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June 24, 2024 33 mins
Taylor Swift brings Travis Kelce out on stage / Roscoes Chicken & Waffles closes in Pasadena / Ben Affleck yells at paparazzi over flashbulbs // Flash Cubes remember those? One Hour Photo / Fire Sepulveda Basin in Homeless encampment / Black holes // Road Rage / Earthquake in Highland Park 3.2 / Flash Flood warnings Southland / Major chains food wars / Hiker Rescued after 10 days // Alex Trebek stamp  
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you'relistening to the Conway Show on demand on
the iHeartRadio app. Over the weekend, I took two different lifts, you
know, Uber Lyft, two differentlifts, And if you're a politician,
I recommend Lyft, whether Republican orDemocrat, because you're gonna get a feel

(00:23):
of what's going on out there.The Lift and Uber drivers they know and
they talk to a lot of regularpeople every single day, and they can
sense the vibe in this country.So I recommend it. If you're in
politics, I'd slide into a Liftor an Uber and ask that guy a

(00:46):
billion questions because they got the answers. Lift and Uber I like both those
companies. I got two great liftdrivers, both probably in their mid thirties,
well educated fellas, and just ajoy to drive around with them.
Upbeat, had this spirit, stillhad a sense of humor. Ah,

(01:08):
they were great Lift an Uber.I like that. All right, Ben
Affleck, is it affleck or aflak Affleck? Affleck Affleck? He's in
the news. I guess. Hewas coming on his driveway and people were
taking photos of him using the flashflash cubes and he didn't like it.

(01:30):
He said they were using too manyflash cubes and blinding him, and he
got pissed and he got out andhe was yelling at one of the photographers,
one of the paparazzi. Now he'sbacking up. He backed up and
stopped right before the guy and Igot out of the car and yelled at

(01:51):
him. Don't flash light some five. Listen, you don't do that.
That's dangerous. You don't even knowif that's me right, you know that,
but it's dangerous what you guys aredoing. You understand. I can't

(02:14):
see. You're gonna get somebody hurtdoing this. My daughter is coming down
here. If you flash the lightson her, you're putting her in danger.
Do you understand that? Yeah?What do you say at the end?
Understanding? Understand Ben? Understand Bensounds they got Star Wars line.

(02:34):
Understand Ben, I understand. Okay, there's that. If you don't like
it and you don't understand, Ben, then don't become famous. This guy's
worth a half a billion dollars.The photographer sells photographs for nine cents each

(02:58):
and he's getting yelled at by theguy who's worth a half billion dollars.
Do you understand that Ben and theseguys sell the photographs. People like to
look at those, and they're notgoing to stop. So if you hate
photographers, you hate people taking yourphoto, you hate the flash cubes or
the flash bars. I don't knowif they're using bars or cubes anymore,

(03:21):
not sure. Then don't become famous. There's a really quick way to becoming
obscure. Sit in an apartment,drink and watch ESPN, blow a little
weed, and don't work a lotin life. You don't have to.
Nobody will take photos of you.Work that is yep. Nobody will photo

(03:42):
graph you. Nobody. Sit inthe get a studio apartment off of Orange
Street in Hollywood. That's where alot of newcomers like to go. Get
a studio apartment there, drink beer, sleep all day, watch ESPN.
Get a lot of other buddies wholike to drink and sleep, drink and
sleep with drink all night. Maybedo a little blow little coke, a

(04:04):
little weed, and don't go onany auditions at all. Get a job
that really doesn't pay much. Justget by in life, no ambition,
and no one will ever take aphoto of you. You'll be fine.
You'll be fine, But On theother hand, if you go to auditions

(04:25):
and you write projects that people like, and you get married to famous people
and then you have problems in thatmarriage and that goes public, people are
going to take photos of you.It's just gonna happen, and you got
to get used to that. I'msorry that if it happens your daughter,
she doesn't deserve that. I'm onboard with that. I get it.
I am one hundred percent behind BenAffleck when he supports his daughter. I

