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. Is this
sounds We're live. Oh, I am six forty eight. It's
Conway Show. We have a new total from the fourteenth
Annual Pastathon. The updated total in cash one million, two thousand,
(00:23):
sixty nine dollars. That is a lot, so thank you
so much for participating. That's a hell of a lot.
Seventy eight, nine hundred and fifty five pounds of pasta
and sauce. That is also, I believe a record. I
believe both those are records. So that is fan fantastic.
All right, Riverside, if you live in Riverside, the Illin Empire.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
I love it out there.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
If I do it all over again, I'd raise my
child in the Inland Empire somewhere somewhere, not sure where,
but somewhere in the Inland Empire. It's like being in
nineteen seventy two again in southern californ for I love it.
But they're having a problem with Amazon delivery. Something's going
on out there in Riverside, and I don't know what
(01:08):
it is.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
I don't know why they can't deliver these packages.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
They've marked some packages unable to deliver due to weather
and road hazards.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
Wait, weather and road hazards. They haven't seen rain and
riverside in a month a month of days, so.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
We've had clear skies for the last month. We haven't
seen a.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Drop of rains. Exactly what I just said, Exactly what
I just s It's.
Speaker 4 (01:30):
One of the latest issues that Randy got from Amazon
after his packages, he said, never arrived.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
You're told your package is out for delivery, and then
you never hear anything else. We have to rely on
a local Facebook group as the bulletin board to communicate
with the other locals to figure out, Hey, who's seen
Amazon today? Where are they this time? Where can we
find them?
Speaker 2 (01:49):
What's going on with the Amazon.
Speaker 4 (01:51):
Randy is the owner of Mister Happy's Mercantile and Anza.
His shop located in the heart of the community of
less than five thousand people that he says relies on
online orders.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Originally, we were receiving all of our packages ups and usps.
About a month ago, the Amazon delivery service took over.
In the Amazon trucks with their own drivers were all there.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
On Tuesday, we spotted four Amazon vans at this ends
of fire station, customers eager to get their packages, like
Missy Ziggler, who waited for an hour for the delivery vans.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Amazon drivers won't deliver.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
They called a hang up and then we get a
message saying our house isn't accessible, but they're not there.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Why isn't this happening? What's going on with Amazon?
Speaker 4 (02:35):
Yes, only a few customers walked away with boxes, while
others were left empty handed.
Speaker 3 (02:40):
I pay for you to deliver it to my door.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
I shouldn't have to go check down your driver every day.
Speaker 4 (02:46):
After we were unable to contact the third party vendor,
we stopped by their Temecula location off DS Road to
get some answers, but an employee left us hanging in
the lobby after promising to connect us with the company representative.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
What possibly could be happening where Amazon is not delivering
these packages in Riverside?
Speaker 2 (03:05):
What's going on?
Speaker 1 (03:06):
I mean, that's a that's a big deal for people
to live out there, these Amazon deliveries.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
I don't know what's going happening. I remember really sure
what was going on?
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Crozer, you're out in Claremont or Montclair, Claremont, Montclair, Claremont.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
What do you have any problems with packages out there?
Speaker 4 (03:22):
I do not, Randy says, he and several other customers
have reached out for answers.
Speaker 2 (03:28):
They are still in the dark.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
Originally they were there for a few hours. We had
no issues, and now it's an hour a day if
we're lucky. As you saw yesterday, they were there for
about twenty two minutes and then they closed their doors
and said, yeah, we're not doing this, and they took off.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
They gotta look into that. Gotta look into it.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Speaking of packages, you can now buy insurance that will
that will protect you from porch pirates.
Speaker 5 (03:52):
Been a huge week for shopping. We saw record numbers
for Cyber Monday sales. That means that influx of packages
are now on their way. And with those, everiz comes
a major problem porch pirates. Some of these thieves snatching
packages within seconds of delivery, many looking at the packaging,
targeting things like electronics. Home security company Safely says one
(04:12):
hundred and twenty million packages were stolen off porches last year,
costing consumers sixteen billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Wow, did you hear that number? How many packages were stolen?
You are you listening?
Speaker 2 (04:23):
Carefully.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
People out there listening to KFI, are you listening carefully?
