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August 6, 2024 32 mins
Kamala Harris picks Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as running mate // Freddy Freeman gets a standing ovation at the game last night // Freddy Freeman talks about getting back into the game and his son getting better // Burglars break into Encino home with family inside.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's camp I am six, and you're listening to the
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Two seconds in and already Elmer's trying to f me over.
All right, I get it, I get it, Elmer, all right.
I don't know what I did to you. I was
listening to Ashley Johnson. Nice to see you, a little buddy.
I'm glad you're with us. I'm glad to be you're
the best.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
It's your show.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
I wish you would replace Krozer, but don't tell him that.
He gets really pissed. That actually sounded like Krosier's laugh.

Speaker 4 (00:33):
I did it, the King of Volume, Krozer. But I
heard you do a story during the news break there
about the blood bank they need they need blood?

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Is that correct? Yes, sir? Do you have that audio still?
Can you play that for us?

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Because I thought that was pretty interesting. You know how
much blood they need and why they need it and
all that stuff. That's all right, then we'll knock it out.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
Here we go.

Speaker 5 (00:59):
Blood inventory of across the US dropped by twenty five
percent in July. Executive director of the Greater South Bay
and Long Beach Chapter Amy Papa Georgia says there's been
a lack of donation appointments because of extreme heat. In
the month of July, nearly fifty percent of Americans coast
to coast for under heat alerts.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
So when you're under a heat alert, you're not going
to be out donating blood.

Speaker 5 (01:19):
Red Cross says having old blood type readily available is
critical in helping people in emergencies. The nonprofit says one
pint of blood can save up to three lives in
Long Beach.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Chris Adler KF find all right, great job, Chris Adler.
You know, I've been around for a couple of decades,
born and raised in the San fran San Fernano Valley country,
bumpkin from the valley flats. So I've been nigh. I've
been to blood drives before I've donated. I don't think
I've ever taken blood though. That's interesting. I think I've

(01:49):
donated more than i've received. I've donated, and I don't
think I've ever had to take blood on Oh, that's
not true.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
That's not true.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
When I was born, well, that's really not true, because
when I was born, I was two days old and
I had a full blood transfusion, full on blood transfusion.
All of my blood was bad. I took on somebody
else's new blood. But when you're a baby, you know
you're an infant, you're a newborn. How much blood could

(02:18):
you possibly take on? Like what like a teaspoonful?

Speaker 6 (02:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
I don't know the answer.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
But here's something I've never heard in my life where
somebody comes on from a blood bank and goes, hey, gang,
we're up to our ass and blood. Can you please
stop donating? God Almighty, we're drowning in this crap over here.
Please stay at home, have yourself a cigarette and a beer,
maybe a couple of shots, but please stop coming in

(02:45):
here and donating. We can't handle anymore of this blood.
Not once, not once, it's always we need more, We
need more blood.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
Eventually they'll get there. I think they're pretty close.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
And coming up up with something, some kind of synthetic
you know, like we have synthetic oil for our cars.
You know that synthetic oil is not made from oil.
It's synthetic. And we've we've come up with a synthetic
oil that can replace regular motor oil, and it's actually

(03:20):
better for your car from what I understand. When We're
very close I think to doing that with blood, coming
up with some kind of synthetic blood. All right, we
had a big announcement today.

Speaker 7 (03:30):
Tim Ball, Tim Walls, Tim Walls, sorry, Tim Walls is
going to be the vice president candidate on the Democrat side.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
It's from Minnesota. They don't know much about him. The
the you know, the knives are already starting to come
out about his past and what he's done.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
The Liberals really like him.

Speaker 2 (03:53):
I don't know much about him, and and I'm really
sort of tired of politics, but I will say this.
I have a theory here, and again, you can only
have two conspiracy theories three or.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
More and you're a lunatic.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
So mine that we didn't go to the moon, and
that Paul McCartney died in the late fifties early sixties
and they replaced him with the new Paul McCarty. And
that's it. I'm not I don't believe that. You know
that the Clintons were running a pizza place with kids
in the basement.

