Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to The
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. It is
the Conway Show. We're live here on New Year's Day.
It should have been a day where everybody enjoys themselves.
Everybody's watching TV, you're watching football, you're hungover a little bit.
He bought some food at the store yesterday, because you know,
(00:22):
a lot of the stores are closed. That's not true.
A lot of the markets are open. I was surprised,
my helme. I was driving around last night around Burbank.
How many markets stayed open late and how many markets
are open today? Man, oh man, those those people are troopers.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
They go.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
You know, the people are bagging groceries, checking you out,
handling the grocery stores. They're all in like the same
mode they were in during the pandemic. They're all there.
I went last night around ten forty five to Pavilions.
Everybody was there. Wow, it was packed.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
It was great. I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
So let's get back to this. This guy in Orleans.
Did he act alone? They don't think he did. How
does that change the investigation when it comes to the FBI.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
But my point is not whether or not he acted alone.
But how does that change this investigation in your view,
and how it changes how the FBI approaches this if
they're looking at his possible connections to others.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
Right, well, one thing that stood out in that press
conference is that the FBI said that he acted along
with a range of associates. We don't yet know what
that means, whether those associates are in the country or
in another country, or whether he encountered them online. We
just don't know yet. What we didn't see were photos
(01:42):
of those individuals or those associates where the FBI would say, hey,
if you know these people, contact us with any tips,
like they did with the suspect here, So more to
come there. But they will definitely be looking at his
social footprint. You know, what was he looking at online,
what was he googling? What YouTube videos might have he
been looking at. You know, we all have a social
(02:04):
footprint and they will be taking a look at that
to see if he was self radicalized in some way
by by by something, and whether or not others saw
this happening, friends, families, family members, or coworkers.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
You know, this guy Jabbar who is the main suspect here,
he's forty two years old, and he said he had
almost zero footprint on social media, which is odd, which
probably means that, you know, in the in the weeks before,
the days before, hours before, he went in and basically
wiped his social media clean, wiped his footprint clean. Because
(02:43):
it's very unusual for somebody who's forty two years old
to have nothing, no Facebook, no social media, you know, I,
no website, nothing, especially he was if he's in the
real estate game. Real estate is sold primarily or principally
on online. Everybody who initially goes to look for a
(03:06):
house starts online, and a lot of the things are
a lot of the processes done on the internet. And
for this guy to have nothing on a on social
media is odd and nothing professionally like a website.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
Strange.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
Strange that saw some sort of change in him that
led him to conduct this attack. But you know, the
FBI did deem this an act of terrorism, and that
that doesn't necessarily mean any foreign influence. It just means
that this individual had the intent to create harm, uh
(03:44):
maybe death, to cause public panic, or to coerce the
government in some way. There's just more to come about this,
and I imagine we'll be learning more in the coming days.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Yeah, and we will uh with this guy with this
story in New Orleans, with the story coming out of
We've learned a little more. I hate to keep jumping
back and forth, but these are two major stories we're
working on here at KFI. The New Orleans terrorist attack
and then the truck that blew up outside of Trump
Tower in Las Vegas. They killed the person. From what
we understand, Elon must just put something out on Twitter
(04:17):
or on X that said that that truck was filled
with fireworks and that's what ignited the truck on fire,
and that's what brought out the blanket, and that's how
they put these fires out. Now, now that we have
a lot of electric cars buzzing around, there has to
be a new way to fight these fires because you
can't come out with a hose and water has very
(04:39):
little effect on these electric fires. That's why they you
see one on the way to Vegas, or if you
hear about one on the way to Vegas or out
towards Pondale and it's burning, they let it burn for
two three days because they can't put it out well.
In Vegas, they have this blanket they put the blanket
over it, they smother it, and they put it out
fairly quickly. But a lot of damage to the Trump
(05:00):
Tower there in Las Vegas. And I've never been to
the Trump Tower. I don't know if that's hotels, if
it's a hotel, or if it's you know, condos or
accombination of both. But that's also a big story, and
we'll get more details on that as they come in.
