All Episodes

November 4, 2024 32 mins
Americans may not know who wins the presidency on Election Night/ Race for District Attorney pits George Gascón against independent Nathan Hochman and Actor Rob Lowe Joins Prosecutors, Firefighters in support.// Dodgers and fans honor Fernando Valenzuela on day of World Series celebrations/ Is November Too Soon for Christmas Decorations? // Dr. Darien Sutton discusses how to prepare at home for the upcoming cold and flu season/Jamie Foxx to address health scare in new Netflix special // Olivia Rodrigo reveals her biggest dating red flag/ Voting Centers/ L.A. Board Commissioner salary increase for the new Police Chief McDonald/ More High Winds 
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's kf I AM six forty and you're listening to
the Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. It's
Conway Show on the eve. We're already there. Remember last
year or earlier this year, like two hundred and eighty
five more days to we vote, one hundred and eighty
four more days to we vote, thirty eight more ninety days.

(00:21):
It's tomorrow. It's tomorrow, and then it's over. After tomorrow,
it's over and no more political ads. Maybe we'll have
a winner, maybe we'll have a loser. Who knows. But
election night in America it's always a big deal.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
Yes, in thirty six hours, we're all wondering what we
have an answer to? Who is the next president. Some
analysts predict the race will not be decided tomorrow night,
not because of fraud or election interference, they say, but
because of rules around when ballots can be turned in
and voted. Swing states like Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, for example,
don't begin processing absentee ballots until election day. Nevada allows

(01:02):
four days for ballots to arrive, as long as they
are postmarked before or on November fifth, and Arizona, much
like California, usually sees a high number of mail in votes.
For example, By the way, I just wanted to mention
I spoke with the registrar last week. Forty eight percent
of ballots that come in go through a system and
the signature is verified by a computer. That means all

(01:23):
the rest have to be man signature verified. So somebody
has to go in and look at different versions of
our signatures to verify our boat.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
Oh, that's the worst. And you know, you never know
what stories to believe, what not to believe, what to
believe when these stories come out. It was a story
that came out that there were there aren't enough ballots
out there for the military to vote, you know, military
that's overseas or you know, out of this country, or

(01:50):
in I don't know, in some of the military bases
in this country. There's not enough ballots for the military.
I find that hard to believe, very hard to believe.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Anyway, the mail in ballots take time, and for those reasons,
we may not see an election night finish.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
The fact that there's a delay doesn't mean something bad happen.
In fact, it probably means something good happen. It means
that election.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
Officials, okay, well, if that's true, then let's delay it
for a year. If the longer the delay, the more
good things that happen.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
Is the fact that there's a delay doesn't mean something
bad happen. In fact, it probably means something good happening.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Okay, all right, well, then delay it longer. If that's good.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
It means that election officials are doing what they should do,
which is verifying ballots and taking their time. This is
not something where the thing we should prize is speed.
We should prize accuracy.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
I saw a woman on today on the news come
up to one of those you know, my ballot boxes
where you can you know, the collection boxes, and she
put in like twelve ballots. Where she get the I
don't know, it seems odd, seems strange, and maybe she
works in an old folks home and she was just
delivering for everybody. You want to believe that everything's on

(03:08):
the up and up. But she seemed to like be
hiding it. She knew there was a news crew right there,
and you would think that if she was doing something,
you know, illegal, she would not do it there and
she would go to another ballot box. But she just
threw them in the ballot box there it was like
twelve of them, So I don't know, Maybe she's on

(03:29):
the up and up.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
We also spoke with News Nation political analyst Chris Steierwalt.
He reiterated, the polls are just polls, they are not
official votes. And as we learned last week, people lie
to pollsters.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
That's right. Well, look, you lie to your kids. Why
wouldn't you lie to pollsters. You know you lie to
your kids all the time.

Speaker 2 (03:48):
Plus, voting behavior changed during the pandemic, so we can't
expect elections of the past.

