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September 13, 2024 30 mins
The temperatures this weekend are going to be very cool; Andrew discusses the up-and-coming Victorville. // Retro school and office supplies are making a comeback. // FDA approves Apple's AirPods Pro ot be used as hearing aids // Cross with Mo 




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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's kf I AM six forty and you're listening to
the Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app but
six o'clock, little after six, about seven minutes after the
fifty three minutes of the own here in Los Angeles.
And finally, we have a weekend where you can go
outside and enjoy yourself, maybe do a little weeding, cut

(00:21):
the lawn, go out and I'm you know, ride your
bike and it's not one hundred and fifteen degrees outside.
It's gonna be nice and cool tonight in the San
Fernando Valley. Right last week it was one hundred and
fifty degrees by tonight in the San Fernando Valley. The
low is gonna be sixty one degrees, sixty one degrees
on Monday, fifty eight, the high of seventy three, and

(00:44):
it's gonna be nice all the way till Thursday of
next week. After Thursday, it's gonna be eighty three, eighty eight,
eighty eight, it's gonna get hot for people going to
Las Vegas for the Big iHeart Music Festival, which happens
one week from today, September twentieth and twenty first. I
will see you there it's going to be ninety Let's

(01:07):
see eighty two on Friday. That for that iHeart Music
Festival in Las Vegas, eighty two, beautiful weather, eighty eight
on Saturday, eighty two on Friday, eighty eight on Saturday,
eighty nine on Sunday. So if you're going, you know, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Thursday,
how about this. Sixty one is going to be the
lower Las Vegas for the iHeart Music Festival, and seventy

(01:30):
five will be the high in Las Vegas next Thursday,
one week form me yesterday, the very next Thursday in Vegas.
Seventy five degrees is the high the high temperature in
the desert. Now, Andrew, I know that you're a desert rat.
Is that an insult or you guys?

Speaker 2 (01:48):
You know, I don't know, Like if you say it,
I guess it's an insult because you're not from the desert.
But if somebody from the desert says it to me,
I guess it's okay.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Okay, Like you know, when you're in Hawaii, Yeah, they
call people from who are not natives, they call mainlanders.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
Is there a term for city folk where you live
that's pretty insulting.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
Oh you mean, like if you were to come there,
like what we would call you?

Speaker 3 (02:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:12):
Well, how do you refer to people who don't live
up in the desert.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
City?

Speaker 1 (02:17):
A holes?

Speaker 3 (02:18):
You guys don't come up so I don't have a
name for you.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
How long you've been living in the Upper Desert, well,
the High Desert.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
I moved back in twenty sixteen after living in La
in Orange County for about twelve years.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
So just missed the desert.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
Yeah, that's just where the world, you know, left me.
So so yeah, I've been up there now for I
guess about six seven years. And you live in the
Apple Valley area. No, I grew up in Apple Valley.
I'm not in the Victorville area, Okay. I like that
area closer to the Freeway. I can't believe how big
Victorville has got. You know, when when I was a
kid driving.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
Through Victorville to get to Las Vegas, you didn't see
any lights on at night, you know, it was just dark.
And now it looks like the San Fernando Valley up there.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
Yeah, that SB one.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
They've been doing a lot of Caltrans work on the
fifteen to widen it. Yes, I'm assuming eventually they will
finish that. It's kind of like the four h five
suppulvent of Pass. It took forever to finish, right, It's
kind of where they're at right now.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
And here's how I noticed that we have a big
listenership up there too. I know a lot of people
live up in the in the high desert listening KFI
from the Annil Valley all the way up to Victorville.
But I knew that that that area was going to
take off, or I knew it it already did. When
driving home from Las Vegas on a Sunday. I remember
I left Las Vegas at I don't know, it must

(03:30):
have been about two o'clock in the morning. Wow, And
I got to Victorville around five or so. We stopped
to eat it. Got to victor Victorville around five o'clock
and there was traffic down the Cajone Pass all the
way like it was the Supulveta Pass.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
I couldn't believe it.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
So it's about four fifty, four hundred and sixty thousand
people and in the next twenty years they're projecting that
to double.

