John Kennedy. Then Kennedy had the mobs steal the election
because they stuffed the ballot boxes in Chicago, gave Illinois
to Kennedy, and that's how he won. It was a

(12:09):
very close race. Kennedy comes back and runs for governor
of California in nineteen sixty two. No, no, Nixon comes
back to California at sixty two, runs for governor and loses,
then runs again in sixty eight and wins the presidency
twice over until he was kicked out of office. So
there could say, well, if Richard Nixon did it, she

(12:29):
could do it. It's like I've heard Richard Nixon speak extensively.
Kamala Harris is not Richard Nixon. That's at least a
fifty iq point differential there. It's like the difference between
a human being in a goldfish. Now, among the as

(12:51):
we know, the idiot policies that she was responsible for
was the wide open border, and the two cities that
took in a preponderance of the immigrants was New York
City and Chicago. Now New York City, the mayor Eric
Adams has realized he blew it. He made a huge

(13:13):
mistake praising the illegal immigrants and declaring New York a
sanctuary and welcoming them, and he blew six billion dollars
on illegal immigrants. His approval rating is at twenty eight percent,
and said, how suddenly he's teaming up with Trump and
Tom Holman to go after at least to illegal alien criminals. Well,

(13:37):
the Chicago mayor is this disaster named Brandon Johnson. Progressive
and woke doesn't even begin to describe his policies. And
his approval rating is down to fourteen percent. People in
Chicago are furious over the illegal alien situations because they're

(14:01):
spending an enormous amount of money, and he wanted to
pass a three hundred million dollar property tax. Can you
imagine that he's bowing hundreds of millions of dollars on
illegal aliens and he wanted a property tax to pay
for it. They also have to have an emergency forty
million dollars short term loan because Chicago's broke and they

(14:24):
can't pay off its debt. They have to borrow money
to pay off their debt. That's how bad this guy is.
And of course he's been all in on sanctuary city nonsense. Well,
the public is fed up, and I'm going to play
for you a compilation of Chicago residents yelling at Brandon
Johnson at a public meeting. By the way, the angriest

(14:47):
citizens in Chicago over the illegal aliens are black voters.
Play cut three. You calls all this money to go
to ilegal immigrants. Anything that you all pass, it's not jenius.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
You have not protected the people of Chicago from invasion.

Speaker 4 (15:04):
He wants to pour a forty million dollar lot of credit.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
It'll put the city in even more day.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
It's your fault that because you don't have the money
to illegal man.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Brad and Johnson, you took an oath to uphold the constitution,
or when you took an oath, was only attended to
fight for the tenth and fourteenth amendments regarding illegal aliens?

Speaker 4 (15:24):
Who guys fighting for some of llegal aliens who haven't put.

Speaker 1 (15:28):
A dime in this country.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
That's follows on you.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
We don't runt illegals in our community. We don't runt
migrants terrorize our own people.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
And the half y'all sit up here and say we
have to accept seventy million dollars being given to them
when you got black people who are already.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
Struggling and need help, it is a disgrace. How about that? Huh,
that's a whole minute worth of a montage there of
black voters screaming at the black mare for him spending
tens of millions, hundred millions of dollars over time on
illegal aliens. Yeah. I have a feeling all the left

(16:08):
wing progressives aren't going to call those black voters the
same names they would have called white voters had it
been white's standing in line to yell at Brandon Johnson,
You're not You're not going to get the same reaction
from the woke scolds are you? But this is this

(16:28):
is this, and you saw what happened in the vote.
I mean Trump got a historic number of black votes
because people are fed up with these progressive policies. There's
a lot of black voters in Chicago feel like they
got bumped back in line, that the illegal aliens took
priority because they did. The progressives hierarchy are criminals, illegal aliens,

(16:54):
and vagrants. Those are the That's the holy trinity for progressives.
That's all they care about. Everybody else doesn't matter if
you're white or black. Uh, if you're not a if
you're not a felon, an illegal alien, or some drug
addicted mental patient vagrant, they have no interest in you.
You just pay the bill.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
More coming up, you're listening to John Cobels on demand
from KFI AM sixty.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
One More Chance this week to call them Moistline and
air your views for twenty twenty four. Last chance this week,
and then we go into hiding for the Christmas holidays
eight seven seven Moist eighty six eight seven seven Moist
eighty six, or use the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app.
There's certainly plenty in the news. There's no shortage of

(17:44):
stuff here. I want it. Are you familiar with the
story of the guy in Lomita a few years ago
who cooked his wife?

