Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to the
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
The ninety nine cent stores went bk because there was
enough money in that in that game. But now the
Dollar General has bought a couple of locations or taken
over a couple of locations. They're won in Burbank on
Buena Vista and Victory. There was a ninety nine cent
store there before it went out of business, and now
there's a Dollar General or Dollar Store. And I wonder
(00:31):
if that's like the upper echelon of those type of
stores that you feel better about going to Dollar General
than a ninety nine cent store. Oh, I see, Maybe
I don't know what is the story at Dollar General.
Are the things sort of just generally a dollar or
is it they used to be they used to be
Now they're you know, two dollars, three dollars, four dollars.
(00:51):
But I like the Dollar General. There's a Dollar General
up in where my wife's from, in Oregon, and we
sometimes my wife and I and my daughter just get
in the car and go, hey, let's go to the
Dollar General and just look around. Wow, and you get
like good deals. You end up spending like, you know,
forty eight dollars not a dollar. Yeah, but there are
some sweet deals at Dollar General. I like Dollar General.
(01:12):
Dollar Store, Dollar King is another one. Yeah, I like
the dollar store. I take a roll through a dollar store.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
Have you ever been to a dollar store?
Speaker 4 (01:19):
Well, I've been a ninety nine cent store many times.
Oh yeah, I like that. I always like you to
feel like I'm getting a bargain somehow.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
I always thought there would be a great cooking show
of the ninety nine cents store, you know, gourmet or
a chef ninety nine.
Speaker 4 (01:35):
I love that.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
And he had to cook a full meal out of
the crap that they sell at the ninety.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
Nine I think that's actually not a bad show.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
All right, Well, go for it. You could use that
at home, okay, All right, here we go. Discount stores.
The new generation, the Generation Z's and millennials are well,
they're spending a lot of money at these discount stores.
Speaker 5 (01:55):
Gen Z and Millennial shoppers are on the hunt for
deals and finding that that's popular. Discount stores.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Oh my gosh, I need it all.
Speaker 5 (02:02):
From TJ Max and Marshall's to Ross and Burlington. These
are not your grandparents, big box bargains.
Speaker 6 (02:09):
Once you go, you become like obsessed because it's just
like addicting.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
I'm one hundred percent with her. Once you go, I'm
one hundred percent with her my favorite look. I know
people think I'm bs ing, I'm not ms. I'll mss this,
And if you m a something in prison and you lie,
you get murdered. But whenever we go to Walmart, I
always our first stop is the clearance section to see
if there's any bargains over there.
Speaker 3 (02:35):
You know, because there's stuff.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
In the store that they have like only one, two
or three items left, they'll not fifty percent off and
sell it to you for next and night.
Speaker 4 (02:43):
When there used to be video stores, I used to
go discount ben let's tee you what's there?
Speaker 3 (02:48):
You want to see what you can save some money.
Speaker 7 (02:50):
Once you go, you.
Speaker 8 (02:51):
Become like obsessed because it's just like addicting.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
It's one hundred percent right with discount stores dollars stores,
you feel like you're going in and you're going to
get a bargain. You don't feel like that in other stores.
You do a dollar general ninety nine cents.
Speaker 5 (03:07):
Though after years of high inflation hurting consumer's wallats this
is our budget.
Speaker 9 (03:12):
It's not a whole lot, so was keep it on
the low side.
Speaker 3 (03:15):
It was like guy three, sounds like a young kid.
Speaker 9 (03:18):
This is our budget, it's not a whole lot, so
just keep it on the low side.
Speaker 3 (03:23):
I think it's a is it, it's like a child.
Speaker 5 (03:26):
A report from the Bank of America Institute found that
spending on value apparel is higher for younger customers compared
to older age groups.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Yeah, because they're broke. Young people are broke, got no money.
Speaker 10 (03:37):
They think they're out there in the world and seeing
how expensive things are.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
Prices are coming down now.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
But yeah, everyone's conscious about prices. And I feel bad
for people that are coming to America right now because
they don't know it. The party's over. We're thirty five
trillion dollars in debt. We don't have any more money
for any more projects. This is not the nineteen seventies,
nineteen sixties, nineteen eighties. This is twenty twenty four, and
(04:05):
there's no money left. You've come to this party right
when we're cleaning up.
