Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's camp.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am six forty and you're listening to The Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Here's something light.
You know, it's been a bad couple of days. We've
had those horrible fires out at San Bernardino, a lot
of crime and encino, and so, you know, once in
a while you just got to, you know, place a
(00:21):
something nice that we can all agree on.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
And I think this is one of them. The Pandas
are back.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Kids love panda bears, and China was nice enough to
give us a couple or loan us a couple, and
they're at San Diego Zoo. Slide on down there and
see the pandas. Yeah, you'll enjoy those pandas.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
They're back in black and one.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
I want to see one so bad.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
I'm with her, I want to see one so bad.
I want to see one so bad.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Yes, I'm excited.
Speaker 5 (00:53):
I haven't seen obviously pandas in years.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
This is a very exciting time for the zoo, very exciting.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
I am going to slide down to the San Diego
Zoo and look at those pandas years.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
This is a very exciting time for.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
The zoo, very exciting.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
It's a very exciting time for the zoo.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
I think you just said that years.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
This is a very exciting time for the zoo.
Speaker 4 (01:14):
It's a very exciting time for the zoo.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
Wow. Nice at a job in that story.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
This is a very exciting time for the zoo.
Speaker 4 (01:22):
It's a very exciting time for the zoo.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
Wow. People just reading that off?
Speaker 6 (01:25):
Huhn.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Give it everybody and start the camera and everyone reads
the same thing.
Speaker 4 (01:31):
No other species embodies that conservation mission as much as
giant pandas do.
Speaker 7 (01:37):
The new bears on the block include you schwan, five
year old male who loves to kick back with a
bushel of bamboo.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Here's a foodie.
Speaker 4 (01:45):
Here's a foody. He's a foody, I mean all a panta.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
It's a foody. He's eating bamboo. There's no nutrients in it.
It doesn't have any taste. It's the worst thing you
can eat. That's why these pandas are so slow, and
these koala bears because there are mostly pandas. That's why
it's so hard to get these pandas to reproduce because
their favorite food has no nutrients whatsoever. Bamboo is just
(02:11):
straw with a little bit of moisture in it, no vitamins, nothing,
that's why they're sleeping all day bamboo.
Speaker 3 (02:20):
Here's a foodie.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
He's not a foodie. If he is, he's the worst
food he ever.
Speaker 3 (02:24):
Here's a foodie.
Speaker 5 (02:25):
Here's a foodie.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Here's a foodie.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
I'm telling you he's not.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
He's a foodie.
Speaker 4 (02:30):
He's a foodie. Here's a foodie. I mean, all the
pandas love their food, but he definitely loves his panboo.
Speaker 3 (02:35):
And he's got roots here.
Speaker 7 (02:36):
His mother was born at the San Diego Zoo in
two thousand and seven.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
What I didn't know that his grandma is.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
A local legend.
Speaker 7 (02:43):
She was the zoo's first panda and lived here for
over twenty years. Hugh Swan is joined by four year
old female sheen Bow.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
She's the smart, adventurous.
Speaker 7 (02:53):
Ones a lot of says Megan Owen, Zoo's head of
conservation science.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
Why do you think people?
Speaker 1 (03:00):
Wait, how is she described?
Speaker 3 (03:01):
She's the smart adventurous ones.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
Okay, all right, we're giving them my human qualities.
Speaker 3 (03:07):
Now, she's the smart adventurous ones.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
Really, she seems to be in the same cage eating
bamboo like all the others.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
How smart? How adventurous? Can you be in a cage.
Speaker 7 (03:18):
Megan Oway, Zoo's head of conservation science, Why do you
think people are so different?
Speaker 1 (03:24):
We should go, we should take a.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Show trip and see these pandas. You would go, right,
Bellio or angel? Uh?
Speaker 5 (03:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (03:34):
Actually would you go? Would you go down to San
Diego Zoo and see these pandas?
Speaker 2 (03:40):
All right? What about Elmer? Would you go to see
these pandas? That's San Diego.
Speaker 8 (03:44):
Zoo one hundred percent. I love pandas. Really, it just
so cute.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
This is not panda express, it's the the enda.
Speaker 5 (03:52):
I do agree with.
Speaker 8 (03:53):
You, though eating bamboo isn't healthy and they're not. The
way to describe them is hysterical, because how can you
be adventurous?