Listen to this number again. I know you're making dinner,
you're you know, with the kids, and you're distracted. Put
everything down for a second. Listen to the number of
packages that were stolen.
Speaker 5 (04:37):
Home security company Safelyy says one hundred twenty million packages
were stolen off.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Do you hear that?
Speaker 1 (04:42):
One hundred and twenty million packages were stolen?
Speaker 5 (04:45):
One hundred and twenty million packages were stolen off porches
last year, costing consumers sixteen billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
Wow, one hundred and twenty million. That's three packages for
every human being that lives in California's.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
That's a big problem. There's now insurance to cover it.
A company called porch Pials is offering a subscription that
will cover the cost of your stolen packages one hundred
and twenty dollars a year. Covers up to two thousand
dollars worth of deliveries or three claims a year. Porch
Pile says your policy is linked directly to your credit
or debit card, so every purchase you make with that
card qualifies for the coverage. The company also saying it
(05:22):
is the first and only subscription based package theft coverage
available in the US. There are some other things you
can do to deter and stop these thefts. Many people
have a indorbell cameras. We've seen that you can track
your packages. If you can't be home when they're being delivered,
you can have your package is sent to a safe
monitored location like a pharmacy or a delivery lock box.
Speaker 1 (05:42):
A lock box, a lock box box that's a lock box,
right lock box or or old school. You can go
to a store, buy the product, stick it in your card,
stick it in your car, and take it home. There's
that that move as well. Go to costco, sniff around,
(06:05):
buy what you want, put it in your cart, pay
for it, check out, take.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
It home, enjoy it.
Speaker 5 (06:11):
That's also good for making sure that people in your
house don't see what presence you're buying.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
People.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Yeah, a billions of year.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Yeah, a lot of money. Good point. Yeah, good point,
good point, good point, good point, nice point, good point,
good point.
Speaker 6 (06:35):
I love that other one.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
Roller coaster.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
Well, she's doing the news, she's on a on the
on the big dipper, is that you and oh yeah, oh.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
No, it's belly. Oh again, Oh it's wrong with that. Yeah,
guy throwing up over there. Bellio must be texting them
what a sign of the time. So people have to
buy insurance for your packages whatever?
Speaker 1 (07:15):
All right, when we come back, we have one of
our favorite segments that we do is we talk to
Dean Sharp the House Whisper. By the way, this portion
of the show at six o'clock every Thursday, we talk
about packages and delivery and insurance and all that stuff.
And it always is being brought to you by Advanced
(07:36):
air dot com One day treatment, life changing results. Make
your appointment today at Advanced hair dot Com.
Speaker 7 (07:43):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
One of our the most popular segments we do every
week on the show is with Dean Sharp. And this
is like every week Dean is with us the House
Whisper on every Saturday morning and Sunday morning right here
on KFI.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Dan, how you Bob, I'm good.
Speaker 8 (08:05):
I'm coming to you live from the parking lot of
a restaurant in thousand os that's doing a grand opening tonight.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Oh that's cool.
Speaker 9 (08:15):
I excuse myself from the table. I'm like, I gotta
go talk to Tim.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
You're a very sweet man to keep your commitment even
though you're otherwise engaged now. But first of all, can
you describe what your donation was to the Caterina's Club
auction because a lot of people who said it was great.
Speaker 8 (08:36):
It was a it's what we do a lot of.
It is a three hour in home design consult for
your home. So Tina and I show up, we sit down,
spend a while talking about your story, and then we
tour the house and we ask you to take a
little time, give us a little time to kind of
(08:56):
percolate on it, and then we sit back down with
you and we blow your mind with what can be
changed in order to transform that place.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
Have you ever had this where you walked in the
house and you and Tina looked around, and then you
came back early and said there's no hope.
Speaker 8 (09:12):
Yeah, we never have. I'll tell you one though. There's
one that I couldn't do.
Speaker 9 (09:17):
Uh.
Speaker 8 (09:17):
And it was a It was a really sweet guy
who was unfortunately a hoarder. And we walked into the
house and I kid you not, we couldn't see it. Wow,
we literally couldn't see it. It was like a almost
a three thousand square ft house and there was so
much stuff in there. I had to turn to him
and say I had to turn him and say, I
don't know how to answer any of your questions because
(09:40):
I can't see your house.