Speaker 3 (17:55):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (17:55):
Yeah, that was you know that story.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
I was disgusting.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
He's back in the news because he was up on parole.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
How could you be up for parole after cooking your.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
Wife in this state? Where do you live?

Speaker 2 (18:11):
Never mind you live in the state of ars I
do yes, I do, yes.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
You can cook your wife and you'll come up for parole.
His name is David Vinn's and I'll tell you about
his parole in just a minute, or at least his parole.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
You're not going to describe what he did, are you.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
Well, A lot of people probably don't remember. We covered
this case way back, but I'd forgotten the details. This
happened in two thousand and nine. David Viennes had a
wife named Dawn, and apparently they had one of those
wild nights. He was a ran a restaurant and he

(18:47):
got whacked out on drugs and came home at a rage.
She may have been drinking and so in their drunk
drug induced rage, he accused down of failing to make
a bank deposit. And they're fighting and he grabbed packing
tape to keep Dawn from hitting him, tied her arms

(19:11):
to her sides, and covered her mouth to keep her
from waking the neighbors. Dawn was trying to let him
know that I can't breathe, but the packing tape ended
up suffocating Dawn. The end then took an ambion, went
to bed, and then when he woke in the next morning,

(19:33):
Dawn was dead. She had suffocated from the packing tape,
and he claims, now, I wasn't trying to murder her.
I was in a drunken rage. But here's what was
weird at first, Well, he freaked out, that's the first
thing that happened, and he boiled his wife's body and

(19:59):
then horde the liquefied remains down a grease trap and
tossed her bones in a trash bin. That's what he
admitted to it first, and he confessed to the crime,
and then when it was time for sentencing, he had
second thoughts, and he didn't have a lawyer. He tried

(20:20):
to convince the judge during sentencing that no, really, I
didn't do that. I was suffering from hallucinations caused by
the painkillers. I loved my wife. I didn't cook my wife.
Judge didn't believe him, sentenced him fifteen years to life,
second degree murder. Now this this happened. You know, we

(20:41):
finally got sentenced. It was twenty twelve. He's already up
for parole because it's fifteen to life, and I guess
he's already served eighty percent of the fifteen years. So
there you go. So there's a three member California Parole Board.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
He didn't mean to do it, John.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
That's what he's Sayings very good. So I see a
little little bit of a little bit of compassion there,
a little bit of leniency coming from mood.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
I'm just I'm just stating judge Debra here. Now I'm
a judge too. I'm a doctor of a judge. I'm talented.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
We're short of experts. Now, you know, there'sn't a budget anymore.
I'm here. Normally we would pay like a doctor contributor
or a legal contributor. We don't have that money anymore.
So you're going to be whatever I want you to be.
So twelve years later, he's talking to the California Parole
Board claiming he's full of remorse and he's worthy of
early release. But here's the issue. He had said he

(21:41):
boiled his wife and dumped her into the grease trap,
and then he said, no, I never did that. I hallucinated.
So he thought, well, in order to get parole, to
show I am truly sorry, I'm going to have to
admit to what I really did. And he now admitted
he's got like a third version of the story. He

(22:02):
now admitted that he killed his wife in their Torrents home,
panicked and did boil the body and pour the remains
down a grease trap and toss their bones in the trash.

