All Episodes

October 31, 2024 35 mins
Blake Troli, several arrests made after violence, Metro bus burned, and looting breaks out across LA following Dodgers' win. Earthquake 2.9 in Pasadena / KIF broadcast Game #5 and Dodgers win World Series / The Dodgers Parade. Fans and the joy of being a sports fan / Ruining the ending to the game / Tim and his wisdom teeth (almonds). WeHo Carnaval. Tim and eyelashes. How old is too old for trick or treating?? 
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Transcript

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 KFI AM
six forty. It's a Conway Show. Dodger Yes, oh man,
I got to watch a lot of that game yesterday

(00:20):
with Timmy Kates and Colin over in the Dodgers studio here,
and we were all in there for that fifth inning
where the Dodgers scored five runs on two errors in
a misplay, and man, that was great. That was one
of the highlights of my year, perhaps being here at
KFI to be with those guys who are real Dodger
fans and really really blast off in there. That was great.

(00:44):
Are we have a two point nine earthquake in South Pasadena.
I don't know when that happened or if it's happened
just recently. We will keep an eye on that two
point nine earthquake South Pasadena. All right, Blake Trolley's with us, Hi, you,
bubb I'm good.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
I did watch the game last night with real Dodger fans,
but I'm not one.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Oh, you're not. Well.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
I'm a Dodger fan, but not a very loyal one.
I actually I actually went for a jog. I said, Okay,
they're down, I go for a jog. I come back,
they're tied.

Speaker 1 (01:14):
It was the greatest, the greatest comeback in the history
of the World series for a game, for a series clincher. Yeah,
five runs. All right, So what happened last night? What's
going on tomorrow? Everything? Dodgers, what's going on? Okay, so
we'll start with last night. You know, I was talking
to job about this. It was pretty funny.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
As soon as this game was over, instead of watching
the postgame interviews and watching the team on the field,
I immediately got on Twitter because I wanted to see
the videos coming out of downtown La. It started happening
pretty quickly, pretty quickly because a lot of people they
were watching the game, I think at those bars at
near La Live right, So that whole area kind of
spilled out into the streets and LAPD actually ended up

(01:55):
making twelve arrests last night. There were some street takeovers,
some people just kind of in the streets. There were
stores that were burglari stores that were vandalized, and all
in all, the LAPD made twelve arrests. Four of those
were for burglary, or six of those were for burglary.
The four were for receiving stolen property. And yeah, I

(02:17):
mean it was pretty chaotic.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
You know.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
One of the things we heard about throughout the city
was just that fireworks were being lit off. Somebody actually
blew their handoff on camera. I don't know if you've
seen the video, it goes to light a mortar off,
and then I would say that, you know, the peak
of all of this was when a metro bus in
Echo Park was was lit on fire.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
Who does that? What's going on with these guys? You know,
your team wins, so you light a public bus on fire.
I don't know, it's odd.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
I was telling John, you know, you feel for that
metro driver. This was the beacon of light in a
metro driver's year as the Dodgers won the series, right,
and now you got people lighting your bus on fire.
And to tell you the truth, there were actually the
driver and passengers were on the bus when it was
lit on fire. Responders actually had to go in there
and get them off the bus.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
And it's Los Angeles, they have to be on the
bus for it when it catches fire. Otherwise, you know,
we're not the king of crazy, you know. And well
that's making the news.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
One of the things I want to touch on is
I kind of figured something along this line was going
to happen. I was starting to watch these videos kind
of spill out over social media. And I did see
a video of a metro bus that had not been
burned down, but it was driving through a crowd of people.
They were out in the streets and they were banging
on the windows chanting metro which is fun in it
in an element, but also, you know, pretty dangerous for

(03:36):
the driver.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Try not to hit somebody, right, And George Carlin refers
to this group of people Life's most interesting guys. That's
what they are. They all moved to LA. Apparently they're
all here and and and you know the I I
saw LAPD they pretty had they had a lock on
downtown LA. They went quickly into a tactical or and

(04:00):
they just shut it down. They weren't gonna have any
of the looting and the burning and all that crap.
I guess one Nike store got looted. Yeah, two stores
got looted.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
A Nike store got looted, and so did a foot
locker store.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
And also over in East LA.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
It sounds like deputies did have some issues trying to
disperse a crowd there. They say, at one of the crowds,
somebody was lighting fireworks. It sounds like into a crowd
of people, which is pretty dangerous. And then when deputies
went to move in on them, a deputy had a
rock thrown at them, and it sounds like maybe a
firework hit another one. So I do want to go
to this audio. I did speak to Mayor Bass about this.

