Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you'relistening to the Conway Show on demand on
the iHeartRadio app. It is thefirst of May, and so it's May
Day. And here to tell youall about May Day is Michael Krozer.
Michael Krozer, you had a backgroundpiece you recorded and produced for May Day
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and what it means everybody? Idid, Tim, and it goes a
little something like this May first,Congratulations. It's a rap. Back to
you, Tim, back to me. All right, May Day. It's
a day of people who love May. They love the first of it,
they hate April. And they're inbrillianto late spring, early summer. It's
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beautiful outside. You know, theprotests are happening. Couldn't be better protest
weather. Last night you may haveheard and seen the protest going on at
UCLA. That was a big deal. Started around eleven o'clock and I watched
it on Channel eleven and Channel ninetill about one point thirty two o'clock in
the morning, on and on,and then I woke up and I watched
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it on Channel seven. It wason Channel seven on their web page,
and I watched it for hour afterhour after hour, and people say,
oh, it was a big embarrassingfor UCLA, But I thought it was
interesting. I thought it was interesting. Now the two sides went at each
other. But right now it's MayDay. There's a May Day rally or
a May Day march in Hollywood,and Angel and Martinez and Mike O'Brien are
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keeping an eye on that. Angel, what do you say, what do
you know about this march? Well, this is definitely a scheduled march that's
rolling through the streets of Hollywood rightnow. And at last check, Mike
was following them, saw them alongHollywood Boulevard. Looks like it started up
around one o'clock this afternoon, andthey're just rolling around town right now,
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all right, And so any streetsblocked? Are they on Holly? Are
they're on Hollywood going from East Hollywoodto Orange Street? Yes, yes,
they That is currently off limits HollywoodBoulevard between or Orange and Highland. They've
also shut down parts of Highland betweenHawthorne Avenue heading up towards Franklin, so
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that it even looks like Hollywood justbefore Highland is also off limits. Actually,
but Mike's overhead to check it all. Let's talk to Mikey, Mikey,
where are you, Bob? Well, we're right overhead almost at Hollywood
High School here, yeah, rightbelow the well, about half a block
below the theaters here, the GramminsChinese Theater and the Dolby Theater, and
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that's where everybody is now congregated.And they all started down by Vine.
They made several blocks down and nowthe closure is between Highland and Orange,
so it's right at the theaters wherethey're all lumped in there. But boy,
the damage to the driveways all theroads around it, and oh,
Sunset's a miserable drive anyway, andit's just horrible. Right here are you
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gonna be? So where you peopleare? Knowing exactly where you are.
You're right over Hollywood High yep,over Hollywood High and making circles over the
Adobe Theater and whatnot here excellent,I'll be watching bub Yeah. And by
the way, we don't say mayday and the point what do you say?
Oh that's right, okay, allright, Michae O'Brien, that's a
great hit. Don't say Maydi.I get that. Let's go to Channel
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five. They're high over this protestright now, and it looks like a
lot of cops, a lot oftraffic. They're blocking off Highland. If
you're southbound on Highland coming away fromthe one oh one, they're going to
stop you right before you get toHollywood Boulevard. So that's going to start
to back up. It's southbound Highlandand they're going to stop you right before
you get to Hollywood Boulevard because HollywoodBulevard's closed. Michael Brian's right above this
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march slash slash rally. Right now, it looks like Highland and Hollywood is
where everybody is. Highland in Hollywood. Just man, yeah, yeah,
sorry to interrapt. You said,oh, it's starting to back up.
Let me tell you what it's doing. Okay. It's Highland Avenue is backing.
