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. Let's get
the weather forecast in US, because I know where. They're
talking about cooler temperatures and light drizzle in some areas.
That's going to help the fire, the Franklin fire, the
Malibu fire. Let's see what we're in for over the
next couple of days here.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Temperatures are going to dip as we head into the
evening hours. Right now, I think you'll be okay with
some long sleeves and maybe a light sweater. But let's
take a look outside. We have a few different camera
shots that you guys can check out right now. We're
first going to start off looking at the radar and
you can see there are some spots this morning that
or this afternoon that has some sprinkles. But here's a
live look at downtown Los Angeles and you can see
(00:40):
it is partly cloudy outside. We're seeing temperatures anywhere between
the upper fifties and sixties depending on where you are.
About sixty degrees right now in downtown Los Angeles.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Winds doesn't look bad at all.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
Here's another live look showing us it's very cloudy.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
Okay, the winds are calming down, but man, is it
cold in the San Fernando Valley they said it was
fifty two degrees. It felt more like thirty two degrees.
I don't know what's happening in the San Fernando Valley.
It is freezing lately, freezing my ass off in the valley.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
In the mountains, this is right, wood big temperature dropped
there about forty degrees for our mountain communities. And look
at the humidity, so much better than what we have
been seeing these last few days.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
Here's look at the temperatures.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
From across our area right now again upper fifties and sixties,
depending on where.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
You are, fifties and sixties. And you just have to
deal with that. Calabasa is the doctor members the doctor
that was murdered. Three people now arrested in the murder
of this doctor.
Speaker 4 (01:38):
In court today the woman prosecutors say drove the alleged
killer to and from the shooting. It's a crime that
the prosecutors are calling a murder for hire, taking the
life of a Woodland Hills doctor, a.
Speaker 5 (01:51):
Very beloved Woodland Hills doctor. Man oh Man.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
This guy treated everybody so beautifully. A lot of people
are very sad when he was killed, and they were
looking for of these suspects for a while.
Speaker 5 (02:04):
They finally got their group.
Speaker 4 (02:06):
Here's the first appearance of the woman prosecutors say was
the getaway driver in an ambush murder in Woodland Hills,
Ashley Sweeten's attorney blocking a view of her in a
downtown LA courtroom. This afternoon, Sweden arraigned in the shooting
death of doctor Hamid Mershoja, who was gunned down in
August as he left his medical practice. Lapd arrested Sweden
(02:27):
earlier this week in the San Fernando Valley, while officers
arrested this man, Evan Hardman, near Houston, Texas. A third person,
Salla Jerwed, is in custody as well.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
So they got them all all three. Good morning, good afternoon,
and good night.
Speaker 4 (02:43):
Meanwhile, a swarm of activity at a house linked to
the ex wife of the murdered doctor. Lapd tight lift
about why they're searching the house three and a half
months after the killing. Mersoja worked as an emergency and
urgent care physician for more than twenty years and also
served as an addiction specialist.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
This guy was the best. This doctor. Uh when they
when he when he died or when he was killed,
and there's a difference.
Speaker 5 (03:09):
When he was killed.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
They had a lot of patients come on and say
when this when you know, when they were relapsing or
they had a problem, or you know, they got an accent, whatever,
and they did.
Speaker 5 (03:18):
This doctor.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
This guy would come in at all hours of the night,
on Sunday, on Holidays, on Christmas to help his patients.
This is one of the great doctors in southern California.
Speaker 4 (03:29):
A small memorial marks the spot in the parking lot
of his Woodland Hills medical practice. Investigators have not released
a motive for the shooting, but in court today prosecutors
referred to the killing as a murder for hire. Eye
witnessed Snooze dug up lengthy criminal records for both Sweeting
and Hardman, and in one request for a restraining order,
Hardman it's accused of threatening a woman, allegedly saying you'll
(03:53):
be dead by.
Speaker 5 (03:53):
The end of the day. Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Well they're still out there. That kind of crap is
still out out there. It's unbelievable, all right, it's got
to san Berndino in the Inland Empire, huge, huge pot bust.
Speaker 5 (04:07):
You're not going to believe how much pot they got, these.
Speaker 6 (04:10):
Guys with the one hundred million dollar drug must in
San Bernardino County. After serving a search warrant at a
five acre property in Oak Hills, Debuitee sees more than
ninety thousand pounds of processed marijuana.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Ninety thousand pounds of marijuana.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
What is that?