Speaker 3 (04:28):
I don't believe that.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
I don't believe in Bigfoot, have not really convinced that
aliens are around. There's a lot of other conspiracy theories
I've not bought into, but I am. I'm gonna lay
it on you and I and I again. I haven't
heard anyone talk about this, so it might be a
Conway original.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
Think dog would not be great.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
I think that neither one of these candidates, Donald Trump
or Kamala Harri wants to win because we are in
for a financial crash that may turn into a depression.
There are way too many half knots in this country,

(05:13):
and way too much money is being circulated amongst ten
rich people, and the disparity is going to crush the
middle class and crush a lot of America. There's people
running around with hundreds of billions of dollars and there's
people running around with two cents in their pocket. Two cents.

(05:37):
You know, I heard a stat the other day online.
Didn't check to see if it was true, but it
sounds probably right. I don't know why somebody would brag
about this.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
Do you know?

Speaker 2 (05:47):
There's almost four billion people in this world who earned
two dollars a day or less. Four billion people earned
two dollars a day or less. And as Don Steckler
always said, the most dangerous people in this world are

(06:07):
people with nothing to lose, and we're creating a whole
lot of people in this country with nothing to lose,
and that's going to get dangerous. So I think we're
in for a financial crash, probably next year, maybe later
this year, probably next year, maybe definitely a recession, maybe
a depression.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
I know it's not great news, but it's it's.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Out there, and I don't think whoever's in office is
going to get blamed for it, whether it's Trump or Harris.
And I think that neither one of them wants this job.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
I I and.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
They call me crazy, but I think that that Harris
doesn't want it and Trump doesn't want it. When Trump
was elected in twenty sixteen, he was worth one point
five billion dollars. He's today he's worth five zero point
seven billion dollars.

Speaker 3 (07:02):
So he's got enough money.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
He loves playing golf, he's getting older, and he's been
he's got He's got a lot of signs from Washington,
d C. That they don't want him there, not from Americans.
There's a lot of Americans that do want him there,
but there's almost nobody in Washington, d C. That wants
him there. You know, they started rumors about him with

(07:26):
that Russian pee tape. They tried to impeach him twice.
They tried to throw him in jail. They tried to
leave him off the ballots.

Speaker 3 (07:34):
Remember that.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
They kicked him off Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram. They
tried to take his buildings from him. They changed his
opponent from a guy who was he was beating handily
in Joe Hiden and then put in Harris. So they
changed out his opponent on him. They raided his house,
They charged him with ninety one felonies. They gave him

(07:57):
inadequate secret service that don't want killed him. They labeled
him the worst president. They call his followers a cult.
They accuse him of an insurrection. They release his taxes
without his permission. So the federal government is telling him
they don't want him in Washington, d C. They do
not want him. And he's getting a little older, he's

(08:19):
got he's got a lot wealthier, and I think he
loves doing these rallies. But I don't think he wants
four more years of sitting in that White House and
taking crap. And I don't think Kamala Harris wants it either.
I think she wants to go out and buy albums
at his store, hang out with her husband, and not

(08:40):
deal with this crap anymore. So it's going to be
interesting to see. It's a race to the to the
you know, to the finish here. But I think it's
a race to see who loses, because whoever wins, they're
going to get this depression slash or I should say
recession slash depression.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
They're going to get blamed for this thing.

Speaker 2 (08:59):
And and it is going to be a real adjustment
in this country because we're all broke. We've all been overtaxed, overpriced,
over you know, inflation's killing us. Nobody has any money.

