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November 27, 2024 31 mins

The LA County Board of Supervisors want to funnel millions of dollars to support immigrants and transgender residents as Trump is set to take office again. Over Thanksgiving weekend Americans will throw out over 300 million pounds of food. More on Trump's tariff plan. The Washington DC Attorney General said an anti-police activist spent $75,000 to live lavishly. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I Am six forty. You're listening to the John Cobel
podcast on the iHeartRadio apps. John Cobelt Show, CAFI AM
six forty Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. If I
mentioned the pastathon yet, I don't think I should be
mentioning this constantly. Fourteenth Daniel KFI Pastathon is going to
be Tuesday, benefiting Katerina's Club and Chef Bruno and they

(00:26):
serve twenty five thousand meals every week to kids in need.
And you can donate or bid on exclusive KFI auction
items now a KFI AM six forty dot com slash Pastathon.
Oh yes, we have a big prize there. You get
to guest host an hour of the show with me.
You have to bid on this.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
That's great.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
Yeah, highest bid well sit here for an hour and
number two. So go do that now. KFI AM six
forty dot com slash Pastathon shop at any Smart and
Final store and you donate any amount at checkout and
go to any Wendy's in southern California and donate five
dollars some more, you get a coupon book worth fifteen
All right, that's a good trade. And then Tuesday December

(01:10):
third is the big show at the Anaheim White House.
All the shows broadcasting live all day from five am
to ten pm. You can donate on site drop off
pasta and sauce. One hundred percent of your donations go
to Caterina's Club KFI AM six forty dot com slash Pastathon,
and then a link to bid on being a co

(01:30):
host on the show.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
And save some cash for the actual day of the event,
because you'll want to bid on John making a fool
out of himself.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
Yes, save cash. It's for the kids, It's for the children. Yeah, right,
Can I just buy Can I buy that prize out?
I mean, can I just say I'll match? No, I'll
replace whatever. Someone's gonna know. You got to donate a
million dollars then, right, what was I going to do? Oh? Yes?
La County supervisors all right, so these these these foolish

(02:04):
people I want to spend. They want three billion dollars
from Trump to fund transportation projects for that car free Olympics. Yeah,
that's the most pressing concern. LA County supervisors also want
to spend millions of dollars of your tax money if
you're in La County. They want to spend millions of

(02:27):
dollars to support illegal immigrants and transgender residents because they
may be affected by Trump slashing federal programs that they
benefit from. Here's Holly Mitchell. That was the supervisor's name.
I couldn't remember. When I think of Holly Mitchell, I
think the hundreds of disgusting RVs in her district all

(02:53):
lined up, I forget what street, hundreds of them lined up,
all dumping human feces and sewage into the streets, and
she doesn't do anything about it. She says it was
surreal to find California back on defense against the Trump administration.
Oh oh, well, that's a good way to ingratiate yourself

(03:13):
with the guy. You want three billion dollars from here's
a motion put forward by Hilda Selie and Janis Han.
That's a couple of empty cans. They want five and
a half billion dollars ongoing legal services for illegal immigrants.
So they want taxpayers in La County to pay for

(03:34):
illegal aliens lawyers. We got to pay for their lawyers.
They came here illegally, and I have to pay for
their lawyer. How does that work? Because Trump doesn't want
federal taxpayers to pay for the lawyers, and he doesn't
want taxpayers outside of LA to pay for him, so

(03:58):
we have to pay for him here because we're a sanctuary.
You kind of have to say this stuff out loud
and you realize how nuts this is, how absolutely crazy
this is. Why am I working to pay for lawyers
to help people who willingly broke the law? So when
Trump tries to deport them, they're going to have some
kind of lawyer shielding them. It's going to develop a

(04:22):
campaign to educate immigrants on their legal rights. Why why
do I have to pay for that? What legal rights
do I have to keep my money? LA is home
to an estimated eight hundred thousand immigrants. One out of
every twelve county residents are here illegally, eight hundred thousand.