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Hope you're not. You're in a cage. You can't be adventurous.
And how I don't know. It's just we just we
try to humanize these bears.
Speaker 7 (04:08):
Why do you think people are so drawn to giant pandas?
Speaker 1 (04:12):
Oh that's a good question. Okay, all right, I like that.
Speaker 4 (04:15):
I always try to resist just saying they're incredibly cute.
But they're incredibly cute.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
They're so cute.
Speaker 7 (04:21):
The first fan is to make their home in the
US arrived at Washington, DC's National Zoo in nineteen seventy two.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
Wow, where was that Nixon Ford seventy two?
Speaker 7 (04:33):
I don't know, Carter a gift to First Lady Pat Nixon.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Ah, Pat Nixon Ah, Yes, Pat Nixon Man.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
A gift to First Lady Pat Nixon.
Speaker 9 (04:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
The other gift to Pat was a bottle of synagrams.
Speaker 7 (04:47):
After a historic visit to China with President Richard Nixon
helped establish diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Speaker 9 (04:55):
I think pneumonium is going to break out right here
at the zoo.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
That sound it's like Nancy Reagan.
Speaker 9 (05:02):
I think pandemonium is going to break out right here
at the zoo.
Speaker 7 (05:06):
From then on, fifty years of panda diplomacy helps boost
the panda population.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
You know, China owns I think China owns all the
pandas in the world, and they lend them to other countries.
But you can't buy them or have them. You got
to return them eventually, and.
Speaker 7 (05:22):
Their popularity with millions of adoring fans watching every tumble,
snow day, and burn. China owns the pandas and typically
leases them out for ten year terms at one million
dollars a year.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
Prepare.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
Wow, man, what a racket to get it.
Speaker 7 (05:43):
With increased tensions between Beijing and the West, the Chinese
had appeared to pull back the bears as their leases expired.
Speaker 4 (05:51):
Yeah, of course I want the pandas bag.
Speaker 7 (05:52):
But after Chinese President Hieshin Ping suddenly signaled a thawing
of the icy panda relation.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
You imagine that that decision went all the way up
to the guy who runs China. And that's how that's
how incredibly popular these panda bears are. Where talk about micromanaging.
That decision to give the San Diego Zoo a couple
of pandas went all the way to the top of
the Chinese government.
Speaker 7 (06:19):
More pandas are now expected back at American Jews, and
with the San Diego Zoo's long history with the bears,
it's a natural first stop for the pandas on core tour.
Speaker 3 (06:30):
What's it like to watch him right now?
Speaker 5 (06:31):
It's really special, really, I don't know, it just it.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Just gives me chills.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
Got to give me more volume, more energy, beaving. You're
gonna be on camera maybe once in your life, you know,
on a on a news station, and.
Speaker 5 (06:46):
It's really special.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
You gotta give me more more energy, got to give
me like a ding dog. It's special. I can't believe I'm.
Speaker 5 (06:53):
Here thing dog that's really special.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
It doesn't seem special. It seems like you almost don't
want to be here.
Speaker 5 (07:00):
Really, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
It just it just gives me chills.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
Maybe the flu or covid giving you the chills.
Speaker 5 (07:07):
She probably has a fever.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
Yeah, I think she got it. You know, I'm just
sitting at that zoo all day. I don't know she
got sunburn or I don't know, dehydrated or something. I
don't why she has the chills.
Speaker 10 (07:19):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Bellio doesn't like to toot her own horn or pat
herself on the back, but Bellio posted a video last
week and I guess I'll do it for you, Bellio.
Speaker 5 (07:37):
Thanks.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
They got one million, eight hundred and twenty three, nine
hundred and eight views.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
That's a lot, Bellio, that's huge. Thank you, Yes, and
and you.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
And we have two hundred and eighty eight thousand people
on Facebook.
Speaker 5 (07:55):
We sure do they call them likes, follows, followers, followers,
but we'd love to have more. And everyone's invited runaway
show on Facebook, X and Instagram and on TikTok it's
Tim Conway Junior Show.
Speaker 2 (08:08):
How do we do compared to other shows? At two
hundred and eighty eight thousand, we middle of the road.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
We're doing pretty good. We're doing pretty good, pretty good.