Speaker 3 (09:14):
Nobody.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
People I know that are making two hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a year are living paycheck to paycheck.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
People are broke.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
There's some companies that, you know, they're not offering health
insurance anymore. There's some companies that aren't offering match four
oh one k matching anymore because everybody's broke. So we've
got we've got to figure this out pretty quickly because
it's uh, you know, the way the way California is
going right now, with how much money they take from

(09:45):
us in in you know, in we pay the most
in gas, we pay the most in electricity. We pay
the most in uh, you know, income tax, property tax, uh,
you know, sales tax. We pay ten and a half
or ten and a quarter percent sales tax. You buy
a fifty thousand dollars car will cost you fifty five
thousand dollars in southern California. Or in California, a fifty

(10:06):
thousand dollars car will cost you five thousand additional dollars.
In Oregon, a fifty thousand dollars car will cost you
fifty thousand dollars. They don't charge you a single penny
of sales tax in the.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
State of Oregon. How do they do it? How do
they do it?

Speaker 2 (10:20):
And we have to charge ten and a quarter percent
and we're broke. We charge ten to a quarter percent
sales tax in the state of California, and yet we're
hundreds of billions of.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
Dollars in the red. I don't know how that happens.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Anyway, That's a little bit of what's going on. I
think it's a race to the end. I think neither
one of these candidates want it, and I think both
parties want to blame this. You know this doom, this
pending doom of this economy on the other team. And again,
whoever's in the White House when this thing falls apart,
they're going to get blamed.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
All Right, there you go. There's politics for today. Fun stuff.

Speaker 6 (11:01):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
There was a woman I don't know, probably her seventies
or eighties, and she left us a nice voicemail and
her only note was, how come he always says ding?
How come he always says hot dog? And then I
got another letter. After we talked about that on the air,
we got a letter from a and I don't know
whether it's a grandchild, grandson, or a son. I couldn't tell,

(11:31):
but he said his grand his mother or grandmother. He
just called her ma. I don't know if that's grandma
or Ma. Said that she also hears hot dog because
she yells sometimes nows how no. And so maybe as
you get older you don't hear dig dog here how no.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
So dude, again, I think I hear hot dog as well.
All right ready, yep, I know, oh yeah, hot dog?
Yeah you heard that, Okay, I said ding door? Seriously, yes,
I heard hot as.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
You get, so maybe I'll change it. Who knows, you know,
got to accommodate everybody. If you were at Dodger Stadium
last night, what a treat that was to see Freddie
Freeman come back. His young son was awfully, awfully sick,
hospitalized for nine days.

Speaker 3 (12:24):
What do you have, Belly, Oh you're you're a medical
guru here?

Speaker 8 (12:28):
What did?

Speaker 3 (12:28):
What is the is a long ass name for what?
That kid? Gillian Barr? Yeah, okay, all right, I get that.
I get that.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
And this young kid, you know, Freddie Freeman's young son
has to learn everything over again. He's got to learn
how to talk, how to read, how to eat, how
to walk. It really takes you back. And so he
left rightfully so to be with his son. And I

(12:57):
don't know if you saw this, Belly or heard this.
Was watching the Dodger game last night was very very emotional,
very moving, and him and his wife, Freddie Freeman, his
wife took thirty hour shifts. They didn't want to do
twelve on, twelve off because you're just exhausted. So he
would stay with his son for thirty hours, and then
his wife would come in and she would stay for

(13:18):
thirty hours. It's you know a little over a day,
a day and six hours, and then they would do
that over and over and over, so that kid always
had one or both of his parents there. And man,
when your kid is sick, everything stops. Everything stops in
your house, the work stops, the bills stop, the social

(13:42):
life stops, watching sports on TV. Everything comes to an end,
and you concentrate on trying to get that kid better.
All your energy goes into getting that child better, all
of it.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
And Freddie Freeman is a very emotional guy.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
Anyway, Remember when I he used to play for the
Braves and when and then he got traded to the Dodgers,
and he was very emotional about that. He was crying
when he left Atlanta and he left the Braves and
then they played their first game when he was a
Dodger Dodgers against Atlanta Braves, and he was emotional then
as well. So last night he comes up to bat

