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 Cobelt Podcast on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Welcome to the show. It's good to have you here.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
We are on every day from one until four o'clock,
and then after four o'clock it's John Cobelt's show on
demand on the iheartapp, the podcast, which is the same
as the radio show, So whatever you miss you could
pick up then. And I think that to the moment,
to the day Joe Biden dies, somebody is going to
be lying and covering up any story about his health
(00:34):
and any story about anything connected to Biden. I think
this has been one of the most extraordinary periods that
I can remember in my life or that I've ever
read about before I was born, where this just been consistent,
overwhelming lying.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
To the public. It's just astonishing.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
And if you Friday, there was this story, and it
was a story at the time, it said he had
a nodule on his prostate. Nodule sounds like a small
little bump, you know, people get nodules on their vocal cords.
And then two days later the nodule suddenly becomes like
(01:16):
stage four cancer that's spread to his bones. There's so
much bs in the world. There's so much lying, so
much covering up going on. It's it's incredible. So the details,
if you don't know, is Sunday they announced Biden has
(01:36):
an aggressive form of prostate cancer. It's spread to the bones,
which means it's not curable. So odds are he's not
going to survive very long. They're they're treating it with
well hormone therapy. Do you know what makes a prostate
tumor grow quickly? This is something all men will be
interested in, women not so much. But it's your testache.
(02:01):
You know, men have a generous supply of testosterone that
many men have too much testosterone. Well, that's what makes
prostate cancer cells grow. And I learned a lot in
the last twenty four hours. Do you know how they
used to treat prostate cancer that had grown aggressive, Well,
they had to cut off the source of the testosterone,
(02:22):
which means they had to cut off Yes, you're ah,
Eric's had just snapped a round. Yeah, they would cut
off the testicles. Oh, okay, and I by coincidence, we
had some friends over last night for dinner and one
of the guys is a urologist and he has done
a lot of surgery parts down in the nether world,
(02:46):
and I brought this up to him and he goes, oh, yeah,
I used to do quite a bit of that years ago.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
He used to do the testical snip.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
And then you're not producing testosterone and the cancer can't
can't grow as quickly, he said. Then they came up
with a slightly less drastic treatment where they would and
I don't know exactly how this works, so if you're
a urologist or a cancer specialist, forgive me, obviously I
haven't been trained for even five minutes. But he said,
(03:17):
they basically used to make an incision and hollow out
the inside of the testicles, you know, the way you
would like, I guess, scoop out a pumpkin, I so
that they would still look like they're there, but there
was nothing inside to make the testosterone, which doesn't sound
very pleasant either, but at least it's less final looking,
(03:38):
less traumatic looking. So and he's telling me that what
can happen now that you don't have testosterone? You start
feeling really weak and tired. Ah, well, that's Biden's presidency,
isn't it. Weak and tired? So it's possible. He's been
getting testosterone suppression or testosterone elimination treatment for a number
(04:01):
of years now, and that's why he aged so obviously,
so quickly, and projected so little energy, and he was
so exhausted all the time. Remember, he very quickly was
not doing normal workdays, and there isn't a normal nine
to five work day when you're the president. There isn't
a job in the world more demanding than that. And
(04:24):
it wasn't long before he was only working from ten
until four, and then it was a sleep sleep time.
And this would dovetail with getting testosterone suppression treatments in
order to slow down the cancer. There is nobody in
medicine who thinks they just found the cancer on Friday
(04:44):
and just realized it was quite a deadly cancer on Sunday.