But let's let's talk about the accomplices here in New
Orleans and see if there's any more information on the three,
(05:23):
four or five other individuals that may have been involved
with this, with this Jabbar kat and this guy who
drove a truck down in New Orleans at three thirty
in the morning, three fifteen in the morning, killed at
least fifteen people that we know of.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
And we talked to.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
Brian earlier, Brian Gann, and he said, the reason why
that number went from ten to fifteen is because those
people who were injured in that terrorist attack, those you know, victims,
were taken to three separate hospitals, three different county hospitals,
and so it was immediately he was very difficult to
(06:01):
get any raw numbers on the people who were injured
and the people who were killed. That's why you saw
that number go from ten to fifteen, which is fairly
unusual for an initial number to come out and then
go up by fifty percent immediately. But the lack of
people working on New Year's the time of day had
happened at three fifteen in the morning, and the ambulances
(06:25):
taking the victims to three different hospitals in the area
all led to that number being wrong and later being corrected.
All right, let's talk about the accomplices here in New
Orleans in this terrorist attack and some more information on
who they might be looking for.
Speaker 5 (06:39):
What are FBI officials doing now that they say they
don't believe this suspect acted alone, So how are they
going about trying to find these potential accomplices?
Speaker 6 (06:49):
So you go to all the tangible practical things, which
would be obviously the cameras in or around where the
IEDs were found. Who stayed at the Airbnb that supposedly
the suspect rented two miles from the location of the incident,
Who traveled with him, and who was he with in
(07:10):
the early morning hours of yesterday. Because the people that
are seen apparently placing IEDs and it sounds like more
than one obviously are connected to him. Did they come
with him?
Speaker 7 (07:22):
Did they not?
Speaker 6 (07:23):
My guess is, Diane, you could sort out maybe who
they are through mobile phones, social media, even maybe even
encrypted apps. There's probably going to be information because they
just didn't appear out of nowhere. He's obviously working with them,
and that's how you're going to get to them. And
my guess is maybe they're already onto that.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
Robert, There's been a lot of conversations now about the
Ballards in New Orleans and how they weren't functioning, they
were in the process of being replaced for the Super
Bowl coming up, and that in the meantime, the police
chief says they had stationed a police car to lock
the street, but that this suspect drove around the car
onto the sidewalk.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
What do you make of that?
Speaker 5 (08:04):
Is that enough security? Given you're talking about New Year's
Eve in New Orleans on Bourbon Street.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
No. No, The answer for this young man should be no,
it's not.
Speaker 8 (08:16):
So events have shown is that it wasn't enough, and
that's that's the troubling part of this. And I feel
bad for the chief. She's you know, you hard target
these things as best you can.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
Yeah, I know, but but it's easy to get dump
trucks that are filled with rocks or sand or dirt,
and to block those streets very very simple to do.
It's the easiest thing you could do to deter this
kind of crap, the easiest thing. And so if those
ballards weren't working, put cars there, put trucks there. And
(08:45):
there's even portable ones, uh you know where you get
filled with water and it has a you know, at
least it will slow these cars or trucks down and
it'll it'll make it impossible for the truck to get past.
There's you know, spike strips. There's a million things you
can do. I'm shocked the New Orleans dropped the ball
like this.
Speaker 8 (09:03):
And you can't think of anything now. Bollows became very
important in New York City. In twenty seventeen, we had
two incidents, one in Times Square, one on the West
Side Highway where there was an investment into infrastructure to
put these things out there, and a lot went out.
Now you'll see fifty Avenue covered with bowets. All the
important buildings when having to New York City have them
that didn't happen. Apparently in New Orleans the threat level
(09:25):
wasn't there like it was for us, So these things
have to be taken for granted. You know, we would
have put up probably a truck there at that point
and put some officers there as well, as well as
the cement blocks so you can stop. You cannot bump
that curb and jump up and do that. But again
on Monday morning, quarterbacking here, this was a missed opportunity.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
It wasn't missed opportnity. You could put those cement blocks
there very easily. And again I was talking about Brian Gan,
who was on with this earlier from iHeartMedia reporters been
on it all day long. He's kfi's national correspondent. Let's
talking to him. When they do this holiday in the
park in Burbank, a sleepy town of one hundred and
five thousand people in the San Fernano Valley, they block
(10:04):
all those streets off and there's no threat to Burbank,
but they have either cars or trucks or water or
sand filled blocks there or concrete that you can't get around.
And it's shocking that they didn't have something like this
in Orleans unbelievable, But.
Speaker 8 (10:24):
She did have four hundred people out there. I think
at one point that's a lot of police officers in
a very dense area. So the issue was, I havn't
seen this before and maybe now they'll go back and
change change that.