Speaker 3 (03:54):
Really.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
Yeah, that's that's where it's at right now with growth.
What's the attraction out there? Just the cost of living. Yeah,
it's kind of like the Inland Empire, you know, like
maybe ten or fifteen years ago. That's kind of where
the High Desert is as far as like living, you know,
affordability now.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
But they're going to also have to expand the the
five it was the fifteen fifteen freeway through the Comb Pass.
There's at some point there's like two lanes, yes, And
I'm like, come on, I mean two cars can come
down from the high desert at once. But I enjoy that.
I like the desert, and if I had to do
it all over again, I wouldn't be opposed to I

(04:31):
would We looked out in the Annealo Valley. I looked
at at a house when my daughter was born, and
it wasn't Lancaster. It was it was actually between the
two of them. I don't remember where there's Lancaster or Palmto.
But I enjoyed how much house and property you can
get there for your money. You can really stretch out. Yeah,

(04:55):
they buy toys, you know, like the off road vehicles.
They stick them in your backyard because you have a backyard. Yeah, right,
and you can take it onto the desert and enjoy yourself.
And I like the fact that the high desert is
what the San Fernando Valley used to be in the
early seventies, where there aren't a lot of people busting
your balls about, you know, where you're taking your ATV
or what you know. Hey, you can't smoke here, you

(05:17):
can't do this, you can't drink there. The lawlessness up there,
And I'm saying in a good way, I like that.
I like that that people can be a little more
politically incorrect up there without being told what to do.
I enjoy that. I think you made a good move.
How long you've been living at in that area.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
Since twenty sixteen, it's when I moved back to the area.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
Okay, And they have a lot of I noticed they
have a lot of warehouses there, a lot of people,
you know, a lot of equipment's brought into Victorville and
then brought into smaller trucks down to Los Angeless.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
So it's similar to what's been happening on the eastern
side of the Inland Empire with like a lot of
logistics distribution warehouses and stuff. So that boom is happening
now up there, and.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
They have I think the greatest outlet mall there I've
ever been too. It's certainly the biggest. The one that's
just north of Victorville there on the fifteen freeway.

Speaker 2 (06:05):
Oh over in Barstow, the outlets. Uh is a Barstow.
I guess it is Lenwood. Sorry, yeah, that's Lenwid.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
But you know that an outlaw, an out an out
that let mall. That outlet mall is kicking ass when
it has three hotels. Yeah, I think either are two
or three hotels right there. You can stay at the
outlet mall if you'd like. That is great. But I
enjoy that there. I really like it. And again when
I grew up there, when I grew up in the

(06:33):
San Fern Downto Valley, there was a McDonald's and an
in and out up there. That was it. There was
nothing nothing else. But I guess there's a big mall
out there in Victorville down too.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
Yeah, there's a mall. We have what they call restaurant row.
There's several like chain franchise, you know, restaurants that you
can eat at. I mean, you could spend a couple
of hours in that area. And then you know, on
your way to Vegas or on your way back to
l A.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Right. And again I'm not saying it's just as I
work here at KFI. I would have said it even
before and again after I work or KFI. But I
think there's a lot of people who live in the
high Desert that listen to the station.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
They do because I walk into places and people don't
know my face necessarily and they say are you on
the radio? And I go, do you listen to KFI?
Going up and down the hill? They go yeah, and
I'm Andrew Caravella. They go, oh, my gosh, I listen
to you. That's great, and no joke, not not not
to you know, not to brag for you. But most
of the time when I have those interactions, they say
they love Conway, oh that's great, or or you know,

(07:28):
on the flip side of that, they love John Cobo. Okay,
all right, yeah, that seems to make sense.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
Yeah, those are the two for that for that area.