Speaker 1 (08:17):
Eighty eight thousand on Facebook, just.
Speaker 5 (08:19):
On Facebook, yeah, yeah, and I think forty seven thousand
on Instagram. That's great, bell Yeah, forty something on X
and WHA. Not so many on TikTok. But we'd love
to have more Conway Junior Show on TikTok.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
Yeah, we gotta get our TikTok.
Speaker 5 (08:37):
Well, you're all invited, all.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Right, but the Facebook is great. At twohundred and eighty eight.
Speaker 5 (08:41):
Thousand, yeah, but we'd love to have three hundred thousands.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
Do we make money off that? At two hunter and
eighty eight.
Speaker 5 (08:46):
Thousand, Yes, but we don't. But we choose, we.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Choose not to. There's a dumb choice.
Speaker 5 (08:51):
Oh it is.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
Sure.
Speaker 5 (08:52):
We were doing it for our followers, I know, but man,
we could make some money.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
Take it the track and double it, you know, I
don't know, you don't think so, I don't know, Bellia.
How many followers do you have? To have in order
to make money. Do you know, Angel, you're younger than
us your hip that's right? Maybe neither, but sorry, give
(09:19):
it them.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Take it.
Speaker 5 (09:20):
I guess quickly too.
Speaker 2 (09:24):
How many followers you need on social media to make
money because you're you're into that, you have your business
and you're a big social socialite. You know.
Speaker 5 (09:33):
I'm not sure, Okay, I love the honesty, I really don't.
I'm going to guess at least over one hundred thousand.
Speaker 1 (09:41):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
If I were to guess, I would have said a
couple million. But my daughter said that that you could
start to monetize after like twenty five or thirty thousand people.
Speaker 5 (09:50):
She's right. We've been offered to offered money to do stuff,
but really don't do that.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
Yeah, is that right?
Speaker 5 (09:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (09:57):
How much money? A lot?
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Really?
Speaker 5 (10:01):
Yeah, we don't do that. We don't do that, mikes.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
It pisses people off.
Speaker 5 (10:05):
Because we try to limit that for cleaning followers.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Yeah, would we lose listeners?
Speaker 1 (10:12):
We constantly put ads up there?
Speaker 5 (10:14):
I think, so really, Yeah, let's they really really really
love you?
Speaker 4 (10:19):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (10:19):
I do enough with it?
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Yeah, I don't think they really do. But Belly, you
you are the I mean you really are the queen
of all social media.
Speaker 5 (10:29):
I really don't think that's true. But thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
You should get more recognition for that.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
You're giving it to me right now, and that's plenty.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
Thank you. There you go, thing wrong with you?
Speaker 5 (10:40):
Thank you?
Speaker 2 (10:41):
There she goes. The Oakland A's are playing the White
Sox tonight. Typically that's a who cares game, because the
Oakland Athletics are forty seven and sixty seven and the
Chicago White Sox are twenty seven and eighty eight. Twenty
seven and eighty eight. They've won twenty seven games and
(11:07):
eighty eight times this season. The announcers said, we'll get
them tomorrow, maybe we'll get them tomorrow. Well, why is
that important? Why is it important for these two teams
who are playing a game that doesn't mean anything tonight. Well,
because there might be a record set set tonight. There
(11:29):
might be a new a new Major League Baseball record
set tonight in losses the White Sox. The Chicago White
Sox have lost twenty one straight games to tie the
American League record. So if you're gonna watch baseball tonight,
try to watch the White Sox and the Oakland Athletics.
(11:52):
They've lost twenty one games in a row twenty one
and they're only twenty in eighty eight, so before the streak,
they only won six games. The White Sox losing streak
is tied with the nineteen eighty eight Baltimore Orioles, the
longest American League losing streak in the history of baseball.
(12:14):
They are one loss away from, I'm sorry, two losses
away from tying the nineteen sixty one Phillies record, but
I think the Phillies were in the National League and
are still in the National League, so that's not the
American League record. But there you go, ding dong and
the I think the reason why the White Sox are
(12:38):
horrible is because they're not paying any of the players
to play. Their payroll along with the Oakland Athletics are
I don't know this, around sixty to seventy million, maybe
eighty million, and the Dodgers payroll I think is the
high two hundreds or low three hundreds, and so you know,
(12:59):
you can't attract a great players when you don't pay
him anything, and that's what's gonna happen. So watch Baseball Night.