Speaker 5 (03:53):
We're accustomed to twenty sixteen and twenty twenty where the
races didn't look close but were closer than we thought.
And in twenty twelve and in other elections it's been
the opposite, which is the race looks close, but it
really isn't and just a little bit of a gust
of wind for either one of these candidates. This could
certainly be another year like that where it looks close

(04:15):
but it isn't that close.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
All right, let's run down tomorrow. First talents come in
at four pm. That's when all polls will have closed
in six states.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
Ooh, four pm tomorrow. Six states close at four pm,
exactly a time to go on tomorrow, So stay tuned
tomorrow to kf FIED four pm.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
Including the battleground of Georgia. North Carolina's polls close. Thirty
minutes later at five pm. Polls close in sixteen states
and DC. That's one hundred and seventy one electoral votes total.
That includes battleground Pennsylvania nineteen crucial electoral College votes. There
many polls in Michigan close it at that hour as well.

(04:55):
Then comes six pm we'll have a better idea of.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
And if you want to the using rallies or tonight.
I don't know what Kamala Harris is doing tonight, but
I know that Donald Trump is in Michigan tonight. That's
his tradition when he runs for president, he always does
his last rally in Michigan. So starting at seven thirty tonight,

(05:18):
I don't know, you can probably see it on I
don't know Fox covers it or not, or running it
live or dip in and out in and out of it.
I don't know. But Trump's last rally is tonight at
seven thirty pm in Michigan. So if you're into that,
look at that.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
Then comes six pm.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
We'll have a better idea of what's going on across
the country. Fifteen more states come in.

Speaker 1 (05:39):
All right, and we'll be on the air. I'll be
on the air with John Colebel tomorrow at six pm
when these states close.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
Including Arizona, Wisconsin, and the last pools in Michigan. Wow,
one hundred and sixty three electoral votes are on the
line in those states. Again, that's six pm. Then Nevada
comes an hour later.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
Oh, everybody's so nervous. If you love Kamala Eras, so
you love Donald Trump, You're nervous. You're nervous. You're not
gonna sleep tonight. You canna be all anxious. You're gonna
get up in the morning. You're going to consume all
that news. You want the numbers, the raw numbers, they
exit polls. What are we trending? What is the LA Times?
New York Times say? What does CNN or what are

(06:18):
all these posters doing? Are they right? Are they wrong?

Speaker 6 (06:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Tomorrow is gonna be wild. Half this country is going
to be happy and half this country is going to
be really pissed. What we will find either way, either way,
it shakes down what.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
We will find out on Tuesday night. Is voter turnout
we're gonna feel about who's using those mail in ballance.
Is this a record like many states are showing right now,
or did more people just vote early?

Speaker 1 (06:42):
Yeah? Or maybe more people said scrow it not voting.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Also, did Republicans vote early a ship from the last election.
We'll see in about thirty hours.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
Yeah, thirty hours from now. All right, the DA's race,
that's a hot race.

Speaker 7 (06:57):
Nathan Hawkman, who is running against George Gascon. He brought
out actor Rob Low today on the final day of campaigning,
holding a rally right here outside the Hall of Justice
where current DA George Gascon has his office.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
Low telling us, quote.

Speaker 7 (07:13):
It's time for the daight to prioritize us over the
Menendez brothers.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
Polls close in a little.

Speaker 4 (07:19):
Over twenty four hours in La County.

Speaker 7 (07:21):
District, Attorney candidate Nathan Hawkman called in help from Hollywood
to motivate voters to make a change.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
That's always rough to come out one way or another
on the DA's race, because let's say George Gascon wins,
then Rob Low came out for Hawkman. So anything that
Rob Low does, if he gets into any kind of
legal trouble. The DA is going to stick it to
him because he came out against him, so he'll be

(07:47):
very careful. You got to think about that kind of stuff.
You gotta think about it, Think about it, think about it.

Speaker 7 (07:52):
I also don't do political enforcements only on cauled in
help from Hollywood to motivate voters to make it change.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
I also don't do political endorsements except for right now,
only on television, only on the West Way do I
do that.

Speaker 8 (08:10):
But there comes a time where the quality of life
of a city that I have loved since I came
here in nineteen seventy six, it's a man's need to
get off the damn couch and come out here and
offer my endorsements.

Speaker 7 (08:28):
Playing the role which isn't a role of a citizen,
a concerned citizen in this county, that might be your
greatest role. And at Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll
sponsored by the La Times, Hawkman maintains a large lead
over George Gascone, though smaller than it was last month.
Hawkman leads Gascon by twenty five points, with twenty five
percent of likely voters still undecided. Hawkman has maintained his lead.