(04:36):
Here's what she had to say.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
You know, as I said in my comments, I mean
I thought that the small, the few incidences of violence,
of looting, what happened to the bus, I was horrified by,
and I certainly expect everyone to be held accountable who
participated in that. But I feel confident that tomorrow will
not be the case. I mean, number one, it's in

(04:59):
the morning. I mean number two. You know, when those
things happening happened, they're fueled by hours and hours of
drinking and celebration, and then people go out and acted responsibly.
But it's so important to focus on the fact that
the overwhelming majority of people who were out there celebrating,
the people who were celebrating at the Valezuela Memorial were peaceful, joyful, unified.

(05:22):
And that's my message going forward in terms of how
our city needs to celebrate this act.

Speaker 1 (05:29):
Has anyone, I guess not told Mayor Bass when you're speaking,
stop pounding on the podium. I'll have to make that
note to it. Bang bang, you can't do that.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
But and that's coming from Tim Conway, who I just
want to say, you have great my technique.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Thank you very much, buddy. But she is exactly right.
Those people have burned the boss and looted the stores.
They should be held accountable. But most of the people
last night, you didn't turn into a full blown riot.
It was a lot of peaceful people. Just join them.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
One of the notes about the looters, I was looking
at a video the loaders. I believe these were the
ones who went into the Nike store. They didn't look
like Dodger fans to me. They look like people taking
advantage of the fact that cops were tied up dealing
with the big crowds of the big crowds of people.
Now going forward, Tim, tomorrow, the parade starts at eleven.
It starts right near City Hall and rides through downtown

(06:21):
LA and they're going to have more law enforcement in downtown,
more law enforcement on the metro system. They're recommending people
try to use the metro system to get to downtown
because it's gonna be another little mess down there tomorrow morning.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
It's gonna be the only way to really get there tomorrow.
But they do have to have, as you say, a
lot of security on that metro because you don't want
to promote the metro and then have a guy or
two get knocked out or be ripped off.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
That would definitely move the headlines in a certain direction.
The other thing I want to talk about real quick, it,
just as it pertains to businesses, is the only Yes.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
The Breeders Cup. Let's suck the breeders go. Okay, all right?

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Do you think after the Breeders Cup, the the the
fans are going to spill out into the streets. I
don't bus and uh and loot a Nike and foot locker.
But you're a you're a racetrack guy, right, you know
the racetrack. You know, what could I say? I was
North Claremont. I you know, I was brought to a
few events, place some bets on things I didn't know about.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
But you know, the Breeders Cup starts started today. I'm
sorry it starts tomorrow. But del Mar started running today
and then the Breeders' Cup is tomorrow for the female horses,
Saturday for the male horses. A couple of females, but
Saturday is the is like the World Series of horse racing.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
Oh wow, And and del Mar, I'll tell you what
those female horse I used to work. I've worked at
two different horse facilities. I worked for a veterinarian who
did equine and also an English barn in college was
calledge Montana. And uh, I could tell you I got
bit by a mayor and almost every time I went
to to clean their stalls, I i I dealt with hell.
So I would love to watch the Mayor's race. Well, look,

(07:57):
they're thoroughbreds.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
I mean they're they're you know, they're pure, a lot
of more pure breads. And they're angry as hell. You know,
they have a lot of adrenaline flowing. They're not kind.
You know animals when when you breed them like that,
they're born to do one thing. Run as fast as
they can for about a minute and thirty two seconds.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
Right, I mean my first experiences with horses was around
a bunch of thoroughbreads. I mean, English typically is a
bunch of warm bloods. But you know, I was in
Montana kind of in a rural area. A lot of
people are using off the track thoroughbreads. Sure those are
hot blooded horses.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
Yeah, And you know you can't artificially inseminate a horse
and have it and turn into a race horse. That
has to be the natural way because they didn't want
cheating going on. Oh really you know that. And so
every one of those horses that's running at the track
has been produced the old fashioned way, you know, ding dong,
if you know what I mean, I know what you mean.