(04:44):
Do you think that's enough? Is that enough? By the way,
if there are eight hundred thousand fewer people in LA County,
I don't think we'd have a housing shortage anymore. I
don't think the price of housing and rents would be
so ha. Why don't you think don't you think that

(05:05):
if the illegal immigrants were deported that American citizens and
legal residents would have much more room to live much
greater supply of housing, and the prices would come down
significantly and more people would be able to afford a home.
Why don't we have that right as American citizens? Why

(05:27):
can't we afford less expensive homes? Why do we have
to compete with eight hundred thousand extra people who broke
the law? Nobody ever talks about this. Here's another motion,
another program from Lindsay Horvath. Lindsay Horvat is the chairperson
of LASA, the Los Angeles Housing Services Association. They're the

(05:50):
ones that are getting auditedd and nobody could explain where
all the money went because it's been looted by all
these nonprofits. They got many millions of dollars in advance,
that was the story earlier this week, never paid the
advances back. Lindsey Horvath is in charge, but she's got
no idea where the money was because she doesn't care.
But she's got another seven million dollars to spend serving

(06:13):
transgender people. Now. I don't know how many transgender people
there are in LA County, but there can't be that many,
and they're getting seven million dollars over the next two years.
The pilot program includes four and a half million dollars
for groups that provide These are more nonprofits to supply

(06:33):
a range of services to the trans The gender expansive
What is that? What is gender expansive? I've never heard
that term. If you heard their t I have not
gender expansive. All right, excuse me, you google it. I'm
going to go to Google. I have never heard that term.

(06:53):
But this is this is millions of dollars. This is
four and a half million dollars for a group I
never heard of. All right, I mean, get Google up here.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
It's a term used to describe people whose gender identity, expression,
or experience doesn't align with traditional gender rules. I know,
how tight, how slow you type?

Speaker 1 (07:10):
So well, thanks for your health. You're snucking a little
dig there too. That's very good. So is that a
new letter in their little alphabetical soup that they try
to force people to say gender expansive.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
People may identify as transgender, non binary, or gender queer,
or they may use other terms to describe their gender.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
You know what. They came up with so many terms.
Even the advocates don't want to go through all the
terms anymore, so they came up with one umbrella phrase
gender expansive. Now that's going to account for all those
all those letters, also intersex people four and a half
million dollars for transgender expensive and intersex, which is I

(07:58):
guess people with male and female parts. Now, how many
times does that happen? We really have to spend four
and a half million dollars on that? And what what
can you do? Anyway? What's our tax money going to
do for that? It's also going to include two million
dollars for an outside administrator to process the grant applications.

(08:21):
So they're going to spend four and a half million
dollars to fund these nonprofit groups, and then two million
dollars to the administrator who's going to give out the
four and a half million dollars. The hell and One
activist says, it's gonna the money's going to go to
groups that are going to empower our community. What does

(08:42):
that mean? I want to keep my money. I want
to spend it on what I want to spend it
on things that please me, that help me, me, me me.
I make the money for me. I don't make the
money to try to solve everybody else's problems. They can

(09:04):
go make money and solve their own more coming up.
Me me, me, me, me, me, it is I've had
it with everybody else. Don't do what you want. I
don't care what you do, how you identify yourself, how
you but you you don't get my money. That's your problem.
Go spend your money.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
Well, it's one thing the La Times devotes a lot
of space to, and that's their climate change obsession. And
they have a writer here, Kate Lynthetoon who many years
ago to his story on us. And this kind of
dovestails with other things we've talked about today. Do you

(09:52):
know on Thanksgiving Thanksgiving weekend, Americans will throw out three
hundred and sixteen million pounds of food.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
What a waste.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
This is also helps ruin the climate because it ends
up in landfills and as it rots, it releases methane,
and methane is a potent greenhouse gas that heats the planet.
And let's just talk about produce here. Four hundred This

(10:24):
is in Mexico. Four hundred and twenty tons of produce
rots each day before it can be sold and ends
up in a landfill. Now why is that?

Speaker 2 (10:39):
Why is that john?