Speaker 4 (04:10):
I'll give you that. It's not the heat of the party,
but I still think that there's still some We got
some lives. Yeah, I think so. I mean, but I
accept your general notion, which is I always say when
people go I just gotten by American citizenship, I always
go out, congratulations if you got here just in the
neck of time to help dismantle the place.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
But if it's I think the big part of the
of the party is over, Like the wedding's over, the
reception is almost over, and I think people are starting
to put their instruments away and they're cleaning up table.
Speaker 3 (04:44):
I think I think that's where we are.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
It's fair, but there could be some after hours parties still.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
Oh that's true, that's true.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
But I think we just have enough money in this
country right now to pay off the interest of our debt.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
And that's true. Well we're just paying we're just paying
the interest on it.
Speaker 4 (04:59):
A a lot of ways to knock that debt down,
as you know, and let's let's do it. Yeah, we
need to do it.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
You know, we should do it.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Like I know, the there's a lot of foreign governments
that own a lot of our debt.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
What we should do is tell them, come get it,
come get it.
Speaker 4 (05:18):
Well, how close you get there there? You know, we
need them to buy that debt, right that's what's financing
our debts, right.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
I don't know if they're still buying it like they
used to, though it's still slowed down.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
I think that's the thing that they buy, of course,
is a stable political system, right, because that's the problem
you buy into these you know. There's the thing. My
pal got married in Ukraine and I was over there.
This is obviously pretty war by a bunch, and they
were had all these great deals. If you put your
money in a Ukrainian bank for a year, the interest
that was insanely high. And I remember saying to someone, Gosh,
(05:52):
it seems like that's a pretty good deal. They said, well,
it's not the most stable government really. Yeah, this is
before the war, before Russian So the point is the
one thing I think investors buy and the other countries
by when they buy that stability.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
Have you been to Ukraine?
Speaker 4 (06:06):
Yeah? I was there for a week. It's pretty cool.
It was really great. It was just fascinating. I mean,
it's so different.
Speaker 2 (06:13):
I like going to I've only been to Europe once
in my life. I was there for four days and
hated it and left. But it's nice to see, how
you know, buildings that are you know, six seven, eight
hundred years old exact, you know, and people live in
these in these beautiful places you only see on YouTube
videos or you know, travel guides, and people live there.
(06:34):
You know, in Venice, there are people that live there
for you know, generation of generations of generation. One of
the most beautiful cities in the world, and they live there. Sure,
it's kind of cool to see the locals.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
I told you about playing a poker there and I
was in the casino, Remember I told you I walk
in it was like it was like a bonfire had
been lit. It was so filled with acrid smoke. It
was incredible. Like we're just not used to it the
way it used to be that way in this country, right,
but you walk in it's like, oh my god, it's
a wall of cigarette smoke. And then you're there for
hours and you're playing poker with people who you know,
(07:06):
most of them don't speak English. It was kind of fun.
It was sort of exotic. Verry James Bond, Yeah, I
do like that.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
I like, you know, seeing how people live outside of
you know, the San Fernando.
Speaker 4 (07:16):
Value right now, it's very exotic, it really is.
Speaker 3 (07:18):
It's cool.
Speaker 10 (07:19):
These two generations in particular have grown up with this,
they have lived this, and they are experiencing it every day.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
The share of value spending has increased four percentage points
for both Gen Z and millennials in the last year,
far out pacing older generations. Twenty four year old Bethany
Brooks says stores like TJ Max and Marshall's, which offer
big discounts on sought after name brands, allow her to
build her dream wardrobe on a budget.
Speaker 6 (07:44):
It's just really exciting when you get a cute T
shirt for ten dollars, it's like one hundred dollars normally
with inflation and just the cost of living itself.
Speaker 11 (07:52):
Like, I can't remember the last time I spent full
price on anything.
