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September 18, 2024 31 mins
Pink Taco is closing after 12 years in business, and a little bit of rain is headed to SoCal in the upcoming forecast. //Governor Newsom is trying to push down gas prices claiming the high pricing is caused by oil company greed. And an 8-year-old child drove herself to Target. There’s also a second moon that will be visible on Earth for only 53 days. // There was an electric bill mix-up where a customer was paying his neighbors bill for possibly 18 years. A new airport satisfaction survey is out, and Conway is discussing the highest ranked airports. // Passengers on a Delta flight experienced bleeding ears and noses due to pressurization issues.  
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's k IF.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am six forty and you're listening to the Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Hey, I got
a call last week from somebody who works I guess
is loosely affiliated or works for Comedy Channel or Comedy Central,
and they're doing a show called So you Think You

(00:24):
Made It? And it's about Hollywood celebrities who I guess
you know, thought they were huge and put in their
place pretty quickly. And so one of them said, hey,
can we use that story that you tell on the

(00:46):
air about Gelson's And I said yeah, I said, you
know it, you know, And they said, well, can we
can we send you some legal papers? I said, buddy, us,
I don't just you it. I'm not going to get
lawyers invaulved and you know, just use it. And they said, well,
can I send you a paper? I said, yeah, send

(01:07):
me anything. I'll sign it. That's all yours.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
You can have it.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
And the story was I was at Gelson's on Laurel
Canyon and Riverside and this happened about, I don't know,
maybe five or six years ago, and I was here
at kffive. I was back in the Delhi section. I
took a number, you know, forty three, forty four, forty five,
forty six, seven, forty eight.

Speaker 3 (01:30):
I'm forty eight, forty eight.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
And so I walk up and the guy working at
Nelson's he looks around, he looks to his left, he
looks to his right, and he says, hey, we're not
supposed to and talk to celebrities at Nelson's. I said, oh, well,

(01:55):
if that's the rules, then don't do that. But he goes, hey,
what can I ask you a question? And I'm thinking, okay, yeah, sure,
you know, what are Johnny Ken like? You know, Gary Shannon,
House Krozier. You know, I was gonna be ready to
answer any question you might have. She goes, can I
ask you a question? I said, yeah, yeah, what do
you go?

Speaker 3 (02:14):
What do you got? He said?

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Does that guy over there look like David Spade to you?
That is a totally true story. Totally true story, Ding dong.
That's happened to me a couple of times. It happened
to me.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
Embarrassing.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
It happened with my My daughter was in the car
and we were going to Canes here in Burbank, and
we were driving around and we got to the window.

Speaker 3 (02:41):
We are already ordered.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
I was about to pay, and the guy looks at
me and goes tim and I looked at him and
go ding dong. And my daughter puts her head down
and she's like, Dad, remember you gave him your name
earlier at the order box. He's just asking if it's you.
He doesn't listen to KFI. She was thoroughly embarrassed by that,

(03:08):
completely embarrassed by that. But they're doing a whole a
TV show on it a Comedy Central or you know,
Comedy Channel or whatever it is called now. So I
don't know if they if the material is you know,
there's enough material there because there's enough idiots out there
like me. But maybe there's maybe there's that's possible. That's
certainly as possible. All right, let's get into the Pink

(03:29):
Taco is a very popular restaurant in Los Angeles.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
It's on the Sunset Strip.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
And guess what, like a lot of restaurants and a
lot of businesses just closed up.

Speaker 4 (03:41):
After twelve years, an iconic business along the Sunset Strip
has closed its doors. Pink Taco abruptly announced Monday with
a sign on its door saying sorry, we're closed. It's
also listed as permanently closed on yelp.

Speaker 5 (03:54):
Oh, it's horrible.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
That's terrible. It's a great restaurant.

Speaker 6 (03:57):
The reason remains unclear.

Speaker 4 (03:59):
Though West Hollywood Restaurant first opened its doors in twenty twelve,
there are still three other locations in New York, Boston,
and DC.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
Oh good, okay, well that's convenient.

Speaker 6 (04:09):
Patients in New York, Boston and DC.