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Because people hate vegetables. If there's four hundred and twenty
tons of waste, okay, have you ever.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Gone day Wait a second, have you ever passed a
bakery as it's closing right and there's a lot of
pastries that are still there that that could go to waste.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
Yeah, I don't think it produces the the methane like
the produce stuff.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
I'm just talking about waste.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
I would say, I would say if there's four hundred
and twenty tons a day in Mexico that the public
has spoken that they don't want to eat vegetables.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Maybe they're just growing too much.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
Do you know one third of all food produced in
the world is never eaten, more than one billion tons annually,
a billion tons, and it all decomposes and releases the
methane and then we overheat and we're all gonna die.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Well, why aren't we just sending that to homeless shelters
extra food?

Speaker 1 (11:34):
They try to have programs that do that because see
the problem is like in this particular section of Mexico,
they put the best looking produce up front and in
the back are the fruits and vegetables. That no longer
look so good. They're beginning to look old. Now they're

(11:55):
still good to eat, but people don't want to buy them.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
Okay, so that at the end of the day give
them away.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
Free mushy papayas. It's disgusting, mushy.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Papayas run in a smoothie.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Wilting spinach and bruised tomatoes. Who's beating up the tomatoes? Yes,
terrible And and you know they've tried these programs to
to well, I got to say, there can't be that
much food insecurity going on if we're throwing out a
billion Well, that's.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
What I'm saying. It's not it's not it's not going
to the right place.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
Is that? Yeah? I me're always told about there's so
many hungry people, so many food insecure people, and all
the rest. It's like, I don't know, looks like it
looks like and you look around and you see how
fat most people are.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
You you're going to go to the obig city.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Well it listen to this takes an area of the
size of China. That's what's amazing. There's all that food
being thrown out, and look at all the food that's
still sticking on everybody's body.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
Well, because they're they're eating your type of diet.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
It takes an area the size of China to grow
all the food that is thrown away. Wow, thirteen percent
of the food produced in the world is lost between
the harvest and the market, and then another nineteen percent
is thrown out by households or restaurants or stores. Food

(13:17):
waste takes up half the space in the world landfills,
and three hundred and sixty million pounds of food will
be wasted in this country on Thanksgiving a loan, and
the emissions associated with food waste are the same as
one hundred and ninety thousand gas powered cars for a year.

(13:38):
All right, So all the food waste is going to
produce on Thanksgiving Day alone the same amount of greenhouse
gas as one hundred and ninety thousand cars would for
a year. So it's food waste that's the problem. It's
vegetables of the problem.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
Well, it's not just vegetables. What about the turkey, the
extra turkey. It was bad when you you know you're
keeping it for leftovers.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
When I when I'm served food, it's usually at someone
else's house because my wife knows not to serve me vegetables.
I go somewhere else. All the food that you know,
I end up tossing out. It's all the vegetables.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
Well that's you.

Speaker 1 (14:15):
I eat the turkey, and I don't even like turkey,
but I eat the turkey and or the or the
you know, the pork or the beef or whatever. But
that's that's trumating. I don't want to hear about hungry
people anymore.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
Well, it's not being distributed correctly. It sounds like just you're.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
Hungry, just good kind of deal. At the produce market,
they eat some of the bruised tomatoes and the mashed
book bias. Okay, stop and go get a job.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
While you're at it, you're listening to John Cobel's on
demand from KFI A M six forty.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
Hey, hey, do you have that vegan promo handy? I
nobody played at the top of the hour. Let me
let me grab it. Hold on, Yeah, I'm gonna because
I picked up on that about halfway through.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
And I was hysterical. That's my favorite promo ever.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
This is like a family around the dinner table.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
There are vegans, John, and vegans do celebrate Thanksgiving.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
You got it? Now all right, well, take take your time,
but I guess, I guess you get it. You get
a lot of You have to sit at a separate table,
right because you can't even look at the turkeys.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
As I yes, I don't, especially when it's carved, and
you know, what do you do?