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Forty five tons? Forty five tons of marijuana.
Speaker 6 (04:31):
Debite sees more than ninety thousand pounds of processed marijuana.
And this was on a Honey Hill road. The department's
marijuana enforcement team says it found more than three thousand
trash bags filled with marijuana weighing between thirty to fifty pounds,
stacked more than twelve feet tall inside a newly built
metal building.
Speaker 5 (04:50):
All right, they have too much pot.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
You can grow pot and be casual about it, grow
a couple of plants in the backyard, maybe hide it
from the neighbors and the cops. But when you get
into ninety thousand, it's very tough to conceal that.
Speaker 6 (05:02):
It took law enforcement fifty one truckloads to confiscate the marijuana.
No arrests have been made.
Speaker 5 (05:08):
Man.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
That is a lot, a lot of pot, lots of it.
And one more story here then we'll get to Dean Sharp.
Amazon is now in the car business. They're going to
be selling cars now at Amazon.
Speaker 7 (05:22):
Forget going to the dealership. You can now buy a
new car on Amazon. The e commerce giant has partnered
with Hyundai dealers in forty eight US cities, including LA,
to list vehicles on the site. The new feature is
called Amazon Auto. It allows customers to browse, order, arrange financing,
and the delivery of a Hyundai vehicle. I mean, really,
(05:44):
you can now get everything on Amazon. They say it offers.
Speaker 5 (05:47):
And what do they do They drop it off on
the porch. I don't know. I don't know how it's done.
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (05:52):
Transparent upfront pricing with no hidden charges, services limited only
to Hyundai, and no word on whether Prime members get
a deal.
Speaker 5 (06:02):
Also, can you return it ticket Whole Food?
Speaker 1 (06:04):
I know that's great, take it back to Whole Foods.
Speaker 8 (06:09):
Also, can you return it ticket Whole Food?
Speaker 3 (06:13):
I would like to get.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
All right, that's our look around the Southland that we
do at six o'clock every Thursday and it's being brought
to you by Oh Advanced There. Yeah, one day treatment life,
change your results. Make your appointment today at Advanced Hair
dot com. Dean Sharp, the House Whisper, will be with
us when we come back. What is the difference between
nostalgic furniture, antique furniture, vintage and retro.
Speaker 5 (06:38):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
He knows when it comes to rugs, you know, curtains, drapes, furniture.
Speaker 5 (06:43):
This guy knows everything. We'll come back and talk about that.
Speaker 9 (06:46):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from kf
I AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
One of our more popular segments we do every single
Thursday and or every single week we have been to
do it on Thursday at six to one. Is Dean
Chart the House with Berdye's Weather is Dean How you, Bob.
Speaker 5 (07:03):
I'm good. I'm good.
Speaker 10 (07:04):
I'm coming to you from Paseroblos, California.
Speaker 5 (07:08):
So really wine country. Huh.
Speaker 10 (07:11):
Yeah, we're up here doing some antiquing and uh, just
spending a little time. Antiques and vintage and retro stuff
is what we're talking about on the show this weekend.
So we're just getting a little of the good.
Speaker 5 (07:22):
Stuff in let me guess it's raining.
Speaker 10 (07:26):
Uh you know what it was. It was raining like
fifteen minutes ago.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
Okay, all right, yeah, I'm watching the Rams play the
San Francisco forty nine ers and it's pouring at that game,
absolutely pouring. All right, let's get into this. I didn't
know this. I was unaware of what makes furniture nostalgic
or antique or vintage.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
What is the rule of thumb?
Speaker 10 (07:47):
Yeah, a lot of people are confused about that. You know,
normally you can just check it by how much you're
paying for you Yeah, no kidding, But there are actual
official rules to it, and it basically comes down to
this antique. What is an antique technically speaking from the industry,
and antique is something that is one hundred.
Speaker 5 (08:07):
Years old or older.