Speaker 2 (22:13):
Well, he's being honest.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
He is being honest.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
That should count for something.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
No third time, he said, I thought about suicide. I
went back to the house where Dawn's body was. This
was after he panicked over the killing, and I had
a panic attack and I was talking out loud to
myself and I said, oh my god, you have to
do something. You have to do something. And at that moment,
that's when I thought back about something i'd seen on
TV a decade earlier. Apparently he'd seen a show where

(22:41):
somebody boiled their wife's body. I don't know what episode
this was. I was afraid I was panicked. I was
new to La I didn't really have any friends. Gee,
I wonder why that is? What kind of vibe did
this guy give off. I'm not going to hang out
with him. He seems like I got I would boil
his wife. I'd already lied to everybody that morning, and

(23:05):
I regret it. Now he's confessing here at the parole hearing.
Don Vinn's family is listening over the phone. This is
the second time he tried to convince a parole board
that he was ready to go, and the parole board
fortunately didn't buy any of it. They said no, but

(23:27):
you can try again in three years. He can come
back every three years for this one more thing. Because
the case was unsolved for about a year or so,
and then finally new detectives took over the case, and

(23:50):
they told a newspaper that they had found blood in
the house and they believed that Dawn was dead. She
didn't just disappear, and they considered David a person of interest. Well,
once he saw the article, he broke down, admitted the
crime to his new girlfriend, A new girlfriend, Yeah, yeah, uncooked.
Then he jumped into his suv raced with her to

(24:13):
a Palace Rancho Palace Verdes Cliff. Can you imagine being
the girlfriend there in the car. No, he just admitted
to killing his wife, and now he's driving probably one
hundred miles an hour. The girlfriend tried to stop it, well,
because he jumped out of the car and he ran
to the edge of the cliff. She runs up to
try to stop him. Van's breaks free and jumps eighty

(24:36):
feet survives.

Speaker 2 (24:39):
It's not his time.

Speaker 1 (24:44):
And then he confessed to the killing in the hospital.
This was the first time, and he told detectives he
had cooked his wife's body in the restaurant kitchen over
the course of four days until it was done. Well.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Did he taste it to make sure it was that's a.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
That's a four day recipe.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
And he poured the water and remains into the grease trap,
mixed it with the restaurant waist. The bones were placed
strategically among other garbage. His skull remained, her skull remained intact.
So he hit it in his mother's attic.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Was that ever found?

Speaker 1 (25:19):
No, No, he was going to take it somewhere else
that his textive searched the attict they couldn't find it.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
So did he say, where he put the skull.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
I can't find it in the story where the skull
ended up.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
Well, maybe he needs to come up with the skull.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
I try to trade that in for a Yes, I
don't know unless I'm missing it in the story. The
detectives couldn't find it, So I maybe he ran back
in there and the girlfriend. The girlfriend how long ago?

Speaker 2 (25:54):
I mean, how long after the murder did he hook
up with the new girlfriend.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
It looks like shortly there.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
Yeah, because he's lucky to be alive. Yeah, should not
have gotten in that car though. No. I mean, once,
once a guy tells you I killed my wife.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
You should run for these.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Yet, not drive with him over the hill.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
And speak to him again.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
Yeah. I don't know. Wow, that's what I'm saying about
the Menendez.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
You're going to bring them up.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
I don't get it.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
People have fetishes.

Speaker 1 (26:22):
John being a nice guy, like in high school, never
really impossible to get a date. And you go out
into the real world and you find that all kinds
of serial killers, mass murders, they got more women than
they know what to do with.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
I don't get it.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Is it me or is it the women?

Speaker 2 (26:41):
It's the women?

Speaker 3 (26:42):
Thank you you're listening to John Cobbels on demand from
KFI Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (26:50):
So Eric found this online. Somebody named Colin the rugg
is posting this on x Luigi angon fans getting tattoos
of him on their bodies, and that one of the tatts,
the first tattoo. It's it's a minute and a half
video and it's of Mangione shooting Brian Thompson in the back.