Speaker 5 (10:37):
Robert, if you could put that into context only because
you're talking about again Bourbon Street under your ZVE. Obviously
a lot of people there, but also the Sugar Bowl
that was scheduled to be played tonight. Man, even more
tourists are in the area. And this bulletin that went
out ahead of the holidays warning about possible attacks, including
specifically ramming attacks.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
Yeah, it was all there. Every year.
Speaker 8 (11:00):
See, we get this little in every every major city,
and Orleans has a big draw for this because of
the game and also and also Bourbon Street. I mean,
these these are big draws for for revelers. So that
was out. This specific threat that they said yesterday New
York and across the country, no specific threat, but there's
a general general threat to everybody involved in you know,
(11:23):
all these major cities with someone there. So it's the
Super Bowl or they excuse me, this Sugar Bowl. We'll
go off tomorrow. Afternoon at four o'clock.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
From what I understand, Okay, welcome back and get some
more information on this. This is a story that is
going to continue to develop, and we'll have all the
information on the story in New Orleans. We also have
the story coming out in Las Vegas where a cyber
truck blows up in front of Trump Tower. And we're
keeping an eye on the amberler coming out of Inglewood,
and also.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
The Rose Bowl.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
It is there's five minutes left in the Rose Bowl
and Ohio State is up by twenty points, so not
looking good or the ducks.
Speaker 9 (12:02):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Is The Conway Show Live four to seven Yesterday, day
before Yesterday, Tomorrow and Friday live all week here at
the beginning of the year, and we thought we're gonna
have a nice, fun New Year's a lot of us did,
and then the New Orleans incident, blew up Vegas incident
has people rattled, and we have an amber alert here
(12:31):
in Southern California and Inglewood, so we're covering those stories
watching also watching the Rose Bowl as it's wrapping up,
and you can tell when there's a blowout in the
suit in the Rose Bowl because traffic star has already
started on the two ten. The two ten going north
and south there leaving the Rose Bowl, both ways are jammed,
(12:53):
so people are already splitting. They said, screw it, it's over.
There's two minutes and forty five seconds less than the
get out.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
I still gotta go home an hour and a half,
that's right.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Yeah, you're hoping this thing a miracle happens and it
goes into overtime.
Speaker 7 (13:08):
Yeah, that's what I want. I want overtime, and yeah,
let's linger that game a little long.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
No, so you could get by before they get out.
You want nine overtimes, so they everyone stays, but they
might clear out in the next hour and a half,
you know, because they have already started.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
People are splitting. Good, that's what I'm open. What one
hundred some thousand.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
People Yeah, yeah, yeah, and a lot of them walk there,
you know, so they may not be piling on.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
You know, you're part of the two ten freeway.
Speaker 7 (13:33):
It was an interesting driving in today. You know that
on that two ten uh through Pasadena before you get
to that split between the two ten and one to
thirty four, and you got those the goal of what
you usuld be called the gold line right there in
the center of the freeway.
Speaker 2 (13:47):
So many people.
Speaker 7 (13:48):
It was that transition between the parade people people go
into the football game.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Oh yeah, and.
Speaker 7 (13:53):
All the people that they were in the football game
were in their cars. Yeah, people pray were on those
platforms taking the train.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Out's the only time you see him full exactly one
hour a year.
Speaker 7 (14:03):
I will say, no, meaning towards it all white people.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
That's the only time you see people on that trade man.
One hour a year. It's full. Yeah.
Speaker 7 (14:13):
I look at all them going, this is the first
time most of you people have been on this.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
Platt right, and they're all looking to escape because that
game is over. Olivia Garvey's on channel four. Stephan, let's
if we can pull that up. You got channel four
on in there. What's going on with the fans at
the rose Bowl?
Speaker 4 (14:32):
All right?
Speaker 10 (14:33):
How does it feel to be in this weather at
the Rose Bone having your team play here today?
Speaker 1 (14:38):
There is no greater feelings two words, Jeremiah Smith.
Speaker 2 (14:44):
This is a big game.
Speaker 8 (14:44):
It is it is.
Speaker 9 (14:45):
It's scary, but it's a lot of fun.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
Excited.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
I was here for the couple o balls.
Speaker 11 (14:49):
I was here for Wisconsin and Florida State, and now
I'm here again.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
I feel great to be back home.