Speaker 10 (08:08):
So it's going to be one hundred years plus to
be an antique. If it's not one hundred years plus,
like you and me, we are vintage. Okay, that's if
anything from twenty years back to ninety nine years you know, obviously,
you know, you get near the edge and it gets
a little you know, gray and crazy, but twenty to
(08:28):
ninety nine is vintage. And the thing that really surprised
a lot of people retro. When we talk about retro
and something's retro, almost everything that is retro is actually
brand new, brand new. But retro technically is when something
brand new is styled to look like a previous period
or you know, to hearken back. Like you buy a
(08:50):
pair of retro blue jeans, right, and so they're brand new,
but you know they look like, you know, whatever, the
seventies or whatever. So you got antique, vintage, and retro.
They all fall under the category of nostalgia because it's
all about it's nostalgic design. It's all about this this
yearning for the past that makes people want to embrace
(09:13):
these previous periods and the stuff that comes out of them.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
You know what I watch on YouTube and and again,
if somebody asked me twenty years ago if I'd be
doing this, I would have said, you're crazy. But I
watch these old Persian rugs, these guys that walk professionally
wash these Persian rugs. I watch youtubees for an hour
of a guy cleaning a Persian rug. I don't know
(09:39):
why it fascinates the hell out of me, though, there's something.
Speaker 10 (09:43):
Wrong, because I think you know what rugs really intimidate people,
especially Persian rugs Asian orientated rugs.
Speaker 5 (09:52):
And a lot of these rugs have been around for
hundreds of years.
Speaker 10 (09:55):
Yeah, a lot of them do so much so that
there are a lot of them that my client want
to purchase a night. I'm like, yes, can we just
hang that on a wall as a tapestry because I
really don't want you guys walking on this thing anymore.
Speaker 5 (10:07):
It has seen better days. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
Are are Americans spending more or less on furniture? I
know when when I was younger, my mom and dad
would spend a lot on furniture.
Speaker 5 (10:18):
I try not to for some reason. It's weird.
Speaker 10 (10:22):
H Americans have shifted their taste, or I should say,
they're buying habits and furniture, And strangely enough, it's kind
of been a bell curve. I think it's coming back.
It's coming back to kind of where where mom and
dad or grandma and grandpa used to think in terms
of furniture. There was a period of time, obviously, I
think we all know this, when when everybody was just
(10:44):
going with the you know, kind of the end, not
to slam ikea, but just to use them as an example,
like the the what I call disposable furniture. And I
only mean that. I only mean that in the sense
that nobody buys a piece of Ikea furniture and says, yep,
you know what I'm going to My kids are going
to inherit this.
Speaker 5 (11:00):
Kids are going to be using this stuff.
Speaker 10 (11:01):
No, no, no, that's not how it works. But the
idea I love. I love the idea of a piece
of furniture that's so well made that you can pass
it on along with the house, right yeah, And those
that furniture is out there, and I think we're coming
back to it. We seem to be coming back to it.
I mean, as it is right now in the US,
we spend about one hundred and twenty billion dollars annually
(11:26):
on furniture and bedding in the US. And because of that,
you know, when times are tight, especially, it's time to
save up a little longer and buy a little better.
The problem is, not a lot of people know what
constitutes really well made furniture. You just walk into a
furniture store and it looks good, and you sit down
it for two minutes and it feels good, and the salesperson,
(11:47):
of course says, oh yeah, this thing's good, it's got
a little warranty on and whatever, and you just have
no idea because you don't know the right questions to
ask about it. So that's got to be a part
of the learning curve, you know.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Speaking of furniture, my grandmother who came over from Romania,
she was born and raised in Romania and then came
over and she was eighteen years old. She used to
make slip covers for couches. She could cover an entire
couch and it looks like you bought it at Nordstrums
or Macy's whatever, you know, a place where it sells,
you know, fairly high end furniture. And she never measured anything.
(12:19):
I'd watch your work. And that is a skill, you know,
that she had in Europe, and she brought here the
United States and all her friends could do it too.
But I think those, you know, people with those skills,
they don't exist anymore.
Speaker 10 (12:33):
They are hard to find. They're out there, they're out there,
but you have to look. You gotta look beyond the
normal stuff. You gotta look beyond the normal retail stores
that you find in the normal retail mall. You got
to look beyond the big box stores, These places exist.
I had to tell you, especially now. You know, if
you live in Freemont, Ohio, Okay, yeah, you're probably not
(12:56):
gonna find a tailored piece of slipcover furniture. But in
Southern California, you just got to encourage our listeners. In
Southern California, we got it all. It's just it's really
on you. You just need to be dedicated to making the
search because once you find those people. I've got a
source for leather sofas in Agra Hills, and I would
(13:19):
never ever let him go. Effect he's making one for
me right now, and I can specify anything. He's like, yeah,
you need this one hundred and eighteen and one half
inches long, Dean, I got you, guess right, that kind
of sim It's out there.