I think you'll enjoy that. You'll have a great time
watch it.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
All right, Hurricane Cocaine? What's going on?
Speaker 11 (13:14):
Beaches in Florida were covered with debris after the storm.
Serves but one beach and the keys had something else
wash ashore.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
Yes, cocaine.
Speaker 11 (13:22):
A million dollars worth of cocaine.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Wow, a million dollars worth of cocaine. The guy that
won the scratcher at the Orange County Fair could go
to Florida and buy all that coke.
Speaker 11 (13:33):
A million dollars worth of cocaine. Twenty five packages of
the narcotic weighing about seventy pounds, were discovered by a
Good Samaritan who contacted authorities.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Can you imagine, like you know, you're addicted to coke.
Let's say you're big, big cocade, and then you beat it.
You go to rehab, your sober for a year, you
hate everybody, you hate the people that made you sober up.
You're miserable as hell. And then you're walking down the
beach and you find a million dollars worth of cocaine.
(14:04):
I don't know how you don't push it in every
orifice of your body. I don't know, but a million
dollars a lot of coke.
Speaker 11 (14:11):
This tweet from a US Border Patrol agent shows the
identical packages that were sees that drugs are estimated to
have a street value of over a million bucks.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
Wow, seventy pounds of cocaine is one million dollars.
Speaker 12 (14:26):
All.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
I've got some bad news here, I think from Alex Michaelson.
Here a death investigation in West Hollywood. We now have
breaking news.
Speaker 13 (14:35):
This is in West Hollywood where LA Sheriff's deputies are
investigating a man's death. This is happening on Santa Monica
Boulevard near North Fairfax Avenue.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Homicide detector And I know people sometimes listen to the
news or listen to station half asked. We'd ask you
not to, but we know sometimes you're doing other things
and you're like, oh, wait minute.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
Where was that? Where was it? Tim? Where was it?
Speaker 13 (14:58):
This is happening on Santa Monica Ble near North Fairfax Avenue.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
All right, Santa Monica and Fairfax.
Speaker 13 (15:04):
Homicide detectives are on the scene. No word yet on
what exactly led up to his death. Obviously this is
a busy area and that investigation could continue for some time.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
That is right.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Kobe Bryant is in the news.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
They sold his locker the Staple Center locker that Kobe
Bryant used during his career.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
They sold it and we'll come back.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
I'm going to tell you how much it's sold for,
so you can guess if you want during the break
and we'll come back. I'll have your answer. So now
you gotta stick through the break because you can't find
anywhere else. We have the on ones with the information.
Speaker 10 (15:40):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am six forty.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
Kobe Bryant's locker has been sold from Staple Center. BELLYO,
I'm sure you saw that locker used to work for
the Lakers when Kobe Bryant played for Lakers.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
Is that not true?
Speaker 2 (15:56):
That's true, Tim, Yes, that is true.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
I'm there.
Speaker 5 (16:01):
You'd always the reporters would always wait at the guy's lockers,
so you knew the order that they would come out
of the showers. Okay, so we'd station ourselves. So I
know that locker very well.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
And Kobe Bryant knew you by name. He would say Hi, Sharon,
he would wow.
Speaker 10 (16:16):
You know.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
That is such a brag bellio. I would use that.
Speaker 5 (16:20):
I don't know how you work it into a conversation.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
But I think guys think that's really cool. You know,
I think so Kobe Bryant knew who you were. Yeah,
Kobe Bryant probably knew, you know, forty people in his life.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
I don't think that. I think it's way more than forty.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
He was very closed off, you know, socially until he retired.
Then he opened up a little. But when he was playing,
he really didn't talk to a lot of people. He
really concentrated on the game.
Speaker 5 (16:46):
If you covered the games, like all the games he knew,
like he knew the beat writers, he knew the TV reporters,
he knew those guys.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Okay, all right, well I didn't know that. Thanks for
embarrassing me on the air.
Speaker 5 (16:58):
Absolutely right. I only spoke to four people, and I
was one of the Okay, but.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
What do you say, Hi, Sharon or Belly O? How
do you address you?
Speaker 5 (17:06):
Usually just high?
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Oh so he may not have known, you know.