(08:51):
Since August. October eighth, he was up thirty points, and
back on August eighteenth, he was up twenty five points.
In a statement, Gascon's campaign said this campaign was never
going to be easy, with tens of millions being spent
against the DA since he took office.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Yeah, we'll see tomorrow, we'll get some early numbers and
exit polls. So you've got to turn tune into KFFI tomorrow.
You know a lot of days, you know it's important,
but not really important. Tomorrow, really important, very important tomorrow.
So we expect to see you here tomorrow. Class starts
at four o'clock. It's the late afternoon class, four pm tomorrow.

(09:30):
That's what time you got to be here. So do
whatever you gotta do, run your errands in the morning,
early afternoon, be in your car at four, and I
expect you to be here. That's just perfect because right
at four, you know, it's an hour before the first
polls close on the East coast. Yeah, you get a
little prepper and then all of a sudden things start
swinging in at five. And I'm going to be drinking tomorrow,
which is a tradition here. I take like nine shots

(09:50):
of vodka, and I get crazy, just belligerent and yelling
and punching and oh it's horrible, but I do it
every So if you're familiar with the program, I get bombed.
STEP's already crying bombed, Yeah, Stepani going to Stepan. Stephush
and I were the only two guys drinking at Morongo. Well,
everybody else was drinking tea and coffee and sodas. Yeah,

(10:14):
and Stephush and I. Man, we we're doing belly shots
with each other at one point.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
It's wild.

Speaker 9 (10:21):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
Happy belated birthday to Fernando Allenzuela. He turned sixty four.
He would have turned sixty four on Friday, the day
that the Dollars Dodgers had their big World Series rally
and celebration through the streets of downtown LA and Dodger Stadium.
It was a cool event. Bellio was nice enough to

(10:50):
convince me that I should go to Dodger Stadium. Really,
I really don't go to events like that much because
of the how big the crowd is. But I said, okay,
I'll go, and I'm I had the greatest time ever
at Bellio. I loved it. I really appreciate you convincing
me to go good times. But the one thing I
I'm going to stop doing myself, and maybe you could

(11:13):
join me. Not Bellio, but the audience. When somebody dies
who are in their sixties or early seventies, we've got
to stop saying he left us way too young. He
left us way too early. He was so young to die.

(11:33):
He was sixty four. He left us way too early.
You know what that's doing when you say that, it's
blaming Fernando Alezuela for not taking care of himself. That's
what you're saying. That's the only thing you're saying, unless
it was an accident where he died in a plane
accident or car accident. But if somebody dies because of

(11:56):
health reasons and you say, oh, he left us way
too early, the subtext of that is you blame him
for not taking care of himself. And that's just rude.
It's it's completely rude because you don't know what kind
of life he had. He used to pitch in Mexico
and work during the day in the fields and in

(12:19):
the local shop in a small town in Mexico. Well,
when you're working in the nineteen sixties in a field
in Mexico, maybe just maybe they're using chemicals that aren't
good for you in a town of five thousand people
in Mexico. Maybe that's possible, and that that maybe that

(12:44):
had an effect on him later on in life. But
when people say he left us way too early, it's
shaming and blaming people. If somebody dies in their thirties,
I get that left us way too early, too young
to die. I understand that when a guy's sixty four
and spent a lot of time in Mexico, working in

(13:06):
Mexico or working here in the United States, in you know,
around chemicals or in the field or whatever, working in
any country, and and dies early, you don't know. You
don't know how. You don't know how he you know,
what his lifestyle was like, and maybe he died way

(13:27):
too late. Maybe he you know, everybody else in his
town that he grew up in Mexico died in their
forties and he made it until sixty three, So you
don't know. But I find it really off putting and
really rude when people blame the person who's dead, Oh,
he left his way too early. What you're saying, is

(13:50):
he didn't take care of himself. And for you to
say that on the day he died or the week
he died, really really rude. It's rude, completely rude. All right,
let's get into something lighter here. When is a good
time to decorate for Christmas? I say the day after Halloween.

(14:10):
That's when it's fair game.

Speaker 10 (14:11):
One survey says about thirty four percent of Americans who
plan to decorate, we'll put up their outdoor holiday touches
before Thanksgiving.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
Meks right now that Halloween is over.

Speaker 11 (14:20):
I wanted to show you how to properly bluff.