(04:48):
would be one of Ben Affleck's bestfriend if that's all he said. Yeah,
did that not sound like he wasusing his daughter as an excuse to
bitch at the guy a little bit? I gotta go back and listen now.
I gotta go back and listen,because because you might be right.
Don't flash your light and don't flashyour lights at me, I said,

(05:10):
you do have don't do that.That's dangerous. You don't even know if
that's me. It wasn't a side, right, Baddy Wes, you know
that, But you're right. Howabout they're still taking photos of him while
he's yelling you know that thing?But your right, they don't stop taking

(05:30):
photos of this guy even when he'syelling at everybody. I mean, please,
don't take photos. Don't take photos, take photos and then click.
They could be taking more photos ofhim while he's yelling at it. Couldn't
be taken more, you know that. But you're right, it's dangerous.

(05:51):
Then what you guys are doing,you understand that I can't see. Then
he gets somebody hurt doing it.My daughter's coming down here. If you
flash the lights on her, you'reputting her in danger. Do you understand
that? I understand then danger.Yeah. I think the daughter is probably

(06:11):
capable of maneuvering around flash gubs orflash bars. I don't know what it
is. Bulbs, flash babs,squares that you put on the old one
ten and remember they turn after afterpicture bang bang bang. And then they
had the flash bars where you getfour or five or eight flashes on one
side. Thing you can turn itover right right, you flip it over,

(06:34):
and it was loud. It's likegunpowder going. I love the sensory
memory you just brought up. Yeah, and you can hear the battery load

(06:57):
up again. You or cranked thething to go to the next right for
the film, and then you're like, oh, I think I have one
left. I think on one left. Now you got you got nothing left?
Yeah, you're beyond your role.Won't turn anymore. That's because the
camera is done. You finished it. You didn't rewind the film. No,
I didn't anything. I had to. Oh you ruined every photo,

(07:19):
every photo, every photo. Godyeah, right, you're open the back
over. It's done. Old school, old school. You're listening to Tim
Conway Junior on de Mayo from KFIAM six forty. I found an old
kmart commercial where they introduced the flashcube and that was a big deal when

(07:42):
the flash cube came out Kodak instematicflash cubes, and that was a big
deal where you can take four picturesat night or in the dark with that
flash cube. And that was theone. When you clicked it, it
automatically turned. Yeah, it turneda good one. Yeah. Yeah,
And then flip to the next one. It's new, it's now, it's

(08:18):
flashqbe crushure. This was in ourlifetime. It sounds so old. I
know, it sounds like it's ninehundred years old, you know, introducing
the new flash cube. And theywere expensive too. It doesn't sound like
you said slash. Yeah, theywere like they were like eleven dollars each.
You're not each, but you'll getlike a six pack for like eleven

(08:39):
douars. They were expensive. Itwas expensive to take photos back then.
Flash cube flash cube only with thenewest Kodak instamatic camera, four full power
flashes and one tiny cube flash cube. Yeh, as you dropping the film,

(09:05):
get yourself a flash cube dropping ontake one, take two, take
three, take four flash pictures withoutchanging bogues in color. Of course,
the West Emptomatic camera outfits from lessthan eighteen dollars, only less than eighteen

(09:28):
dollars for the camera and everything,the camera, the cube and the film.
I love that you can take two. But do you do you remember
getting your first camera where it camein that it was usually a Kodak come
in a yellow box and everything inthat box. You open that up and
like it was so beautifully you know, laid out there, and do you
remember the one which one you got, Like if it was the one ten

(09:48):
or the thirty five millimeter or theguy got that. I remember when my
dad got remarried, I was aroundtwelve or something like that. That my
mom or whatever at that point,she she was big in the camera,
so she she always had the littleone tens that kind of followed in half
and like you said, the littleflat flash thing that you put on the
top there and flipped it over whenyou need the next ones. But one
ten was was the one that Iremembered using most. Yeah, the one