That's not possible.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Now.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
Maybe if you're an old guy who never goes to
the doctor, it's possible that you could have cancer a
growing in your body for ten years and you're not
paying attention. You know, maybe vagrants on the street, but
the president of the United States, especially somebody as old
as he is who had other medical problems. It's it's
part of a basic blood tests. It's a PSA test,
(05:18):
they call it. I forgot what PSA stands for. But
when you go to the doctor, if you go for
a check up every year or two, like a lot
of people do, and you get your your blood test back,
and it'll tell you what your glucose number is, your
blood sugar and all kinds of readings on all the
elements that float in your bloodstream. Well, one of the
(05:38):
automatic ones is your PSA test. And I know a
couple of guys who had a PSA reading and it
was a little too high and they had they had
to get some kind of treatment because it meant cancer
was forming there. So it and it's routine if you
go to the doctor once in your life, let's say
(06:00):
after the age of forty, right, that's when they start
recommending regular, regular checkups.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
You go.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
Once you get a PSA number, it's on your chart,
and if there's something funny about it, the doctor tells
you it's a headline piece of information. So here's a
doctor named Ezekiel Emmanuel and he's not off the street.
He's a former member of Biden's transition team, and he
(06:29):
helped write the Obama Affordable Care Act, Obamacare. Okay, so
this is one of the architects of Obamacare. Doctor Ezekiel Emmanuel.
He goes on MSNBC and he says about Biden, he's
had this for many years, maybe even a decade, growing
(06:50):
there and spreading. He did not just develop it in
the last one hundred to two hundred days.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
So it's just another thing that they've been covering up.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
Since maybe before he became president. Maybe this started when
he was vice president. He had it while he was president,
said doctor Emmanuel. He probably had it at the start
of his presidency. I don't think there's any disagreement about that.
But of course, the way the news coverage was just
(07:24):
discovered it Friday, it was a nodule, a nodule. Suddenly
forty eight hours later it's in the bones. Now, you
can have an aggressive cancer, but cancer doesn't spread that quickly.
It doesn't go from a nodule to in the bones
in forty eight hours. He supposedly had urinary symptoms. Now
they have something called a Gleason score, and that's how
(07:47):
they rate the cancer. And the scale goes from six
to ten, and when you get up to nine or ten,
it means the cant the sales looked very different from
healthy cells, and that that's a signal that you might
be nearing the end of the line. So he had,
(08:13):
he had tons of these tests. There's no question about
they just didn't. They just didn't tell ran for president twice,
ran for vice president, or rather became vice president for
two terms.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Nothing was ever revealed.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
They lied about it, they hit it, and there's nobody
with a medical degree who's buying this idea that it
just suddenly appeared.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Here's another headline.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
Doctor say it's inconceivable that Biden's cancer went undetected.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
By his medical team. Uh.
Speaker 2 (08:49):
One doctor said he must have had the best possible care.
I'm a little taken it back that it's this far advanced.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
UH.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
Doctor David Schustermann, a urologist, said, the fact that we
find it at a glease and nine is pretty much
unheard of in this day and age of medicine. If
you're an average citizen with average doctor habits, you don't
get to a nine s, which means when he was
running for office, running for president last year, until he
(09:19):
did the big splat in the debate, that was another
thing that they were hiding and lying about. And then
maybe he's got Alzheimer's, maybe he's got dementia, maybe he's
got Parkinson's, but he definitely had a bad case of
prostate cancer and the treatment would sap your energy and
make you weak and tired. So here is by the way,
(09:43):
Biden gave a clue way back in July twenty twenty two.
We actually played this on the show July twentieth, and
this is Biden sounding like he's admitting to cancer.
Speaker 4 (09:55):
My mother drove us and rather than a stable to walk,
guess what the first frost.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
You knew what was happening.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
Get how to put on the windshield wipers to get
literally the oil slick off the window. That's why I
had so damn any other people I grew up have cancer,
and why camp for the longest time, Dellawer had the
highest cancer rate in the nation.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
That's why I and many other people have had cancer.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Because there was oil in the air and it was
dripping on the windshields as we drove through town. Sounds
like a fantastical story to begin with, but nobody followed
up on that. I actually remember him saying that I
was a story for very briefly, all right, we've got
(10:46):
more coming up. Oh well, lest you might as well
do more on Biden, because they released the tapes of
him mumbling to the Special Council Robert Her when he
was being investigated form mishandling classified documents. That was another
thing they lied about, and they criticized her severely for
coming to the conclusion that Joe was going feeble.