Speaker 3 (04:12):
New York, Boston and DC.

Speaker 6 (04:15):
New York, Boston and DC.

Speaker 7 (04:18):
Yeah she was very yeah, yeah, very sexy.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
Have you ever been there? Croasy pink Taco?

Speaker 8 (04:25):
Never?

Speaker 2 (04:26):
It's great step you're Europe you love Mexican food?

Speaker 9 (04:30):
Right?

Speaker 7 (04:31):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (04:31):
You been? I actually never went to that one. Ah,
you missed out.

Speaker 7 (04:35):
I never been to a pink Taco.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
You never been to one? You've never been to one
in New York or Boston or d C. Never been there? Angel?

Speaker 8 (04:43):
You been?

Speaker 6 (04:44):
I've never been? Oh?

Speaker 3 (04:46):
You people?

Speaker 2 (04:46):
Where you guys go? You guys would to with Eltito
or Acabolco? Where are you guys going to get your
Mexican food? Taco Bell, Baby Taco, Bell Del Taco God
a mighty desert white not like me.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
Slide out there and I get the authentic food. Yeah,
against hold on.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Please yeah, dig dog go no, Tim, please bring it down,
please bring it down right, We're about to get you
remember last week one hundred and fifteen, one hundred and
sixteen in the in Burbank Woodland Hills, one seventeen. Well,
guess what we are about to get our first rainstorm.

Speaker 5 (05:22):
So when does fall get here?

Speaker 10 (05:24):
I've been touting this for the last couple of weeks,
and you'll fall on the calendar. Will officially get here
tomorrow on Sunday and on Sunday whatever on Sunday, and
it will early Sunday morning, seven forty three, it'll be
mostly clear. We're looking at a warm up. Our first
day of fall is going to feel like summer.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Hey, Croach, were you driving home last night? You see
the when the moon came up? How huge it looked? Absolutely? Man,
oh man, that it's gonna look again almost as big tonight.
But did you also notice that a piece was missing
from the top.

Speaker 3 (05:52):
That's the shading.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Yeah, there was the shadow of virtial partial what eclipse,
I guess I we'll call it. But man, when it comes,
that's the closest that the Moon's bend to Earth in
quite some times.

Speaker 7 (06:03):
It was weird because when I left here last night,
I saw it and it just looked gigantic as I
was driving home. By the time I got home and
looked out the window in my house, it didn't look
a thing.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Yeah, all right, But when it comes up it looks huge.

Speaker 7 (06:15):
Yeah, yeah, when first coming up that you got to
catch it early to see how large it is.

Speaker 2 (06:18):
And with all the smoke from the fires, it looks
really orange when it first came up.

Speaker 3 (06:22):
But you see it.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
We'll watch it again tonight. It comes out of the east,
rises out of the east, sets in the west.

Speaker 3 (06:30):
Maybe guys are hip to that already, But.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
As you're driving on any of the eastern freeways, the two, ten,
the ten, angel, what else is going west? Sixty? Any
even number is typically going east west. Ninety is a
good one.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
The eighty, the seventy, the fifty, the ninety, the ten
or the ten. It's another one, yeah, the twenty thirty four.

Speaker 2 (06:57):
Yeah, all right. Let's get back to the weather. When
we're going to get rain here, and this.

Speaker 10 (07:01):
Often happens when we're on the shoulders of seasons, right
summers leaving, fall is entering, but we're going to still
battle it out all the way and through October. We
tend to get sometimes a little bit of a warm
up where it feels a little summer like, and then
we get a cool down where it's like, Okay, yes,
fall is here, but that.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Is Yeah, we are going to get these Santa Ana
winds late September October, and that's going to be a
nightmare if any of these fires start.

Speaker 10 (07:24):
But that is typically the case for that first month
of any season, where we kind of go back and.

Speaker 5 (07:30):
Forth a little bit until fall officially here.

Speaker 10 (07:32):
It kind of just takes over a thingdays we get
in November and December area of low pressure.

Speaker 5 (07:35):
This is going to PLoP through Thursday into Friday. There
is a chance of rain.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
I don't rain is on the way for Thursday tomorrow
and early Friday.