Speaker 5 (13:35):
It's out there. We can find it here in Sokol whenever.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
And we've not had many instances where we had to
have something either fixed or recovered. But whenever I do
go to a place in Burbank on Magnolia, and I've
noticed that anyone who covers furniture, either does slipcovers or
does couches professionally, or chairs, whatever, their place of work
is a.
Speaker 10 (13:58):
Mess it's classic. It's the classic, you know. And but
you know what, that's the kind of place you're will
that's where you want to go. That's right, you want
to go, you want to go through. Uh, there's enough.
This is off. This is off the furniture subject. But
there is an appliance parts store in my town, uh
named Miracle Appliance out in thousand Oates. You walk in
(14:19):
there and it's like, you know, you have to work
hard to find the desk.
Speaker 5 (14:24):
In between all the stuff's right, but yes, what guess what?
Speaker 11 (14:27):
You know?
Speaker 10 (14:27):
The guy comes up to the counter. He's always in
this great mood. He's the he's this appliance wizard, right,
and I'm like, yeah, I got a party.
Speaker 6 (14:34):
He's like, oh, that's a that's a uh, that's that's.
Speaker 10 (14:37):
A ge six. Hang on and he goes in the back.
You hear him rustling around. Things are falling over, and
he comes out and he's like, here's your part. And
the same is true Taylor Shop. People who are serious
about the craftsmanship that they're working on, they don't take
time to uh, you know, jush up the store. You
just get in there, you make contact with them and
(14:58):
and you get some seriously good stuff.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Are you broadcasting from Pastor Rovols on Saturday and Sunday?
Speaker 5 (15:04):
No, no, no, I'm back, You're back, Okay.
Speaker 10 (15:05):
I'll be back late Friday, but for up here right now,
I just didn't want to misspending time with.
Speaker 5 (15:10):
You, Maxcell and Buddy.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
I really appreciate coming on and we'll be listening on
Saturday and Sunday.
Speaker 5 (15:15):
Thank you, sir, Thanks Jim.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
All right there he goes Dean Sharp every Saturday and
Sunday morning right here on KFI, and it is a
it's a terrific show. It's called He's the House Whisper,
and he's on every Saturday morning. I think six to
eight on Saturday and then nine to noon on Sunday.
I think I get those numbers right, and it's just great.
He does the show with his beautiful wife Tina, and
(15:38):
they're a great team and they know everything about house houses,
what you put in the house, decorating house, the exterior
of the interior, landscaping. So try to check it out
every Saturday and Sunday morning right here on KFI.
Speaker 9 (15:52):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI AM.
Speaker 5 (15:56):
Six forty km. I am six forty. It's Conway Show.
Too late, Oh, too late. Let's do a whipproun.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Yeah, all right, I'm not gonna tell you what the
item is, but I'm going to ask you to guess
currently on Amazon, Amazon dot Com.
Speaker 5 (16:18):
I think we're all familiar with what they do.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
What is the most expensive item on Amazon right now?
The most expensive item on Amazon as we sit here
at six thirty six pm on December twelfth, twenty twenty four.
(16:41):
Today is the twelfth, right, yeah, Marls Friday is thirteenth? Yeah, wow,
all right, Bella. The most expensive item on Amazon?
Speaker 5 (16:50):
How much?
Speaker 12 (16:51):
I'm gonna guess it's around one hundred.
Speaker 5 (16:56):
K, one hundred thousand?
Speaker 1 (16:58):
All right, Croach, Oh, we're amy amount, not the item, yeah.
Speaker 5 (17:01):
Not the item, the amount. I'm gonna say half a.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
Millik, five hundred k, all right, Bellio, Wow, it's just
gone up?
Speaker 5 (17:18):
Oh is installed?
Speaker 3 (17:20):
Six hundred thousand.
Speaker 5 (17:22):
Six hundred k?
Speaker 8 (17:23):
All right, step boosh, I'll say four fifty K, four
fifty all right, Maddie is Maddie in there?
Speaker 12 (17:33):
Yep?