Speaker 1 (15:32):
I just ignore it almost under the table, you look
at the wall.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
I mean, so what we do is we have the
turkeys sliced, right, and then people can go and grab it.
So I'm not in there while the turkey is sliced.
I don't say anything.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
Every slicing cuts right through to the heart.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Here's the deal. I don't say anything. I don't. I
don't want to make anybody.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Does everybody make fun of Thanksgiving.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
Everybody's used to me being a vegan. I'm the only
one and I eat my vegetables and my vegan sweet
potato soufle in peace and quiet, and yeah, nobody bothers me.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Do you have that hold on it's loading? Okay, you
don't get you don't make a big deal out of it,
but you get grossed out when you see the turkeys
in the grocery store.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
I don't say anything to anybody. I'm not imposing my
feelings on anybody else.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
It's like a religious thing, though, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
No, I just don't want to eat animals, but I
don't tell other people usually about.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Usually except you, except yeah, exactly, sure, I'm the chosen
one here.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
Well, it's just so much fun.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
Uh, all right, now, I have We've talked about this
this week when when Trump said he's gonna slap at
twenty five percent tariff on Mexico if they don't stop
the fentanyl from coming over the border and all the
illegal migration and people, the usual crowd is appalled, Oh
could you do that? It's going to ruin the economy.

(17:05):
It's good well to me. I guess there's two choices.
Either go in there with the military and start shooting
everybody in the cartels, or you put pressure on the
government to to to cut off the trade from their end. Okay,
either we're gonna do it, or they're gonna do it.
Either our military or Mexico's military law enforcement, your choice.

(17:29):
And the thing is most of the Mexican government is
afraid of the cartels. The cartels control a third of
the country. So anybody who's president, when you say, hey,
maybe we should do something about the cartel. Oh no, no, no, no,
not me, not me, because the cartel kills politicians and journalists.
They've killed like hundreds of politicians and journalists over the years.

(17:52):
So they just give nonsense answers whenever pressed. And Trump
is saying, well, you better grow a pair, do something,
or we're going to shut down your economy with the tariff,
I mean, and that's what he should do, because in
the end, seventy five thousand Americans die every year. Fentanyl
overdose happened this year, last year, the year before, I

(18:15):
mean ten years ago, it hardly existed. But the ingredients
come from China, they're shipped to Mexico, they're mixed in
Mexico and manufactured and sent to the US, and seventy
five thousand people die. So I don't know if I
was president, if you're a president, you'd say, all right,
we got to do something here. I mean, seventy five thousand.
That's a year. That's more than the entire Vietnam War.

(18:38):
That's twenty five times the number of people died on
nine to eleven. We started two wars over nine to eleven.
That was three thousand people. Now he got seventy five
thousand a year, and we're afraid to take on the
drug cartels. Seriously really, So, now all these critics are
coming out because Mexico has never been able to confront

(18:58):
the drug gangs. They a third of the country. They've
been able to get a handle on stopping immigration when
we bribe them enough. And under the old president Andre's
Manuel Lopez Oberdoor, the Mexican government shied away from confronting
the cartels and tried to address poverty and inequality. That

(19:25):
is the reason for the violence, which is complete nonsense.
The cartels make billions of dollars and they'll kill anybody
to protect the billions of dollars. His strategy was known
as hugs not bullets. Oh yeah, that's gonna work, hugs
not bullets. Wow. So anyway, Obrador is gone and now

(19:49):
they have Claudia Shinbaum. Yes, they have a Jewish woman
who's the president of Mexico. I don't know how that happened,
but she is facing a lot of pressure not to
capitulate to Trump's threats. Well, who's giving the pressure, I mean,
I mean, the Mexicans are happy with the cartels covering

(20:12):
one third of the territory or maybe I mean, maybe
a lot of mech Obviously a lot of Mexicans might
work for the cartels, right, but they must imagine, I mean,
you have billions and billions of dollars worth of drugs,
and billions are paid to human smugglers. What is the
employment number in Mexico for the drug cartels, like if

(20:34):
they were a private company, what's their employment number? And
maybe a lot of people don't want things to be
disrupted if it means seventy five thousand Americans are killed.
Oh well, Shinebaum is blaming Americans taking the drugs. We
don't produce the weapons, we don't consume the drugs, but