Speaker 5 (09:42):
Well.
Speaker 9 (09:42):
I can see the ceilings. That's it. That's all I
can see.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Okay, but when you walk at me, what we're gonna
talk about today are the secrets of ISH.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
I don't understand that. But can you explain that to me?
Speaker 9 (09:52):
Okay?
Speaker 8 (09:53):
ISS is just kind of my thing. It's it's something
I've used for a long time. It's about decor, and
this is this is a tricky one. Tim this weekend
Saturday and Sunday show, I'm gonna attempt one of the
hardest things I've ever done by way of just like
communicating this verbally to people. And that is when it
(10:13):
comes to your decor, right the way you decorate your house.
I'm not talking about moving walls. I'm just talking about decor.
People get really frustrated. They get really confused because they
see the way things look in magazine spreads and they think,
you know what, I'm never gonna live like that. I
never get to have a house like that. My house
is never gonna be sexy and nice and you know.
(10:35):
And so the first thing is, first of all, no
one lives in a magazine spread home, No one, right,
you know, it's just unreal. I just want to take
everybody off the hook for that, right. I like to
give this example. Imagine, like this beautiful sophisticated kitchen layout
in some design magazine. Right, you can bring that kitchen
to its knees by just putting a refrigerator magnet on
(10:57):
the fridge with a Kindergarten coloring project. Right, that's real life. Okay,
but you never see that in a magazine. So the
big question is, listen, my life is not I'm not
you know, I live in a modern house, or maybe
I live in a craftsman bungalow, or I live in
a Victorian house or a ranch house. But it's not
one hundred percent purely that. It's you know, my house
(11:20):
is kind of ranch ish, it's modern ish, it's a
Victorian ish because it's got these other things going on,
and I'll never have a really good design. And the
fact of the matter is, it's not true. There are
secrets to blending, you know. Basically, what comes down to
kind of eclectic design, And those are the things that
(11:40):
we're talking about this weekend, so that you can step
back and say, wow.
Speaker 9 (11:45):
This place is really nice. And also real people live.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
Here every day, right, And I think people are too
hard on their own house. Like when you go to
see a house in an open house, you know, you
look through it. You may spend ten or fifteen minutes there,
and you don't see any of the scars. Are the
bruises of the house. The people live there can show
you all of them. But people are too tough on
their own home. They strive for protect for perfection, and
(12:10):
they don't think they ever get there. But I think,
you know, eighty to ninety percent and maybe even less
is perfect.
Speaker 8 (12:17):
Absolutely, that's the thing. In fact, one of the rules
that we're going to talk about this weekend is what
we call the eighty twenty rule. And it's a rule
that everybody should remember. It's not a law of design,
it's a suggestion. But the eighty twenty rule basically says this.
It says that if you kind of push a room,
(12:37):
the theme in a room to about eighty percent, like
you decide and you know, this room's going to have
kind of a blue and a leather thing going on.
Speaker 9 (12:46):
With some soft pill.
Speaker 8 (12:47):
If you kind of push that to about eighty percent,
then you know what the rest of it the other
twenty percent, It can be nick knacks from the family,
It can be it can be all sorts of things
that don't necessarily correlate to and guess what they're gonna
drop in Just fine. Real life really works inside a
home when you're at about eighty percent.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
Dean Charvis with us the house westward Saturday and Sunday
right here on KFI. Dean, are there certain things that
are going by the wayside? Imagine there are a lot,
But for instance, is it over for the hot water tank?
Speaker 8 (13:21):
Is that almost over? I would say so. I mean,
I think the numbers prove that out. Now you got
you got some holdouts who basically either one because they
don't want to spend the extra money for a tankless
water heater right up front, or two they kind of
have this survivalist mentality. It's like, well, you know what
(13:41):
the big one hits, I want one hundred gallons of
water in a reservoir in my house, And you know
that makes sense. There's a logic to it, but I
think it's kind of a strained logic when it comes
to sacrificing the fact that you know what I mean,
if you've ever lived in a home with endless hot water.