(10:11):
ten was a very popular little tinyfilm that went in there. Yeah,
it was great, but it wasexpensive, you know, when you took
it to get it developed, itwas like sixty five cents per photo.
It eventually came down in price.Yeah, but if you had, you
know, thirty six pictures, youcould spend you know, twenty five dollars
developing it. You go to thedrug store get him developed, or the

(10:33):
photo Matt, and the guy knewyou, you know, yeah, and
he'd see you coming and you'd gothrough all the envelopes and find yours and
give them to you yeap. Andback in the days when you had to
be careful what pictures you took becauseyou knew somebody else was absolutely going to
see them. The ones who developedit one hundred percent one hundred percent.
And then they came up with thewith the one hour photo and you go

(10:54):
to the mall and have them developed. But that machine was in the window,
so you could sit there and watchall the photos being develo and you're
always just waiting for some you knowwoman to be nude. One boot,
just one. You never saw it. You never got there. There was
always a little group of boys.You go to the Orange Julius and then

(11:16):
right over to one hour photo forlike an hour while mom was shopping.
Is that missus? M she sureis. And even if all the photos
came out completely overexposed, are allblack, you still had to pay full
price for the pictures you took.Were just some blur and full price.
Man, you had to pay forevery one of those stupid things. You

(11:39):
got double prints and they didn't separatehim for you. You had to separate
them. You had to go throughall of them, one here, one
there. You had to make twopiles life. That's in our lifetime.
You know. If you got trip, you know, like a trip sir

(12:00):
quads, you'd have to make fourpiles on your own. Take you an
hour to separate all that craft.You get a copy of that two that's
great, man, a memory fromour childhood. You know that commercial?
Yeah, yeah, the music wasit was you know right out of you

(12:20):
know, a guy with a cassio. It's new, It's not it's now.
No, it's it's over. Andthey're all, you know, they're
all women in their forties and menin their fifties dancing disco and like wow,
I mean they still back then didn'tget like kids did cube. Hey,

(12:46):
goofy Cats slash Cube last Cube.There it is there. It is
like it's a big selling for youcan get four pictures before you got to
replace that slash. Yeah, andthen it's it's over all right. We
have a We had breaking news.I don't know if it's still breaking,
although I watched TV news and theysay breaking news on crap that's like ten

(13:07):
hours old. It happens all thetime, you know, like, hey,
we'll start tonight with breaking news.I'm like, oh, breaking news,
breaking news, a plane crash orearthquake? What happen is a new
thing called a flask Q Yeah yeah, that's a fire that happened four days
ago. Oh it's still breaking news. Okay, their way toward the flames.
There was a fire. There wasa fire. It's pull of a

(13:28):
basin along Burbank Boulevard. Their waytoward the flames. We are told the
firefighter was in critical condition, buthe was able to walk and was then
airlifted to a local hospital. That'sgreat, that is cool. He's gonna
make it. And they're saying thatthat probably was a homeless encampment. It
blew up there, all right,a black hole. Astronomers are watching this

(13:52):
super massive black hole awaken in realtime. Well, astronomers may be witnessing
something never seen before by humans.Wow, a super massive black hole roaring
back to life. In twenty nineteen, astronomers noticed a sudden spike and brightness
and a galaxy three hundred million lightyears away. They've just not's far.

(14:16):
It's a long ways three hundred millionlight years away. Okay, three hundred
million light years the speed of lightgoing as fast as the speed light goes
for three hundred million years, andit finally gets there. They discovered the
galaxy has been emitting more visible andinfrared light in recent years, and even
started emitting X rays in February.Researchers think they may be witnessing a super

(14:39):
massive black hole at the center ofthe galaxy awakening. Wow. All right,
two things. I was out lastnight. My wife and I were
sitting in the backyard and I havethis powerful flashlight that I bought because I'm
crazy, and I was flashing upto the sky and it looks like one
of those old movies opening up inHollywood where you can see the be of