Speaker 3 (07:44):
Rain rain, rain, not much, but man, we could use.

Speaker 10 (07:47):
It to say that we're going to get measurable rain,
but we will broadbrush the area with some spotty showers,
and I do think you should anticipate at least at
least a few showers on your Friday morning. Will they
be big significant, No, but enough to get the wind
shield wipers going in some spots. That's seventy two in
San Diego sixty eight to Santa Barbara in.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
The Orange can It's always fun to turn your wipers
on after they've melted in the summer, when it's one
hundred and fifteen degrees out and they they just destroy
your view. You can't see anything. The first you know
you got to get the new wipers. You never know
when to get the new wipers, though, you know you
want to get it after the last heat and before
the big rains start in November. And wipers are cheap nowadays.

(08:28):
You can go to Costco or Walmart and get them
for you know, nine bucks ten bucks per wiper, and
it does make a huge difference, huge difference. But putting
them on yourself, that is tricky. That is a very
complicated thing for most people to do. With me, it's
hit and miss. Either I do it in one second

(08:49):
or two hours later I throw it away. It's hit
and miss with me.

Speaker 10 (08:52):
Seventy six, seventy four tomorrow, we bought them out, same
with Friday, because that system passes to the north of us,
and it does bring us at least a chance of
some spotty light.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Showers, a lot of snow and rain up in the
Sierra Nevada. So we're moving on. I think we're done
with the most part for these triple digit temperatures. It's
gonna be hot this weekend in the valley ninety five,
ninety six, ninety seven, maybe one hundred, maybe one hundred,
but I think we're done with the one fifteens.

Speaker 10 (09:18):
The weekend looks for a warm up, beautiful on Saturday,
and then we get hot Sunday, Monday, Tuesday. We will
go back above the average, so we'll go from seventy
three to ninety nine.

Speaker 5 (09:28):
So we're talking to twenty.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
Five degree warm up in many seventy three to ninety nine.

Speaker 5 (09:33):
We will go back above the average, so we'll go
from seventy three to ninety nine.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
Oh no, So.

Speaker 10 (09:38):
We're talking to twenty five degree warm up in many
areas from where will end the week and where we'll
start the week next week, So we do anticipate a
major change.

Speaker 5 (09:48):
It looks like that sandwich day.

Speaker 10 (09:49):
In the middle Friday into Saturday, Friday afternoon Saturday, if
that's your best time frame right there. Temperature is not
too hot, not too cold. We are looking at temperatures
that will be warm and above the average.

Speaker 5 (09:59):
I don't even think this way.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
I can't believe this, but we slept with the window
open last night, and at one point my wife and
I said, I gotta shut the window on freezing because.

Speaker 3 (10:10):
It was fifty nine degrees. Did the same thing. Yeah,
it was horrible.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
You know, one week agoes one hundred and twenty thousand
degrees and now I had to get up out of
bed freezing to shut the window because we were, you know,
about to get frostbite or something like that.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
Whatever.

Speaker 8 (10:29):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on de Mayo from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
I was watching the news earlier.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
There's not a lot of information on this, but there
was a big fight at Palmdale High School. So maybe
if you have a kid, brother or sister goes to
Palmdale High School, there was some major, major fight. Up
to one hundred students involved. Cops are out there, La
County Sheriff. It was in lockdown for a while. So
if you have a kid that goes there, you know,

(10:59):
ask him what happened. Because we don't have much information.
They're not giving that much information on odd odd odd
odd gas prices. Governor Newsom is pushing to take gas
prices and shove them down. We've been paying way too
much for gasoline in the state of California lately, and
we need a break.

Speaker 11 (11:18):
Well, there's no secret the gas in the state of
California is some of the most expensive in the nation.
In fact, according to numbers that we have seen from
Triple A, the average price for a down of gasoline
in California is about four dollars and seventy eight cents.
That is a dollar fifty more than the national average. Well,
Governor Gavin Newsom says that he blames oil companies for

(11:39):
that huge gap. His idea is to make rules for
refineries to store backup oil.