Speaker 5 (11:08):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
All right, so we just went through Biden's story about
suddenly has stage four cancer, suddenly has a cancer that
rates very high on the prostate cancer scale, and most doctors,
including one that worked with him in the White House, says, well,
(11:35):
this must have been around for years.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
This is not something that just happened.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
So he knew about it, his aides and family should
have known about it, and it was covered up even
as he was running for president, maybe both times he
was running for president. Cancers don't grow that quickly. They
don't grow in two days. And now it's in the bone.
And I don't usually believe in conspiracy theories that hey,
(12:05):
this story was released Sunday because it wanted to distract
from some other story. But maybe on this they're so deceitful,
they lie so much. On Friday, late Friday night, there's
a political website called Axios and they had leaked audio.
(12:28):
If you remember, back in twenty twenty three, Biden had
to answer questions before a special counsel named Robert Herr,
and they were investigating Biden's sloppy storage of classified documents. Remember,
they found documents in his garage, in one home, in
(12:49):
another home. It's stuff going back fifty years when he
was a senator, classified documents that weren't supposed to be
in all the places they found in his home in garage, So.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
He had to he had to submit to this interview and.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
The if you remember, Robert Hurr said that that he
decided not. One of the reasons to decide not to
charge Biden is because he didn't think a jury would
convict Old Joe, because Biden was a sympathetic, well meaning
elderly man with a poor memory, and that's the way
he'd come across to this jury, and the jury would
(13:32):
feel sorry for him, not want to pick on him,
and and end up sanctioning him. So he's a well
meaning elderly man with a poor memory. And if you remember,
Biden went ballistic at a press conference, very angry with
her and up until the point that he confused who
the president of Mexico was.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
And then you know, they ushered him off the stage.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
And his fury was con tained inside his inside his
room because he was embarrassing himself again. And there's also
a book, another book, I think the third or fourth
book coming out. This is the book co written by
Jake Tapper from CNN and Alex Thompson from Axios. This
seems to have the juiciest of stories about Biden's decline
(14:22):
and how everybody worked twenty four to seven to cover
it up at the White House. And you know, this
really is one of the great scandals in American history
because we had a president who was absolutely physically and
mentally incompetent to serve as president. He was weak, racked,
his brain was turning into oatmeal, turning into sludge. We're
(14:47):
going to play you a clip one clip of Biden
being interviewed by Robert Hurr and he's having a hard
time remembering dates like when his son bo died, what
years he was vice president. Play cut number one.
Speaker 3 (15:02):
It's the Duris time of Relachambridge Road and or dodging
was related to the.
Speaker 5 (15:08):
Head by a senator or the.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
Bio cancer shot above.
Speaker 3 (15:15):
Where did you keep papers that related to those things
that you were actively working?
Speaker 6 (15:25):
Well, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
This is what.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
Twenty seventeen eighteen.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
That area is.
Speaker 6 (15:39):
Remember in this time frame, my son is either been
deployed or is dying. And and so.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
If it was.
Speaker 6 (15:59):
And by there were still a lot of people at
the time when I got out of decent were encouraging
me to run in this period, accept the president.
Speaker 4 (16:14):
I'm not a mean man.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
He just saw that and stopped stopping for a second. Anyway,
both died in twenty fifteen. It was not twenty eighteen
or twenty nineteen. It was not the same period. You
could hear that he's overwhelmed, confused, lost, grasping, trying to
put together the history of his recent life. We're not
trying to dig up you know, what his report card
(16:40):
looked like in second grade. This is just a few
years ago, and we'll play some more. But he has
trouble figuring out, you know, what what is current, what
happened early when he was running for president in twenty nineteen,
and when he was vice president, and when his son
died as brain as a total mess at this point,
(17:01):
and this is nine months before he crashed and burned
on the stage with Trump during the debate. This is
what they covered up. They refused to release this audio.