(15:00):
light. And I was told bya guy who knows more about space than
I do, that if you takethat flashlight, no matter how weak it
is, and you point it towardsthe sky, that that light will even
though you shut that that flashlight off, at some point, that light continues
for infinity. Somebody can see thatlight thousands of years from now if they

(15:24):
had if they had the proper,you know, equipment to observe that that
that light, even though I shutit off, that beam of light will
continue forever. God, I wouldtend to think that if that were true,
that beam of light surely isn't theonly beam of light that went out
in that moment. So somebody that'sobserving it would, I would imagine,
be getting a barrage of nothing butlight from everybody who kind of hit that

(15:48):
right, But it's so weak thatthey would probably not see it. Like
when you look at the North Star, and you know, if you look
at it's night that the light thatwe see from the north Star left the
north Star in the fourth teen hundreds? Is that what it is? Is
six or for no, it's fourundred and fifty years whatever, four under
and fifty years, So four andfifty years ago it left the north Star
and we're just seeing it now.And so when that north Star burns out,

(16:14):
we'll see it still for four hundredand fifty years and then it'll disappear.
But then the number two thing andthen we'll move on. So I
know a lot of people don't likespace. If the black holes are so
popular, are so aggressive and haveso much power in gravity to condense things
that if Earth ever got swallowed bya big black hole, it would condense

(16:36):
everything on Earth is something much smallerthan a grain of salt. Everything on
Earth would be compacted much smaller thana grain of salt. That is crazy.
I think that's why a lot ofpeople don't like Like my wife,
she's not a big fan of likethe space like sort of movies because it's
too big of a concept to sortof wrap your head around. Yeah,
my sister is similar. That's afrustrating thing. Yeah, she gets lost

(16:59):
and turned into the station. Yeah, it goes on, we really are
nothing. Yeah, but we arenothing. Yeah, yeah, we're nothing.
And some of us are less thannothing, but like Ben Affleck's more
than nothing but his daughter. You'relistening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from
KFI Am sixty. I was watchinga video online and these young kids were

(17:25):
arguing with another car. There weretwo cars going back and forth road rage,
arguing, yelling at each other.And then as one car was turning
around to flip off the other guy, he got into a radical accident,
like he could have died in it, and he slammed into the back of
a truck and the car was completelysmashed, and the other kids were in

(17:47):
the other car. They laughed andthey drove away. Now, when I
was growing up, that happened once. I remember we were teeping a girl's
house. And you only tpeed agirl's house if you really liked her,
you know, if you felt badfor if you hate it, or you'd
never tepe your house. Only thelike the popular kids got t peed.
I don't know why. It wasjust a thing. And I remember teep

(18:08):
being a house with a bunch oflike five other idiots, you know,
throw a toilet paper on the house. Not a lot, but you know,
just sort of stupid, drunk fun. And then her dad gave chase.
Her dad got in a car andchased us all the way down the
hill in near Havenhurst and Ventura,all the way up to Burbank Boulevard,
and as he turned on Burbank,he crashed on Burbank and Magnolia. I

(18:32):
remember exactly where he crashed, andhe crashed into the median there and the
car was flipped up on its side, and then it came back down and
it fell up on its wheels,and we all stopped and went back to
see if he was okay. Youknow, immediately you change your mindset when
something like that had happened. Youknow, we tried to get away,
and then as soon as we realizedthat he could be hurt or killed whatever

(18:56):
an accident, we all stopped andwent back to make sure he was okay.
And he had some choice words forus. His car was all banged
up and our a lot of parentsgot involved, and it was a big
deal, but at least we wentback short to make sure that he was
okay. The kids don't do thatnow, and it's weird. They don't
have that button in their brain,that switch where once an emergency happens,

(19:25):
everybody goes into emergency mode and triesto help the person out who is in
pain or who is dying. Andkids don't have that nowadays. It's weird.
And I don't know what happened.I don't know if it's the parent's
fault. I don't know if it'swhat we're eating. I don't know if
it's what we're teaching them or whathappened. But some kids don't have that,