Speaker 1 (07:34):
That's the audience that makes sense. That certainly makes sense.
Especially John Colbat I'll bet he's huge. He could move
up there, he'd be the king. He was a Victor
village man that guy'd be the mayor and a heartbeat,
he'd win one hundred percent of the vote up there,
no matter who he's running against. That's really cool. I
love that area. I love the Inland Empire, but man,
I got a soft place in my heart for that

(07:55):
Victorville in the in the High Desert. I really I
like the people out there there. They see there seemed different,
but in a good way that they You know, there
are a lot of family people up there, a lot
of people raising good kids up there. And whenever war
breaks out, I know that there's a disproportionate amount of
people who sign up to be in the Armed services

(08:15):
from the High Desert.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
Major veteran population and military support.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
Yeah, they risk it all so idiots like me could
be on this station. I appreciate that.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
All right, lot's going on again. A beautiful weekend weather
wise last weekend it was one hundred On Friday of
last week, it was one hundred and fifteen degrees in
Burbank and right now that's because that's where we are.
The station is in Burbank, and right now in Burbank, California,
seventy four degrees, seventy four eighty four, ninety four, forty

(08:56):
two degree difference, forty two degree difference from yesterday, from
last week, last Friday to today, forty two degrees. That
is unbelievable. All right, old school going, old school people
are buying nostalgic office supplies again. At the office supply storm.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
They say everything old is new against right, and apparently
that's very true these days when it comes to office
and school supplies.

Speaker 1 (09:27):
Oh my gosh, you guys, nineties kids unite.

Speaker 3 (09:29):
Gen X and millennial shoppers posting their glee on the
social media.

Speaker 1 (09:33):
Yeah, the peachy folders are back, the pencil carriers are back,
the old notebooks that had blue jeen cover on them with.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
Their old school fines for.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
It comes to organization either or you.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
Know, remember the trapper keeper, the popular retrobinder that all
the cool kids had, is making a comeback on store
shelves nationwide, cat.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
Papers and this and that, and I'm explaining what a
trapper keeper is.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
And it's not just the adults spying in. According to Axios,
nostalgic style school supplies are popular with kids too. Marketing
experts say the rush for retro is like comfort food
for consumers.

Speaker 6 (10:10):
People prefer or turn to nostalgic items, especially in times
where things might seem a little bit chaotic, because they
connect the past with the present. This gives us kind
of a sense of stability and self continuity.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
Or it was just a better time, you know, it
was just we go back to better times where we
felt better about the country. Maybe that's possible as well.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
And nineties brands like Kaboodles and Lisa Frank now being
introduced to a new generation. Celebs like Taylor Swift even
using an old school typewriter and a TikTok to reveal
new song lyrics earlier this year, but others like Dolly
Parton never gave up the old way. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
I look, when albums went out in the I don't know,
in the eighties or so, they were replaced by cassette
tapes and then CDs. A lot of people got rid
of their albums. They're vinyl and their record players. But
those are back in. If you go to you know,
if you want to target two years ago, there might
be one or two albums that they had for sale.

(11:11):
Now they got an entire section of people buying albums,
and a song just sounds differently on an album played
on a record player. There's something cool about that. So
I think people are going back to that. I don't
know if we're going to go back to VCRs. I
think that ship is sailed. I don't think, you know,
we're going to go back to renting videos. I mean,
I wish we were. You know, some of my fondest

(11:33):
memories of the eighties and nineties, we're going to a
Blockbuster and just looking around for a couple hours to see,
you know, what movies to rent. Hope that does come back,
but I don't think it will.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
Dolly does not take The Queen of Country is famously
known for using what's now considered an archaic form of technology.

Speaker 7 (11:51):
Every time I coordinate and kind of communicate with Dolly,
it's still through facts.

Speaker 3 (11:55):
Even to her goddaughter Miley Cyrus.

Speaker 7 (11:57):
We do use the phone, but she does a and
then someone scans the facts and then they put it
into a text message and then that gets sent to me.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Oh that's great, that's old school.

Speaker 3 (12:08):
Amy Webb owns the Sticker Shop in Cincinnati. She says
it's all about creating a bridge between the past and present.
For her customers, it has.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
Really been cross generational.