You know, Highland becomes Kowanga atone point and and it's backing up
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onto Kowanga all the way from BarhmBoulevard. Okay, So that's that's in
the Kowenga Pass. It's it's it'sa huge mess right now. Is the
one A one affected southbound at Highland? Oh, the off ramp there is
probably jam packed. I'm looking atit right now, and all the off
ramps through Hollywood are just at they'rejust absolutely jam packed getting off of the
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freeway. All the surrounding surface streetsare just a crawl at best, mostly
stopped right now. So and andthat's this, and that goes for every
east West street all the way downto Melrose. Once you pass Melrose,
it starts to loosen up a littlebit. But from Melrose all the way
up to the into like Franklin,it's an absolute nightmare, unbelievable, right,
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thank you, Angel Martinez. Thatwhole Hollywood area is a nightmare right
now. And you're gonna see itall day long on TV. You'll hear
about it all day long here onKFI. If you have any business,
you're going to dinner with somebody,you're going to a movie. Maybe got
out of towners that you dropped offin Hollywood and you didn't know that it
was May Day and you didn't knowthere was a big rally and a march,
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and now you can't get back topick them up, and it's become
a nightmare. This is why we'rein protest mode in this country. So
everybody's protesting. Everybody's got a beefwith somebody, everybody's got an angle,
and you're gonna have to suffer throughit because they take priority. You do
not they do, and you're screwed. It's happening on USC locally on their
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campus. It's also happening on UCLAcampus, and so you just got to
deal with it. It doesn't looklike the dean or the president of these
universities really want to drop the hammerand shut this down. So you're just
gonna have to deal with it ona daily basis and get used to it
because they're not shutting this down atall. And it is May Day,
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the day of big marches and bigrallies, and that's happening in Hollywood right
now. So you got USC,Hollywood, and UCLA all hotspots right now.
So if you can avoid the areas, you're listening to Tim Conway Junior
on demand from KFI Am sixty.All right, we keep an eye on
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a lot of major stories happening herein southern California. We've got a big
march in Hollywood, a May Daymarch in Hollywood. Then we also have
the earthquake. Let me write thisdown. Okay, we have the earthquake.
I'm adding it to my list,my shopping list of breaking news stories.
And then we have USC and UCLA. That's a big deal. A
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lot of violence on the UCLA campuslast night that's not good. And then
the break storry that everybody's talking aboutin southern California is May fifth. Say
go to my iOS coming up onSunday and our own Mondo will be at
the Luchador Brewery at noon at noonoff the seventy one and so kel SOCl
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Canyon, So dig dong with everybody. But the one story I'd like to
talk about now, it's affect thata lot of people in the riverside,
a lot of people in Orange Countynot that many people here in LA.
Is that earthquake? That earthquake?Did you feel it? Krozier? Did
you feel the earthquake? Did not? I was here in the news prep
studio and didn't feel it. Dangting my bedroom shook. Come on,
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yeah, like a like I thoughtsomebody ran into the house with a car.
Do you feel it, Stefush anyreports from any damage? You didn't
feel it over here? None?Huh? And Belly you didn't feel it?
Angel do you feel the earthquake?I did not? Okay, what
about Bellyon? I didn't did youfeel it? Angel? She did?
(08:01):
She did not. I did it. But it'll be interesting when I get
home to see where my bird is. He may have flown off. Oh
that's right, might be hanging outsomewhere else in the house. So come
all right. But it was it. It rattled me. I don't like
earthquakes. I think the big one'scoming, and I don't like it.
I like the smaller ones because Idon't like the big one. But I
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will tell you this. I'll tellyou two things. One is that you
know, everyone always says when youget when we get a bigger earthquake like
Northbridge or the one on July fourth, a couple of years ago, a
couple of years ago, Tim thatwas two thousand and six, well,
whatever it was. But whenever weget an earthquake that's moderate size, people
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always say, oh, is thisthe big one. I'll give you a
tip. When the big one hits, nobody'll ask is this the big one?
You'll know it pretty quickly. Whatdo you think the definition would actually
be for the big one? Whatwould want to fy it as being the
big one? Electricity going out,internet going out, your house crumbling,
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a lot of fires, a lotof death. Uh, you know,
basically the north Ridge quake times tenor San Francisco or something. Yeah,
just radical, I mean, youknow, just paralyzed, paralyzing us.
But I will also tell you thatmost people listening, if not almost everybody,
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like ninety nine point nine percent ofthe people listening right now, you
don't know anybody who's been killed inan earthquake. You don't even know anybody
who's been injured an earthquake, probably, And yet we all have a fear
that we're going to die in anearthquake or get caught an earthquake. It's
weird because I have it too.I don't like earthquakes. I think it's
because the one sort of and Ihate this term the rock, right,
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the one safe place we all haveis home. And when your home is
not safe anymore because of an earthquake, or because you've been burglarized or a
car ran into it, or you'vehad a fire, as soon as your
home doesn't feel like a safe placeanymore, that rattles you. That rattles
you. Maybe you're in a hilla hillside, and you've had a mud
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slide or the hill sliding around you, and your house is in danger.