(08:51):
All right, are you going to the parade tomorrow? I
am going to be covering the parade tomorrow. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
We've been in meetings all day about it, so I
will be down there with the fans, and.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
I hope to talk to you tomorrow. Then we'll be
talking Lake Cholie. Everybody. Thanks for coming on, man, really
appreciate its long night for you. All right, we're live
Dodgers win. And again it's Halloween, so I'm gonna ask
you one, just one favor all year long. Please please
do me a favor. It's not gonna cost you anything,
and it's gonna help me out. It's gonna help you
out as well. Please drive carefully. There are a lot

(09:24):
of kids out there. Every single November First we do
a story on a kid that's been hit and killed
by a car. Don't let that be you. It'll change
your life forever. Please slow down, just if it's just
one day a year, Please, for God's sake, do me
a favor. Slow down.

Speaker 5 (09:45):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (09:51):
Hey, I Am six forty. It's Conway Show. You can
win a thousand dollars. All you gotta do is h
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (10:01):
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Just enter this nationwide keyword on our website bills that's
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(10:23):
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Speaker 1 (10:25):
Go to the website KFI AM six forty dot Com,
slash cash and stick the keyword in their bills b
I L L S. You could win one thousand dollars,
easiest grand you probably ever won. All Right, at the
top of the program, we said, hey, it looks like
there has been an earthquake in Pasadena. Well we were correct.
At four oh one pm, there was a magnitude two

(10:48):
point nine earthquake two miles southwest of South Pasadena. It's
not yet been confirmed that this event happened, but I'm
telling you it did. And if you live in the
South Pasadena area, two point nine not a major earthquake,
but a lot of them are coming around. And I
don't like that. I don't like it at all. All Right,

(11:10):
last night here at KFI was an unusual night. Maybe
you tuned in to listen to the program or Mo
Kelly's show, and you hear the Dodger game. Well, something happened.
And I'm not really quite sure what I can talk
about on the air legally, but something happened to the
transmitter on KLAC, the Dodger station, and so we had

(11:34):
to We lent them our station in Los Angeles, the
Big Stick in Los Angeles, and they broadcast the Dodger
game right here on KFI. Now, what are the odds
that the first night that the Dodgers are broadcast on
KFI since they left the station back in the nineteen

(11:57):
sixties or seventies, very first night that they're broadcast on
KFI AM six forty, they win a World series. They
win a World Series. It was they It started in
our time slot, had round four, five pm, and they
continued through mo Kelly's show. The Dodgers won a World

(12:19):
Series on KFI. What are the odds of that the
very first game they broadcast in decades seventies, eighties, nineties,
early two thousands, two thousands, tens and sixty five, seventy years.

Speaker 6 (12:35):
So you could kind of say the Dodgers won a
World Series on the Tim Conway Junior and mo Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
That's right, you could say that. You could absolutely say that, Well, oh,
I see, I see, I see what we were saying.
We were trying to say, yeah, And then everybody went
up to the mo Kelly party. Man, that guy knows
how to put on a party.

Speaker 7 (12:54):
That was one of the best parties ever.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
It looked like, you know, and Moe Kelly and Twala
they both come from the music background and promotions. They
know how to put on an event. They know how
to do it, and they've also seen people getting fired
for not knowing how to do it, so they know
they've learned firsthand how to put on great events. So
if you ever invited to a mo Kelly event with Twala,

(13:19):
show up because it's going to be a top shelf.
That was a great event. And then Krozier won an
award for the loudest man in the history of radio
A congratulations. If I'm ever, If I'm ever in the
mountains and we're abandoned and we're stuck and nobody can
find us, I want Krozier next to me. I'm sorry,

(13:40):
they'll find us in eight seconds. No, I laughed all
the way home. I'm like, God almighty, the loudest man
in the world was standing right behind me when he
belted that out. But seriously, you've got to join a competition.
You've got to jump on. I've never heard anything like
that before. It is unbelievable. Have you ever tested to
see what decibel comes in at No? I have not.