Speaker 4 (12:17):
I do think that Gen X, like we are in
our nostalgia era.

Speaker 1 (12:21):
I wonder if there'll be a generation that just says
no to sell phones. I know our entire lives were
consumed by it. Everything. Every time you wake up, the
first thing you reach for is your cell phone. The
last thing you look at before you go to bed
is your cell phone. You carry it around with you
all day long, and you look at it more than

(12:42):
you look at anything else in your life. You look
at that cell phone and you buy things on it,
you sell things on it, you get information out of it.
It's really a tremendously tremendously valuable tool. But I wonder
if there's gonna be a generation in the future, and
maybe now, maybe not now, maybe not the next twenty
thirty forty hundred years, But I wonder if there will
be a generation that said, you know what, We're not

(13:03):
going to do this anymore. We're going to go back
to old school. The one thing that I do miss
is going home and turning and seeing the answer machine blinking.
If that if that light was blinking, you had messages
and you want to see who the hell called you
to see you know, whether it was a girl that

(13:24):
you would had called and she called you back, whether
there's guys there planning on Vegas trip. And with text
you see it instantly now and you don't get that
that that ramp up. But when you have an answer
machine and that light was blinking, or if you had
a modern answer machine, it'll be blinking and it'll show
the number of messages. It'll be blinking five or six
or ten or whatever it is, and then you go

(13:46):
through all of them and it's like it's like a
poker hand. You don't know what cards coming next. And
it was really cool. But that doesn't exist. It does exist,
but nobody does that anymore.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
So my brother's a gen xer yep. And he's the
only person where I've custom ICE's ring tone on my phone.
Everything else is generic and it's purposely the AOL dial
up ring tones.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
Now that's correct.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
So when it's in my pocket and he calls, people
look at me like, do you have to dial up
in your pocket? And that's owz. So it's my brother.
That is great, man, it's a fun one and it's funny.
You brought up gen xers and two. All three of
my cousins are and they're the only people when they
leave a message on my phone, they say it's a Monday,

(14:28):
May fourteenth and about six o'clock. So I wanted to,
you know, I'm like, everything is on the PHONEO, and
I could tell me.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
You know, I still do that when I just I
called my daughter before we started today and she picked
up and I said, hey, s so, it's your dad
and she's like, Dad, I know who it is. But
I do it every single time.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
Chris Little does that when he calls me to come
in and fill in, he goes, hey, it's Chris Little, Lego.
I know it's been Chris Little for the last three
and a half years.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
Thank you.

Speaker 6 (14:56):
Anytime I call my parents or my grandma, I go, hey.

Speaker 5 (15:00):
It's me.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
As if you're supposed to know who me is.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Oh, that's irritated. It's me, Kiki. I don't. I don't
usually give unsolicited opinions much because I don't like to
get them myself. But you gotta change that. You got
to stop with the it's me. Guys don't like that
at all. That was even a Seinfeld episode. You're like, oh,
she's pulling at the it's me and I'm supposed to
know that, Hey, Hey, it's me? And yeah, who was

(15:26):
I was supposed to know that My mom used to
do all the time, Hey it's me, Like, who's me?
She goes, mother, You stupid? Got it really set you off,
didn't it? Ma, didn't really set you off? But yeah,
I don't like the hey it's me, you know. I
also don't like and Gina grat By the way, who's
with the Woody Show. I don't know if anybody knows
that she's the new character in the cast of The

(15:48):
Woody Show every morning on all ninety eight point seven,
But she does a great impersonation of this. And this
is skin crawling. Skin crawling what I'm about to do?
But a guy and a girl who spend the first
night sleeping together all night. They wake up in the morning.
They're both uncomfortable because they just met recently or the

(16:09):
last day or week or month or whatever. And they
wake up. They're looking at each other and one of
them says, hey, you, I can't do that without my
skin crawling. Hey you, Oh my god, that's the most

(16:33):
uncomfortable hey you ever invented ever, and then you have
to do the you know, you got to try to
get the hell out of there, and then you don't
know whether to say I'll call you later or whether
that's going to set her off using that lame term.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
You just got to say, thanks, have a nice day, I'll.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
Call you later. She throws something at you.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Copy light away.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
You ins wrong with you? Maybe I won't, Maybe I won't.