Speaker 5 (11:45):
In the event that they need to shut down for maintenance.

Speaker 11 (11:48):
He says those maintenance shutdowns directly lead to price price spikes,
several of which we saw last fall. That's right, he's arguing,
if his plan were in place last year California's you
could have saved as a whole millions, perhaps billions of dollars.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Okay, one of the reasons why gas spikes is when
they take a refinery off line for maintenance or maybe
there's an explosion, and that's one of the reasons. But
another reason taxes. We pay more than any other state
in taxes for gasoline.

Speaker 11 (12:21):
Industry leaders, however, say, use them's idea can cost them
a lot more money.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
And you know what, and are we are? We don't
have a choice here in California. We all drive, or
most of us do. Most Almost everybody I know drives
or has a car. Almost everybody. Even people are making
you know, ten fifteen bucks an hour. Somehow they've been
able to put together a car and they drive themselves around.
But if you lived in New York City, you probably

(12:47):
don't know anybody who has a car. You could go
to New York and live there and work there without
a car for three, four or five years and never
even think about it. And if somebody has a car
and lives in New York, you think they're an idiot
for owning a car because they never use it. You
take a cab or the subway wherever you want to go,

(13:08):
unless you have a house and you live in New Jersey.
But if you live in Manhattan and you own a car,
either you're really rich or you're not that bright. There's
the only two people that owned cars in Manhattan. It's
extremely expensive to park in Manhattan, but here in California,
you need a car. You can't give it up. In California,

(13:29):
you have to have it to get around.

Speaker 11 (13:31):
By costing them more money that can drive prices to
go even higher. Whereas Democratic lawmakers embrace the special session,
hoping to properly vet his idea.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
All right, speaking of cars, we had a kid who's
only eight years old, and he drove himself to Target.

Speaker 9 (13:49):
Eight year old who drove herself more than a dozen.

Speaker 2 (13:52):
Miles alone to Target to get to a Target's Wow.

Speaker 3 (13:56):
What a great commercial for Target.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
You know, it's so popular and it's such a great
place that kids who are eight years old are taking
dad's car to Target.

Speaker 3 (14:06):
That's a great commercial, great TV commercial.

Speaker 6 (14:09):
It looks like a kid.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
Okay, it's a light. Yeah, I have a license plate.

Speaker 6 (14:19):
Okay, what is that? Kaf oil boy? A driver called
in the plates. Luckily enough, the eight year old girl
and the car.

Speaker 12 (14:27):
Had both been reported missing on Sunday morning. Lossters later
found the child alone inside.

Speaker 6 (14:32):
Of a Target.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
What what grade are you in at eight? Are you
in second grade? Third grade?

Speaker 5 (14:38):
Okay?

Speaker 3 (14:39):
Second grade? Third grade and you're driving to Target? Man?

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Oh man, that girl. I think that girl's going to
go on to be something in life. A lot of ambition,
you know, getting that car out. I don't know how
you reached the pedals at eight, but I took off
and went to her favorite place, Target a little bit,
but she was getting there all right, all right, she
enjoys Target. They've got to make that into a commercial.

(15:06):
It's a great online commercial, maybe not on TV, but
a great social media commercial. Throw that kid, eight year
old in a car and she's off the target.

Speaker 12 (15:15):
All are.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
We talked about this earlier, the second moon. You're going
to see it east when as you drive home tonight,
maybe you will live in are you working downtown LA?
And you're going to drive to Illin Empire. You're going
to see this big ass moon tonight.

Speaker 13 (15:26):
Earth is about to have a temporary second moon. Meet
twenty twenty four pt five, a small asteroid recently discovered
that will be captured by Earth's gravity for just fifty
three days.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Yeah, and this is going to be about two and
a half times the distance of the Moon, and so
it's very close to Earth. This is going to be
they're calling it a second moon. It's going to be
around for fifty three days though, and it's going to
be visible to the naked eye.

Speaker 13 (15:50):
Starting at the end of this month, this mini moon
will make a brief orbit around our planet before continuing
its journey through space, although you won't be able to
see it with the naked eye.

Speaker 3 (16:00):
That's not true. I heard you can see with the
naked eye, although you.