Speaker 5 (17:33):
Alright, you said they're selling cars now, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Right, two fifty fifty thousand, yes, okay, all right, is
Mike Morris.
Speaker 5 (17:42):
Do you want to play Mike Morrisey withs Michael Morris.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
I'll go low and say one hundred thousand, one hundred thousand, okay,
the actual retail price of the most expensive item currently
on Amazon. I'll tell you what it is first. It's
a baseball card. It's Christy Matthewson a E. W Son
Matthewson maybe pronounced Matheson. And it is a baseball card.
(18:06):
He played for the Yankees, I believe. And the current
price for that card four hundred and nine thousand dollars. Wow,
So I think Steph fushe got closest at four point fifty.
Steph Fush, you are a winner, Bubble. I'm going to
(18:28):
try to buy it with my credit card right now. Oh,
do it, because there's not quite enough room for that card.
I wonder if it comes with free delivery.
Speaker 3 (18:35):
Though I would hope got to be.
Speaker 5 (18:38):
It's gotta have free delivery, gotta be. There's no way
they charge it eighteen fifty.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
Well, do you have Amazon Prime?
Speaker 12 (18:44):
I do?
Speaker 5 (18:45):
I do?
Speaker 1 (18:45):
Yeah, yeah, one of the higher ups on Amazon got
the Prime.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
You should have bought it on Cyber Monday.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
That's right, Yeah, got a deal, but he played for
the New York Giants. It's sports memorabilia and it's been
awf than authenticated by Professional Sports PSA. So that's a
legitimate company. Four hundred and nine thousand, four hundred and
twenty two dollars and fifty nine cents. So that's yours.
(19:16):
If you got that kind of dell, go check it out.
Speaker 5 (19:18):
All right.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
USC did a study and it seems probably logical that
expanding public housing reduces our huge homeless problem here in
southern California.
Speaker 13 (19:30):
This USC study found that Los Angeles had lower numbers
compared to other cities when it comes to public housing,
and now city leaders here in Long Beach say the
study could be a jumping off point to expand public
housing and services. Jamie Schafford and his wife Tanya are
on a mission to help people in need.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
For them, it's personal.
Speaker 11 (19:53):
Most part of towns down a skid row, homeless living
on sidewalk Corboyd condominium And oh.
Speaker 14 (20:00):
I have more smiles on my face now than I
did in the past.
Speaker 13 (20:04):
The couple met in downtown LA when they were both
experiencing homelessness.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Wow, how about this couple they met while they're both
homeless and now fighting to solve the homeless problem here
in La.
Speaker 13 (20:15):
They now live at the Century Villages at Cabrillo in
Long Beach, a housing community that supports families and veterans.
Speaker 11 (20:22):
Owns one of the lucky ones, and my life changed forever.
Now I'm at the other end helping them instead of
somebody helping me.
Speaker 13 (20:32):
A new USC Homelessness Policy Research Institute study found that
more publicly funded housing may help decrease the number of
people who are homeless.
Speaker 5 (20:42):
That seems logical.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
More public housing decreases the amount of people who are homeless.
Speaker 3 (20:47):
According to the study, Los Angeles had more.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
I don't know why the study had to be done.
I think I could have knocked that out at home
one night.
Speaker 13 (20:54):
Los Angeles had more unsheltered homeless between twenty seventeen through
twenty twenty compared.
Speaker 3 (20:59):
To other major cities.
Speaker 13 (21:01):
It also shows Los Angeles had a low number of
public housing units.
Speaker 15 (21:05):
Los Angeles is clearly an epicenter of the current homelessness crisis.
Housing market differences seem to provide the most powerful explanation
why different places have different levels of homelessness.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Yeah, and we have a lot here. You want a
good way out of being homeless. Get yourself a winning
ticket in the super Lotto. We have one here in
Southern California.
Speaker 6 (21:27):
There is a new millionaire in Southern California after last
night's Superlatto drawing. The California Lottery says that forty seven
million dollar ticket was sold at the Fresh Catch Seafood
Market in Artesia. The winning numbers are eleven, nineteen, twenty four,
thirty eight, forty one, and twenty six. Jackpot winners have
one hundred and eighty days to claim they're prize, so
check your tickets if.
Speaker 16 (21:48):
You didn't when the Superlato, don't lose hope. Nobody has
won the Mega Millions yet, which means that jackpot grew
once again. The grand price is now at six hundred
and seventy million dollars.