(14:20):
for the first time and I think, I don't know,
nine days, almost two weeks it was off, and he
says to the umpire, He like pats the umpire on
the shoulder saying, hey, I might need a minute here,
and the umpire shuts the clock off, shuts the pitch
clock off, motions to the pitch clock guy, Hey, shut

(14:44):
that off, And they stopped the clock. All of a sudden,
there's no pitch clock because there's no pitch clock on
guys that take time off to make sure their kids
survive and make sure their kids are better. And so
they shut the pitch clock off. And they had Freddy
Freeman standing at home plate, and the forty or fifty

(15:08):
thousand people are at that stadium last night, and if
you're wearing a Dodger jersey last night in the stands,
or if you're wearing a Phillies jersey in the stands,
everybody stood and clapped for that guy. Everybody because they
know what it's like. A lot of them are dads,
and they know what that's like. No matter how much

(15:30):
money you have, one of your kids is down. That's
everything stops.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
So here it is.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
Here's the audio of Freddy Freeman last night, coming up
to bat for the very first year.

Speaker 8 (15:40):
There comes Freddy Freeman. Dodger Stadium rising to its feet
to welcome back number five, number.

Speaker 3 (15:50):
Five, Freddy Freeman.

Speaker 8 (15:54):
Here it stuck. So Phillies catcher just gave Freeman, a
big hug party has stepped out of the batter's box,
taken off his helmet, tipped it to the bands of
Dodger Stadium, and tapped his heart. And you can tell
that Freddy is never afraid to show his emotions and
wear them on his sleeves. He's killing them again right now.

(16:15):
The entire Philly defense is facing Freddie Freeman.

Speaker 3 (16:22):
This is the good stuff.

Speaker 9 (16:26):
When he Craven broke down in tears when he walked
into the locker room today. Every locker had a blue
shirt with his son's name Maximus on the front, Freeman
on the back with number five. It touched him dearly
mac Strong.

Speaker 8 (16:43):
Those t shirts read now, Garrett Stubbs and the Phillies
deserve a lot of credit for.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
What we just saw.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
And you can hear it in Rick Monday's voice. Listen
to Rick Monday again, barely able to hold it together.

Speaker 9 (16:56):
Craven broke down in tears when he walked into the
locker roo room today. Every locker had a blue shirt
with his son's name Maximus on the front, Freeman on
the back with number five. It touched Tim dearly mac Strong.
Those t shirts reads.

Speaker 2 (17:14):
Yep, that was a great day, great day for sports,
great day for Los Angeles. Man just shows we got
a heart. Fifty thousand people there at Dodger Stadium last
night standing and applauding.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
That is a great moment.

Speaker 6 (17:29):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am six forty.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
T want to play one more Freddy Freeman audio here.
Freddy Freeman's young son, Max was very very ill. And
now he's got to learn everything over again. He's got
to learn to eat, drink, walk, talk, sleep, Everything starts
over again. So it's like having a newborn. And so
in the postgame interview Freddy Freeman's first game back I

(17:58):
think in nine days, he talked about the condition of
his son and how grateful he was to all the
people out there last night at Dodgers Stadium, and man
he got he got visits and gifts from the Phillies
that were in town, and you know, teammates around the

(18:19):
entire country, Manda, they all come together try to help
this guy out.

Speaker 3 (18:22):
This Freddy Freeman, his kid's name is Max.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
He's getting better, and he talked about him in the
postgame Prescott pros K's game conference last night after the
Dodgers beat the Ahillies.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
I think it was five to three.

Speaker 10 (18:36):
The wins that we've been getting the last three days
have helped me mentally with my family, Chelsea saying, so,
I think that's why I'm able to be here because
of knowing Max is going to be okay. So maybe
when I step on through those lines, I can focus
for three hours. I think I can. I've been through
a lot in my life. I can compartmental, Lizetty pretty good.