Maybe it's been red tagged or yellowtagged, and you don't feel like it's
your safe place anymore. And that'sthe one place we all have, whether
it's an apartment, a condo,a townhouse, a home, wherever it
is, that's the one place whereyou feel safe. And you don't feel
safe there anymore. You don't feelsafe anywhere, and so it does rattle
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people. But let's find out moreabout that earthquake. It happened in Corona.
In Corona, and fairly shallow quake, only about a mile under the
surface. Before I can even getthe words up to my photographer, who
was just in the next room,was that even an earthquake, it was
already over. That one jolt hadme and likely others waiting for a lot
more to happen. But as Isaid, it was over before it even
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began. It was a preliminary fourpoint through But it was actually the four
point one magnitude quake struck here nearCorona in Riverside County. Now that's according
to the US Geological Survey, thatearthquake happening at one forty nine this afternoon.
I was actually here in the bureauputting my other story together and preparing
to get under my desk. Butlike I mentioned, it was already over
before it started. The quake wasinitially reported as that four point three magnitude
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quake before it was downgraded to afour point one Now Our viewers reported feeling
that jolt in Orange County and LosAngeles. A lot of in Orange County
riverside, they were rocked County andLos Angeles County as well as here in
the Inland Empire. The quake promptedthe LA Fire Department to briefly go into
what's called earthquake book mode, whereit's members will survey any particular damage to
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its stations. None was by theway, when something so dead on,
you don't have to call it.So called fire department to briefly go into
what's called earthquake what mode where it'sthey went into earthquake mode. Quote,
yeah, you don't have to say. What's called earthquake mode. It's dead
on man, it's dead on man. It's called earthquake mode, where it's
(12:03):
members will survey any particular damage tolike we used to. I used to
work with a guy at Kala Segsand he would say, I'm going to
take a dump if you know whatI mean. And I said, buddy,
when when you don't? When you'revocabulary is about eight words, you
never and you don't have any colorfuluh in descriptive terms you ever use.
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You don't have to say if youknow what I mean, because we all
know what you mean. You neverhave to use that term. Do you
know it? If you know whatI mean? But that earthquake real quickly.
I got up early. I sawmy daughter off to school, and
then I was taking a quick napbetween one thirty and two. I was
gonna lay down and fall asleep betweenone thirty and two, and so I
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was asleep and I was dreaming,how about this. I was dreaming that
that I was on the set ofthe remake of The Waltons and they were
pissed at me because I talked aboutcigarette smoking on the air and they said
you should and talk about cigarette smokingon radio. And I said, okay,
well, you people are doing asitcom from the nineteen seventies. And
the grandmother stood up to fight meand I and she punched me in the
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face and I pushed her down ina chair and it was on game on.
I was fighting the New Walton's castand crew so kind of odd.
Starting with the granny that was odd. I'll take you all on and hey,
I got it, I got aI don't know if I'm supposed to
say this or not, but aninside I sort of look at the New
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Waltons, John Boy not the sameJohn Boy that we all knew growing up.
You'll have to see wait for theseries to come out, because they're
doing the New Waltons is not thesame John Boy. Different, different,
I'll just say that, all right, all right, We're intrigued. It
is. It's different, He's different. Good night, John Boy. You're
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listening to Tim Conway Junior on demandfrom KFI AM six forty. We're following
the March in Hollywood. It's abig deal. If you're going anywhere in
Hollywood, be aware that Highland Hollywood, that area is a mess. And
it's Mayda. So the May DayMarch, the May Day Rally is on.
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And then we have UCLA and USCthey're battling their own problems. And
then the earthquake that happened, theearthquake that happened at one forty eight,
one fifty two. I felt itat one fifty two. But my clock
is a law off. I don'tknow when you felt it, but it
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was a big deal for me.You know, it did feel like somebody
ran into our house for a car. I didn't like that. So if
you're in Orange County riverside, youknow what I'm talking about. You felt
it. You felt it, andit it jars you. If you're not,
you know, if you're like meand you've been through your share of
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the earthquakes, I've been through alot. I've been through the north Ridge
quake, the sill Mark quake nineteenseventy one. There was another quake in
nineteen eighty seven that we went through, the north Ridge quake. As I
mentioned in nineteen ninety four, Ibelieve, and so it's a big deal.