Speaker 10 (14:53):
And he missed the ring?
Speaker 2 (14:55):
You really? You do?
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Oh?
Speaker 12 (14:56):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (15:02):
What is a buck eye? I don't know? Like what
is a buck guy?
Speaker 10 (15:06):
Who knows what.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
A buck guy say?
Speaker 12 (15:11):
Even the buck eye is a native nut of Ohio
falls from trees.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
Let's go, duck go down. A lot of drunks out
there at the Rose Bowl, all right?
Speaker 11 (15:22):
Then?
Speaker 1 (15:22):
One nice thing about about New Year's falling during the
week right in the middle on a Wednesday, is there
is almost no traffic out there.
Speaker 8 (15:32):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
There's a little bit in downtown Los Angeles like there
usually is around the one ten Freeway south of the
one oh one. There's a little bit of traffic there,
not too bad. And the Rose Bowl, Krozer, unfortunately, now
that's expanding. Uh, and that's going to uh screw you
up on your drive home. But look you though, Yeah,
(15:54):
but you decided Krozer to live between work and the
Rose Bowl.
Speaker 8 (15:57):
He did.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
Yeah, you made that mistake, dude.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
How did you time it?
Speaker 12 (16:02):
In?
Speaker 2 (16:02):
Stuff?
Speaker 1 (16:02):
With them all crows? You gotta see Channel four. Let's
go back to Olivia Garvey here on Channel four. Look
at these people piling out right now.
Speaker 10 (16:09):
Oregon is trailing the Ohio State forty one twenty one.
We got two minutes left in the fourth Ohio State.
They're going to the semi finals. It is gonna be
an incredible matchup to come.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
But what a day at the Rose Bowl.
Speaker 10 (16:21):
I know these Oregon fans are upset, but like I said,
what a season they have had, and now they can
look forward to the future. And of course I'll have
highlights from this game at six o'clock right here on
NBC four.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Back to you guys in the studio.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Piling out unbelievable, And you know a lot of them
are going to make that road trip home tonight. You
know they're gonna get on that five Freeway and drive
back to Oregon. You know, Medford and Portland and you
know Scatpoos and Saint Hellens and all the towns.
Speaker 13 (16:50):
To that stadium is just squidlocked. Once you're out there
for this type of thing, Yeah, it's over. It's it's
game over. So anyways, if I'm able to get one
fair back home, that's it.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Yeah, there's three ways to get in and out of
that Rose Bowl and they're all blocked right now. All right,
let's get We've got three major stories working on, actually
four locally here.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
We have an amber alert that we had mentioned.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
At a little bit after four o'clock, so a lot
of people got that on their cell phone were working
on that. If you miss that. A young lady fourteen
years old. Her name is Novella Holden, I believe, and
she's fourteen years old, five to five hundred pounds, brown hair,
brown eyes, brown, black clothing, black shirt, black leggings, black crocs, sandals,
(17:40):
and a pink head wrap. And then the interesting fella
they're looking for is Edward Mason, fifty nine years old,
six foot two two d and twenty pounds, blackish gray hair,
brown eyes, unknown clothing. And the vehicle they have a
Dodge Caravan, a black dot Caravan twenty thirteen license plate
(18:04):
six ZS and zebra and as Mary wise and yellow
nine eight seven six z M Y nine eight seven,
and it was activated by the CHP on behalf of
Inglewood Police Department. So they we're working on that, still
looking for that chap. We have the the New Orleans
Terrace incident. That's still a big story, a lot of
(18:25):
it a lot of facts still coming in because it
is you know, New Year's Day, and a lot of
people are off work, and so you know a lot
of reporters are at home with their family, so you
don't get the nine thousand reporters that you normally would
have on a case like that. And then the Sugar
Bowl has been postponed until tomorrow one o'clock our time,
(18:47):
four o'clock.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Croches is New Orleans on the East Coast time. I
think it is right. I think they're one hour different.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
Well, it's gonna be a one o'clock our time and
New Orleans will host that Sugar Bowl. And I guarantee
you there is going to be the biggest police presence
at that Sugar Bowl tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Ever, Yes, and they are on Central Standard time, Yes,
oh they are. Okay.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Ever, there is not going to You'll never see more cops.