Speaker 5 (17:04):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
It is Friday at six thirty six, So we do
this every Friday. We play sound effects and try we
test your ears. We test your ears to see how
good they are. You got bad ears, you got good ones,
you got young ones. Young ears are better than old ears.
Old ears suck. Old ears need help. Hearing aids And

(17:33):
my grandfather had a hearing aid and I sort of
was jealous of him towards the end, and as I
got older, because he had a button on it where
he can shut it off, and when he turned it off,
he was completely deaf, couldn't hear anything. And I remember
when my grandmother would talk to him, I could see
him slowly like pretend to scratch his head and I

(17:53):
saw him push that button and it was off. He
shut down, shut it down. My grandparents had an odd relationship.
My grandfather smoked two packs of cigarettes his entire life,
his entire adult life, maybe since he was even before
he was an adult. But he came from Ireland, first

(18:15):
generation or I think a second generation Irish, and came
to America when he was eighteen, met my grandmother and
smoked two packs of cigarettes between the time he was
eighteen until he was seventy three years seventy two, I
think it was seventy two. And when he quit smoking,

(18:36):
I mean he smoked in the house, windows up in
the in Cleveland in the winter, snow, you know, eight
feet of snow outside. He didn't care. He enjoyed his cigarettes.
He liked this and he'd roll his own sometimes mostly
bought it at the store. And he enjoyed that. So night,
this is jeez, I don't know what year. This was

(18:58):
mayde the late seventies, and he said to my grandmother,
and they shared a house every I mean the only
they were one car family. So my grandmother would drive
him to work every day and then pick him up.
One car family. That was the that was the norm
back then. Nobody had two cars. And he said to
my grandmother, he said, you notice anything different about me?

(19:22):
And she looked at him and she said, is that
a new shirt? And he said no, I've had it
for twenty years. And she said, are those new glasses?
He said no, I've had those longer than the shirt.
And she said, have you lost weight? And he said
a little, But that's not what I was talking about.
And she said, I give up.

Speaker 5 (19:41):
What is it?

Speaker 1 (19:42):
And he says to her, I quit smoking two years ago.
And you what her response was, well, I didn't know.
I didn't notice. He smoked two packes, two to three
packs of cigarettes in the house every day and he
quit and he was smoke free for two years. And

(20:03):
asked her if he had not, if she noticed anything different,
and she did not. That's the relationship they had. They
loved each other, didn't spend a lot of time with
each other. They had separate beds their entire life. I
don't ever remember them ever hugging each other, holding hands,

(20:25):
or even getting within four feet of each other ever,
accept at dinner. I know. So my grandfather would come
to dinner, would sit next to her at dinner. That's
as close as they got. All Right, it's time to
figure out what these sounds are. All right, you can
play at home, you can play on the air here
and we'll start with Steph and I actually, Kiki or

(20:49):
or anybody wants to chime in here, Andrew or Angel, but.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
Angel you with us?

Speaker 1 (20:55):
I am Did Michael Brian fly over Burbank about ten
minutes ago? Or is he back in?

Speaker 3 (21:02):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (21:02):
All right, that's how it looked like him outside. All right,
here we go. Name this sound effect. Here we go. Kids.
You can play at home. You can play here if
you're a part of the program. Here we go. What
brand is that for?

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Coke?

Speaker 1 (21:16):
That's right? Whoever said coke? Alright? Kicky nailed that. Cakey
nailed at Coke, Diet, Coke, Coke zero. The HBO intro,
that's right, HBO? Whoever said HBO nailed that? One?