Speaker 5 (07:56):
According to Bank of America's research, spending on value apparel
over increased thirteen percent this July compared to July twenty nineteen.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
Two into the weeds. I guess people are going to
discount stories. That's the Yeah, that's the bottom line. Yeah,
value is what they want.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
Very good.
Speaker 7 (08:13):
You're listening to Tim conwayjun you're on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
We got a lot more things to cover, a lot
more things we're going to cover here. You've been watching
on TV the Menendez I.
Speaker 4 (08:27):
Just started watching that the Menendez dramatic telling of that
story finally killed their parents on Netflix exactly, and.
Speaker 2 (08:38):
Some people believe that they didn't kill their parents. All
the evidence shows that they did, though I don't know,
I don't know. It's odd you'll find out. Eric Menendez,
one of the Menendez brothers, I'm guessing he'd believes that
they didn't. You're right, You're right, you nailed it. Yeah,
but it's he's slamming the Netflix documentary.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
Yeah, he doesn't lie, he's not had.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
It's calling it dishonest.
Speaker 9 (09:01):
Netflix's latest true crime drama making headlines of its own. Monsters,
the Lyle and Eric Menendez Story centers on the infamous
brothers convicted of murdering their parents. While it's currently the
streamers number one show, the real life subject to Eric
Menndez is slamming the series, saying it is rampant with
(09:22):
horrible and blatant lies.
Speaker 2 (09:24):
Well, I mean to start with the title of it
is monsters. You know, I don't know how much wiggle
rome you're going to have after that. So I do
get the point that he's pissed that it's called Monsters.
Speaker 9 (09:37):
The show, which portrays the brother's alleged abuse at the
hands of their father, also implies an intimate relationship between
the brothers, which has drawn viewer backlash.
Speaker 8 (09:46):
Can we please stop Ryan Murphy from making any more shows?
Speaker 9 (09:50):
In a statement released by his wife, what does that?
Speaker 3 (09:53):
Who's that?
Speaker 8 (09:53):
Can we please stop Ryan Murphy from making any more shows?
Speaker 3 (09:56):
Who's Ryan Murphy's? What else has he done?
Speaker 12 (10:01):
He's done? He started his biggest, real, big thing I
think was very.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
Oh gleat American horror story.
Speaker 12 (10:06):
Yeah, but then American hairstory, Oh horror story came after
that o.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
American crime story and yeah, okay, and so this kid
who said this not a fan?
Speaker 8 (10:16):
Can we please stop Ryan Murphy from making any more shows?
Speaker 9 (10:20):
In a statement released by his wife, Tammy, Eric writes,
it is sad for me to know that netflix dishonest
portrayal of the tragedies surrounding our crime have taken the
painful truths several steps backward. In nineteen eighty nine, jose
and Kitty Menendez were found brutally murdered in their Beverly
(10:41):
Hills mansion.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
Wow that was nineteen eighty nine.
Speaker 4 (10:44):
Yeah, that's a wild Wow. It doesn't feel like it
was that long ago. I don't.
Speaker 3 (10:49):
I think they got that number wrong.
Speaker 12 (10:51):
That was one of the first things that John and
Ken when they came here to KFI, and I like
that was one of their first big noticeable things they did,
was that frieda Benendi.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
I think that dates wrong though, nineteen eighty nine. I
thought it was nineteen ninety ninety eight. I think they
got that wrong. Maybe it is eighty nine.
Speaker 12 (11:11):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
I'll have to look it up.
Speaker 9 (11:13):
Their sons ultimately admitted to the fatal shootings, but argued
it was an act of self defense, saying their father
had physically and sexually abused them for years.
Speaker 3 (11:23):
He said that he didn't mean to hurt me.
Speaker 9 (11:26):
Now, Eric is criticizing the show's co creator for what he.
Speaker 12 (11:28):
Called We're convicted in ninety six. Oh I see, Okay,
Well it took him that long seven years.
Speaker 4 (11:35):
Well, they had that, they had that. Who was it,
Leslie Abrams? Is that rely?
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Yeah? Leslie Abrams?