Speaker 5 (17:10):
One time I hadn't seen him in a while, and
I came into the locker room and he goes, you're
a site for sore eyes. I always he was very sweet.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
Oh that's great, Belly. Oh yeah, that must made you
feel good.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
It actually did.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
Yeah, did you ever like drive home from a game thinking,
you know, if anything happens between him and his wife,
you could be the next missus Kobe Bryant. No, he
was younger than me, so no, I see, okay, all right,
Kobe Bryant's locker sold, the one he got dressed in undressed,
you know, prepped for the games at Staples Center, which
(17:44):
is now Crypto dot Com Arena. Let's find out how
much it went for dig Dog with this locker. That's
a lot of money.
Speaker 12 (17:51):
And Kobe Bryant's locker has sold for a record two
point nine million dollars.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
At WHOA almost three million for a locker.
Speaker 5 (18:02):
Two point nine million dollars at auction.
Speaker 12 (18:04):
It's the most valuable sports locker ever sold at auction
and the third most expensive piece of Bryant memorabilia. As
Staples Center maintenance worker saved the locker from demolition during
the arena's twenty eighteen renovation.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
That was a good idea. But Bellio, why didn't they
save Shack's locker and you know whoever else was on
that team, why did they just save Kobe's.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
Maybe they still have shacks locker. Maybe it's because shack left.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
I don't know, but man, that was a good save.
Whoever made that decision to save whatever. It's probably like
thirty dollars worth of wood to put that locker together,
and you know, maybe another ten dollars in hardware, maybe
a four dollars knob cook Yeah, yeah, right, probably about
fifty bucks.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
Max tied up in that thing. A little craftsmanship.
Speaker 5 (18:52):
Maybe it was a little locker on the little door.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Oh it was.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Did he have a key for it? Yeah? Did he
lock it?
Speaker 5 (18:57):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (18:58):
What was in there?
Speaker 5 (18:58):
You think his watch?
Speaker 1 (19:00):
You know, are you to watch?
Speaker 5 (19:02):
Well all the players when they you know, they take
off their fancy jewelry, lock it down.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
Oh they don't play the game with their watch on.
Speaker 5 (19:09):
Some of them do?
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Waitit, some of them really do.
Speaker 5 (19:12):
Now can you imagine.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Constantly looking at it like texting messages? Ben I.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
So that two point nine million, that's a lot of dope.
That's a lot of money. And that was our sports
feature we do every single Tuesday at six forty eight,
And of course it is brought to you by Advanced
Hair one day treatment, life changing results. Make your appointment
today at Advanced hair dot com. There is a contest
(19:44):
going on here locally. I'm sure Bellio has seen it.
A lot of people are talking about it. But there's
a sign up board. We have this little tiny area
in the kitchen where they sell snacks and it's on
the honor system. So you get a snack and they
and you got to you know, put money into it,
either credit card or cash, and then you walk away
(20:04):
with your snack. And it's like a little tiny seven
to eleven and a lot of people use it. I
use it almost every day. So they have room up
on top of it for a name, and there's a
sign up sheet there and whoever gets, you know, whoever
comes up with the perfect name for the snack area
is going to get twenty dollars worth of free snacks.
(20:27):
So people have been signing, you know, putting their ideas
down on that piece of paper and then putting their
name next to it. And they've come up with some
good ones. One of them was, I heart snacks. That's
a good one. What is it again, I heart snacks.
You don't like that one?
Speaker 5 (20:44):
I mean it's cute, it's clever.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
Here's another one. A guy named Larry wrote this. I
don't know, I've never seen a Larry here. Oh yeahs okay,
he wrote three and a half, five and a half.
Speaker 5 (21:00):
Get it.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
It's like it's like a small seven to eleven.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
It's hat.
Speaker 5 (21:04):
That's kind of cute, but it's long.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
Yeah, three point five, five point five cute. Yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Here's another one, el Moldo.
Speaker 5 (21:15):
I think that was Aaron's.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
What was that?
Speaker 5 (21:18):
Aaron put that one in?
Speaker 1 (21:19):
El Moldo.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
I don't know what that means? Is that span?
Speaker 1 (21:24):
What is that Spanish or something?
Speaker 5 (21:26):
I think so the mold el Moldo for mold.
Speaker 2 (21:32):
I feel like they're making fun of my name.