Speaker 5 (21:58):
I think that drawing is tomorrow night.
Speaker 16 (22:00):
Drawing is tomorrow, which is Friday the thirteenth. It may
not be considered a.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Friday the thirteenth is going to be very unlucky for
a lot of people, but it may be the luckiest
day in the world for one guy or one gal.
Speaker 5 (22:11):
But they say six hundred, six hundred.
Speaker 16 (22:13):
And forties six hundred seventy million, six.
Speaker 5 (22:16):
Hundred and seventy million dollars the lucky number. But you know,
check this out.
Speaker 16 (22:20):
The last time a ticket matched all six numbers on
a Friday the thirteenth was last year when a winner
in May took over a billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
Wow, man, how about that Friday the thirteenth?
Speaker 5 (22:31):
A billion dollars? All right, everybody.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
I think a lot of people enjoy this show called
The Hot Ones. You know, where they eat really hot
wings and they try to pretend that it's not killing them. Well,
there's some big news with the hot Ones. It's not
going to be the show that it was before. Somebody
has made some unbelievable news with the hot Ones.
Speaker 5 (22:54):
What're my favorite shows?
Speaker 9 (22:56):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on de mayl from
kf HI.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
Sports update for you before we get to the story
on the hot Ones.
Speaker 5 (23:05):
The Los Angeles Rams.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Spoiler alert if you're recording the game, take a powder
here for a second. At halftime, the score is tied
three to three San Francisco three La Rams three. As
we go into the second half. Also a Kings update.
If you're a Los Angeles Kings faan, maybe you're recording
the game. You're gonna watch it later. I'll give you
(23:28):
a couple of seconds here, four three two one. The
LA Kings broke their six or seven game win streak
and they lost to the Devils three to one, which sucks,
But Kings.
Speaker 5 (23:43):
Are great this year.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
Not a hot team in the NHL when it comes
to numbers, but for some somehow they keep winning and
they're in second place in the Western Division.
Speaker 5 (23:54):
So there you go, all right.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
The Hot Ones a great TV show where people go
an eat really hot wings and try to pretend they're
not dying while drinking milk and trying to get some
kind of relief from the tremendous pain that comes along
with eating very, very hot food. Well, the show has sold.
(24:17):
The show has sold. How is that going to affect you?
Let's find out.
Speaker 17 (24:21):
Okay, we're talking about Hot Ones, where celebrities are interviewed
while they're eating a series of hot.
Speaker 16 (24:27):
Wings on the Bubblecue.
Speaker 17 (24:29):
Buzzfeeds sold off. First, we feast the studio behind the
show to investors, including the show's host Sean Evans. Hot
Ones first debuted onto Bubblecue nine years ago. It has
more than fourteen million subscribers Wow on YouTube and four
billion FEUs.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Isn't that wild? Four billion FEUs with this show the
hot Ones.
Speaker 17 (24:52):
On YouTube and four hot billion fews.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Let me just say, Krozer, you seem like, uh oh,
Crozy's done it.
Speaker 4 (24:59):
Then on the.
Speaker 17 (25:00):
Bubblecue gosh, and you definitely have to have a glass
of milk. Water doesn't do. That's right, They've got their
milk there.
Speaker 5 (25:06):
That's right.
Speaker 12 (25:08):
All right.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Let's talk about Jamie Fox, one of my favorite actors.
We almost lost him last year and there was not
a lot of information that came out about his illness,
but I consider him one of the better, if not
one of the best actors in Hollywood. And he went
through a spell where he said his daughter saved his life,
but nobody really knew what he had. Let's find out
(25:31):
what happened to Jamie Fox. Jamie Fox is back in
a new Netflix special.
Speaker 18 (25:38):
He finally shares the details of his near death experience
in twenty twenty three.
Speaker 5 (25:43):
He's having a brain bleed.
Speaker 19 (25:46):
Has led to a stroke.
Speaker 18 (25:47):
Fox says, the last thing he remembers before coma was
asking a friend for help with a headache.
Speaker 19 (25:53):
Before I could get the aspirs, I went out. They
took me to the first doctor, and that doctor just
gave me a cortisone shot and sent me home. I
don't know if you can do yelps a doctor's movie.
(26:14):
That's half a start.