(14:03):
Oh my god, it's a record. Bye bye, and you'll
beat the next competitor. By like one hundred. It's unreal.
But whenever we do a remote, oh, you know what
you should do is when we do the Catarina's Club,
have people come down and listen to that and see
how far and we'll see how far a guy can
go down the block and hear it's kind of like this.

Speaker 7 (14:25):
To the type of thing.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
Right, that's right, that's exactly right. How long did you
guys stay last night for the mo Kelly show? Do
you stayed on ten? I was pretty much you, Oh
you did? Okay, well, let's stay.

Speaker 5 (14:36):
Till the end.

Speaker 6 (14:36):
You did?

Speaker 7 (14:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Really? Yeah, I heard you didn't?

Speaker 7 (14:41):
Who told you that?

Speaker 1 (14:42):
Everybody? Oh yeah, you split like around seven thirty. But
I also look, I didn't want us all to hang
around because that's not our party. It's his party, you know,
I mean, you know, it's him, his party. The guests
that he brought in there must have been one hundred
people there, all dressed up easily. Yeah. And when I
was leaving there people still coming.

Speaker 6 (15:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
And the food was great. BJ's had pizza there, Wendy's
was there, And man, I tell you, that guy knows
how to put it on a party.

Speaker 7 (15:10):
And Michelle Q bought a bunch of candy.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
Really really oh for the event, yeah, or for our
free drawer.

Speaker 7 (15:19):
Both.

Speaker 6 (15:20):
She put all the extra in our free drawer, but
she yeah, all that candy. Michelle got.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
Dodgers win. Dodgers win, Dodgers win, and fans are just
going absolutely ape s everything you need to know about
the parade.

Speaker 8 (15:36):
Let's see, the Dodgers are announcing a World Series Championship
parade that's gonna happen Friday morning tomorrow at eleven am
in downtown Los Angeles, and then after that there will
be a special what's described as a ticketed celebration at
Dodgers Stadium.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
And they're selling out Dodgers Stadium for I think it's
like thirty bucks a ticket to get in, but the
resale value now it's like twelve hundred bucks. But it's
gonna be sold out. There're gonna be a fifty five.
I think they're selling out all the seats. I think
they're going to sell out every seat, so it might
be fifty six thousand people out there tomorrow. Here's a
look at the parade route.

Speaker 8 (16:07):
It's going to start at Gloria Molina Grand Park in
front of La City Hall. It's going to head down
Spring Street, and then it's going to turn onto First Street.
The route goes down Grand Avenue and then turns onto
Fifth Street. It ends at Flower and then after that
is the celebration at Dodger Stadium, for which you will
need a ticket and you'll need a parking pass as well.
If you don't have a parking pass, your ticket will

(16:29):
serve as your way to enter in. But what we
are hearing from city leaders and from the Dodgers themselves
is that it's best to take public transportation, especially to
the parade route.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
N I don't know unless they have a cop on
every train that might be dicey.

Speaker 8 (16:44):
Is that it's best to take public transportation, especially to
the parade route, because parking is going to be impossible.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
Yeah, it's going to be tough to park, but it's
also tough to survive on metro. So either or.

Speaker 8 (16:57):
There's going to be so many people that are going
to want to get there, you just just takes a
public transportation.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
Okay, I love that. I think that was Mark Brown
doing that. And Mark Brown's great. He's over at ABC.
I text him all the time. He's a great dude.
But I love that TV news, and we do it here.
I think as well. You know, every ten minutes we're
doing a story on a guy gets wiped out on
the metro, or a woman gets stabbed, a woman gets
thrown on the train, a woman gets shot, a guy

(17:22):
gets stabbed, a guy gets shot. And then what do
we do when the first big event happens in la Hey?
Take the metro. Yeah, you'll enjoy that. Just slide on
down there. What could be better? If you're on the metro,
keep your head swiveling, keep it on a swivel. Look around,
look around, look to see who's gonna wipe you out.
Wipe you out. Be careful. If you have kids on

(17:44):
the metro, be extremely careful. You don't get wiped out
on that metro. All right, Dodgers win. What a night
here at KFI and iHeartMedia. That was one of the
coolest nights ever where we didn't sort of have to work.
We played Best of and I got to walk around
in and out of the Dodger station while they're while
they're broadcasting. That was great. It was like being at

(18:06):
the game.