Speaker 12 (14:22):
A Christmas treat.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
That's right, you gotta do. I do it immediately immediately
that Christmas decorations came out. Halloween was on a Thursday.
On Friday, I took everything down and on Saturday, Christmas
decorations came out on Saturday. Inside outside, we're going and
retailers are all for it. All right. Speaking of retailers,

(14:43):
there's another thing I got to bring to your attention,
because it's brought it's been brought to my attention. And
another thing that I think is rude. If you go
to hobby lobby, you see everybody buying Christmas decorations, and
you know they're buying you know, nutcrackers and wreaths and
lights and ornaments and trees, all that stuff, all the

(15:06):
Christmas decorations, Stanta the Reindeer, all that stuff, and they
buy it and they decorate their house so it's beautiful,
you know, like these glass Christmas trees, these ornaments that
you hang from the tree or chandelier or whatever, candles
and makes the house look beautiful. Well, guess what, eighty

(15:29):
five percent of all the Christmas decorations that are bought
at Hobby Lobby, they come back after the first of
the year, because I think there's a sixty day return policy.
So all these phonies who are decorating their house to
show everybody that they've got some money and they've got
some taste behind your back, they're bringing all this crap

(15:54):
back to Hobby Lobby. And you'll see if you go
to hobby Lobby after January first, you'll see a law,
a line thirty forty fifty deep of people who, without
any conscience, they're bringing their Christmas decorations back to Hobby Lobby,

(16:15):
and Hobby Lobby gives them their money back. These phonies
who stand in line at hobby Lobby. You know, they
decorated their place all nights, thinking, oh, this guy has
made it. He's got some nice decorations. Now he borrowed
them Hobby Lobby, lent them to them for free, and
now they're going back to hobby Lobby where they can

(16:37):
be sold next year to the same people doing the
same thing. They're LA phonies. Let's do LA and let
LA in a phony minute. Let's be another online video
phonies in LA in a minute. Let's get into it.
These people buying stuff at hobby Lobby, they'll bring it

(16:58):
back after the first of the year as their phonies.
LA phonies in a minute.

Speaker 9 (17:03):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Unfortunately, flu season is coming up. Maybe you're gonna get
the flu shot. I know they're offering it at Vond's
and Pavilions. I think for free until I heard I
don't know. Maybe there's something you gotta do to get
it for free.

Speaker 13 (17:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
But I also heard you get ten percent or fifteen
percent discount on groceries on gros if you get the
flu shot. So I don't know. Maybe you get it,
maybe you don't. Who knows, But your flu season checklist.

Speaker 11 (17:37):
How do we get our holiday our holiday safety bags
and safety kits together? Thinking about the things that we need,
especially as we move into this viral season. I think
the most important thing is a digital thermometer. You don't
need a special thermometer, and you know as an er doctor,
those four hit thermometers are not as accurate as you
want them to be. Sticking to the basics is the
most helpful. Of course, you want to have things like
a seene of menifit or insights for paying discomfort or fevers,

(18:00):
And of course you want to have things like a
scene of menifine or in says for pain.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
To com Okay, I got that one and SAIDs for
what's incest and says for anybody, can you get it
over the counter? Is incest? Fight the flu? And says
for odd have an odd thing? And says I've never

(18:25):
heard that? Is that an old time? It's got the
old school? Yeah, totally old school cure. Did he mean
incense and says for pain insids? Yes, it's an inset.

Speaker 13 (18:37):
What is that? It's like the seed of meniphin it's
a yet it is. Yeah, it's I'll get you the
definition here.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
Really, Belly, you're like a die like doctor Ray.

Speaker 13 (18:47):
Well, you know, I refer to myself as the doctor
Ray of KF.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
That's right, Yeah, when you're not calling yourself the Caraburnett
of KFI.

Speaker 7 (18:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (18:55):
I go back and forth between the two. An inst
is it's non steroid anti inflammatory drugs.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
Drugs that can reduce pain and inflammation.

Speaker 11 (19:07):
Okay, insets for pain, discomfort or fevers. And if you
notice a fever, have no fear. Just wait to see
if it goes down and then consult your career provider.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Yeah, a fever is good. A fever is your body
fighting off ailments and disease and foreign you know, I
don't know cold flu. It's your body's fighting it with
the flu. It's trying to burn it out and then also.