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Home Box Office? Next one? That's the Intel, that's correct?
Tenaum thing, eh.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
Caravella, Andrew nail it Intel? Next one? Anybody? That's a
rather complicated one. I remember, I just can't think of
the name. It sounds old, Yeah, it does sound old.
Nobody sounds like Christmas for some reason. LG. Oh that's

(22:03):
a actually good connection. You know people buy stuff from
LG for Christmas. Alright, Neck Mac, that's right, Apple, Yes,
Kieky's nailing it with these sound effects. All right, next one,
here we go, anybody again? Yeah, all right, here we

(22:29):
go one more time. Ding dong this sound effect? Nothing? Anybody?
Master Card? Yeah, master Card? Alright, McDonald that's right. Keeky
nailed it. That is McDonald's I'm loving it. Ding dog.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
Netflix.

Speaker 1 (22:59):
That's right, Angel Martinez for the win, Angel Martinez, Netflix.

Speaker 3 (23:05):
Next, here we go sound.

Speaker 1 (23:07):
Effects, Prime Original, Okay, Amazon Prime Original. Oh, ao L
that's right. I think wait a minute, I think that's AOL.
We see here. Oh no, it's not. Okay, it's not

(23:30):
a L. Let's listen to it again. It's not a
o L. Here we go. The Sprint. Sprint's very close
like T mobile, Yes, T mobile, tea mobile, that's right, Sprint,
that's correct. Windows, when you turn it off or turn

(23:54):
it on. Oh, that's not part of the game. I'm
shutting my computer down. I'm sorry. You should have done
that later, so it was closer to say that's wrong.

Speaker 5 (24:05):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand. From KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Stories we didn't get to this week because of the fires.
We had three fires burning, the Bridge fire, the Line fire,
and the Airport fire, and they seem to have most
of them under control. Let me do a final check
here just in case if anything popped up here. But
it looks like yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. They have

(24:32):
the park fire and let's see here the Bridge fire,
the Line fire, and the Let me see the Bridge
fire three percent contained, the Line fire twenty five percent contained.
That's huge, thirty eight thousand acres. On that the Bridge
fire fifty two eight hundred acres that exploded to be

(24:53):
the biggest of all three of the fires here. Then
we have the airport fire nine percent contained. That's a
good number. Nine percent is good. Twenty three five hundred
acres in Orange County burning over to Riverside. So it's
been a long week, a lot of heat, a lot
of fire over the last couple of weeks. It's been very,
very trying for a lot of people living here in

(25:15):
southern California. And the stories that we didn't get to
because of all the fires. Justin Timberlake pled guilty to
a lesser charge in his drunk driving incident in New York.
I think it was in the Hampton's right.

Speaker 4 (25:31):
Justin Timberlake has pleaded guilty in his drunk driving case
in New York. The singer entering his plea in a
Sag Harbor court this morning. As part of a plea deal,
he admitted to a lesser charge of driving while in pair.
Timberlake was arrested in June after police say he ran
a stop sign and beard out of his lane.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
The judge ordered him to pay a fine and perform
community service.

Speaker 4 (25:50):
The singer also agreed to appear in PSAs about the
dangers of drunk driving.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
That's when you know you're famous when part of your
pun is to tell everybody not to do what you
just did.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
To appear in PSAs about the dangers of drunk driving.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Helloi, Mark Brown, There you go, Mark Brown, How you Bob.
Nice to see you. I love how that story ended.
Hello I Mark Brown, Mark Brown, ding dong with you?
All right. So that's another one story we didn't get to.
Justin Timberlake drinking and driving. You know how he got caught,
by the way, somebody in his party called the cops
and dropped a dime on him. They think it may

(26:27):
have been somebody at the restaurant, somebody in his party,
or a bartender that said, hey, this guy's leaving here,
he's bombed and shouldn't be driving. That's how he got nailed.
Bon joviy another musician in the news. We didn't get
to that because of all the fires. But this guy
saved a woman's life.