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I think earthquakes are a big deal. And a lot of people are
like me where it just sort ofrattles them and your day is not the
same, even though it's small,it's not the same because all the memories
come back from the earthquakes that youknow they weren't so small and did you
know, disrupt your life. Butagain, very few people have died and
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very few people have been injured inearthquakes. And I've always said this on
the air to make people feel better, and I don't mind repeating myself.
So if you heard this, gograb a smoke. Between nineteen ninety four
and two thousand and four, atwenty year period, two people died in
an earthquake. So after the northRidge quake until two thousand and four,
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two people died in California. AndI think it was the co Linger earthquake
that wiped them out. A brickbuilding fell and killed two people. So
in that twenty year period, twopeople died in California, two one guy
and another two. And so inthat twenty year period, you had the
same chance of being killed by OJSimpson that you did of dying in an
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earthquake. And yet you didn't goto bed every night thinking, Hey,
I hope OJ doesn't get me.So it's kind of ridiculous to think you're
going to die in an earthquake becauseyou don't know anybody who died in one,
probably and you don't even know anybodywho's been injured in one. But
yet it does rattle you. I'mwith you. I'm with you on that
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one. I read the Hilter Scaleher book when I was like seven or
eight years old. What a funguy. Yeah, I know, my
mom had it laying around, soI picked it up and was intrigued.
But I was like, you know, kind of like you said, I
was scared. And I lived inMiami at the time. I was scared
that that that Charles Manson and andthe whole gang was going to come after
me, you know, from thatpoint. And she told me, no,
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no, no, there they're longways away. But I still had
that fear. I again, Iworked at another radio station here in town,
and one of the one of theproducers, and I don't want to
mention her name, although she didgo on the air and say this that
this was true. Remember the HillsideStrangler. When the Hillside Strangle was around,
Well, while that Hillside Strangle wasgoing around, this producer, young
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lady, very very nice, verysharp, very bright. Her mother was
a little odd, and her motherused to remember the Hillside Strangler. He
used to come in if you hadan open window, he'd come in and
and rape women and strangle them todeath. That's what I guys. But
this producer, her mom lived onsort of like the wild side where she
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used to sleep in a neglige.You know what that is. I don't
know. Stafolition know what a negligeis. Yeah, sure, okay.
I and she used to sleep ontop of the sheets with a neglige and
the window open, hoping that theHillside strangler would come by and they could
mix it up. Weird, weird, but true start true story. And
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she said, she admitted on theair, she s, Yeah, my
mom's kind of kind of out there, a little out there that is weird.
And and by the way, shelived in the area where he got
caught. She lived in that area, so kind of kind of nutty.
All right, let's go on,let's find out what's going on with UCLA.
They had a big late night lastnight, lots of protests, lots
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of people out there throwing crap ateach other, and I watched it until
about two two thirty in the morning. UCLA has canceled the classes. Today
things are very calm, but hoursago things were definitely chaotic. Right here
on campus and behind me you cansee that pro Palestinian protesters were actually rebuilding
the barrier outside of their encampment.But we've seen that chaotic and disturbing video
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of people fighting, throwing things,and setting off fireworks here on campus.
But one of the most shocking aspectsof all of this is police didn't respond
for two and a half hours.Okay, I don't know why this is
shocking, as police didn't respond fortwo and a half hours. They said,
it's really shocking. Shocking aspects ofall shocking aspects. When the cops
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show up, everybody hates them.The protesters hate them, the parents hate
them, the administration hates them,so they don't shop anymore. Why would
you show up? Everybody hates thecops when they show up. See what's
going on in Columbia, in NewYork. Everybody around there is yelling at
the cops, So why would theyshow up? So not welcome, they
arrest somebody, They're out in tenminutes anyway, So let's not blame the
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cops on this one. Now.Things started to escalate just around eleven PM.
No one intervened until about one thirtythis morning, and then we started
to see a massive law enforcement presence. It still took time for them to
move in and separate protesters, andthe Daily Brew and UCLA student run newspaper
posted online that it wasn't until aroundthree that law enforcement started moving in.