Speaker 2 (11:40):
Yeah, that and she successfully got a hung jury on
the first one.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
Yeah, and then they nailed them on the second one.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
That was why it took so long. But yeah, and
that whole defense, which is associated really, you know, there's
never I didn't think there was any doubt as to
whether or not they killed him. But the idea was
that they had, as it suggested, here been the subjects
of abuse for so long and that they just snapped.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
Yeah, you know it was I do remember a lot
of details about that case, though, even though it was
you know, forty years ago or more than forty years ago.
Forty it happened forty three years ago. Well, let me
see twenty four eleven, it's thirty five years ago that happened,
and and so that's that's a long time, thirty five years.
(12:25):
But I still remember remember the ice cream when you know,
the cop showed up, there was still like you know,
ice cream that was frozen or it melted. Oh no,
It was a lot of that small beeh of what
happened in this house.
Speaker 9 (12:38):
Adding I believe Ryan Murphy cannot be this Nie.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
And I know where the house is too. You're past
the house, you know where it is, No, where is it?
It's right off of Sunset near Beverly Glen and I
and it's weird to pass the house and like look
in there and go, wow, that's where this all this
crap happened.
Speaker 9 (12:53):
That's wild, adding, I believe Ryan Murphy cannot be this
naive and inaccurate about the facts of our lives so
as to do this without bad intent. Just days after
Eric denounced the show, Kim Kardashian visited the California prison
where the brothers are serving life sentences.
Speaker 4 (13:10):
What why is she there?
Speaker 9 (13:13):
Kim Kardashian visited the California prison where the brothers are
serving life sentences.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
She doesn't have enough publicity, She's got to get more.
Speaker 9 (13:21):
Along with Cooper Kotch, the actor portraying Eric, Kardashian wasn't
there to see the brothers specifically, but they were part
of a group of forty prisoners meeting with the star
as part of her regular work on prison reform. According
to a source familiar with the situation, the criminal justice
advocate has collaborated with the Monster's creator before starring in
season twelve of Murphy's show, American Horror Story.
Speaker 8 (13:43):
We are shifting your entire attitude right now.
Speaker 7 (13:46):
A right.
Speaker 12 (13:47):
It's an interesting little tidbit of what a different era
it was when all that was taking place, when the
first trial was taking part, the prosecutors they tried to
say that, because you know, the defense was as they
had been raped by dad and all that. One of
the prosecutor said that the men could not be raped
because they lacked the necessary equipment to be raped. What yeah,
(14:08):
really that was It was a different era back Oh,
I see, okay, and getting raped apparently wasn't a thing
back then.
Speaker 2 (14:14):
Got almighty, man, you imagine presenting that in court nowadays?
Speaker 3 (14:17):
Right?
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Yeah, No, she didn't have a woman parts, so she
couldn't get raped.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
What is that possible?
Speaker 10 (14:24):
No?
Speaker 2 (14:25):
Of course that is what a crazy time. So who
knows whether this will lead to it, you know, another
trial or not. But those kids, how old are they now?
They got to be in their forties, fifties.
Speaker 12 (14:38):
I wonder how Lyle and Eric Menendez fifty six fifty
six my age.
Speaker 4 (14:44):
I feel like one of them got married in prison,
didn't there?
Speaker 3 (14:47):
So yeah, I mean fifty six. I still even think
about those guys as kids. It was like teenagers.
Speaker 2 (14:54):
They didn't help their case when mom and dad died
and they went on a spending spree.
Speaker 4 (14:59):
Yeah, they explained that in the trial. I forget what
the explanation was for that. Krozier, there was an explanation
that Leslie Abrams had for that too, Like they had
an explanation for everything and it wasn't. There were some
credible explanations for what they did. But I'm not saying
that I necessarily bought them all. But it's not as though,
(15:20):
you know, they didn't have an answer for everything.
Speaker 3 (15:22):
Yeah, it'll be odd.
Speaker 12 (15:25):
They planned lyle bought Chuck's Spring Street Cafe, a Buffalo
wing restaurant, right, yeah, rollxes, postures.
Speaker 4 (15:33):
And all that.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
Yeah, I remember them buying cars.