You'll probably see the National Guard, you'll see FBI agents,
you'll see state police, you'll see private security, everybody. There'll
be more security there than there will be fans at
that game tomorrow, at that Sugar Bowl when Notre Dame
takes on Georgia. And then we're working on the Vegas
(19:32):
story as well. A cyber truck filled with fireworks blows
up outside of Trump Tower and killing one person who'll
have audio on that as well. So lots of stories
going on and lots of open freeway. So you got us,
you got Conway as they you know, I'm gonna start
using that. I heard that up in Oregon where a
guy hosting the show, he goes, you know you got Steve,
(19:54):
you got you some Conway, you got Conway or we're
working on that, And we got all four of those stories.
There's major stories and more right here live. We are live.
And I can prove that by simply going to the
La Times website and read you the headlines. If this
was recorded, I couldn't do it. The LA Times headlines,
driver express desire to kill people before ramming New Orleans revelers.
(20:17):
Biden says fifteen dead in attack. And so I could
not have predicted that if this was a recorded show.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
We are live. We'll be here till at least till
seven o'clock to night.
Speaker 9 (20:31):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.
Speaker 2 (20:37):
It is The Conway Show. Bad news coming out of
New Orleans.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
Just a horrible, horrible evening for everyone went there to
celebrate and just terrible terrible news. Fifteen people killed, at
least thirty five people injured in a terrorist attack there.
I ran down, ran his truck down a street in
the French Quarter that is the French Quarter is uh croach,
I think it is the French Quarter, and wiped out
(21:04):
a ton of people.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
Fortunately.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
I mean, if there is any kind of tiny silver
lining that it didn't he didn't do it at eleven
thirty at night or at midnight. There could have been
hundreds of people run over. There's an interesting point about that.
Speaker 7 (21:18):
We were talking about the ballards and then being renovated
and then being taken out, because they were doing that
right where Canal Street is. That's sort of like the
main drag north south and anything east of that on
Canal Street in that area that's basically the French Quarter.
So he turned off a Canal Street, took it right
into went on Bourbon Street. Before you get to what
is considered the main part of the French Quarter and
(21:40):
Bourbon Streets specifically, there's about a block before you get
there on Bourbon, okay, and after that block that's where
they put the ballards.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
Oh really, Yeah, so there's a.
Speaker 7 (21:51):
Block between canal which is a main drag and where
the main part of French, the French Quarter is before
they put those ballers and past those where those ballers
would have normally been. That truck didn't make it much
much further than that. Yeah, it looked like it crashed
into like a cherry picker.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
Yeah, that's what it looked like. And so I think
that which may have been there to protect people maybe, Yeah,
it's quite possible.
Speaker 7 (22:12):
So I think, you know, I don't know how much
the baller thing should make much it should be in
the conversation because he couldn't have made it more than
ten twenty feet where a pass where those ballers would
have been.
Speaker 2 (22:26):
Yeah, and that's all going to come out.
Speaker 1 (22:27):
But the timing of repairing those things, yeah, and Thanksgiving
and Christmas is strange.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
Yeah, that's not going to happen again.
Speaker 7 (22:36):
The other thing about you know, with New Orleans specifically
is you know more and more about it.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
It is the political.
Speaker 7 (22:42):
Scene there and the financial scene there is so poor.
And that's why it's always right, that's why it's always
so higher in the crime stats list and murders list
It's always in the top three or five in the
nation of murders and violent crimes there in New Orleans
because they just don't have resources, like say, even La has.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
It's amazing that you know that there are a lot
of crime stories that come out of New Orleans and
that doesn't deter anybody.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
From going there.
Speaker 7 (23:07):
It doesn't because most of the stuff that you hear about,
when you do hear about really bad stuff, it doesn't
really take place in the quarter because it is such
a touristy place.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Right, there's always a ton of cops there.
Speaker 7 (23:16):
Oh, yes, always ah, and they're always like on foot,
on horse, they're always around.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
Yeah, there were four hundred cops assigned to that area
on New Year's four hundred in a very small, like
you know, three block by three block vicinity. Maybe how
big is is it? Three to four blocks by three
to four blocks.
Speaker 2 (23:33):
It's more than that.
Speaker 7 (23:34):
It might be like a quarter mile, a quarter a
half a mile from one side to the other.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
Okay, So there's the nightmare of fifteen people getting killed,
thirty five people getting injured. Then a much lower degree
sort of problem for people. Krozier is you've been there
and you know that those streets are all retail on
the bottom floor, but mostly hotels above that.