I mean, just like I can take an hour shower
(14:02):
and you can take an hour shower and there's still
plenty of it left over. It really is the way
things are. And the savings energy wise are tremendous. And
what about remember and I don't see this much anymore.
We have one, but we have a house that was
built nineteen thirty eight. The built in sliding cutting board.
You don't really see those much anymore. No, you don't
(14:24):
see those very often. You don't see them mostly because
you know what those things really need to get water.
That's you know, really you probably shouldn't just wipe them
down with that dingy dish towel and slide it back
into that dark place.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
I have a brush that we use to brush, you know,
washed potatoes before we bake them. And my wife's aunt
noticed that that's the same brush I used to clean
the dishes, and she was like, ew.
Speaker 9 (14:58):
You know what you know? I mean, I honestly, honestly,
I'm gonna let you up.
Speaker 8 (15:02):
Okay, good, okay, because I mean, come on, I mean potatoes.
Most potatoes are dirtier than the plates. That's right, you
just ate off of, so you know what it should be.
Speaker 9 (15:12):
The other way around.
Speaker 8 (15:13):
You should be you know, you should be thinking, oh,
don't use the potato brush to clean the dishes.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
You know what I do, miss though I don't see
it much and you probably see it less than I do.
Are the built in mixer? You know they used to
be like in nineteen sixties and seventies home there was
a built in mixer where you know, the dial and
the little mixer was right there.
Speaker 2 (15:32):
You just put the jar on the.
Speaker 8 (15:33):
Counter, built like the actual the hub right, built into
the countertime.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Brainy bunch style.
Speaker 8 (15:40):
Yeah, you know what that that you're really betting the
farm on that company continuing to make that exact line
and mixer. I tell you what it's been replaced with, though, Right,
you get yourself a beautiful KitchenAid mixer, Yes, a beautiful
free standing kitchen aid. And if you're doing a custom
kitchen then we've got a cabinet, a base cabinet that
(16:00):
has a platform that holds the kitchen aid. It has
a plug inside. You open the cabinet door you hit
a lever and up comes the kitchen aid hydraulically locks
in the place you can use it, and then you
just click a latch and slide it back down.
Speaker 10 (16:16):
It.
Speaker 9 (16:16):
Nobody lifts it, nobody has to keep.
Speaker 8 (16:18):
It on the countertop. If you got room for that cabinet,
it is it is a winner. You know, we got
about thirty seconds here. But the sense when I walk
into somebody's home, my sense of them making it in
life is the the spigot and the and the right
on the stove where you can fill the pot with water,
(16:38):
right there on the stove, the pasta pot, filler pasta pot.
You just you are, you're just mesmerized by I can't
stop with that. I always think that really rich people
have that. Yeah, well you know what, that's true. That's
where it came from. And uh, it has its value
because you know, you can just fill it up. But
I just got to remind you, unless there's a drain there,
(16:59):
once pasta's done, you're still carrying that pan full of water.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Okay, all right, but that does come with its own
plumbing issues, I imagine you know, it's.
Speaker 9 (17:10):
Just it's just a water line.
Speaker 8 (17:11):
And yeah, you do not actually you don't want anybody
to accidentally turn it on over by the stove because
you know you've got no drain there.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
So yeah, real quickly, off the air, I'd like to
unless you want to do this on the air. I
need a really good plumber if you know of anybody, sure, okay,
of course always you're the best, buddy. Thanks for coming on,
and thanks for your participation in Caterine's club with that
auction item is beautiful. I know it's a big day,
(17:39):
you know, it's it's an hour to wherever you go,
or an hour and a half, then three hours there,
an hour and a half back. It's a full day
for you. But man, people are going to really enjoy
that when you show up.
Speaker 9 (17:48):
Glad to do it, happy to do it.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Thank you, sir.
Speaker 1 (17:50):
All right, Dean Sharp, that was whisper every Saturday and
Sunday morning right here on KF.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
I I knew it. What was that? I knew it?
What happened? You need a plumber? Oh you heard that?
Yeah I did.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
But you're in the bathroom now, all right. Laguna, Nogal,
whole foods bad news. What's going on in Laguna and Nogel.