(27:16):
You see Thompson dressed in his suit Mangeon wearing the
hoodie in the backpack. He's got the gun pointed and
they show the whole process is they're peeling off, you know,
the outline of the tattoo before it all gets colored in.
Now one of them seems to be like a was
that a flower of some kind of red flower? And

(27:38):
it's got the bullets with denied, defend and depose inscribed
on them. Yeah, it's a rose. It's a rose. One woman.
One woman was inspired by the Pokemon character Breloom, which
is on Mangion's profile. Now, we told you last hour
that forty one forty one percent of adults under the

(28:03):
age of thirty think assassinating CEOs is acceptable or assassinating
Brian Thompson's was acceptable forty one percent and nineteen percent
were neutral. That means sixty percent of people under the
age of thirty not bothered that Brian Thompson got plugged
in the back and murdered. And now you've got people

(28:27):
spending money on colorful tattoos to commemorate the occasion. Are
they going to carry those tattoos for the rest of
their life? They look pretty permanent to me. I mean,
what does it take to get a tattoo off? I
can't believe ten years from now they're gonna want like
a murder depicted on their on their arm. Oh, it

(28:48):
is time to get off the planet. It is time
to go. I have to get on one of Elon
Musk's SpaceX rockets and leave this place. Have you seen this.

Speaker 4 (28:59):
Mark these people who are is a cult around him?

Speaker 1 (29:03):
Well, yeah, the tattoos.

Speaker 4 (29:05):
I haven't seen the tattoos. Say, I'll send you the tattoos.
I'm looking for a new one.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
And and Americans under the age of thirty are okay
with Brian Thompson being shot to death.

Speaker 4 (29:18):
It's it's astounding. I mean, yeah, I don't know. There's
a new kind of it's so multi fasting. But one
of the things is there's a new kind of okayness
with violence.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (29:31):
Disturbs me. Yeah, just just in general. I think there
is an okayness with it now. It bothers me. And
then of course this kid is celebrated because he's taken
out a big bad CEO who is in charge of
a healthcare company that you know, did a lot of ken,
does a lot of bad stuff.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
Do we all get one ceo to take out? Yeah, exactly.
I mean everybody's got a problem with somebody, that's.

Speaker 4 (29:56):
True, You're right, I mean, and all that's going to
happen is that the c just have private security now
that they that they buff up. Yeah, it doesn't actually
change anything from a policy standpoint.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
So no, nobody's gonna no ceo is going to walk
the streets in New York by himself anymore.

Speaker 4 (30:10):
But you know, I'll tell you Michael Moore, I mean
they because he was mentioned in the manifesto as it's called. Yeah,
he was saying, Hey, I'm not going to tamp down
any of this anger. This anger is good. This healthcare
system is broken. So you can see where you know
where the lions now the lions kind of begin to
erase them security. Does he have no exactly? Uh, we've

(30:31):
got a big show. It's a Conway show. There is
a cannabis cafes, artificial intelligence, a new LA County program
that could erase medical bills. It's all here. In fact,
Governor Newsom unveiling a plan.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
I know you're a big fan. Oh I love that guy. Yeah,
he's so great.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
He has unveiled a new plan for well paying jobs
without a college.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
Degree, which would be a nice thing to be able to. Yeah,
up to what's he going to do? Though?

Speaker 4 (31:05):
His ex wife? They sent her to grease? Huh was
that his wife or girlfriend?

Speaker 1 (31:10):
Oh? No, that was his wife. Yeah. Yeah, she wanted
to be the first lady with with when Gavin became president.
Did you ever see that layout they did?

Speaker 4 (31:21):
And oh yeah, I know, I know it was. It
made me very uncomfortable. And seriously, if you're a public official, dude.

Speaker 1 (31:27):
Was her jacket Jackie Kennedy impression?

Speaker 4 (31:29):
The whole thing was. It was disturbing thought. I don't know,
but now she's going to be in Greece and sent
her down there.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Yea. Apparently I read a few articles in between the lines.
I got the feeling she was too crazy for the
Trump family. Wow, what does that say? Well, look at
the stuff the Trump family puts up with, and she
was too much.

Speaker 4 (31:56):
They farmed her out when the chips were down though.
On the taxpayer, We're taking care of that relationship for.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
Them, all right. I love it. Big show, John, Big Show. Yeah,
we got Kruzer with the news live in the KFI
twenty for our newsroom. Hey, you've been listening to the
John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear the show
live on KFI Am six forty from one to four
pm every Monday through Friday, and of course, anytime on
demand on the iHeartRadio app

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