Speaker 12 (15:35):
Collectively, they spent approximately seven hundred thousand dollars before the arrests.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
Yeah, I remember the Rolex. That's funny, we all remember
a different thing.
Speaker 12 (15:42):
But apparently family members said that the connection between their
spending and the murder. There were no changes in their
spending habits after the killings.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
They were already already living large. Yeah that's crazy, man. Yeah,
I do remember them going on a spending spree. I
do remember the watches and the cars. I remember them
buying restaurants. But you know they should have laid low.
Speaker 12 (16:04):
One all time tennis coaches compete in tennis tournaments.
Speaker 4 (16:08):
That was their big thing. They were ten and the
dad was famous for losing it at their tennis tournaments.
Like if they were Eva, they would he would scream,
he would jump out of the stands, that kind of thing.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
But the rule of thumb is when you kill mom
and dad, don't go out and spend seven hundred thousand
dollars the next week.
Speaker 3 (16:26):
Yeah, just doesn't look good. Doesn't look good.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
Dodgers about to have a very important series, maybe the
most important series of the year, probably maybe have a
couple of years. They can play the Padres. They're up
three on the Podres and they're can play three games
at I believe at home. These are home games, Yeah,
at Dodgers Stadium against the Padres tonight, Tomorrow and Thursday.
(16:51):
And the Dodgers are up three games on the Padres
and they're playing them three games.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
So yes, you're right, they could be tied at the
end of the series.
Speaker 4 (16:59):
The lyrics like a white.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
Horse man sniff that cocaine.
Speaker 7 (17:04):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from kf
I am six forty.
Speaker 2 (17:10):
So kids doing nowadays they sniff coke. I don't know
it was hot for Heroin. I thought it was Heroin.
Heroin is Heroin white. It's horse that's what it's called
the name of heroin. Maybe it's both coke horse. Do
the kids still do it the heroin? Or is that
too old?
Speaker 3 (17:27):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
I think everybody's on something though, you know, I mean,
who's going through life sober?
Speaker 4 (17:34):
I see you think we're all medicating one we're another.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
Sure, you know, one hundred percent. And we all try
to hide the level of our addiction.
Speaker 4 (17:44):
Oh that's whether it's.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
Drugs or drinking or gambling. And you can hide it
if you got a job. If you don't work, it's
very hard to hide it because it consumes, it starts
to consume your life. Sure, but if you can offset
the stink of get high all the time with working,
then you can ride that white horse for a while.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
I just never know what. Courtney is always encouraging me
to get to a little bit you know, buzzed or
really a glass of wine. Yeah, wow, she says, that's
my girlfriend. She says, that's that's my favorite. Mark Thompson
is the buzz to Mark Thompson. Is that right?
Speaker 12 (18:20):
She can tolerate?
Speaker 4 (18:21):
Yeah, I'm there, you go, that's right. She doesn't. She
just wants me to pass out. And I never thought
of it. Thank you that we've had a breakthrough here.
You're right, but yeah, I don't know. But that's a
good point, Tim. Tim's onto something that we all have
our thing. You know, everybody's on something.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
And you can tell when people text you when they're
high because the text is usually longer yes and yes,
and they get happy over crap that doesn't really mean anything.
Speaker 3 (18:52):
Oh you know, did you see this or this dude? Woo, yeah,
that kind of crap.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
But I've made a conscious effort of trying to text
people when I'm buzzed because I I think that they
know that I'm buzzed and I and I think it's
it's weird.
Speaker 4 (19:09):
It's weird.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
But also, here's a here's a tip for people texting.
And I've learned this the hard way because somebody had
to tell me, and so I'm going to pass this
on to you. You don't have to respond to every text. Sure,
when somebody sends you a meme or something, you can
just let it sit there and move on. You don't
have to give it a heart or a haha, or
(19:31):
a thumbs up or thumbs down or that's great, that's cool.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
You can just read it and move on.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
I have to say, though, I feel that sense of
obligation really always react. Yeah, not to write something, but
to always acknowledge it somehow. Thumbs up. I like the
thumbs up, thumbs up or explanation point. Those are those
are strong, you know, because they don't you know. Then
you get the heart, which is which is always available,
but I use it more sparingly.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Okay, but you know what, what you can tell when
somebody's older when it says in letters, it'll say thumbs up,
and then there'll be the emoji thumbs up. So they
had to type thumbs out to get the emoji, and
then they put the emoji up and forgot to erase
the letters.