Speaker 5 (18:07):
Man.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
It was really a cool deal. All Right, it's Halloween,
Please drive carefully, let's not kill any kids. Don't kill
any kids tonight, and I'll make you a deal. If
you don't kill any kids, I won't say your name
over and over and over on the radio. But if
you do kill a kid, I guarantee you I'll be
repeating your name over and over and over and over

(18:29):
again on this station. Not in a good way, not
in a good way at all. I'm going to ruin
your life. You kill a kid, I will ruin your life.
I will. I will mention you over and over and
over on this station until you'll you'll be exhausted by it,
over and over. Whoever kills a kid tonight, by bye bye,

(18:51):
by reckless driving, tune in tomorrow to KFI because your
name will be mentioned over and over again. So you
don't want that. You don't want that. Please drive slowly night,
don't run over these kids.

Speaker 5 (19:05):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI.
AM sixty.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
That's right, that's great. Sorry, I am six forty. It's gone.
My show Tim Kaid's coming on at five o'clock. He's
he produces the Petros Money Show. He also does the
Dodgers U C l A Laker. I'm neut Lakers Raiders,
and we'll talk about the parade. Maybe you're going to

(19:35):
the parade. Maybe you got tickets, you're going to the stadium.
That's a cool deal, one of the fortunate ones by
Dodgers win. Dodgers win. It's a long season. You know,
it all starts where the pictures show up in late February,
early March, and then you sort of get excited about
the season, and then it's opening Day and then it's

(19:55):
a long, long summer, long spring, long summer. Dodgers are
up by ten, run by ten games, they're even, they're
up by three, they're down by two, and you look
at the papers every day. You look at the games
as often as you can. You go to the games,
and you invest a lot of your time. A lot

(20:15):
of your time gets invested into the Dodgers. They play
one hundred and sixty two games. Every game is a
little over two hours. So it's one sixty two and
I think the average game is I want to say,
let's say it's two and a half hours, but it's
not just two and a half hours of your time.
It's an hour and a half. You leave the house
an hour and a half before the game. The game

(20:38):
is two and a half hours, so you're at you know,
two and a half, three and a half, you're at four.
It takes an hour and a half, two hours to
get home. You're about six hours a total, six hours
per game, and there's eighty one home games, so you're
about five hundred hours and then maybe another I don't know,

(21:00):
another five hundred hours or four hundred hours watching on TV.
So you're investing about about nine hundred hours a year,
nine hundred hours, and that's a lot of your time.
Divide it by twenty four it's thirty seven and a
half days, thirty seven and a half. It's a full

(21:21):
month of twenty four hours a day watching either going
to a game, watching a game, driv into a game,
or driving home from a game. And that's a lot.
It's a lot. It's a tremendous investment on your It's
a commitment, yeah, because you don't have that kind of time,
you know, for anything else. You know, I think other
than your family, your kids, and your work, I think

(21:43):
being a sports fan is probably the third thing that
you're invested in.

Speaker 9 (21:46):
You were saying earlier about how you know now that
your daughter's gotten older, and she's not as you know,
you guys aren't doing as much stuff together because it's
starting her own life out. And yeah, you see your
time kind of getting more into.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
Yeah, I guess, you know, when when I was the
biggest Dodger fan in the world, then when my daughter
was born, it became secondary and I and I didn't
really watch the Dodgers from two thousand and five until
about I don't know, maybe two thousand and twenty, twenty
twenty one, maybe twenty two. I sort of I knew
what was going on. I knew the players, I knew
it was happening.

Speaker 9 (22:18):
Twenty when they won the World Series, it was COVID,
so you know, there was nobody in the stands.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
But I recently got back into it, and man, that
team has brought me so many great times in my life,
so many great.

Speaker 9 (22:31):
It was was that Fifth Inning will go down in
history along with Freddy Freeman's you know that that first
home running Game one. It was just there were there
were a lot of moments in this series that people
will remember a long time.