I don't know why everybody was so desperate in the
Democratic Party to keep Joe Biden as president when clearly
he was shot, except I think that all these stupid bastards,
(17:23):
his aides, they're the ones who designed all these destructive policies,
you know that led to the eleven percent inflation, that
led to you know, eight million people coming over the border.
This was all the unnamed people that that we who
were running the country. Because clearly he wasn't at this
point play some more.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
You had a better.
Speaker 6 (17:45):
Shot, but when presently alisation and so I hadn't I
had at this point, even on a pen, I hadn't
walked away from the idea that I might run for office.
Can some of our brand again a prepression? And and
so what was happening? Though one will die May thirty,
(18:13):
twenty nineteen, when the twenty fifteen.
Speaker 7 (18:15):
And died twenty fifteen, maybe it's twenty fifteen or eat
not much of the months or when he goes yeah,
that's right, and what's happened in the meantime is that.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
It has.
Speaker 6 (18:34):
And Shrump gets elected in November of twenty seventeen. I
was six sixteen, twenty sixteen, all right, so when I
have twenty seventeen.
Speaker 7 (18:50):
Year, that's when you left office in January or ten.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Se Okay, No, he's totally last, all right, then he
got it off there.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
He just goes on and on like that.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
He's totally And it was what was really galling is
in the press conference after HER's report was released and
said he was a well meaning elderly man with a
failing memory. Biden went crazy, saying, you know, how dare
he raise my son's death. Well, as you heard the tape,
it was Biden who started talking about well, Biden's death.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
It wasn't Robert Herr.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
And all the liars in the media, and all the
liars in the Biden adminstration, on all the liars in
democratic circles in Washington. They all went along with his
indignant outrage. All these people should be banned from government,
all the media people should be kicked out of journalism.
They perpetuated on purpose an incredible series of lies.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
I just never had anything like that happen before.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
And they wonder why they're on the outside, because by
by then much of the public was on to Biden
being senile. If you looked at the polling, it was
like in the eighties, like over eight including a majority
of Democrats, said Biden's too old, he doesn't have the
mental capability anymore.
Speaker 5 (20:12):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI Am six.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Forty every day. We're on from one until four o'clock.
Moistline for Friday eight seven seven Moist eighty six eight
seven seven Moist eighty six.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
Is the number.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
Or use the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
Not a day goes by.
Speaker 2 (20:35):
Where there's another destructive, damaging bill. We've got a freshman
assembly woman from here in Los Angeles.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
I'm looking up this nut.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
Let me see here, because her name is Sades. That's
shaw Day, like the pop singer from years ago, shahday
El Hawari. And she she's just been sworn in recently
to represent the Assembly. And she's representing South LA and
(21:09):
Downtown LA. And I'm looking at her site here and
she has this crazy bill called Assembly Bill twelve thirty one. Now, now,
the Assembly just got spanked the other day by the
general public. The Assembly Public Safety Committee, you know, the pervert, predators, pimps,
(21:37):
and tentophile committee. They had to be bludgeoned into making
making it a felony to buy teenagers on the street
for sex.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I was a big route. It went on for two weeks.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
So on the heels of that, you would think these
people would go and hide for a few days before
they wanted to start legalizing more crime.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Not shot a here.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
This bill would authorize a court to grant pre trial
diversion for some felonies they're declared non violent or non sexual.
Of course, we found out that the legislature's version of
(22:27):
what are non violent felonies differ than a normal person's
because one of the ones that was considered I don't
know if it still is, but it was up until recently.
I know that for sure was a rape of an
unconscious person that was considered a non violent felony. See
I'm not kidding, I'm not just being snarky and hyperbolic.