Speaker 3 (20:12):
Yeah, like, oh, that guy's in his sixties.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
He just gave me, he spelled out thumbs up and
gave me the emoji. Yeah, the technology is a little
too doubled up. Yeah, do you ever do this? And
I do this all the time, and I'm so embarrassed
that I do it. But I go to copy something
that somebody else has written and I want to send
it to a friend. Sure, so I copy it and
I paste it in the in the in the box
(20:37):
where you can type. Then I take a picture from
him and I put it there too, so I have
it all in one text, and then I forget to
not send it back to him, so I sent it
back to the guy who did it, and then he's like, wait,
I just sent that to you.
Speaker 3 (20:50):
Why you said you packed it right?
Speaker 4 (20:52):
Oops?
Speaker 2 (20:53):
But uh, you know, texting is great, but I think
a lot of us are losing our socials skills over it.
Speaker 4 (21:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
If you if you go three or four weeks without
talking to anybody because you're texting them, I don't know. I
think it's harder to get back in the game.
Speaker 4 (21:07):
I remember reading a study though that's that with younger
people anyway, that was saying that they feel the quality
of their relationships and the degree of closeness that they
feel to people that they text or communicate. What I'm
just by texting is every bit what it is with
the people that they see in person.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
No, I understand that, but I'm saying, but when you
got to I think you're losing your people skills. That
when you get back into a group of you know,
where there's people at party, five or six people at
a party. You've been texting for so long, you want
to text them at the party.
Speaker 4 (21:42):
Yeah, that's a good point. You list a little something
off your social fastball because I think you do. Yeah,
I think that's a fair point.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
How about this guy, Uh, there's a Corona woman or
this woman, I should say, there's a Corona woman who
was arrested for allegedly stealing a purse from a vehicle
while the car's owner. The other woman was in the
Inland Empire visiting a grave a loved one had passed away.
(22:12):
She was visiting the grave and another woman stole her
purse while she was doing that, just before eight pm
on September thirteenth, I think it was Friday the thirteenth.
Adds a little another layer to it. A woman visiting
a grave site at Green Acres Memorial Park.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
Bam banam bump. The dead? Isn't that there commercial?
Speaker 4 (22:36):
It is?
Speaker 13 (22:36):
Now?
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Come on, they're dead?
Speaker 4 (22:40):
You see the genius.
Speaker 11 (22:42):
On display green Acres Memorial Park in uh in mortuary?
Speaker 4 (22:53):
If they the.
Speaker 3 (22:54):
Guy had never heard of the show before the name it,
They're dead. Bana bam bump.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
He's in.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
He had never seen that show before he named it
green Acres, or maybe maybe it was around before green Acres.
That's possible anyway, So here it is, there's a purse
in the vehicle. In San Berndino County Sheriff's Department said
there was a news alert out. The thief took the
victim's credit cards and made multiple fraudulent perchase purchases in
(23:26):
the Fontana area before the victim was able to deactivate
the stolen cards. Two days later, detectives identified thirty two
year old Corona resident Emily Hernandez as the suspected thief,
and she was arrested. She's a loser on September seventeenth.
Speaker 4 (23:45):
Not only was.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
Hernandez on fella how about this?
Speaker 2 (23:49):
Not only was Hernandez on felony probation at the time,
but the twenty twenty Jaguar f Pace she was driving
was found to be an unreport had stolen vehicle. Wowow,
what a woman she's going for it. She is, she's
in the diamond lane. It says here she had she
(24:10):
had acquired this car using identity. It was identity theft
at the car dealership in Ontario.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
So she was implicated.
Speaker 2 (24:20):
Implicated in the in a similar incident at Montecito Memorial Park,
she did the same thing.