(19:48):
and that's weird. It's odd.I considered it really bizarre watching it,
and I watched it a couple oftimes to make sure it was right.
It was correct. It was odd. All right, Let's talk about
the earthquake, the earthquake that happenedin Highland Park. If you felt it,
it was a three point two earthquake, you are not crazy. It

(20:11):
was an earthquake host to Highland Park. We had an earthquake three point two,
five oh seven this morning, alittle shaker here. Maybe you felt
in Mount Washington over into Alhambra,maybe South Pasadena. Possibly we didn't feel
it over here in Glendale, soit might have woken you up. But
yes, it is a small one. Yeah. When I was driving around
yesterday, driving around the San FernandoValley into Pasadena Arcadia, I saw these

(20:34):
big, huge clouds. Maybe yousaw them as well. Cars. You
probably saw them over the Mount Baldyin that area. Man, they were
huge. Yep, yep. Flashflood warning for Los Angeles and Ventura.
Let's find out that continue. Nomore breaking news of flash flood warning has
just been issued. And that's inthe middle of a heat wave. Yeah,
this is our live look from Burbankwhere it is ninety two degrees right

(20:57):
now. Heat advisories and warnings arein place all across the south Land.
Some areas are seeing triple digit temperature. Yeah, it's getting hot, man,
it is getting hot. Thousands ofrecord temperatures this week. So that's
a bad deal, man, badbad deal. All right. We were

(21:18):
talking about food and food wars.There are food value wars that are heating
up with major chains. Major chainsare offering to you know, they're trying
to get you back into their restaurants. McDonald's kicking off there as summer of
value in just a few days.This as consumers push back against higher than
normal prices this morning, inflation fatiguehitting consumers looking for a quick meal from

(21:45):
grocery store prices to those skyrocketing fastfood meals. As the current inflation rate
sits at three point three percent,Food away from home is four percent higher
than it was about a year ago. Okay, that doesn't seem like a
lot, but maybe it is.If it's four percent higher, and you
know, and it was already highto begin with. People don't know that

(22:06):
kind of do. Food away fromhome is four percent higher than it was
about a year ago, creating ahuge buzz on social media. Can we
talk about how crazy is that termfood away from home is? I've never
heard that before, but how deadon is that? You know? What
should we call it? He's eatingat a restaurant, food away from home?

(22:27):
Food away from home? Is foodaway from home? God, it
sounds like the food's lost food he'saway from home? Yeah, bad vibes.
Hey, speaking of laws, thehiker was found after ten days.
Maybe you heard us do that storylast week. I don't think we did,
but if we did, we wouldhave said, hey, there's a

(22:47):
hiker missing and he's been found.A missing hiker found alive the heartfelt reunion
was all captured in these photos.Thirty four year old Lucas mcclish spent ten
days in this and a Cruz Mountains. On Tuesday, June eleventh, mcclish
headed out for a three hour hikefrom his hometown of Boulder Creek. That's
the new Gilligan's Island. He's outfor a three hour tour. On Tuesday,

(23:11):
June eleventh, mcclish headed out fora three hour hike. A three
hour hike. A three hour hikefrom his hometown of Boulder Creek. He
said he got lost and didn't recognizecertain landmarks wiped out by fires. When
he didn't show up for Father's Daydinner, he was declared missing on Sunday,

(23:33):
June sixteenth. Four days later,mcclish was rescued. I'm sore,
I'm a little tired, and Ilost my voice. We spoke with McLish
on Friday about what he had onhim at the time. I left with
just a pair of my pants andmy pair of hiking shoes and two and
that hat. I had a flashlightand a pair of folding scissors like a

(23:56):
leatherman tool. And that was aboutand how he survived. I didn't have
a shirt. I didn't hear shirtmentioned. I had pants, a knife,
shoes, and what else? Didhe have a pair of pants?
He had pants, okay, andmy pair of hiking shoes. Hiking shoes,

(24:18):
not heard that term before. Andhiking boots maybe okay, and two
and the hat and a hat allright, so far, no word of
a shirt. I had a flashlightand a pair of folding scissors. Folding
scissors and a flashlight like a leatherman tool. And that was about it.
And how he got no shirt onman? Any selfies of his pants?