(18:57):
Knowing your son is at home, okay, I think that
will help. And you know, tomorrow we got pet again,
so I might be a little tired watching it, but
there's gonna be days that it could be a little
bit more tired. But he's like if you have kids,
he's like a baby again, so we have to relearn.
He has to re learn how to sleep again. So

(19:17):
he's every two hours, so we're up a lot.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
So and you know what that's like if you have
a newborn.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
When we had our daughter, she was about I don't know,
maybe a year old, and somehow she got she got sick.
She had a cold, and she would sleep all day
when she was not feeling well, and then she was
up all night, so she would sleep from six am
till six pm, and then she was up from six

(19:43):
pm till six am. And we couldn't correct that for
six months. Six months. We tried everything, and we couldn't
correct that for six months. So in those six months,
my wife and I would take turns. I'd be up
for four hours with her, then I wake my wife up.
She'd be four up four hours, then she'd wake me

(20:05):
up and I'd be up for four hours. And we'd
stay up with her from six pm until six am,
and then she would sleep from six am until five
thirty or six in the afternoon. And finally we corrected it.
I think I don't know how, but it was. It
was tough. And so Freddie Freeman's gonna go through a
lot of that trying to get this Max, you know,

(20:26):
back into into eating and sleeping and drinking and talking
and all that stuff.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
He has to learn everything over again.

Speaker 10 (20:35):
We're gonna be tired. It's okay. We're just still happy
that we've got our family back at home together. But
I can't answer that until I go through it. I
really can't. But I feel good, body feels good. I
liked my swing in the last couple of days, so
we'll see how it goes. Who knows, I mean everyone
jan you know, playing baseball. It's timing. I haven't played

(20:58):
in a week and a half. See how that goes.
But I feel good. I feel like I can go
out there and give everything I can to this team
because they've been so gracious for me, and my family's
okay at home, so I think I can go out there.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
And play well.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Fantastic And then Freddy fievens Freddy Freeman's first hit after
he came back with the Dodgers last night.

Speaker 9 (21:20):
Three to one.

Speaker 8 (21:20):
Pitch to Freddy, the base is empty and one out
in the third. Freddy rips it to right field, first
game back, and there's his first hit, quickly cut off
by Castiano. Say keeps Freeman on first with a one
out sigal they.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Go and you can watch listen to the Dodgers on
KLAC five seventy a m.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
I think they play Philadelphia again tonight. I have to
look at the schedule.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
I think tonight, and I don't know about tomorrow. But anyway,
great to see Freddy Freeman back and knowing his kid
is gonna be okay.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
That is great, great news. All right, you're live.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
When we come back there, there's been some more homes
that have been hit. They can't stop this. They can't
stop this. Insino again, Encino again. So we'll come back
and talk about this. It's getting wild out there. It's
the wild wild West here in Los Angeles. All right,
we're live on KFI AM six forties Conway Show.

Speaker 6 (22:18):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
Ding a dog. Hey, we've got some more action in Encino.
They can't seem to stop these burglaries in Encino, San
Fernando Valley right off the one oh one and the
four five, just west of the four five and south
of the one on one, well north and south of
the one on one. But you'll get you get the

(22:45):
area that's in Sino. Beautiful area, beautiful homes. People have
money there, and the people don't have money are coming
to get your money.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
It's just pretty scary. I just hope they catch them.
That's all. Put us out to sleep again. We don't
have to worry.

Speaker 11 (23:02):
That residence stunned after yet another break in. Just after midnight,
police received a call of a burglary at this home,
and Encino officers say the suspects broke a glass door
to get in.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
The residents scared them off. Scary, very very scary.

Speaker 12 (23:15):
You just can't go out of your house and leave
it alone, or you can't go out by yourself and
leave yourself alone because you're going to get Yeah, I'm
with that guy, leave yourself alone.

Speaker 3 (23:24):
You can't leave yourself alone. Definitely leave yourself alone. Yeah,
I think'd all with that guy.

Speaker 12 (23:28):
By yourself and leave yourself alone, because.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
Yeah, you're by yourself and leave yourself alone. All right,
there's gonna be a rap song.