We'll tell you when you back.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
Not good.
Speaker 7 (18:14):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
What's going on in Laguna Negel Bellio? Are you close
to Laguna Neguel? Is that your your neighborhood?
Speaker 2 (18:27):
Yes? How far? Like ten minutes?
Speaker 7 (18:29):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (18:30):
All right?
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Is Laguna Noguel better than Irvine? Or is Irvine better
than Laguna and Negael?
Speaker 2 (18:34):
I think we're both great?
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Okay, let's stop with that. If you had to choose
between lagun and Neguel or Irvine, where would you live? Well,
obviously live in Irvine, so you chose er so flu.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
Lag Willing to split my time? Does an Angel Angel?
Do you live in Laguna Aga or near them? Yeah?
I live across from that Whole Foods.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
You're about to go, no way, you and Laguna Laguna Negal? Yeah,
you live in that Whole food And what is that?
What is that the meat place you went to?
Speaker 10 (19:08):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (19:08):
Wild Fork? Wild Fork? You go there all the time.
Speaker 6 (19:11):
Huh Yeah, it's across the street from that Whole Foods.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
Really yes, oh my god, bad vibes. Let's find out
what's going on with the Whole Foods there. It's because
it's not good not good.
Speaker 6 (19:24):
Police, send the Laguna Nogel. They're searching for a man
who tried to carjack a Whole Food's employee last night.
It happened just after ten pm as the worker, a
man in his twenties, was leaving to go home. Please
say that is when the attempted carjacking happened, and the
man was stabbed in his arm during the process. Two
nearby construction workers chased after the attempted carjacker, but we're
(19:45):
unable to catch them.
Speaker 3 (19:46):
The victim was.
Speaker 6 (19:47):
Treated at the hospital and is listed in stable condition.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Okay, ellio, do you think the criminals listen to radio?
Speaker 2 (19:54):
I bet they do.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Yes, Okay, all right, so this is just for the criminals. Okay,
if you're not a criminal, you can have a cigarette
or a beer, and maybe both. This is just for
you career criminals out there. Okay, everybody else, you get
a pass. If you're a career criminal, I got a
tip for you. It's gonna save you a lot of time.
It's gonna save you prison time. It's also gonna save
(20:18):
you some headaches, and it's gonna save you some money.
Don't commit crime in Orange County. Don't do it. They
have a ton of resources. The people live in Orange
County respect the cops and vice versa.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
They have a DA who hates you. They have a DA.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
They will stay up all night trying to figure out
how to put you away for a long time, and
they will make your life miserable. So if your career criminal,
Orange County is not your home, there's no nothing there
for you. It can only lead to a tremendous amount
of headaches for you. It's going to cost you money.
(21:03):
It's going to cost you your freedom, it may cost
you your life. It's going to cost your family. It's
gonna cost your reputation. There's gonna be a lot of expenses.
Orange County is not the go to place to commit crimes.
There's way too many cops with very little to do
because there's not a lot of crime. And when you
(21:24):
do it, commit a crime, they're going to be on
you immediately. So I don't know what you were thinking
in Laguna Neguel that you thought that that was cool
to do that.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
It's not. It's not all right.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
Let's talk about Long Beach. Long Beach, the search continues
for a twenty eight year old firefighter, and let's find
out what's going on here in Long Beach.
Speaker 10 (21:50):
This drama began to with Vogue last night about ten o'clock.
Let me sip out of the way here you can
see that thieves. Search boats are still out there looking
for the veteran firefighter, and the LA City Fire and
Long Beach Fire are still calling this a search and
rescue mission. There were four guys on a boat last
night that went out near the port of Long Beach.
(22:11):
Three free divers went into the water, but only two resurface.
The missing diver is a six year veteran of the
Los Angeles City Fire Department. Search and rescue teams from
Long Beach, LA Seal Beach and the US Coast Guards
search for the missing firefighter all night and today, you.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
Know, and this is personal for them. This is one
of their brothers that's missing, and so they're going to
spend an inorder amount of time looking and looking and
looking for this guy. But how did this possibly happen?
These guys are very well trained at what they do.