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At three thirty am. The DailyBruin says four of their reporters were walking
on campus when they were followed andthen assaulted. We have reporters who were
guessed and reporters who were assaulted.So it has been a rather chaotic day
of events at UCLA. We're notquite sure either as to how it escalated
it to this degree. It's notsomething that we obviously have seen yet on
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campus. But wait, they're notsure how it escalated. Quite sure either
as to how it escalated. Iknow how it escalated. You get two
groups of people who hate each other, they both show up with sticks.
That's how it escalated. Is definitelyviolent ways that previous demonstrations by the counter
conchesters weren't. Our sense is thatit was. We are hearing from sources
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on the ground that it was largelyone sided. It's a bit difficult for
ust ascertain, obviously, among thechaos that is still going on. All
right, let's find out what thelatest is here. It was an ugly
night here at UCLA, and whathappens next could be another frightening event for
this campus. Is we do believethat this encampment at some point will be
clear. Take a look at theencampment. It has grown to over one
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hundred tenths here and I have seensupplies being brought in all day in supporters
out here that supplies including masks,including gloves. And to give you a
sense of how things have changed here, just within the hour, we have
seen LAPD back on UCLA's campus.Okay, so they're going to allow the
tents to stay. And guess what, the group that hates the tent people
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are coming back tonight, give meanother radical night tonight. You can see
that their helmets are not on rightnow. They are sort of standing around
appearing to be waiting for something,and we know nothing urgent at the moment,
but that could of course change chaotic. Now. You know what's kind
of weird about this whole incident isthey're both sides. The people who are
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pro Palestinian people are pro Israel.Both of them politically are on the same
side. Both of those sides overwhelminglyvoted for George for Joe Biden. Seventy
seven percent of Jewish people in thiscountry and sixty seven percent of the Palestinian
slash Arab slash you know whoever's inthat area voted for Joe Biden. They're
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both on the same side politically,and yet they're fighting each other. It's
wild, it's weird, and Idon't remember that ever happening. I always
remember it's one side against the other, Democrats against Republicans. But both of
these sides voted overwhelmingly for Democrats,both of them buy huge margins, and
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they're battling it out. I don'tunderstand. It's something Weird's going on in
this country, something odd, andI don't get it. All right,
We're live on KFI AM six fortyfollowing all these big stories, the Mayda
March on Hollywood, USC, UCLA, and of course that quake that happened
shortly before two pm. What aday. We thought it was just gonna
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be casual Monday here. Nope,it's crazy. You're listening to Tim conwaytun
You're on De Maya from KFI AMsix forty. Lots of action here in
Southern California, UCLA, USC.Then we also have the march going on
in Hollywood, the earthquake that someof us felt right around right before two
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pm this afternoon, and all thatattention is being drawn away from something weird
going on in Mammoth right now,in Mammoth, right now, it's twenty
three degrees, twenty three degrees forMay first. That's freezing. It's really
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rarely that cold, and it's gonnabe freezing in Mammoth. You know,
the lows are still unbelievable in Mammoth. You know that big ski resort that
Bellio and her husband always go to. But listen these highs twenty nine thirty
one or lows twenty nine thirty one, eighteen degrees on Saturday with snow in
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Mammoth eighteen degrees Sunday seventeen degrees Mondaytwenty three, Tuesday twenty four, twenty
four, twenty four, twenty thirtyone, and it's gonna below freezing at
night for the next ten days inMammoth. Huge news. If it wasn't
bigger news here, that'd be abig story, all right. My very
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good friend Chris Christy, who flieswith Channel seven ABC, he flew over
UCLA and gave us a bird's eyeview a little after three pm today,
So baya n an hour and ahalf hour and forty five minutes ago,
we're hovering over that heavily vandalized quadin front of Voice Hall, and you
can see a lot of organization takingplace. Today's activities by law enforcements surrounding
(25:11):
this area and locking down the quadhave given the protesters in the encampment the
opportunity to do some shopping. Andwe're seeing an influx of new supplies being
brought in here, heavy bags ofumbrellas, brand new bags with hundreds of
goggles. Okay, they're using theumbrellas not because it's gonna rain, there's
no rain in then ten day forecasts, but they're using them to deflect any
(25:32):
kind of sticks or cones, trafficcones, whatever the other side's thrown at
him. They use these big umbrellasto try to protect themselves. That's what's
going on with the big umbrellas,spray paint, gas masks, an entire
tent dedicated to ppe, and evena sign that literally says protection for tonight.