Speaker 11 (19:33):
Staling nasal washes and also suction bulbs. I stick to
these things instead of decongestents, because sticking to the basics
is probably going to be the most effective. We talked
a lot about decongestins. Unfortunately the data isn't there, and
I think really important know your child's weight and their
vaccination status. The weight is for the medication provision, so
when you're giving out they see tomnifit or those insets.

(19:54):
It's weight based and so you want to have an
up to date weight. Many parents come into the emergency room,
I wave it, and then I realized that they've been
underdose and that's the reason why their fever is persistent.
So those are some key things you need. And then
remember there's still time to get your flu vaccine or
your COVID update.

Speaker 4 (20:09):
There is.

Speaker 11 (20:09):
The numbers are still low and so you can still
better protect yourself as.

Speaker 12 (20:12):
We move into the holiday period.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
You agreement, Yeah, she wasn't listening, do you agreement?

Speaker 12 (20:20):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (20:22):
A journey.

Speaker 11 (20:23):
They are, they are, they are you know you are
doctors that work with me don't get sick from our patients.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
We get sick from the kids.

Speaker 11 (20:28):
So we got to make sure to be careful.

Speaker 12 (20:30):
There you go.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
Krowzier, I think we talked about the last week. I
forgot though. Do you get the flu shut? No, you
don't take one? All right, step you take the flu shot?
You get one? I usually don't know. Elly, Oh are
you gonna get the flu shut? I love it? Five
of them? Wow, you're not gonna get a flu shot.
I should, but I don't.

Speaker 9 (20:52):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Probably I will, probably you will. Yeah, what about you, Angel,
you take the flu shot? No, I've never had one. Really,
I don't get the flu. Well, guess what. Knock on wood,
I'm gonna take all of yours for you. I'm gonna
get five. Oh good, And you have done that before,
have I? Okay, I get that. I got a flu
shot around ten years ago at a Sears in Topanga Plazas. Yeah,

(21:18):
they are, well, not in Sears. They're offering them outside
of Sears. And it's outside the door, just outside the door,
un table set up, got a table in flu shots.
I said, give me a flu shot. Ten bucks or
twenty bucks does gold. And then about three weeks later,
we were at Walgreens and I saw, Hey, they're offering
flu shots and I said to my wife, I'm gonna
get a flu shot. Joe, you just did two weeks ago.

(21:40):
I was that this year last year.

Speaker 11 (21:43):
You.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
God, this guy's dumb.

Speaker 13 (21:45):
He's so dumb.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
He's like the dumbest guy in the world. And so
I've doubled up. I probably shouldn't have done that. Cannot
be good. I don't know. Maybe maybe get twice the protection,
you know, so you get two separate chots, so you
load them up into one big needle. No, I get
two separate one on each arm. Bang bang thing dog

(22:08):
Off to the races, walk along with two dead arms
on your side. That's right, Hey, you got banded on
each arm.

Speaker 12 (22:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
I got two flu shots, one outside of series and
one outside of Seers and one outside of Walgreens. Do
you ever go into these stores? Jim nah, not that really,
not that much, all right? Jamie Fox updated on Jamie
Fox's health. What's going on with this guy? Up next
to Jamie Fox?

Speaker 14 (22:32):
The Hollywood ail Us to return to the stage in
a new Netflix special called What had Happened? Was on Friday,
the streamer releasing a quick teaser, sharing a snippet of
sound where Fox appears to be addressing the big health
scare that left him hospitalized the last year.

Speaker 4 (22:47):
Tackles.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
I said, if facing stayed funny, I can stay alive.

Speaker 4 (22:59):
I'm beat.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
There you go Fox.

Speaker 14 (23:02):
What had Happened was Premiere's December tenth Wow.

Speaker 11 (23:05):
And he's really said, what we.

Speaker 1 (23:07):
Know about you don't know anything. I don't know much.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Sounds like he's gonna.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
Tell yeah, I'd like to find out, all right, and
then we have Olivia. When we come back Olivia Rodrigo,
she reveals her biggest dating red flags. So if you
want to date Olivia Rodrigo, you're gonna want to listen
to kfive give you the inside track.

Speaker 9 (23:29):
Here you're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from
KFI Am six forty.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
We have pop star Olivia Rodrigo, very very hot act.
A lot of kids show up to see her, very
talented young lady, and she reveals her biggest dating red flags.
So if you're interested in possibly dating Olivia Rodrigo, it's possible.
Somebody listening right now, you know, has a shot. You'll

(23:59):
want to hear this and you can avoid some mistakes.
These are red flags from Olivia Rodrigo.