(20:55):
we're the ones who suffer the deaths due to the
crimes in response to the drug demand from your country, boyd.
She twists that around. Huh. She and her predecessors allow
the drug cartels to take over a third of Mexico.
They make billions of dollars. But it's our fault for
taking the drugs, and we're causing Mexicans to die because

(21:18):
we take the drugs. So we should just have the
seventy five thousand people die every year, is what she's saying.
So that all the thousands and thousands that are profiting
off the drug industry can continue to do so. Well.
Trump says We're going to wage war on the cartels.
Obrador had said, we're not going to allow any foreign

(21:39):
government to intervene in our territory, much less a government's
armed forces. Well, you know, a part of we would
love to see Trump send in the military. See what
happens are the cartels that strong and I have wondered,
and I'm going to keep wondering, is how many American politicians,
how many of them are getting a cut from the cartels.

(22:00):
I got to believe a lot of people in the
Mexican government, are in the Mexican law enforcement and in
the Mexican military to all of this can go on?
How many? Because there is Trump is the only guy
that I'm aware of who is demanding that this stop,
and it should stop because a lot of the people
who are dying from fentanyl are our innocents. I mean,

(22:23):
how many We've had a number of parents on whose
kids died because they took a pill at school and
it turned out to be laced with fentanyl, and that'll
kill you in a matter of seconds. But any you know,
this is part of China's plan actually to destroy us.

(22:43):
They got they got They tried it with the Wuhan virus,
they got it, going with the with the uh well,
not only the math but the fentanyl. They got those
spy balloons flying over us. They're buying up the farm
land around our military nuclear bases. Oh then they got
TikTok to infect all the all the people, all the

(23:04):
all the kids' minds. And now you suddenly have young
girls who want to save eric Lyulemanandez. That's all part
of the plan. The Chinese is turning uh the the
the brains of our young people into mush, into bruised mush,
mushy tomatoes.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
And slimy papiyas.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
And slimy pias. That's what's happening. And it's all part
of the great plan. So Trump should be going after
all these countries. We have that promo yet, all right,
play it.

Speaker 3 (23:35):
Coming out to the family on Thanksgiving, Mom, dad, everyone, Yes,
I'm a vegan.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
What did he say, I'm vegan. He's a virgin. No,
you guys vegan. I don't eat meat. No eating meat,
No eating meat. You can have a little turkey though
te when do we meet your new fellow? No, pop.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
That that is probably the best one ever. I don't
need neat. You can have turkey though.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Clay Row produced that that was one of his best.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
All Right, you're listening to John Cobels on demand from
KFI A sixty.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
I am warning you there is a lot of criminal
activity with all the nonprofits that are sucking out so
much tax money from us. Here's another story, not in
Los Angeles, but out of Washington, d C. There's a
Washington d C has its own attorney general. His name
is Brian Schwab, and he says an anti police activist

(24:39):
spent seventy five thousand dollars to live lavishly. These were
donations that he got for his fake nonprofit organization. The
guy's name is Brandon Anderson, and his organization was called
raheem Al. He was to defund the police, Okay, to

(25:01):
fund the police, and he used the charitable funds to
support his luxurious lifestyle. He took the donations to his
fake nonprofit to fund lavish vacations and shopping sprees, and
the board of directors let him get away with it,
said Attorney General Schwab. Now let's get this Brian Anderson, Guy,

(25:26):
Brandon Anderson, excuse me. He was for police. He was
for the abolition of police departments. I think one of
the new city council members is here in la is
also for the abolition of police. Well, Brandon Anderson started
his organization with the goal of equipping black, Brown, and

(25:48):
Indigenous community crisis responders with the tools, training, and funding
they need to provide care. Now, one of these community
crisis responders, well, he was going to set up kind
of an alternate emergency force. He wanted to create an
emergency dispatch app that would allow people who hated the
police to bypass calling nine to one one. They would

(26:11):
use this emergency app and get this. Anderson's nonprofit received
more than four million dollars in donations before the project fizzled.
Now he's being chased by the Attorney General for seventy
five thousand dollars he spent on his own personal luxurious