Speaker 18 (26:15):
Last spring, Fox was filming the upcoming Netflix movie Back
in Action with Cameron Diaz in Atlanta.
Speaker 5 (26:23):
When Fox fell ill, he was taken to the hospital.
I went to heil in bed. You don't remember when
he got sick.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
Everyone denied that he had a stroke, But that's exactly
what happened.
Speaker 5 (26:32):
He had a major stroke. I went to hail in bed.
Speaker 18 (26:35):
In the months that followed, his family kept his condition private.
Speaker 9 (26:39):
Nobody sees it.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
They cut it all off, they held it down.
Speaker 18 (26:46):
Fox said after waking up, he was told the full
recovery was possible, but it would be the worst.
Speaker 5 (26:51):
Year of his life. And when I woke.
Speaker 19 (26:54):
Up, I found myself in a wheelchair.
Speaker 16 (26:57):
Okay walk.
Speaker 18 (27:00):
The fifty six year old Fox describe relearning basic functions
and relying on his nurses.
Speaker 19 (27:05):
Jay, you don't remember, do you what up?
Speaker 5 (27:08):
In bathing? You foot of past month and a half,
I said, mystery while singing, dancing, and playing the piano.
Fox credited his healing to family and faith.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
God gave me sec Oh, that's great, all right. Jamie
Fox is on the Men. That is good news all
right in Hollywood. Speaking of Hollywood, the Critics Choice Awards,
that's a big deal. It sort of kicks off all
the awards shows, and whoever wins the Critics Choice Awards
goes on to win a lot of major awards. Let's
(27:45):
find out who's up for the big beginning of the
awards season.
Speaker 20 (27:49):
Here Critics Choice Awards, we can exclusely reveal the nominees
of the big film categories.
Speaker 4 (27:56):
We'll You're knacko?
Speaker 8 (27:57):
Are you ready to go?
Speaker 14 (27:58):
Aren't we?
Speaker 20 (27:58):
Our Best Picture with a complete known Anora, the Brutalist
Conclave and a second Timothy Chalome led picture June Part
two plus Amelia Perez Nickel boys sing Sing the Substance
and Final of Course Wicked, Let's move on to Best Actor?
Speaker 5 (28:13):
Was Wicked was just an afterthought?
Speaker 20 (28:16):
Sing Sing the Substance and Final of Course Wicked.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
PA's Finally, of course Wicked, the one that made more
money than all the other ones combined.
Speaker 20 (28:22):
And finally, of course Wicked. Let's move on to Best Actor.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
I haven't heard of any of these movies. That have
been nominated none of.
Speaker 20 (28:28):
Them, and finally, of course Wicked. Let's move on to
Best Actor. It was alphabetic blood being told, and the
nominees are for actor Adrian Brodie the Brutalist, Timothy Shallomet
for A Complete Unknown, Daniel Craig for Queer, Coleman Domingo
for sing Sing, Ray Fines for Conclave, and you grant
for Heretic.
Speaker 5 (28:44):
Okay that Best.
Speaker 20 (28:45):
Actress ready Cynthia Rivo Wicked, Carlos Sofia Gastone for Amelia Perez,
Maryann Jean Baptiste for Hard Shrews, Angelina Jolie from Maria,
Mikey Madison for a Nora, and Demi Moore for The Substance.
There are your nominees. Wow, the big categories this show
Critics Choice Awards.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
All right, let's go with the Golden Globes. May never
heard some of these, because I've not heard any of
these movies.
Speaker 4 (29:08):
We now know which films and TV shows are in
the running for the Golden Globe Awards.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
On the big screen, independent movies dominated the lists, along
with our favorite, which is from Wicked.
Speaker 14 (29:18):
The nominees for Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy are
Anora Neon.
Speaker 5 (29:24):
Okay, I gotta rely on ron Or Rona. Can you
come on with us? Or are you busy? I'm good? Okay.
I haven't seen that movie though. No, is this two movies?
Or is this one movie?
Speaker 3 (29:34):
Anora? Neon?
Speaker 5 (29:35):
Is that one movie?
Speaker 3 (29:37):
Anora is the movie? Neon is the Developments?
Speaker 1 (29:41):
The Yeah, okay, okay, all right, And you've not seen
it the Mark?
Speaker 5 (29:45):
Not yet? No, So have you seen it?