Speaker 10 (22:42):
The area where the search is going on right now
is closed to all boats, but it's not that are
not involved in the search. We've learned that the missing
diver comes from a firefighting family. Friends and family were
here waiting to hear updates on the search all day.
Earlier this afternoon, LA City Fire Chief Kristin Crowley talked
about how painful it is for the entire firefighting family
(23:04):
waiting for news of their missing firefighter. Here's what she
had to say.
Speaker 11 (23:08):
We've been actively engaged with his immediate family, friends, colleagues.
It's a very well supported and loved family around the region.
So with that, we've been side by side with them,
offering support, love. We're giving them real time information for
their loved one as well.
Speaker 12 (23:24):
This is hitting the fire family very hard. We've been
working throughout the night with our partners from Long Beach
and numerous other agencies, so we do have our peer
support has been notified, so our peer supporters out there.
We have some clinicians out there, we have therapy dogs.
We're out there. We're supporting our firefighters, We're supporting the family,
and this is hitting the entire fire community very hard.
Speaker 10 (23:46):
During this entire search, there could be as many as
twenty four divers looking for them missing diver again, we're
till they went free diving last night, which is diving
without any Scoopiger and again LA City Fire on long
are still calling and let's say Search and Rescue operation
reporting live in Lung Beach. I'm said Garcia.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
Oh, that's a very sad story. That free diving is
very difficult to do, very difficult, and hopefully they, you know, somehow,
maybe this guy was found and he's on a boat
somewhere and he's unconscious, or he's he doesn't remember where
he is, or there's got to be some hope for this,
but it does not look great. We'll keep you updated
(24:29):
on that. But that's a very very sad story. We'll
wi come back. There is a blizzard warning and we
will tell you where, but it might affect you over
the next couple of weeks. Maybe you're driving northern California
for the holidays and you want to be aware of this.
Maybe you're going up to Washington, Oregon and you want
(24:51):
to know that the roads are clear when you go
on your Christmas vacation. Will tell you where and when
this blizzard warning is going to take effective.
Speaker 7 (25:02):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
If you are traveling over the holidays, be aware it's
going to be a cold one. It's going to be
extremely cold and miserable in some cities. Let's get a
little audio and then I'll tell you about some specific
cities like New York, Chicago, Seattle, covering the north and
tell you where you're going to freeze your tail off.
Speaker 13 (25:27):
This morning, Americans bracing for chilling winter weather, the coldest
Arctic ere of the season, blanketing the Midwest and heading
towards the East coast after a cold snap yesterday hits
southern states not used to the extreme chill, Newburgh, North
Carolina dropping to twenty two degrees at Florence, South Carolina
at just twenty And while it will warm up today tomorrow,
(25:48):
fridge attempts are returning to the area. And it all
comes while some residents are still reeling from Hurricane Helene,
which swept through more than two months ago, especially in
hard hit Ashville.
Speaker 7 (25:59):
I mean it's kids, kids and families sleeping in living
rooms with holes in the room, and every day then
we offer the heroes of the line is probably longer
than a mile.
Speaker 13 (26:09):
Cassie Hale and her family have been living in a
camper since the storm, using this parking lot as a
temporary campground.
Speaker 11 (26:16):
What is your day to day looking like?
Speaker 8 (26:17):
Now, we get up, we warm up the camper, and
then we go to work the KidsCo library at homeschool.
Speaker 13 (26:23):
Farther north, parts of the country buried under feet of
snow and bracing for even more. With a powerful clipper
system on the move, hard hit Eerie Pennsylvania could see
another round of lake effects snow. National Guard members have
been called in to help residents dig out.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
All right, it is going to be very, very cold
this winter. We already have some of the totals in
or some of the predictions that I should say. If
you're going up to where is this here, Portland, Oregon?
All right, maybe you're buzzing up to Portland, organ It's.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
Not going to be bad.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
It'll be the nighttime lows in the mid thirties and
then the high almost all month long in the mid forties.
So Portland not bad if you're cruising up that area. Now,
let's take a look at Chicago. This is where you're
going to have some problems. In Chicago. On the eleventh,
(27:20):
which is next week, the low gets down to sixteen
degrees sixteen degrees now Christmas week, starting the twentieth in Chicago.