Speaker 13 (16:03):
Won't be able to see it with the naked eye.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
I have good eyes. I want to saddleback. I can
see everything.

Speaker 13 (16:09):
Scientists are excited to study how Earth's gravity affects it.
This rare event gives us a deeper understanding of asteroid
behavior and could even impact future space missions.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
Yeah, hope it doesn't hit us, and that would wipe
us out, wipe us out. I saw I heard something
interesting on the internet, and we talked about this a
couple weeks ago. But anyone that was born before eighteen forty,
for some reason, that date sticks out. And I don't
know why they've determined that, but scientists and historians they

(16:40):
all believe that right around the same date, all around
eighteen forty. But anyone who lived before eighteen forty never
knew that there were dinosaurs on this planet. For millions
and millions and millions of years, nobody ever knew it.
There were no fossils that were found, there were no
scientists that knew, there was no carbon dating, there was

(17:02):
none of that.

Speaker 3 (17:02):
Wow. Wow.

Speaker 2 (17:03):
So if you were born before eighteen forty, you never
knew dinosaurs existed. That is crazy. Yeah, now we have.

Speaker 8 (17:10):
Now we have.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
You can go down to the museum and see one.
They got the bones in one downtown see check him out.

Speaker 8 (17:18):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
We have a story here about an electric bill mix up.
This guy was paid it lives in an apartment building
and he was paying his neighbors electric bill for how long?
Let's do a whip around here, all right? How long
was this guy paying his electric bill? But it wasn't his,
It was his neighbors that he was paying, and his

(17:46):
neighbor was paying his, so they just chris crossed them.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
How many?

Speaker 2 (17:50):
How long was this guy paying his neighbors electric bills?

Speaker 3 (17:53):
Steph Oush, I know it? Oh you do?

Speaker 2 (17:56):
Okay Croach two years, two years, Angel Martinez.

Speaker 3 (18:02):
Three years, three years.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
Matt one year, one year. All right, let's find out
how long this guy was paying it?

Speaker 3 (18:12):
A neighbors electric bill.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
The Northern California man is shocked after he finds out
he's been paying someone else's utility bill.

Speaker 6 (18:19):
This story is really crazy.

Speaker 12 (18:20):
Ken Wilson lives alone in his Vacaville apartment.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
When is there that's a brag? Huh.

Speaker 12 (18:25):
Wilson lives alone in his Vacaville apartment. When his bill
spiked a few months ago, he tried to cut back,
even buying a device to tell him how many watts
his appliances were using. The bill stayed high, and he
finally called PG and E and that's when he found
out he's been paying the bill for the unit next
door for how long? Possibly for eighteen years.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
Eighteen years, macarena, eighteen years. Let's find out real quickly.
Let me see, all right, So he's been doing it
for eighteen years, and that means two hundred and sixteen months,
two hundred and sixteen electric bills they were paid that
weren't his.

Speaker 11 (19:06):
Even after I turned off my breakers, I was I
kept going outside to check my meter to see if
it was still running, and it was still running.

Speaker 6 (19:13):
And I couldn't believe that PG.

Speaker 12 (19:15):
And E has owned up to the mistake and says
it is committed to making it right, though it has
not said exactly.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
How committed to making it right? How about committed to
paying this guy ten thousand or fifty thousand dollars?

Speaker 12 (19:27):
Jacon says it is committed to making it right, though
it has not said exactly how.

Speaker 5 (19:32):
Well.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
I know how just exchange bills. Give the neighbor your bill,
and you take the neighbor's bill.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
Boom.

Speaker 12 (19:39):
This is probably a rare occurrence, but here's a tip
just in case. The meter ID number is listed on
the monthly bill, so it might be a good idea
to check to make sure they match.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
I'll be right on that. I get on that.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Yeah, I got nothing else to do. I will get
on it all right. Airport's satisfaction Where are we with lax?

Speaker 14 (20:01):
A new study from JD Power has revealed which North
American airports travelers find most satisfying. The list includes Minneapolis
Saint Paul International Airport at number one.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
Wow, okay, all right, the Twin Cities number one.