Speaker 1 (22:44):
And then with you know, you and I, you know,
we have the I guess the honor of the advantage
of being here with the Dodger station. So we're watching
it with the guys who produced the Dodger shows, you know,
the pregame, post game show, and they get it. They're
still into Dodgers, you know, Colin and Tim Kates are
still into it.

Speaker 9 (23:05):
You and I were sitting in that we're standing in
that studio in the fifth inning when that whole big
comeback and they tied it up was happening. And yeah,
it struck me even in that moment last night, to
be in that room with those guys that run those
games and to see their enthusiasm for.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
Just as high as ours are, and that Cats gets
more excited. You would think a guy like that would
burn out on sports, and he didn't. Yeah, you know,
he still gets He had that bamboo stick with him
and he was banging that thing up. It was great.
As Tom Looney has said, who you had on? Was
it yesterday? The day before?

Speaker 9 (23:34):
Sports is the truest evaluation of reality, either TV or whatever.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
You have to watch it live, yeah, or else somebody's
going to ruin it for you by telling you the score.
It's high speed chases and sporting events or two things
you still have to watch live, which is one of
the reasons why ESPN is so valuable, because you can't
you know, if you just recorded sports and then fast
forward the commercials not that valuable. But when you watch

(24:01):
a championship game, you can't let anyone ruin it for
you by texting you the score or saying, hey, we'll
get him next year. You have to watch it live.

Speaker 6 (24:08):
Yeah, so go ahead, no, no, I tell you it's funny
both those things you just said.

Speaker 7 (24:12):
I ruined it for my husband last night, oh god,
because he paused it for dinner and yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I found out.

Speaker 6 (24:21):
On my phone that they won, and so I was
reposting it and I was playing I Love Love La
and so I in the music the volume was up,
and he turns to me, he goes, are you serious
right now? So, and then your second point about pursuits.
I was getting a root canal this morning, and there
was a pursuit this morning, and the dentist and all

(24:45):
the hygienis all came in the room to watch the pursuit.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Oh that's great, Yeah, that's really cool. You're like, oh,
this is like being at work. I'll tell you a
quick story and wisdom teeth taking out about I don't know,
fifteen twenty years ago, and I noticed, you know, it's
a big operation. I think they took two or three
out at the same time. And I noticed the next
day there was a piece of tooth still in where
they were supposed to extract it. And so I called

(25:10):
my Denis and I'm friends with him, and so I
called him and I said, I said, buddy, look, I
know it's Saturday, one o'clock, but there's a piece of
tooth still in there, and it and it I think
it's getting infect He goes, oh my god. He goes,
that's serious. He said, can you meet me the office
at four o'clock And I said, yeah, yeah today, He said, yeah, yeah.
So we brought a nurse in. He opened up the office.
I get in there and he looks in and he goes, yeah,

(25:30):
there's a it looks like a piece of tooth is
in there. So he puts me down, put you know,
puts on the gloves and all the you know, uh,
the the paper wrapping around it and all the what
do they call it anesthesia and all that crap, and
and so he goes in with these like tweezers and
he goes in and he pulls it out and and

(25:51):
and he pulled out a little piece of of of
tooth and he looks at it and he looks at it,
and then he pauses and he says, did you eat
almonds last night?

Speaker 7 (26:03):
What it was? An almond?

Speaker 1 (26:09):
I said, yeah, I did.

Speaker 6 (26:12):
You had your wisdom teeth pulled and you went home
and ate almonds.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
He said for the next way four hours, don't eat
anything solid like almonds.

Speaker 7 (26:22):
And you need to be told what God is embarrassing?

Speaker 1 (26:25):
You know. Walking out of there, brought a nurse in.
He came in on a Saturday. Do you eat almonds
last night? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (26:35):
They do look like little teeth, though I guess they
they not to him, did you?

Speaker 7 (26:42):
I was like, they pulled the tooth out so easily.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
Wow. He stared at it for like literally ten seconds.

Speaker 6 (26:47):
You're like, yeah, did he take a little bite out
of it?

Speaker 1 (26:51):
And he's like, I said, it's like, uh, he but
he did. Look at me, goes, uh, you want the
rest of it? Why?

Speaker 7 (26:59):
Why would you do that?