We know a lot of people that go from Los
Angeles to Chicago to spend Christmas with Mom or dad,
or grandma, grandpa, or brother's sister. Starting on the twentieth,
(27:41):
there's going to be a cold snap in Chicago. Twenty
two degrees on the twentieth, then on the twenty first,
twenty two, twenty one, twenty one, twenty one, nineteen, twenty one,
twenty It is going to be freezing at night and
it's not going to get above thirty four or thirty
five during the day. And this is going to go
from December twentieth, December nineteenth, twentieth all the way to
(28:08):
January fourth. It is going to be sixteen, seventeen, eighteen
degrees at night and then thirty one, thirty two, thirty three,
possibly thirty four during the day. That is two solid
weeks of absolutely freezing weather. Maybe you're off to New York.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Is this New York?
Speaker 1 (28:32):
Yes, it is all right, New York City, New York City.
It looks like it's it's going to be okay. The
lows will be in the mostly in the thirties and forties.
It'll get down to twenty eight degrees on the twelve.
But Christmas, What does Christmas look like?
Speaker 2 (28:48):
In New York? Great question.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
The highs are between forty one and forty three all
week and the low thirty one to thirty two degrees,
so it's very consistent, but yet freezing. The real cold
weather is coming in after the new year. According to
weather dot com, right around the first it is going
(29:11):
to be twenty nine degrees twenty nine, twenty eight, twenty nine,
So the beginning of the year is going to be
absolutely freezing in New York City, freezing. Maybe going to Seattle.
It's also a fun place to go. It looks pretty
mild in Seattle. You're not going to get almost there's
almost zero days that'll be below freezing, even at night.
(29:33):
So you're gonna get some, you know, relief from the
Pacific Ocean. It'll keep things a little warmer than in
the Midwest. The highs in the mid forties forty one
to forty seven degrees, lows in Seattle, Washington in the
mid thirties almost all month long. It doesn't really change much.
But I noticed that there's not going to be a
(29:55):
lot of rain once you get to December twentieth and again.
This this is you know fifteen, you know, twelve days out,
but it looks like December twentieth, almost through the new year.
Speaker 2 (30:08):
They don't.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
They're not calling for a lot of rain. So that's
very uncharacteristic but also very welcome. So if you're going
to Seattle, which is always always freezing, you might get
a little bit of a break. All right, let's talk
about Wicked. That's a huge movie. Let's find out a
little bit before we go to the mo Kelly show.
Speaker 9 (30:28):
Here, we got a lot to get to today.
Speaker 14 (30:30):
We're gonna cue the music and talk about Wicked. The
bad Way big screen adaptation is winning the box office.
We know that, topping the charts, and now it's sweeping
up awards as well. Wicked has been named Best Picture
by the National Board of Review, plus the Popular Musical
took home prizes for John Mshu's directing and a special
award for the collaboration between the two leading Witches, Cynthia
Rivo and Ariana Grande. So huge congrats to the whole team.
(30:53):
I'm sure they have a lot more awards.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
It's just get started.
Speaker 14 (30:57):
A reminder we can come to our sister company, Universal
Pictures and is in theaters.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Now there you go. All right, go see Wicked. Evidently
it's great. Kids love it.
Speaker 9 (31:07):
Have you seen a belly?
Speaker 2 (31:08):
Have you seen Wicked yet? I know you have some
kind of connection to that.
Speaker 5 (31:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Yeah, yeah, you enjoyed that. Yeah you did?
Speaker 2 (31:15):
I did. You didn't go? Have you no?
Speaker 1 (31:19):
But I thought you would go because you have a connection.
Your mom's friend is in it, or you're no.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
I would like to go.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
High school roommates in it or something. I don't know,
somebody's in that thing. All right, well, great review on
that Wicked.
Speaker 2 (31:31):
Thank you. Sorry, I don't have my headset on Oh god, okay,
all right, very good. We gotta get out of here.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
Mo Kelly his whole crew coming up next right here
on KFI AM six forty Conway Show on demand on
the iHeart Radio app. Now you can always hear us
live on KFI AM six forty four to seven pm
Monday through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeart
Radio app.