Speaker 11 (23:34):
There.

Speaker 12 (23:34):
Can't go out by yourself and leave yourself alone because
you're going to get take the chance of really getting
in trouble.

Speaker 11 (23:41):
Joe Petrillo is a security expert from SDS Alarms. He
worries these burglars could become violent because they don't care
there are people at home.

Speaker 13 (23:48):
So it's a little bit different kind of a burglar
that breaks in in the daytime, which is usually what
we're all used to, and they don't want anybody home.
They want to just get in ran say, get their
goods and lead.

Speaker 11 (23:59):
That's blowing for sources to l ABC News that Tom
Hankswam was targeted just a few weeks ago, but now
it's just coming to light no one was home at
the time. All together, more than fourteen burglaries in the
last month. Petrillo says, there are some things you can
do to protect yourself.

Speaker 13 (24:13):
Make that house look occupied all the time.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
Yes, that's a great tip. Fantastic tip. Put lights on
timers that go off at odd hours. So you know,
you have an office downstairs, or an extra bedroom or
I don't know, the laundry room, and you can set
those those the lights to go off on timers, so
it goes off at two in the morning, you know,
for ten minutes, and then it comes on at three
in the morning, maybe three thirty. And it always looks

(24:38):
like somebody's walking around, like some nut is walking around,
you know. And that's what we do at our house.
It always looks like somebody is home. That's what they
don't want. I was toying with putting a sign outside
our house and putting a light on it, and I
want to put on the sign there's no jewelry in
this house, which is true. I mean, I think my

(25:00):
wife's wedding ring is the only thing worth anything in
our house. There's no watches. I don't think you know.
There's an Apple watch, but what are those worth on
the resale market? What fifty sixty bucks? And there's no money,
there's no art, there's nothing worth coming in for. And
then at the bottom I want to put the only

(25:22):
thing I spend money on is guns.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
I don't know if I want to do that. You know,
freak the neighborhood, neighbors out.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
But man, I don't know what the endgame is here
because it happens every single night. But this is a
great tip for everybody who lives in Los Angeles.

Speaker 13 (25:40):
Make that house occupied all the time.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
Yes, that's the best tip I've heard in a long time.

Speaker 13 (25:46):
And that means a lot of lights at night. I
don't care if it's eight o'clock at night.

Speaker 2 (25:50):
We have one hundred and thirty eight lights around our house.
One hundred and thirty eight. It looks like Dodger Stadium.
Dodger Stadium, And that's what you got to do.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
Got to have a lot of.

Speaker 13 (26:00):
Lights at one o'clock in the morning, a lot of
lights on and cars parked out in the driveway.

Speaker 14 (26:05):
Because our neighbors will be talking about trying to hire
patrol for US street. So were gathering information about hiring
co patrol because it seems to be an increase. And
our house was hit down the street here, and a
few of them around the neighborhood, and there's got to
be the one or to cru that hitting that area.

Speaker 11 (26:19):
Detectives are looking at all these cases, but so far
they aren't sure if they're connected.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
They're also increasing patrols in the area.

Speaker 2 (26:25):
Okay, now this might be a theft ring, this might
be organized. It probably is.

Speaker 15 (26:31):
Almost every morning now we are reporting on some sort
of burglary that's happening throughout La right here in Encino.
Just the latest one also Tarzana Studio City, Silver Lake.
Now behind me, this home just hours ago, made a
nine to one one call. They locked themselves in a bed.