Speaker 14 (20:13):
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport at number two, and Phoenix
Sky Harbor International Airport at number three.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
You know it's another good airport, well, Burbank, it will
be great once they're done with it. But that San
Jose Airport is terrific. So it's Portland, Yeah, gonna.

Speaker 3 (20:27):
I'm surprised Portland wasn't higher. Yeah, Portland not three.

Speaker 2 (20:30):
They just renovate their airport. It is spectacular, unport believably. Yeah,
it's all wood now inside. Oh wow, and it just
I gotta show you some pictures.

Speaker 7 (20:39):
And it was highly ranked for a number of years.
That's what I'm surprised, especially with the remodel, that it's
not higher.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
You know, you see all over Portland Airport that you
don't see at Burbank or Lax. There are signs everywhere
you can't you can't miss them. And the sign reads,
if you're paying more for a product in the airport
that you were then you were paying outside the airport,
call this phone number. So if you have a McDonald's
in Portland Airport, it has to be the same price

(21:05):
for a big Mac outside. This is inside that airport
and that's how they keep the prices down.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
That should be make them number one period.

Speaker 2 (21:13):
You're right, but they're smart because they don't charge like
if you if you have a retail space at Lax,
it's tremendously expensive. That's why you got to charge more
for your product. But at Portland Airport they don't charge
much more. I think it's like a typical price if
you had a store inside the airport or outside the airport.
But if you're charged more for you know, they have

(21:33):
a Nike store in there, and if you're if you're
buying Nike shoes inside the airport, they have to be
the same price as you're buying at the mall exactly.

Speaker 7 (21:41):
That should be a law period everywhere, at every airport.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Because you know this Burbank Airport, I got a tall
bottle of water maybe it was a Leader Leader and
a half nine dollars.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Come on for one bottle of water nine bucks.

Speaker 14 (21:57):
Fourth on the list is John F. Kennedy International Airport.
What JFK got fourth? No way?

Speaker 2 (22:05):
I'm with Glenn right, No way, no way, no possible way,
no way. That's New Yorkers just voting for their own craft. Yeah,
no way, man, it's Glenn Walker to one o'clocker with
Glenn Walker, no way, no way.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
Man.

Speaker 14 (22:21):
Will Lax ranked below average at fourteen. The survey evaluated
ease of travel, level of trust with the airport terminal facilities, staff,
departure experience, food, beverage and retail options, and a rival experience.

Speaker 6 (22:35):
Yeah, Lax all better by twenty twenty eight.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Sure you say so. I hope l Ax does get better. Really,
I hope it does the negative men. I know everybody
as is on, including myself.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
It's so cool to crap on it and I do too, right,
especially when they make you wait two hours?

Speaker 3 (22:55):
Was it two hours?

Speaker 7 (22:55):
At least two hours as sitting on the time, I
just did get off the plane, not leave it.

Speaker 3 (23:00):
That's it. And that's at the end of the trip.

Speaker 2 (23:03):
You know, if it was the beginning of a vacation,
you could tolerate it because you're thinking about, you know,
going to the beach or playing golf, for hanging out
to sleep. But when you're coming home, you just want
to get home. Oh my gosh, I just want to
get home. I remember flying back to Lax and my
daughter my wife were hungry, so we stopped at the
Carls on Century Boulevard. They're a couple like a half

(23:26):
mile quarter mile from Lax and I go through the
drive through and there's bars on the drive through window,
and I said, the young lady works, and I said, hey, what's.

Speaker 3 (23:35):
Going on here?

Speaker 2 (23:35):
You got bars on the window and she said, yeah,
week ago a guy jumped through the window and robbed
the place. Like okay, well, this is the welcome to
Los Angeles to math for everybody.

Speaker 13 (23:45):
You know.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
Guy flies to LA for the first time and the
first thing he does he wants to get a burger
and he has to see bars on the window. All right,
Speaking of flying and airports, we have a horrible story here.
It's probably the fear of a lot of people who fly.
And we'll come back. I'm going to tell you about it.
But this turned into a bloody mess on this flight.