Speaker 7 (23:57):
Yeah, especially along that Bourbon Street area. Yeah, it's mostly
it's mostly restaurants and bars and you know, things like
that little chotchkey stores and things like that.
Speaker 2 (24:05):
Right, and then above that hotel rooms.
Speaker 7 (24:08):
Yeah, that's why all we see the balconies overhanging up
right on them, and the cops closed that whole area off.
So if you weren't in that area, you were not
getting back to your hotel room. Yeah, and they've they've
there have been a couple of reports also of in
then the neighboring areas where they're doing investigations. There's one
house that they've been looking at where a lot of
people that are visiting the city they were evacuated.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
They were told to leave the places.
Speaker 7 (24:30):
That they were renting around this house that they were
looking at, and they told a lot of these people
don't expect to go back to.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
That house tonight. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
There was an airbnb about two miles away from where
this attack happened where this guy Jabbar was staying and
they don't know whether he's staying alone or not. So
lots of news coming out today unfortunately, all of it
is bad and even the uh, you know, the score
coming out of the Rose Bowl is bad on a
(24:58):
much lower level. Or are people down here from Oregon? You
drove from Oregon to see your ducks beat the Ohio
State Buckeyes and go on in the playoffs, or Oregon
at a sensational season of thirteen and oh, now they're
thirteen and one and they're done.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
That's a long drive home.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
And I don't know if they fly those kids now
or if they drive them still. I remember in the
old days they'd get you know, three or four buses
and they'd bust them all and that's got to be
a long bus ride back, you know. Oh to get
blown out in the first half and never recover.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
And they didn't.
Speaker 7 (25:33):
And this week was unusual apparently because it was like
the first time and I don't know how long that
they did not have any of the pre bowl game
stuff that the teams do, like that what is it
the lawn?
Speaker 2 (25:43):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, right, yeah, yeah, that Why did they
do that? That's unusual? Into that because we had that story. Yeah,
the Lowryes thing was always great.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Yeah, you know, you see these guys three hundred and
forty pounds eat a cow, you know, I mean literally,
you know, eat cattle by themselves. They just chop the
horns off and walk it through a warm room and
give it to these chaps.
Speaker 7 (26:01):
They're saying it's because of this new college football playoff
format that they just started this year with twelve teams
oh ic, so they just had a total time crunch
where they couldn't do all the stuff that they would
normally used to do.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
I see, all right, So we're keeping an eye on
all this stuff here. We're gonna take a short break.
When we come back, we'll update you on all of
these stories. We've got the New Orleans terrorist attack, that's
the major story. The Las Vegas bombing or fire outside
of the Trump Tower that's another one. We've got an
amber alert that's also a big story coming out of
(26:36):
Inglewood and they're looking for a young lady.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Will give you the description.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
We'll come back, and then we have traffic starting to
pile up now. Unfortunately Croz right where you have to
go in Pasadena, the two ten is starting to get jammed.
The two ten north and south where CALLI it comes
in contact with the one thirty four that is not
moving you are jammed two ten, but once you get
(27:01):
a mile or two away from the Rose Bowl, you
are flying. You're doing sixty five seventy seventy five miles
an hour. And almost every freeway I was listening to
what Mike Morris or earlier, Almost every freeway is wide open.
There's a little bit of congestion in downtown Los Angeles
where the one ten and the one oh one meet,
(27:22):
but other than that, everything looks wide open. The ten
Freeway people coming back from the ocean. So the ten
Freeway going eastbound coming out of Santa Monica, that's a
little jammed over there.
Speaker 2 (27:34):
Nothing in Orange County. Nothing.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
There's a tiny little jam on the right off near
the four or five and where is that now? That's
actually gone too, so that's just disappeared. The fifty five
again a little bit jammed of people leaving the beach.
So it was a beautiful day to be at the ocean.
Maybe here from out of town, and you know, you
(27:58):
came to see the Rose parade, then you.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
Went to the beach.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
You're gonna have traffic coming off of most of the thoroughfares,
the three ways coming off the beach. But other than
that everything's wide open here in southern California. It looks
like an unbelievable day for traffic. If you are if
you want to see southern California and you have desire
to buzz out to I don't know, Cherry Valley, or
(28:22):
if you want to get up to Palm Springs or
Lancaster you're flying. You can literally go to Las Vegas
right now if you decide to do that. You're bummed
that the Rose bowls over and you want to go
try to win your money back in Vegas. You could
probably get there in three hours. You did get that
final score, right, yeah, yeah, the final score is not good.