(26:36):
lifestyle choices. But there's actually four million dollars for his
fizzled app. Looks like there was no alternate emergency response team.
Looks like people will still have to call nine one
one and deal with the police. So the complaint against
Brandon Anderson details over forty thousand dollars in spending on

(26:57):
mansion and penthouse apartment rentals. Oh, that's like the Black
Lives Matter leaders in LA spending six million dollars on
a big mansion. Well, this guy was doing it too.
Ten thousand dollars on personal travel, a trip to a
Cancun resort, a ten thousand dollars clothing allowance where he

(27:18):
would buy clothing from Botega Venera, Alexander McQueen, Bloomingdale's far
Fetch Sacks, even spent five thousand dollars in emergency ventary services.
It's interesting his his organization called raheem Al has not
had a treasurer since twenty twenty, so there was nobody

(27:42):
counting the money. Anderson had full, unrestricted control of its finances.
And this crook got four million dollars in donations. Because
defund the police, so many people got wreck and was
a lot of rich white people who financed these organizations,

(28:05):
and they're the ones who got hosed. Defund the police, Yes,
create your own emergency response team and what are they
going to do? Well, turned out he was not. He
didn't really want to defund the police didn't really want
to set up his own emergency response team. He just
wanted to steal the money and spend it on high living.

(28:27):
That's which is what a lot of these nonprofits do.
That's the whole point of them. All Right, Conway is
out for the third straight day, hasn't shown up for work,
and nobody knows where he is.

Speaker 4 (28:41):
Nobody's looking either. No, no, I got a text from
him the other day. You know, I think he's he's
somewhere within.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
The reach of a radio, so he knows what's going on. Well,
who knows. It's Doug McIntyre.

Speaker 4 (28:54):
Yes, I'll be in here till seven o'clock tonight. You
know that defund the police thing. Remember Occupy Wall Street. Yes,
that was good too. My wife and I we had
a house for a bunch of years, for twenty years
up in Oregon on the Oregon Coast in Tillamook County
where they make the cheese. Yeah, one of the funniest
things they've ever seen. At the height of Occupy Wall Street,
it's pouring rain. It's the Oregon Coast, it's pouring rain.

(29:18):
There's one guy in one of those Gordons of Gloucester
slickers standing on main Street with log trucks going by,
with occupied Tillamook sign.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
You know, the epicode for global commerce.

Speaker 4 (29:33):
It was just such a You almost kind of liked
the guy for you're.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
A true believer. Yeah, that's right. He's he's really giving
it a shot. All right.

Speaker 4 (29:44):
So, I mean it's Thanksgiving, I got lots of Well
we did Zeppo yesterday, so we're doing shemp today. Okay,
I wrote a book about shemp. My god, I'm doing
it and uh so, I I believe it or not.
When I was at the other radio state and I
work Thanksgiving, I told the story about when I cooked
a turkey drunk.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
Now, you and I have a lot of things in common.

Speaker 4 (30:08):
One of them is we eat exactly the same We
had the same diet, never a vegetable, shall sully my palette?

Speaker 1 (30:13):
All right?

Speaker 4 (30:14):
And I have I told you this the Vaughn's over
here on pass Avenue when I was forty, Yeah, I
was shopping for what I buy and the checkout woman
is looking at the stuff I got on the belt
and she looks at me and she goes, are your
mom and dad out of town?

Speaker 1 (30:30):
Actually said that? So that's the way I eat right.
It comes on a little square of cardboard. Shrink grabbed
the cream color. An adult right with a credit card,
and this is what you're buying.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
So so I I was boozed up and I decided
to cook a turkey.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
I had no idea how to cook a turkey. I
will tell the results. It's over. It's not easy. It's
a it's it's.

Speaker 4 (30:56):
A it's a Thanksgiving radio tradition. The folks have listen
to the show, So that will happened today.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
All right, Doug Backintyre, how to cook a turkey drunk? When?
All right? Who's doing the news? Oh, Brigitta Dagostino's in
again to do the news for Krozer next live on
the KFI twenty four hour. Well, she's in the KFI
twenty four hour newsroom. Hey, you've been listening to the
John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always hear the show

(31:21):
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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