(24:05):
We'll tell you what happened. We'll come back blood everywhere.

Speaker 8 (24:09):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
But look east.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
In about a half hour you're going to see this
big ass moon, huge moon tonight. It'll rise in Burbank
at seven twenty six if you're in Ontario, seven twenty three,
so right, start looking around seven twenty. It'll come up
over the mountains and you'll see thisw big, huge, beautiful

(24:38):
orange moon coming right up over those hills and with
all the smoke from the fires and especially how big
it is and how close the moon is to Earth
right now.

Speaker 3 (24:49):
It is going to be spectacular, but you gotta catch
it early.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
If you catch it too late, it gets too small
and there's nothing interesting about that, nothing, nothing at all.
So you got to catch it in about a half hour,
almost exactly a half hour from now, moon coming up.
So you're stuck on the ten. I don't know what
freeway you're on, ninety fifty seventy two ten, whatever it is.

(25:15):
If you're going east, look up, look out, and look at.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
That moon all right.

Speaker 2 (25:19):
A bloody flight, A flight that turned into a bloody
mess coming out of Utah on Delta Airlines.

Speaker 15 (25:26):
Knew this midday some scary moments in the sky for
some Delta Airline passengers. The pressurization issue on a recent
flight caused bloody noses and some severe ear pain for
several travelers. Passengers say they started to feel pain shortly
after the flight departed from Salt Lake City. It was
en route to Portland, Oregon, on Sunday. One passenger said

(25:47):
it felt like somebody was stabbing her ear. She later
discovered she had a ruptured ear drum. The plane returned
to Salt Lake medical personnel met it there. There were
no serious injuries, but ten passengers needed evaluation or treatment.

Speaker 9 (26:00):
I looked over at my husband and he had both
of his hands over his ears.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
Yeah, that was on the weight of the airport.

Speaker 9 (26:07):
I looked over at my husband and he had both
of the hands over his ears.

Speaker 3 (26:10):
That was also a Thanksgiving of last year.

Speaker 9 (26:13):
I looked over at my husband and he had both
of his hands over his ears.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
That was during No No. That was during the Rams
Phoenix Cardinals game.

Speaker 9 (26:20):
I looked over at my husband and he had both
of his hands over his ears.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Oh no, that's when you said, you want to tell
me a story about a woman you work with at
a union bank.

Speaker 9 (26:29):
I looked over at my husband and he had both
of his hands over his ears. They finally announced that
we were going to head back to the airport. Still
didn't say why did you feel they could have done
a little bit better letting us know what was happening.

Speaker 15 (26:41):
The FAA is now investigating. Delta says technicians fixed the
pressure issue on the aircraft and the plane was returned
to service the following day.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Yeah, this is Bellio talking about John when he watches
college football on Saturday I looked over.

Speaker 9 (26:57):
At my husband and he had both of the hands
overs years.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
All right, all right, all right, she's not here to
defend herself. I get it, cheap shot, I get it.

Speaker 13 (27:07):
I get it.

Speaker 2 (27:08):
If you love coffee, you might be living forever and
ever and ever. Two cups of coffee is linked to
lower risk in heart disease.

Speaker 16 (27:18):
Arian taking a look at a new study that suggested
two or three cups of coffee a day is linked
to a lower risk of heart and metabolic disease. You
could appreciate this story evil, Well, hopefully you do appreciate
this new data. So it's adding to the existing research
that we know about coffee and its benefits. It looks
at over one hundred and eighty thousand participants and examining
and comparing the outcomes of those who have a lot

(27:39):
of coffee in a day three to four cups, to
those who have only a.

Speaker 3 (27:42):
Cup of coffee or none.

Speaker 16 (27:44):
And they found that those who had between two to
three cups of coffee has significant cardiovascular benefits.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
That's a that's an important statement. I'm going to play
it again for you. Listen to this.