(24:42):
Yeah, pants got really worked.I think the pants are the first
thing you throw on the fire whenyou get back. I think those pants
are done. And how he survived. I'll just make sure that I drank
at least a gallon of water everyday. But then after like, how
did you get the water? Washe like in a seven? I'll just
make sure that I drink at leasta gallon of water every day. They've

(25:03):
had a creek or something. Thenafter like getting close to the end of
it, I was just my bodyneeded food in some type of sustenance.
The Santa Cruz County Sheriff's office saidthey deployed drones, the Cowfire San Mateo,
Santa Cruz Unit, the Boulder CreekFire Department, and California State Parks
assisted in the search. Yeah.I'd slap him with the bill for that
rescue. Sorry. Uh, sortof an absolutist there, unless you when

(25:27):
you go hiking, you need aGPS with you or a phone so people
can tell where the hell you areand when and when. You cost the
shareff you know, tens of thousandsof dollars to come look for you with
the drones and manpower. I thinkyou get the bill because people know GPS
exists and you were too cheap toget one. So now we just spend

(25:48):
eighty thousand dollars to come find you. So stick that sucker with the bill,
the Sheriff's office said. On Thursday, around three in the afternoon,
witnesses reported hearing someone yelling for help. McLish was found in a remote canyon
in Big Basin State Park. Hewas moved to see all the boots and
pause on the ground looking for him. This is really humbling and oh no,

(26:12):
it was awesome experience. Yeah,maybe instead of the scissors next time.
GPS. Both him and his familyare feelings and a shirt. Guy's
got to get a shirt. Guyhas known a shirt. God, he's
got to get a shirt on him. You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on
demand from KFI AM six forty.Thursday is the debate. We are three

(26:34):
days away Tuesday, Wednesday and thenbang Thursday at six big ass debate.
It's gonna be live right here onKFI. And I hope I don't get
in trouble for saying this. Ithink we're the only TV or radio station
carrying it live? Is that true? Bellio, I would have to check

(26:57):
that. Check that out. Okay, you check that out. I think
we're the only ones carrying it live. I think CNN and KFI. I
think, okay, we're the onlytwo. So, Belly, are you
gonna dress up for the debate?Well? I have my debate gown that
I wear every year. Okay,I remember that last time. Yeah,

(27:18):
I'm gonna wear like a little tiara. Wow, all right, what are
you gonna wear? I was gonnawear like these camouflage sweats. Oh thanks
for dressing up, But you cannotlet that drop, can you? I
don't know what it is about thosesweatpants. And for your information, it
was an informal meeting. It wasn'tlike we were sitting down with all the

(27:40):
big wigs. It was just aninformal meeting. Let it go. We
had a meeting. Was it threeyears ago? Yeah? Maybe four years
ago? Roberlucci, what I mean? He can't let go of a meeting
four years ago? Four years ago? We had a meeting and our boss,
Rob Berlucci said, hey, whydon't you guys come in and we're

(28:02):
going to, you know, designa new studio. Tell us what you
what you'd like in the new studio. And we all had, I think,
pretty good ideas. And I seriouslythought that Bellio looked nice for the
meeting. No you didn't. SoI said, hey, thanks for dressing
up for the meeting, and shegoes, that's a rude. That was
not the tone in your voice.It was more like, at Bellio,

(28:22):
thanks for dressing up for the Meeting'strue? And I turned around and I
went, how rude. That's nottrue. That is one thousand percent.
And I know anyone listening believes meon this one. And you're still talking
about it. Why would you stillbe talking about it. I said,
I think I thought you looked greatfor the meeting. No, you did
it. I did. And thenyou said you turned around without skipping a

(28:45):
beat. You went how rude becauseyou were saying honest, condescending? Yeah,
like, how really you were sweatto a meeting with our boss?
Is the way you were presenting it. That's the way you felt sweats though.
Yeah, as far as sweats go, you're you're you're calling me out.