(22:48):
What I tell you this, These committees are made up
of pimps, perverts, pedophiles, and predators.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
They really are. I remember arguing this years ago, one.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
Of the propositions I think fifty seven, the one that
let a lot of prisoners out early, arguing with somebody
over how can rape of an unconscious person not be
a serious sexual felony? But it wasn't. It wasn't. They
have all these gradations of felonies. Now, this crazy lady
shade El Hawari, I mean, she's an assembly person for
(23:26):
like five months and she wants the court the judge
to consult with the prosecutor and the defendant whether to
grant diversion and a diversion plan would be administered by
a treatment agency. A treatment agency. When you commit a felony,
(23:49):
you're supposed to go to state prison. You're not supposed
to go to a treatment agency and have a beating.
This is Assembly built twelve thirty one. She wrote the
bill to help alleviate crowded jails in the state. Why
Newsom is closing his fifth prison since he took over
(24:12):
as governor. That's what's creating the crowding, is he's closing
the prisons. Secondly, he already dumped out seventy thousand prisoners
into the streets literally into the.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
Streets, because.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
That's that's actually seventy thousand happens to be the number
of homeless people here in La County. It's as if
every prisoner that Newsom dumped out of the state system
ended up on the streets of La So, for all
the crimes they commit, and they commit a lot of crimes,
(24:50):
she wants to give them diversion. Why why don't we
have to alleviate crowded jails. We've got all this empty spin.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
We should be.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
Filling the jails, creating more jails, punishing people. She says
she wants to expand an investment in re entry, housing, education.
What does that mean, they talk in gibberish. There is
no money to reinvest in anything. We're tens of billions
(25:24):
of dollars in debt for this year. What we know
happens with diversion is that victims see an opportunity to
ensure that folks are actually held accountable for their crimes.
But accountability doesn't just look like punishment behind a jail cell. Well,
nothing else works, because if I'm buying to jail cell,
they can't hurt anybody else. If they're free, they're going
(25:45):
to hurt other people. That's what they do. In fact,
cal Matters just did a study of all the prisoners
that were let out during the COVID panic, and they
found out about a third of them were sent back
to prison eventually for committing felonies, and thirty of them
committed murders.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
So what is she.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
Talking about accountability. It's not about accountability. It's about getting
him off the streets so they can't hurt anybody else.
If they end up changing their ways, it's only because
they don't want to spend time in prison, because it
should be really miserable and dangerous and awful in prison,
(26:29):
to the point where they could never ever want to
spend another day there. Like when I hear about a
prisoner says like I don't want to go back in there,
then I know, okay, maybe that guy's refor hied when
he sounds like he's terrified of spending an another minute
inside of prison because that was such a nightmare, that
was so unpleasant and hopefully painful. Diversion program, I don't
(26:58):
know who came up with that idea, some progressive whap job.
The whole concept of diversion. There's no need for diversion
send them to prison and keep them there. The one
argument they can't make is that any prisoner is going
to hurt you while he's in prison. And I don't
(27:20):
care if they're unhappy. I don't care if they're oppressed.
I hope they're unhappy and oppressed. If they're unhappy and
oppressed and scared of the violence inside of prison, that
will more likely make them not want to go back.
But this diversion nonsense. So here's another nut. We gotta
watch shot ay Elhawari. And the thing is she represents
(27:42):
districts racked by crime. That's what makes me smeck myself
in the head. The politicians who represent people who are
most likely to be victimized by criminals, they're the ones
who don't want to lock the criminals up.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Nobody's explained that.