Speaker 3 (24:26):
She stole somebody's.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
Purse or wallet while the person was visiting a great
that's her thing, Yeah, that's her thing, all right, eats
your own hernand is being held at the West Valley
Detention Center. She was due to appear in court on
Tuesday at San Bernardino Court on Tuesday afternoon. Jail records
show multiple accounts of grand theft, vehicle theft, theft under
(24:50):
false pretenses, burglary, and using somebody else's bank access card,
amongst other charges. You go, what a world we live in?
Wild He's visiting a gravesite and you stealer. Perse that's
pretty low, unreal. Welcome to Los Angeles. You can enjoy it.
(25:12):
If you just got here, you're going to really enjoy
living here because you're going to see the creepiest, dumbest,
most aggressive, aggressive people in the world. They all live
within the sound of our voice. It's like a big
prison here without the walls.
Speaker 4 (25:27):
Let me just say there, there's plenty good here too.
Tim's a little okay, okay, well you report back when
we see those stories.
Speaker 7 (25:38):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from kf
I Am six.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
Conway showed Thompson's with US Crowsier joins us as well.
Your last cast or tease is six forty five. Indeed, Yeah,
that's a tease and it was a tease. Yeah, all right,
that's really cool, man, think dong with you.
Speaker 3 (25:59):
There's a certang.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
I know you're a big surfer, crows I know Thompson,
you're non But there's a surfer gang in southern California,
notorious surfer gang.
Speaker 3 (26:09):
What's going on with these guys?
Speaker 14 (26:10):
Plisberty's estates will not be just for locals anymore. The
city is settling a lawsuit accusing officials of not stopping
a local group of surfers from bullying and harassing out
of town surfers. Palas Ferdie's Estates must now install new walkways, benches,
and signs at the secluded spot to welcome everyone.
Speaker 4 (26:30):
Oh, they're going to hate that. This was a big
deal though.
Speaker 5 (26:32):
Man.
Speaker 4 (26:32):
They were literally beating guys up. No, you're trying to
surf there.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
They have a reputation of if you're out of town
or you were not surfing on our beach, that's right,
and they were serious about it.
Speaker 14 (26:42):
Under the settlement, the city must also prevent makeshift structures
or equipment storage there and make sure complaints over so
called surf localism are actually addressed. Though not a bay
is renowned for its winter time waves.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
There you go.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
Guy tried to steal a corvette and he couldn't figure
out how to open the door.
Speaker 6 (27:03):
When you go shopping and you park your car in
the lot, you expect everything to look the same as
when you left it, right. Well, one guy in Florida
was in for quite the surprise when he stumbled upon this.
Speaker 4 (27:14):
This is not your car, this is my car.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
But why are you in my car? No real good
answer to that, But why are you in my car?
Speaker 4 (27:25):
No? You can't get out because are we calling the cops?
What do you mean for what? This is grand theft auto?
Y'all don't know what are you trying to steal my car?
Speaker 3 (27:32):
What are you doing? U? Uh uh uh.
Speaker 6 (27:34):
So Julio Solano was walking back to his car in
Miami Beach when the parking garage manager told him.
Speaker 9 (27:39):
Somebody was already in his car.
Speaker 6 (27:41):
Solana found the stranger sitting in his corvette. He says,
a man tried to say it was his car.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
Oh God, that's great, But what a like this guy's
got going?
Speaker 3 (27:50):
He lives in Miami and.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
He's got a Corvette that's got I mean, that's a
you know, touchdown.
Speaker 3 (27:57):
What a guy? What I mean, what is this guy?
Speaker 4 (28:00):
Seventy eight?
Speaker 3 (28:00):
Yeah, where's this guy living?
Speaker 14 (28:02):
You know?
Speaker 4 (28:03):
Through the.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
Cocaine cowboy day? Where are tubs?
Speaker 4 (28:07):
And whose were tubs? Rocker tubs?
Speaker 13 (28:12):
It seems as if the suspect broke into my car
to steal my car, and when he broke inside the car,
he could not get out, for whatever the case may be,
he was stuck in the car.