Speaker 5 (21:34):
Really, maybe that's it.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Oh, elmer el Mulda.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
Maybe that's a stretch. Here's another one, stale crap. I
don't like that too flat, too flat mine? I like
l moldo.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
What is yours? What was what was your?
Speaker 4 (21:53):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (21:53):
Say is good? I saw that. I didn't know that
was yours.
Speaker 5 (21:56):
It's mine?
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
Here's another one.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
F the snacks.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
Admitted that I don't know.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
I don't have there's no name next to that one.
Here's another one.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
I've lost thirty eight dollars in change on this snack machine.
I'm never coming back. A commentary. Kind you wordy. Here's
another one gas station and then there's a cartoon of
a kit of a guy farting.
Speaker 5 (22:29):
I like that one.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
I like al Moldo.
Speaker 5 (22:32):
That's cute.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Was it aaron that got a protein shake? Yeah, and
it was there was mold in it.
Speaker 5 (22:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
Well, look, you know you're playing Russian Roulette with that
snack area.
Speaker 5 (22:47):
I haven't had problems really. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
I've had some stale stuff and I just write stale
on the bag and I put it back there. I
put it in the state in the stale area. There's
a whole area there.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
The stale show.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
There's a whole stale basket. It just throws craps and count.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
The browser bin of the of the three and a half,
five five little Yeah.
Speaker 5 (23:16):
It took a bite out of a sandwich that was
stale and he threw it back in the refrigerator and
left it.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
He really, Oh my god, that's wild takes. I love
the fact that you do something like fun and then
radio people.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Just kill it on the air. Yeah, like with El Moldo.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
Mighty.
Speaker 10 (23:36):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
All right, bike lanes, homeless encampments, They don't mix. They
don't go together pretty wed. They don't go together together
at all, bad vibes. People like their bikes and they
don't like the carts and the debris that comes along
with these encampments.
Speaker 6 (23:59):
With Los Angeles started rolling out its new bike lanes,
it didn't take long for drivers to trash them. Now
even the homeless are doing the same. But literally in.
Speaker 9 (24:09):
The trash in the lane, you have to zigzag in
and out at traffic again, so it's sort of like,
what's the point of having the bike lane.
Speaker 6 (24:18):
Seventy year old Keith Johnson found himself dodging a pile
of trash that has grown in this bike lane near
the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard in.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
Wilton, Hollywood and Wilton Only Wood.
Speaker 6 (24:29):
Okay, the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard in Wilton, I got it.
A multi ten encampment hugs most of the sidewalk here,
and we found bicyclists threading the needle around the debris
or just darting into traffic to avoid it, literally threading
the needles. With little sidewalk available, people often compromise.
Speaker 9 (24:47):
Pedestians have to use the bike lane to get around
the encampment. You know, then bikers have to watch out
for people stepping out into the street.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Yeah, we got to clean this up for the Olympics.
Four short years, we will have the Olympics here, so
we all have to straighten up. We've got to clean
ourselves up, take a shower, put on you know, take
a shave, and really get ready for these Olympics. We
got to People have got to get out there and
start and I'll volunteer, you know, I'll be part of
the cleanup crew. I don't mind. I got nothing going
(25:16):
on during the day or weekends. I'll get out there
and pick up trash. But we really have to straighten
up here. In four years, we have four short ears
to straighten our act out, and we've got to let
the world know that we're all not you know, crazy
and lunatics out here in La So if there's some
kind of you know, organization where they need volunteers to
(25:37):
help go around and pick up trash, I am your guy.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
I will volunteer. I mean a lot of people to
do that.
Speaker 6 (25:44):
Though this Hollywood Encampment sits in La City Council Member
Ugo Sodo Martinez his district. His office says the camp
has been there for more than a year and that
the city removes its trash every week and completely scrubs
it down every other week. But Johnson says, what's really
frustrating is that when the city does come by and
clear this out, the cleaned up sidewalks and bike lanes
(26:05):
only last a few days than the tents and the
tarps return.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
Yeah, they come back.
Speaker 2 (26:12):
Nice to see that Eric Garcetti has landed on his feet.
He has gone back to doing Home Depot commercials. Here's
one of the latest ones that he has done.
Speaker 14 (26:21):
We decided it's time to put a different kind of
power tool in your hands. Store mode in the Home
Depot app gives you in store tools made to help
you get more done.