Speaker 8 (26:45):
A chance encounter with John bon Jovi turning into a
life changing moment. The legendary rocker in the right place
at the right time Tuesday when police say he and
his team helped save a woman on a Nashville bridge.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
You know what, this looks off, But I always hesitate.
I always stay on high alert when a celebrity is
caught on camera saving somebody's life. I always think there's
something more than that. But this one I can't figure out.
I think this one is authentic.

Speaker 8 (27:15):
The woman standing dangerously on the ledge over the Cumberland River.
Bon Jovi then seen on surveillance footage released by police,
walking over and talking with her for about a minute
before helping her climb over the railing to safety.

Speaker 1 (27:28):
Yeah, but I will say this, this is not the
Golden Gate Bridge. This bridge is about twelve feet above
the water, so I think if she fell over, she'd
simply just get wet.

Speaker 8 (27:39):
The two later embracing in an emotional hug.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
How about that.

Speaker 8 (27:44):
The Grammy winning singer, who had been filming a music
video on the bridge at the time, may have been
just the right person to talk to in that heart
wrenching moment. NBC News confirming the musician has had extensive
training and speaking to individuals and crisis through his JBJ
Soule Foundation.

Speaker 6 (28:00):
Cool.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
I didn't know.

Speaker 8 (28:00):
The organization helps people living in poverty across the US,
including those facing hunger and homelessness, a mission bon Jovi
took to heart this week in Nashville and is living
every moment there you go.

Speaker 1 (28:12):
Congratulations to John Bond, Joey mo Kelly is with us.
I was talking about you because I believe of all
the people on the air here now that Ken Champala
has gone, I think you and I are the only
RAMS fans in the building. Can you tell everyone what
I'm wearing right now? Yes, he no longer plays for

(28:37):
the team, but you got his shirt up? Well, yeah
it's Aaron Donald. You know, can't go wrong, That's right.
Did you buy it before or after.

Speaker 9 (28:46):
He quit oh long before this is people can't see,
but this is the older version of the uniform where
he had the old gold deep blue.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
So this is maybe six seven years old. You know,
I go back old school. I don't want to out
myself as how old I am, but I go back
to Roman Gabriel. I saw Rodan Gabriel play and they
were blue and white when I started watching them.

Speaker 9 (29:07):
I started watching the Rams back in nineteen seventy six
or seventy seven.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
You know, Lawrence McCutcheon, you got the Diggerson year and
his time. Absolutely, absolutely I was. I went to my
first Rams game.

Speaker 9 (29:22):
It was against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers when they were
an expansion team and they went oh and fourteen back
when they had fourteen games.

Speaker 1 (29:29):
Yeah, so the Rams won like thirty three to nothing.
Was at the Coliseum. So you go back long enough
to remember when the Rams made the playoffs, there was
the Cowboys or the Vikings that would wipe them out
always yeahs usually Starbrock starback and the Cowboys were just
come in and wipe the mount Yeah. And I remember
crying when the Rams finally made it to the Super Bowl.
And lost in the fourth quarter to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

(29:52):
You know, my dad was a big Rams fan as well,
and he made a mistake in that game. And he
told me at halftime that he put fifty dollars for
each one of his kids on Pittsburgh, and I changed
allegiance for that second half. I was rooting for Pittsburgh
at that point to get that fifty. Yeah, and they covered.

Speaker 9 (30:12):
And I remember I ran into Terry Bradshaw many years
later when I was working for Jim Rome, and I said,
I'm still mad at you for what you did that
Super Bowl. He said, kid, get the f over. True story,
true story.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
That Super Bowl was here. Yes, yes, Rose Rose Bowl. Yeah,
I remember watching that sucker on TV. What's on the
Big Show night? Of course it's Friday, and it's also
Friday the thirteenth, so we're gonna be doing horror movies
and name that movie called Classic Excellent. I will be
listening Moe Kelly to Hold Team Up right now on
KFI AM six forty Conway Show on demand on the
iHeartRadio app. Now you can always hear us live on

(30:47):
KFI AM six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand on the iHeart Radio app.

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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