Speaker 5 (28:02):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI Am sixty.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Coming up after two o'clock, we're going to have another
report from KCR Channel three in Sacramento. Ashley Zavala has
a report on high speed rail. Looks like they have
another ten billion dollar deficit.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Ten billion dollar deficit.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
This is just to build the high speed rail from
Bakersfield to Mercette, I is astonishing. This is like a
gaping wound that keeps pouring blood out. And every few
weeks there's another estimate of more money that is going
(28:53):
to be needed. And Newsome announced the other day that
he wants to use some of the gas tax money
on high speed rail. In case you're wondering why you're
paying for eighty nine A golln get into all this
coming up after two o'clock. In the last segment, I
was telling you about Shahdail el Hawari, who represents downtown
(29:21):
La South La Exposition Park. A lot of crime in
those areas, and she has this idea that you send
some of the felons to diversion instead of state prison.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
Diversion.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
It's very vague and unspecified, and she's actually running into
some turbulence even from other Democrats. I think they're fed
up for the time being with being beaten up by
the public over their stupid crime nonsense. And I had
to check, and I keep this on files so I
can access it easily. Keep track of the Assembly people
(30:03):
who wanted to block making it a felony to buy
teenagers off the street for sex, and I suspected that
Shadai Alhawari belonged to that group, and I am right.
In the original vote that took place back on day
(30:24):
the first, shade El Wahari did vote to block buying sex.
Buying teenagers for sex a felony. Voted to block it.
In other words, in her mind, in her mind, it's
okay to by teenagers for sex. She not only doesn't
(30:47):
want it to make it a felony for some felonies,
she doesn't want you to go to prison even if
you're guilty. She wants to go to a diversion program.
This is how crazy she is actually won an election
representing people in a high crime area. You go figure,
(31:09):
your sons and daughters can be sold on the street
for sex, and people who are caught committing felonies which
you're serious, right, This is not misdemeanor situations. This is
these are felonies where it's mandatory to go to prison.
She wants a diversion program. Why would you elect somebody
like that. They don't even want to go along with
the basic tenets of civilization where the serious bad guys
(31:35):
get put away so we can't get hurt, where you
protect teenage boys and girls before they were adults.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
From being sold for sex.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Shadai el Hawari, keep track of this crazy person now
on the national front. Supreme Court back to Trump had
been registration. Today Trump administration wants to deport three hundred
and fifty thousand Venezuelans who were in the United States
(32:11):
under temporary Protected status status and the Trump administration wanted
to end the protections and so now they're going to
be allowed to move ahead with deportations. Three hundred and
fifty thousand. I've seen some estimates that it's five hundred thousand,
and they're in the United States. This is another Joe
(32:33):
Biden program. He took something that was supposed to be
used occasionally for small groups of people in a humanitarian situation,
and he blew it up into mass, a mass amnesty
of sorts, because people would get what they call TPS,
(32:54):
temporary protected status, and it would go it would go
on forever years, a decade more, and they've gotten These
people have been relocated all over the country. And then
the Biden administration had given out an eighteen month extension
(33:17):
and now people who are being told you got to go.
Speaker 1 (33:20):
They sued.
Speaker 2 (33:22):
That proper procedure process wasn't followed, and you know, the
court agreed with the Trump administration. At least for now
it's pending on appeal. But no, you got to get out.
It's just incredibly the arrogance of a lot of these immigrants.
(33:45):
They get the word in the program was temporary. Nothing
in it suggested that you were going to get a
permanent deal here. You do have to go home and
make your own country work and not bring not bring
all your country's problems to this country. We have our
own stuff. So everybody ought to be taking responsibility in
(34:07):
some of these nations for correcting all the problems, and
instead everybody's fleeing. Everybody's coming here and creating a whole
bunch of problems for us and a cost for us.
We've got to pay for all this. Nobody ever wants
to look at the cost of taking care of an
(34:27):
extra you know, twenty million people's tremendous. All right, we
come back high speed rail Newsom will not kill it.
I have a feeling union workers have photos of him
in compromising positions because any rational person were to kill
this project. And now it's got another ten billion dollars
(34:52):
in debt, we'll tell you more about it. Michael Krazer
and for Deborah Mark Live and KFI twenty four 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