Speaker 4 (28:24):
There you go.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
All right, If you guys Crozier, you probably rarely use
a passport. When's the line do you have? You have
a passport?
Speaker 12 (28:31):
I just got one like three weeks ago. Yeah, which
is what I've had in ten years.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
I had one in the nineteen maybe nineteen eighties, but
I haven't had one in probably thirty five years.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
I never left the country, Yeah, I have, and I
have no plans to do that.
Speaker 12 (28:47):
Really, you had no plans on getting a passport leaving the.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Ever go to Mexico or Canada or Europe or anywhere
if I want to see this country. First on Thomson,
by the way, I'm put his head down.
Speaker 3 (29:02):
He's working with some country white bumpkin from the.
Speaker 4 (29:04):
No, No, it's not that, because I want to see
the West. Like I've never been to Bryce Canyon, I've
never been. I want to go to Zion. I've never
been to this place. So these are places I want
to go to, a Yellowstone, et cetera. So I'm with
you on the on this country mark. You don't need
a passport for this, you know what I'm saying. But
I also think there's a lot of great stuff that
you do need a passport for, you know, like and
so this is the point. If SOF wanted to go overseas,
(29:26):
I know you'd be on that plane with her and
you'd have your passport ready.
Speaker 12 (29:28):
You talked about doing cruises, but not getting up the boat.
You may need it just to get on the boat.
That's true, because you do need a passport. Like when
you leave on a cruise ship from the United States,
the first port I think has to be a foreign country,
or the last port has to be a foreign country.
There's some kind of weird rule when it comes to cruises.
That's great knowledge. Yeah, it's odd. It's odd.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
I don't know what what it is. It's called the
I don't know. It's kind of weird stupid. You know,
ocean rules. The words stupid ocean rules. The true starts
we're stupid ocean rum. Anyway, you can now renew your
passport online, a.
Speaker 15 (30:05):
Game changer for international travel. For the first time ever,
Americans can renew their passports online, which the.
Speaker 12 (30:12):
Five million Americans to be able to use this every year.
Speaker 3 (30:15):
You know, by the way, this story.
Speaker 15 (30:16):
Game changer for international travel. For the first time ever,
Americans can renew their passports online.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
That should be the end of that story. Why do
they have to have anything more than that? You know,
that's the that's the that's the whole story, and that
should just end.
Speaker 15 (30:31):
However, for expedited services, you do still need to do
those by mail or in person.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
That this should be I just reduced the story from
two minutes to twelve seconds.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
This should be the whole thing.
Speaker 15 (30:40):
A game changer for international travel. For the first time ever,
Americans can renew their passports online. However, for expedited services,
you do still need to do those by mail or
in person.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
That's the story.
Speaker 12 (30:53):
Well, one can't get one the first time online?
Speaker 4 (30:56):
Oh okay, all right, But the one cool thing is
also as part of that, you can now take your
own passport photos against a white wall, which I thought
was so cool because there's a whole there's a whole
business of having to go into various places to get
the passport photo. Right, you would, you don't look at
me like that. You don't have a passport, so you
don't realize what a pin of the assid is.
Speaker 3 (31:17):
I know, but it's not.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
Also, I was at Costco about six months ago and
I was waiting for a temporary card. I forgot mine
at home, and there's a woman there's getting her photo
taken because she bought a brand new membership to Costco.
And she looked at the photo and she goes, oh,
it's not a good photo. And LAY said, well, it's
just it's gonna be small in the back. No one's
(31:39):
gonna really see it. She goes, yeah, I they take
another one. She took another one and she didn't like
that one. She took a thirty Oh no, that's well,
I'm waiting to get in the store. She for my
hot chicken in the bags. She went through three photos.
That's so three. And I said to my wife, who
was standing next to me, and I'm like She's got
(32:00):
to be relayed to Mark Thompson.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
How dare you? Oh, we gotta get asked rageous.
Speaker 3 (32:07):
We're live Moe Kelly. Next on k if I Am
six forty is True Story.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 4 (32:14):
Now, you can
Speaker 1 (32:15):
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