Speaker 15 (24:07):
They say, yes, I don't dat.

Speaker 12 (24:09):
Olivia Rodrigo is opening up about her biggest dating red
flags while sharing some BTS secrets about her Guts tour
with Netflix. The brutal singer reveals the go to question
she asks while on dates, and depending on the answer,
it can leave her feeling sour.

Speaker 15 (24:28):
The biggest red flag. Okay, this is a very oddly
specific question that I ask guys on first dates.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
How much money do you make? Where's your house? Kind
of CARDI drive? Is that a real rolex?

Speaker 5 (24:41):
Is?

Speaker 7 (24:41):
That?

Speaker 1 (24:41):
Is that some of them?

Speaker 15 (24:42):
I always ask them if they think that they would
want to go to space, and if they say yes,
I don't data.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
Oh god, it's that wild. That is so odd. If
they want to go to space, so then she doesn't
date them, that is weird, odd odd odd odd aud.

Speaker 15 (25:03):
I just think if you want to go to space,
you're a little too full of yourself.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
I think it's just weird.

Speaker 12 (25:09):
And Olivia isn't the only one.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
So astronauts have a shot here.

Speaker 12 (25:13):
Who agrees with her Space red flag as Grimes, whose
acts as SpaceX founder Elon Musk, also chimes in on
the conversation, writing on X formerly Twitter, it's true only
women should be going to space and this isn't the
first time the Disney Channel alum, who's currently in a
relationship with Louis Partridge, has shared her perspective on dating.

(25:37):
In fact, as she told Variety in an interview in
twenty twenty one, her debut album Sour served as a
deeply personal one, telling the outlet I definitely talked about
my deepest, darkest secrets and insecurities on sour, which is
sort of strange to be like, here, you guys can
have this. Anyone who wants to listen to it can listen.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
To me who cares. All right, let's look at the
jobs report. How voters will be affected by a recent
jobs report.

Speaker 16 (26:08):
Those twelve thousand jobs the economy added last month may
seem shockingly low, especially when you consider estimates were for
about one hundred thousand jobs added. But October was no
usual month. The Labor Department says Hurricanes Helene and Milton,
coupled with a major strike at Boeing likely distorted the numbers,
leading to the weakest month for job growth since December

(26:30):
of twenty twenty. But there was little impact from the
strike or the hurricanes on the unemployment rate, which held
steady at four point one percent as wages rose slightly.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
That's still incredibly low four point one percent. That means
almost ninety six percent of people who want to work
can find a job. That's a pretty big number.

Speaker 4 (26:50):
Now.

Speaker 16 (26:50):
The most jobs were added in healthcare and government last month,
but more than forty thousand jobs were lost in manufacturing.
That's thanks in large part to that Boeing strike. Now,
the report did give Wall Street a reason to rally,
the Dow jumping nearly three hundred points to kick off November,
the Nasdaq climbing more than one hundred and forty, and
the S and P five hundred added more than twenty points.

(27:12):
Traders are betting the week jobs report will keep the
Federal Reserve on track to cut interest rates by a
quarter point at next week's meeting and give the federal
little room to continue lowering borrowing costs. Now this last
job's report before the election quickly becoming political thodder. The
Biden administration saying the economy remained strong, the Trump campaign

(27:32):
calling this report a catastrophe.

Speaker 1 (27:35):
All right, that's odd. They wouldn't agree on it, all right.
Mammoth got their first snow, or maybe not their first snow,
but they got some snow, and they're expected to open
in Mammoth. If you love skiing, they're expecting to open
a week from Friday, on November fifteenth.

Speaker 4 (27:51):
It's just about time for ski season.

Speaker 6 (27:53):
The area received a few inches of snow overnight, and
snow groomers are already hard at work.

Speaker 4 (27:57):
Preparing for skiers and snowboarders.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
This mammoth Mountain is set to open for the season
one week.

Speaker 4 (28:02):
From this frime.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
That is unbelievable, all right. The board LA Board Commissioners
are looking at a salary increase for the new chief
of police for LAPD. How much is Jim McDonald going
to make?

Speaker 6 (28:19):
This week the LA Board of Police Commissioners will consider
the new salary for the next LAPD chief, and it
is a lot more than the last chief bade.