Speaker 16 (27:53):
And they found that those who had between two to
three cups of coffee has significant cardiovascular benefits.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
How about that to three cups of common Now we're
not and look, we're not talking about two to three
milkshakes a day. You know, before we all we all
used to drink coffee. Now we drink milkshakes. You know,
you go to I don't know, Starbucks or Dutch Brothers
wherever you go to get your coffee, coffee, bean, tea.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
Leaf, whatever that thing is.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
And we wonder why we've become so fat in this
nation because instead of having two or three cups of
coffee a day, we have two or three milkshakes a day.
That's what's going on, all right, mo Kelly joins us.
Huge moon tonight, buddy, huge big ass moon.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
And it's supposed to be like orange or something. Yes, yeah,
it's gonna be great harvest moon. I think they call it.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
In about in about twenty five minutes, it's gonna start
to happen.

Speaker 3 (28:46):
So it's gonna be visible through that one, now I won't.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
I think it'll it's gonna be too far east to
see if the studio to see it. That's exactly right,
exactly right. Well, what's on the big show night man?

Speaker 1 (28:57):
Well, we got to talk about the rain, which is
coming the rest of the metro. They're in trouble again.
Ran down a car or a car ran into a train.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
One of the two.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
It derailed the train. They can't catch a break. Cannot
catch a break, or at least not with me. Right,
And since the last time we talked, they still haven't.

Speaker 3 (29:11):
Reached out to me. But they should.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
They should, Yeah, because they reach out to everybody, you know,
that's just not you.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
They know how to get in touch with me.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
They just look, I don't think I'm intimidating, that's right,
that's right.

Speaker 2 (29:22):
And Tupperware is going out of business. Yeah, I'm sorry.
My grandmother is a huge fan. I'm sure yours was
as well. Yes, little tupperware around the house and it
and it gets faded and turns different colors. You know,
you put the spagetti colored food, Yeah, the color of
the food.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
I forgot that.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
Tupperware is a brand like Kleenex, right, but it's almost
generic now for.

Speaker 3 (29:45):
Just stuff you save your food.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
Yeah, and I think you know, Glad and some of
these other companies they put out a similar, you know, product,
but it wasn't as good as Tupperware. But people didn't
character it was cheaper, didn't care, and they went for it.

Speaker 5 (29:57):
I saw.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
I think it was Tiffany who put out that article
or wrote something on social media about that new costco
going into Baldwin Hills. Yes, but there's a people are
pissed or really happy. There's nobody really on the fence
on that.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
There's no end between, if only because the neighborhood has
been changing for the past few years to people who
are there five years ago probably are not there now
or could not afford to be there now.

Speaker 2 (30:24):
It's very expensive and it's already super super crowded. Anytime
you go to lax and you have to go through
that corridor, it's always, there's always traffic.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
There, always, and it's you know, just a hop skip
over from sofar in Inglewoods. So you're just adding two
problems on top of problems. And they're going to add
eight hundred apartments. Eight hundred apartments that could mean a
thousand or twelve hundred cars. You know, if you have
an apartment, you know, a husband and wife, they each
have a car.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
Everybody's got to have at least one car.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
Yeah, it's in California, it's at least eight hundred cars, Yeah,
and could be more. The only saving grace though to
living there is if you're out of toilet paper, it's
right downstairs.

Speaker 1 (31:01):
It could not be any better where you could go
down in your robe on your slippers and get some
stuff and run back upstairs. It's almost like a part
of your house.

Speaker 2 (31:07):
Yeah, dollar and a half hot dog downstairs. But we
were talking earlier about the new Price Club, or not
the New Price Club, the old Price Club which is
now Costco.

Speaker 3 (31:16):
But it was in Englewood. That's where we used to go,
right across from in Hollywood Park. I'm sure you went
there as a kid. Oh, I'm sure. Yeah, it was.
It was great.

Speaker 2 (31:23):
It was a great time O life, buddy. I'll be listening.
Nice to see a moon rising in twenty five minutes
out of the east.

Speaker 3 (31:30):
It should be spectacular.

Speaker 8 (31:31):
You know.

Speaker 1 (31:32):
I should just take a few segments off and just
go out and the station's not going anywhere.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Yeah, that's right. Put on the best step of the hell.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
All right, we're live Moe Kelly Nax to this whole
crew No Live next on CAFI AMS forty 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 iHeart Radio app.

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