Speaker 3 (29:47):
It's so good?
Speaker 5 (29:48):
What is it about?
Speaker 12 (29:49):
It's about It's kind of like a Cinderella story. It's
about a stripper in New York who meets the son
of a Russian oligarch and it it's crazy. But it's
the best movie of the year in my opinion.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
Really, I loved it. I gotta check it out. Yeah,
it really is the best movie in the history of
motion picture. Wow, all right, Bella, go check.
Speaker 14 (30:13):
Out Challengers, Amazon, MGM Studios.
Speaker 8 (30:18):
Challengers, anything Mark. I would rather get a prostate exam
and see that movie. Based on the number of times
I had to endure the trailer for it, it looked
excruciating so good.
Speaker 5 (30:30):
So how do you see all this stuff? Where do
you have all the time to see that?
Speaker 12 (30:33):
I have an AMC a list subscription where you get
the three movies a week. That.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
Yeah, it's a great deal.
Speaker 12 (30:40):
As long as you see two movies a month, it's
like twenty five bucks a month.
Speaker 3 (30:43):
It's a great deal.
Speaker 5 (30:44):
And you can see up to three a week. Three
a week, that's a great deal.
Speaker 14 (30:48):
Challengers, Amazon, MGM Studios.
Speaker 5 (30:51):
Challengers is good.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
It's so good, alright, it is it better the best
movie you've ever seen.
Speaker 5 (30:56):
Not the best movie, but have you ever made?
Speaker 12 (30:58):
You know, Zendia it's pretty good.
Speaker 3 (30:59):
I don't know it's up there.
Speaker 14 (31:01):
Okay, all right, next Jim Amelia Perez Netflix.
Speaker 5 (31:04):
Amelia Perez Mark. You know, Tim, I don't think I'm
the demographic for that. I saw Craven today. Kill Okay,
all right, Bella.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
I've heard bad things.
Speaker 5 (31:15):
Okay, all right, we'll move on.
Speaker 14 (31:17):
Amelia Perez Netflix, A Real Pain Searchlight Pictures, A Real Pain.
Speaker 5 (31:23):
Mark.
Speaker 8 (31:24):
Oh yeah, that's the buddy movie. Also where we're gonna
have to defer to Bella on this one.
Speaker 5 (31:28):
Hight, Bella.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
It's really good.
Speaker 5 (31:30):
It's good.
Speaker 3 (31:30):
It's really really good.
Speaker 12 (31:31):
It's Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Colkin. So yeah, McAuley Culkin's brother.
Oh okay, and it's great.
Speaker 5 (31:37):
All right, excellent.
Speaker 14 (31:38):
We move on the Substance Movie.
Speaker 8 (31:41):
The Substance. Now we're talking best movie of the year. Right,
there is that?
Speaker 5 (31:45):
Right?
Speaker 3 (31:45):
It was good.
Speaker 5 (31:46):
I liked it, all right, The Substance Who did they?
Speaker 14 (31:50):
The Substance Movie? And Wicked Universal Pictures?
Speaker 5 (31:55):
All right, Wicked? Mark? Did you see it? I will
never see that film as long as I live. I
will never see that bell. How many times do you
see this?
Speaker 3 (32:05):
I just saw it this weekend? Actually?
Speaker 5 (32:07):
Was it great? I?
Speaker 3 (32:08):
Okay?
Speaker 12 (32:09):
I did theater when I was a kid, so I
have like a connection to it, but it's not for
the general population.
Speaker 5 (32:18):
Did you enjoy it?
Speaker 3 (32:19):
I loved it?
Speaker 11 (32:20):
Wait?
Speaker 5 (32:20):
What's that mean? What's that mean?
Speaker 7 (32:21):
Like?
Speaker 12 (32:22):
If you I feel like, if you don't like well,
if you don't like musicals, you're gonna hate it.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
Okay, done, I'm out, all right, all right, Moe Kelly
his whole crew coming up next.
Speaker 5 (32:30):
Again.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
We have to thank everybody for one million, two d
and twenty three and seventy dollars for the pastathon this year.
Thank you, thank you, thank you. And also Jan Detroit.
Big old shout out to Jan Detroit who was listening
to the show and sent us some kind of video
that Belly told me it was cool, So there you go.
Jan Detroit Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now,
(32:54):
you can always hear us live on k if I
Am six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app