Speaker 2 (26:31):
A lot of people don't know that Eric Arsetti was
the voiceover guy for Home Depot for quite some time.
Speaker 1 (26:37):
Then when he was mayor, he was unable to do it.
Now he's back to guide.
Speaker 14 (26:40):
You every step of the way and explore products quickly
with the scam. That way you get the top brands
at the best prices with ing dong.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Eric Garcetti, all right, mor Kelly is up next. Hi
you Bob, I'm doing all right. I did not know
that about our former mayor.
Speaker 2 (26:58):
Isn't that wild?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
I did not know that. I knew that he was
always entertainment adjacent.
Speaker 15 (27:02):
I know he had done some stuff and entertainment appeared
in some movies, but I didn't know he was doing
voice offers as well.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
Hey, I was listening to you last night, and I,
first of all, I don't know how many as the
crow flies. How far are you from?
Speaker 1 (27:14):
I s fought three miles? Is that where the big
concert was?
Speaker 2 (27:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (27:18):
And you could hear it?
Speaker 6 (27:19):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (27:19):
Absolutely, no exaggeration, no lie.
Speaker 15 (27:22):
And that was before I started reading the news reports
of people complaining.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
People were complaining for Manhattan Beach and Redondo Beach. Yeah,
it goes that far, well, come to find out.
Speaker 15 (27:34):
But when you're hearing it, you think it's just bothering you,
and then you realize, well, it's bothering everybody.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
And how long did it go on for?
Speaker 15 (27:41):
I went to sleep before Stephan was listening to as well,
and he's in a he's relatively close to me, And
I went to sleep around ten o'clock. It was still
going on. Really, yeah, excited to get up real early.
That was part of the reason why I was annoying me.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
Yeah, I heard you last night. You turned into the
get off my launch.
Speaker 15 (27:57):
Oh absolutely, these freaking kids, you know, know how to
turn on the music.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
Remember you used to be in the music business. Yeah,
I was shut it off. Look, look, okay, life is
not fair. It's time for them to turn it down.
That was a hell of a concert, though. I think
what they have to do is they've got to lower
that stage. That's one of the solutions.
Speaker 15 (28:16):
Or they got to put some sort of like sound
design wrap around it, you know, acoustically keep the sound.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
In, or like they've been doing for many, many years,
put it in the Mahave desert where there is nobody.
Speaker 15 (28:28):
There's a reason why you have like Coachella way out
there exactly, so you're not really bothering anyone, or or
they can turn.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
It down, right, But if you're bothered by it three
miles yeah, can you imagine, you know how if you're
within a.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
Couple of miles, well you got to do. But if
you're within a mile, I'm surprised you didn't shatter windows.
Yeah that was loud as hell. Oh it was really bad.
Speaker 2 (28:47):
I can't believe that.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
Oh, it's on the big show night.
Speaker 15 (28:49):
Bob, Well, we're going to be giving away more tickets
to Australian Pink Floyd at the Orpheum Theater.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
It was a big hit last night. We're going to
do it every night.
Speaker 15 (28:57):
This week we have to talk about the coyote burglar
breaking and entering into a SeeMe Valley house, attacking a
family dog.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Prime everywhere, even the coyotes are getting in on it.
It's crazy.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
I can't believe that they can't shut this in Sino
burglary crime ring down.
Speaker 15 (29:14):
I'm thinking like insino surveillance, private security.
Speaker 10 (29:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (29:21):
I used to live in Studio City, so I would
drive through and see every now and then. I'm either
it's an inside job all the way around, or they're
just idiots.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
And I don't think they're idiots. They've got the money
to stop it.
Speaker 2 (29:32):
Though they've got the money to hire a private security,
they just don't want to do it.
Speaker 1 (29:35):
I think they do depending on the area.
Speaker 15 (29:37):
Sure, you know, either it's like within a development where
you have a security kiosk, or you have private security
driving through.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
Yeah, It's it's amazing that that it's all happening in
one little area.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
It happens every night That's what I'm saying. Someone knows something.
There's gotta be some inside information being passed out.
Speaker 2 (29:55):
Yeah, exactly. I'll be listening mel Kelly NX with his
whole crew right here on KFI AM six forty Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio 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