Speaker 4 (28:27):
Tomorrow, the Board will consider a proposed.

Speaker 6 (28:30):
Salary of more than five hundred and seven thousand dollars
for Jim McDonald.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
Wow, five hundred and seven thousand dollars for Jimmy and
Jim McDonald. He also has a pension coming from the
Sheriff's department. He was the sheriff for a while and
he's also the chief of police in Long Beach. Plus
he was with LAPD as a street cup or. I

(28:55):
don't know what he rose through with his ranks, but
he's possibly looking had four different pensions. When he retires, Man,
that guy's going to be in the driver's seat. He's
gonna get a VOAT and RV condo at mammoth or veil.
This guy's going to be loaded.

Speaker 4 (29:16):
Who's expected to fill that position.

Speaker 6 (29:18):
That's about three hundred and fifty thousand dollars more than
what the previous chief, Michael Moore made. If approved, the
salary would require a vote by the La City Council.
It's not clear why McDonald would make a significant amount
more than more.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
Yeah, he's making more than more.

Speaker 11 (29:34):
Is that right?

Speaker 4 (29:34):
We would make a significant amount more than more.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
Yeah, he's making more than more, more than more, all right,
but he's spent it. He's getting an extra three hundred
and fifty thousand dollars. Wow, Maybe because he has to
deal with the Olympics. Maybe maybe, or maybe he just
he's worth it. That's possible as well. Yeah, but he's
making an extra three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. All right,

(30:00):
don't forget. You got to be careful with these winds.
It's going to be windy over the next couple of days.
Maybe not your area, but certainly San Fernando Valley and
coming out of the comb Pass windy city, and you
got to be very very careful. A little tiny spark
and we're off to the races, and it could get
real ugly around here.

Speaker 10 (30:19):
Once again. The Santa Ana winds are blowing into southern California.

Speaker 17 (30:23):
You could see.

Speaker 10 (30:23):
Trees, signs in lights blowing in the wind from powerful gusts.
A red flagged warning is in effect today for parts
of La and Ventura Counties, and the wind is already
causing damage. In San Fernando, a tree came crashing down
on Fox Street.

Speaker 17 (30:38):
The winds are very strong and the reason why is
because of the proximity to the foothills over here. It
just whips down the side of my house and I
can hear the chimes all night.

Speaker 10 (30:48):
Firefighters say you should avoid activities that could spark a fire,
like using any machinery.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Yeah, and also maybe wind chimes. You can take them
down for the next couple of days.

Speaker 10 (30:56):
And don't do yard work like cutting grass. They say
this small spark can be dangerous.

Speaker 4 (31:01):
Pay attention to the fire burn bands.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
If you're not allowed to burn, you don't.

Speaker 11 (31:05):
If you are somebody who works with have you equipment
and machinery.

Speaker 5 (31:08):
Make sure there's no chains hanging from your trailers.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
They cause sparks.

Speaker 7 (31:11):
Well.

Speaker 10 (31:11):
There is a higher risk for wildfires to spark this week.
It's also important to note that power outages.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
Is a guy in the background ignoring all the warnings.

Speaker 10 (31:19):
It's also important to note that power outages also occur
when winds are this powerful. Looking ahead, the National Weather
Service says a second, potentially stronger and more widespread Santa
Ana wind event will happen on Wednesday and Thursday. So
fire crews are on standby in case brush fires break out.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Okay, so tomorrow not as bad. Wednesday and Thursday the
winds pick up, Please be alert. And if you're in
the mountains, in the hillside areas, this thing could go
up in a in a split second, So be a vigilant,
be careful out there, and report any fires asap, even

(31:57):
the small ones you think, like little trash cans on fire.
That's how these big ones start. And Wednesday and Thursday
we're gonna have the Santa Ana wins and it's gonna
be wild around here. So be aware of that. Beware
of that all right. Tomorrow, elections starting all day. John
Colebel at one o'clock. I'm coming in at four, then
Moe Kelly, Mark Thompson will be here as well. We're
gonna have all the coverage free tomorrow all the elections,

(32:19):
all the numbers, local, state, and national numbers, all night long.
We will start tomorrow at one pm with John Cobot.
We're live on KFI AM six forty more Kelly Next
on KFI Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now,
you can always hear us live on KFI AM six
forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime

(32:42):
on demand on the iHeart Radio app

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.