(29:07):
People wear their pajamas around here.I know people walk around in their
bare feet and their stocks and slipperwill I condemn that too. I condemn
that as well. You don't say, oh, hey, thanks for dressing
up for work. That's not true. I've hit some people here for dressing
in pajamas. Pajamas are for home. Pajamas are for bed or a living

(29:27):
room. They're not supposed to comeout to, uh, you know,
Starbucks the workplace. Yeah, Isaw I saw pajamas at Starbucks over the
weekend. What kind of pajamas werethey? Because they're matching top, matching
bottom. How about that? Butthere's a lot of leisure were now.
I mean, it's a fine line. It's not with me, it's a
big one. It's a big becauseI have sweatpants that like a thin material

(29:52):
that people might think are pajamas,but they're active were okay? And what
kind of activity do you do inthem? Sleep? Work? Oh you
do, I've come to work inthem. What you've come to work in?
Pajamas? No? Inactive wear?Oh? Active wear? Please?
Inactive wear. You sit here andI'm wearing what you think are pajamas,

(30:12):
but they're activewear. Okay, Wellit's not. There's not a lot of
activity around here. Wear your pajamas. Tomorrow, I'll wear my active wear.
No. No, I'm gonna weara suit and tie though for the
debate. I think it's a bigdeal. No. Oh, I'm going
to address up for the debate aswell. Crozier is too, Oh it
is. Oh, he's not dressingall right. Miss teen USA seventy one

(30:36):
year old makes history with Miss teenUSA. Now proof that age is really
just a number. Marisa Kyo isseventy one years. She has made the
history over there. Oh they gota byes or with the seventy one years
young it's seventy one years. Shehas made the history over the weekend,
competing in the Miss Texas USA pageantMarisa Record is the oldest contestant in pageant

(31:00):
history. Okay, and how'd shedo Miss Teresa when she took to the
stage to compete against over one hundredother women for the coveted title. Wow,
all right, how'd you do?She looks fantastic. Earlier this year,
the Miss Universe organization lifted their rulesto be more inclusive, removing the
age limit and also the Maytal statusrestriction for the competition. Okay, they've

(31:26):
moved the marital status, they movedthe age, They've moved the weight,
the height, They've moved everything.And now it's a circus. And also
the Marytal status restriction for the competition. Now it's Miss Ringling Brothers. And
while Morissa did not take on thecrown, she did win. Yeah,

(31:47):
well she didn't. And while Morrissadid not take on the crown, she
did win. I don't know.I think the crown goes to the winner.
Maybe I'm mistaken, Maybe I haven'tseen enough beauty pageant, she wrote
on Instagram. And she hopes toinspire women to strive to be their best
physical and mental self. She hopesthat she is proof positive the beauty is

(32:08):
really just a number. And shedid it. She looked great. That
takes a lot, that takes alot of courage to get up there and
do it. And she looked howstrong she worked with that boy she had,
she had free time. And that's, you know, frankly, what
it should be all at all.I don't know, I don't know where
we are in life. But country'schanging, country's changing, man, all

(32:28):
right, Tomorrow will be Tuesday,then Wednesday, then the debate is on
Thursday. That's going to be anunbelievable debate six pm. It starts right
here on KFI at six pm onThursday. Be here. Bellio's dressing up.
I'm dressing up. Stephus probably not, but he'll be here anyway,
all right, moo Kelly's not intonight. Chris Merrill's in, and so

(32:51):
him and Chris Merril, the wholecrew will be here next I AM six
four Conway Show on demand on theiHeartRadio app. Always hear us live on
k FI AM six forty four toseven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime
on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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