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You can see here we go bythe way. Listen to this.
This is a big clue. Protectionfor tonight. Protection for tonight. They're
going to have another crazy night onthe UCLA campus because both sides it's game
on. There's gonna be a fewcops there again. They're gonna UCLA cops
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are going to try to handle themselvesagain, I believe, and it's gonna
be game on again tonight. Youcan see all of these tents lined up
in the walkway here. They areready for business if things get wild tonight,
and you can see just how organizedthey are, a studying display of
organization as they continue to bring inlots of plywood. I will say this,
(26:36):
Channel nine k COL and KTTV FoxChannel eleven locally here in Los Angeles
both blew out their programming. NowI don't know what kind of programming they
have at you know, eleven o'clocktwelve o'clock at night on any of these
stations. You know, guys sellinga new uh you know, uh,
a way to work out or newweight loss, you know, medication,
(27:00):
whatever it is. But they bothstayed on the air till about one thirty
last night. Channel eleven and Channelnine live covering the mayhem that's going on
at UCLA. And so that's anhonorable thing to do. It's a big
local story. And for those twonews stations to blow out all their programming
and lose all that money and tostay on the air. I thought that
(27:22):
was great. You had Pat Harveyover there staying until about one thirty at
night, Alex Michaelson and the wholecrew over at Channel eleven. So I
give my at a boy and anat a girl to stay up that late
and stay on the air to showus pictures of what's going on. And
then when they went off the air, Channel seven, ABC seven sent a
helicopter up and they were live ontheir website all night long showing pictures.
(27:48):
So those are your three key stationsto find out what's going on tonight,
because tonight might be another big nighton UCLA campus Channel nine, Channel eleven.
And then afterwards a Channel seven hastheir helicopter all goosed up and ready
to go. Plus, this isthe beginning of the month, and a
lot of these TV news stations theyhave a certain allotted hours that they buy
(28:15):
from their helicopter, you know,a company that they use out of Anny's
Airport, and so at the endof the month, they've burned up a
lot of the hours, and that'swhy you don't see a lot of helicopters
up there. But now it's Mayfirst, a whole new sheet, a
whole new month, and you're goingto see a lot of coverage tonight over
UCLA. You're going to see iton two, four, five, seven,
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nine eleven. You're going to seeall of them tonight covering what might
be another long night on the UCLAcampus. We got Chris Adler, she's
gonna be doing a report with usreally quick, live from UCLA. She
says, oh good, that maynot be true. Really, I have
to stay tuned. Oh okay,all right, Hope it's not. Hope
it's not. But according to ChrisChristie, people are loading double supplies and
(29:00):
tents and food and ready for anotherlong night. Was that so? Apparently?
Are the police? Oh okay,cops are omn in on this one,
okay. And two by fours orI should say two by fours,
Yeah, to rebuild the wall thatwas torn down last night. They have
brought in a whole lot of woodto rebuild that wall and reconstruct the barricade
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that was the basically what they wereusing as shields just about twelve hours ago.
You know, Krozer and looking atthe barricade they put up, they
could use your help. It waspretty shoddy, man. It was just
p supply wood leaning against fence theyneed. They needed to have it anchored.
They need, yes, yes,yes, yes, some foundational stuff.
Some pylons, drill it, youknow, deep in, some support,
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some cement support at the bottom.Yes, you need to see.
They should be doing that right now. Digging footings and filling up with quick
creed. Put some posts up.Keep a lot of people separated here,
all right. So Chris Adler's comingup, and I've been doing a live
report from UCLA. We'll find outwhat's going on tonight at UCLA. We're
also covering that Corona earthquake. Fourpoint one earthquake happened today, So if
(30:08):
you felt it, you're not crazy. It was an earthquake, and we're
live covering also Hollywood Boulevard, alot of marches. It's Crazy Today on
KFI AM six forty Conway Show ondemand on the iHeartRadio app. Now you
can always hear us live on KFIAM six forty four to seven pm Monday
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