Speaker 1 (27:00):
It was so embarrassing.

Speaker 6 (27:02):
Why we do?

Speaker 1 (27:03):
Because I don't know if people just do things when
you're told not to do things, you want to do it.

Speaker 7 (27:07):
Thanks you do.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
Yeah, Well, you're told not to eat you know, a
certain food. You're like, I want to I want to
go eat that food.

Speaker 7 (27:14):
I'll show what's wrong.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
What am I gonna get a peace stuck in there?
It looks like them dragging me in on a Saturday.
No way exactly what happened.

Speaker 5 (27:22):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM sixty.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Convoy Show. It is Halloween. Everyone's gonna get out there
and enjoy themselves. Please please please. The last couple of
years we've had to do stories the day after about
kids getting hit. Please be careful, please please please. It'll
ruin your life, It'll ruin their lives. A lot of
lives will be ruined. West Hollywood is preparing for Halloween.

(27:50):
It's the big party in Los Angeles. That's the place
to go.

Speaker 10 (27:54):
It's gonna be a groovy Halloween in West Hollywood for Carnival,
which is of course, are iconic event. One of the
best places with the best vibes, of course, is the
abbey they are going to be celebrating Halloween. Look at
all of the beautiful, wonderful costumes. I am here with Kiki,
the assistant general manager, Kiki tell us all.

Speaker 7 (28:15):
About Halloween at the abbey.

Speaker 11 (28:17):
It's one of the best places to be. We are
the most scariest bar in West Hollywood and in America.
We've been decorating since October and we just finished up yesterday.
And my staff is ready to please everyone.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
Ooh, how about that today?

Speaker 11 (28:35):
And my staff is ready to please everyone. Interesting bar,
My staff is ready to please everyone.

Speaker 1 (28:43):
Go out to the abbey, then enjoy yourself. All right?
Should there be an age limit for trick or trading?

Speaker 10 (28:50):
I know a few things scream Halloween more than dressing
up to scare some candy out of total strangers?

Speaker 6 (28:58):
Are you brought a little old to be trick or
treating a little the younger in the morning?

Speaker 1 (29:03):
But in the final countdown to the haunted holiday? The
age old debate.

Speaker 7 (29:07):
Over well age is sweeping across the country. At what
age did you stop trigger treating?

Speaker 11 (29:12):
I think I stopped around fifteen, probably like my freshman
or sophomore year in high school.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
All right, belly O, you seem to be a trigger treater.
You're you're in the hallyween spirit, You're you're spirited. I'll
give you that. When did you stop trigger treating. Is
she there? Crozer? When did you stop trigger treating or
have you? Uh? Man thirteen? Yeah, you know I was.
I was fifteen and I said to my dad, Hey,

(29:42):
all my friends are meeting at Winchell's Donuts on Louise
and Ventura, about eight of us, and we're all gonna
go out trigger treating. I was fifteen and my dad
said sure. So I dressed up as a woman that year.
I don't if you could still do that and if
it's offensive to anybody whatever. So I dressed up as
a woman. My dad drove me to Winchles, don't it

(30:04):
And he drove by and he was about to drop
me off, and I look into Winchles and I see
all my buddies there. They all have jeans on, flannel shirts.
Nobody's dressed up. They're not just like and they're just
not changed.

Speaker 8 (30:17):
They're not.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Yeah, they have the crap they ordered Portola Junior High.
They still have it on. So I said, Dad, you
gotta take me home. I gotta get out of this stuff.
So he takes me home. I changed and put on
my flannel, you know, my jeans, and I go back
to Winchles and I get out of the car and
I go into wincheles remember exactly when, where, at what time?
Who said it? And all this crap. And I go

(30:40):
in and one of my buddies goes, here are you
wearing fake eyelashes?

Speaker 7 (30:48):
You have the makeup on and everything.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
I took all the makeup off. I just forgot to
take the eyelashes off. And I said, no, no, these
are my real eyelashes. And that was a nickname. While hey, lashes,
what's up? Bub what's going on? Hey, let's get lashes
to go out of this angel? Whenn't you stop trigger treating?