Speaker 3 (26:50):
By the way.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
Have you noticed I've and I've said this on this
station for fifteen years, have you noticed that a lot
of these burglaries are not in Burbank or Glendale or
Culver City, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills because they have their
own police department. There was a guy last night and

(27:13):
I think from what I gather, I think he was
somehow defacing one of the memorials at Memorial Stadium, which
is at Boroughs High School in Burbank. And I was
coming home from I don't know what I was doing,
you know. I went to Del Taco and then I
had to I remember what the hell I was doing

(27:34):
last night. Oh, I had to go to the Empire
Center for a little bit, and then I had Del
Taco and I was coming home. And as I was
getting home, I saw a cop car fly by me,
probably doing eighty miles an hour, and so I made
the turn. I happen to be going the same way,
and he stopped about a half mile in front of me.
And there were seven cop cars and fourteen cops in

(27:58):
Burbank because somebody was doing something that they didn't like
right outside of Memorial Stadium at Burrows High School in Burbank.
Seven cop cars, fourteen cops. And this guy was not
robbing a house. I think he was doing something with
one of the statues out there. Don't know if he

(28:18):
was stealing it or defacing it or spray painting. I
don't know what he was doing. And they grabbed him
and they hauled him off. But these small communities with
their own police force. They have the advantage because they
don't have to patrol. LAPD has to patrol from Chatsworth
to sam Pedro. They have thirty miles to patrol in Burbank.

(28:43):
Very small. Glendale, same thing, very small, and the cops
can get around pretty quickly.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
And so if you're.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
Worried about your family and worried about crime, best to
get into a small community that has its own police force.
Do your research and find these smaller communities that have
their own police department. And man, is that that's a
game changer, big difference.

Speaker 15 (29:08):
Hours ago, made a nine to one to one call.
They locked themselves in a bedroom because they said burglars
were inside of their home, several of them. They broke
through a rear glass door, and it's not known exactly
what they may have taken or how many were here,
but they do say the police when they arrived, those

(29:30):
burglars were gone. The address search of this location shows
that the homeowners are songwriters, and we're seeing this throughout
Incino right now.

Speaker 3 (29:38):
Just yesterday we.

Speaker 15 (29:39):
Reported on another home burglary that happened overnight at a
multimillion dollar home here. Similar residents were home and woke
up to the sound of that glass breaking and past
days more burglaries than Sherman Oaks and San Fernando. Detectives
tell our I team that these burglaries and in Cino
match tactics of South American theft groups and impassed. The
investigators have found that these group will target one particular

(30:01):
neighborhood for a week or more, in this case several weeks.

Speaker 2 (30:05):
Uh, and then they can't get these guys. That's wild
that they keep hitting in Sino and they can't grab
these guys suh and.

Speaker 3 (30:12):
Then move to other areas.

Speaker 15 (30:14):
So LAPD they are advising that these neighborhoods leave their
lights on, have alarms, cameras and even allowed dogs to
try to detour these burglars.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
Yeah, and there is a I think you can buy
it on Amazon.

Speaker 3 (30:26):
There is a arm.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
I don't even know how to describe it, but it's
an alarm when somebody breaks in your house. It's a
loud it's a big speaker and there's a loud big
dog barking on the speakers. So don't even have to
have a dog. You have to feed it or take
it to the VD or clean it or walk it
or clean up it. Stoodoo, it just sounds like you
have a dog at home, which is an interesting idea.

(30:53):
You know, you don't even have all the hassles of
having a dog. You just have the speaker there and
it sounds like you have a dog. Here's another tip.
Real quick, I know we have to take a break.
Go to a second hand store and buy yourself an
old pair of work boots size thirteen plus and put
them out near the front door. And the guy stealing.

(31:15):
The guys who are going to break in your house think,
oh Christ, there's a pretty big guy that lives here
who's in the construction game.

Speaker 3 (31:22):
Maybe we'll move on. And and criminals know this.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
If there's a flag, an American flag flying on the outside,
chances are there's a gun on the inside. And a
lot of them pass when they see that American flag
flying because they know there's a nut inside like mate
with those guns.

Speaker 3 (31:44):
So get yourself an American flag.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
They're cheap, twenty thirty bucks, put outside your house and
then might deter one or two guys. Touchdown, pull run
All right. We're live on KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (31:57):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeart Radio app. Now,
you can always hear us live on KFI Am six
forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime
on demand on the iHeartRadio app

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