Speaker 3 (31:09):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (31:09):
I think I was like thirteen.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Really maybe I had the spirit well into I don't know,
I'm fifteen. I think I still went out trigger treating
of fifteen six. I enjoyed it.

Speaker 9 (31:19):
I would have, but I moved at some point in
the neighborhood I was in. It was not conducive to
trigger treading. Everything was too far apart the houses.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
I love Halloween. I loved everything about it. It was
one of my favorite holidays, especially when it fell on
a Saturday. You know, you get friends come over, you
get dressed up early. My dad always decorated the house
up real nice. It was just really cool.

Speaker 9 (31:40):
My dad never decorated, and he always forgotten. I always
ended up having the same costume every year.

Speaker 1 (31:45):
It was the old man.

Speaker 9 (31:47):
It was a flying Yeah, I wish it was a
fine school. I literally had my grandfather's flannel shirt and
he took some black marker and made a mustache and
gave me a cigar.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
And I was an old man every year. Oh cool?
Really when did you stop? Ellio? Maybe the night, but
I bet you had a Halloween spirit when you were younger.

Speaker 7 (32:09):
O wait, into our teens? Yea, yeah, okay, you know
Gieki was in her twenties when she stopped.

Speaker 1 (32:16):
Really, whoa, that's kind of cool. Wow, that's one. Hey, Kiki,
how is the wedding? I haven't seen I saw you
briefly the last night. But how's the wedding?

Speaker 7 (32:27):
She's not here? Oh well she's driving though.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
Bell. Yeah I told you be Kiki. So how was
the wedding?

Speaker 7 (32:36):
It was good?

Speaker 1 (32:37):
Yeah, people can't tell who's on radio or not. You
get a lot of nice gifts.

Speaker 7 (32:42):
Oh, and I want to thank the Conway crew. Oh yeah,
you guys went.

Speaker 6 (32:46):
All out loaded up for you gave me the best
president of all My presents.

Speaker 7 (32:51):
Oh that's great, thank you to the Conway Show. I'm
going trigger treating the night.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
Kind of weirdo trigger treating in twenty one though.

Speaker 7 (32:58):
Huh oh, I've got the halloweens spirit. Tim, I do,
I do?

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Bella. When did you stop trigger treating?

Speaker 3 (33:05):
I believe I stopped when I was fourteen, fourteen, my
freshman year of high school.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
That was the last time I went. Yeah, and it's
and it's you know what, it's a hard decision because
you do you still feel young, you still want a
trigger treat. You don't want to let that go. You
had so many fun years doing it, and you don't
want to stop doing it.

Speaker 3 (33:22):
I say let teens trig or treat because it just
it's ways safer and better than having them do something else, right,
that's right.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
Yeah, I say let them go until they're eighteen nineteen.

Speaker 6 (33:33):
But I didn't like like the older kids that just
wore their street clothes and had a pillow that plane
that's and they're like wanting candy. You know, they're knocking
like little five year old dead away. That's not cool.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Yeah, I I we had We used to live in
Magnolia Park, which is a very desirable area for trigger treaters.
And my wife, for some reason, I don't know, maybe
she comes from accounting background, whatever, she loves counting how
many kids come buy and we had I think it
was eight hundred and twenty five kids come by way. Yeah,
it was unbelievable. They come by and they just don't stop.

(34:03):
It's like one group after another after another after another,
and wipe this out, wipe this out with candy. But please,
please be careful tonight. Let's not do a story tomorrow
where a kid gets hit by a car. Let's make
this the first year in four or five years where
we don't do that story tomorrow. You're gonna feel so
great about yourself when you get home, you park the

(34:25):
car and you haven't run into a kid, and that
kid's gonna feel great too. So please, they're dressing in
you know, black outfits with the witches and you know
whatever you know outfits have it on that are all
you know, dark and ninja's and all that crap. Please
please be careful. It's not worth it. It'll ruin your life,
that ruin their life, and every single year we do

(34:45):
a story about it, and I don't want to do it.
Tomorrow because it's Dodger Parade and I don't want to
do the downer story tomorrow. We're live right here on
kf i AM six four Conway Show, on demand on
the iHeartRadio app. Now, you can always hear us live
on i AM six forty four to seven pm Monday
through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app

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