The final score forty one to twenty one Ohio State
(28:47):
forty one, your Oregon Ducks twenty one. And now the
Ducks are yeah, they're wabbling back up to Oregon with
their with their tail between their legs.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
Just a horrible, horrible game.
Speaker 9 (29:03):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
The Rose Bowl is over, and it's over for your
Oregon Ducks. And I like the Oregon Ducks. My wife
is from that area, a big fan of Oregon Oregon Ducks.
They had a great season thirteen and zero, and they
ran into a very hot Ohio State team that tore
them up and down the field. It was thirty four
(29:32):
to eight at halftime and it wasn't even that close.
That game could have been fifty six nothing. So a
total of sixty two gay sixty two points for you
betters out there, I imagine that was way over the
over on that. It's over over there, so we're working
on that's a big deal. A lot of people leaving
(29:55):
the Rose Bowl, so traffic is going to get pretty heavy.
The nice the saving grays about the Rose Bowl is
they can't really get that heavy coming out of the
Rose Bowl because nobody can move. Nobody can get the
hell out of there. So you know, it's not like, well,
Dodger Stadium is the same way the road. I was thinking,
(30:16):
there's like three ways to get out of that area.
Speaker 7 (30:18):
It's such a trial to get to the freeway. Yeah,
I think that once you get to the freeway, I
think it kind of opens up pretty quickly immediately.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
The only the only stoppage right there are people going
westbound on the two ten and then continuing westbound the
two ten. You're going to drive right through that traffic.
But other than that, the one thirty four is wide
open both ways. Hearing that and and crows, you're gonna
love this. The one thirty four to the two ten
is wide open, and the two ten all the way
(30:48):
to your front door is wide open.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
Yeah, that's the best part of working on the holidays.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
Yeaes and gentlemen, that's a twenty minute ride and the
way you drive, that's nine minutes yep, nine minutes to
get home. So that rose bull is over. Sorry for
the ducks, better luck next year. Ohio State will continue
onto the playoffs, staying in sports here.
Speaker 2 (31:09):
Then we'll get back to New Orleans.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
They have canceled, I'm sorry, postponed the Sugar Bowl. Postponed
the Sugar Bowl until tomorrow at one pm hour time.
So if you're a big Notre Dame fan or perhaps
a Georgia fan, tomorrow one pm will be the start
of the Sugar Afternoon.
Speaker 2 (31:31):
And here's a.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
News conference that they had earlier on why they postponed.
Speaker 2 (31:35):
I think they made the right choice as well.
Speaker 11 (31:37):
Afternoon. Obviously, we wish we weren't here for this reason.
Today the Sugar Bowl Committee has a ninety year history
of being a good corporate citizen for the city of
norths and that's why this tragedy hurts us and his
thoughts and prayers go out to the victims and their
families as we all work through this. Of course, anytime
(31:58):
we have a major event in the city in New Orleans,
public safety is paramount, and we have full faith and
confidence and the governor and the mayor and all the
assets the federal, state and local resources that they've applied
to this event so that we can ultimately bring those
responsible to justice and carry on with the major events
(32:20):
that we have in front of us, speaking of which
we were scheduled this evening to have a CFP quarter
final played in the Superdome at seven forty five. We
have been in consultation with ESPN, with the College Football Playoff,
with the Southeastern Conference, with the University of Georgia, with
(32:41):
Notre Dame, all parties and all agree that it's in
the best interests of everybody in public safety that we
postponed the game for twenty four hours. Work is fast
about an efficient and fun environment for tomorrow night. Be
more details on that in the coming hours, but for
(33:03):
now that's the plan that we're going to move forward
and play the game, and again we reiterate our thanks
to everyone up here for the work, important work they're doing.
We live in the fun and games world with what
we do, but we certainly recognize the importance of this
and we're going to support it one hundred percent, So
(33:23):
thank you.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
All right, that makes sense now the reaction of the
two different teams that are there, Georgia and or Sorry
Georgia and Notre Dame.
Speaker 5 (33:33):
ESPN reporter Laura Rutledge, who's been speaking to the teams
the Sugar Bowl has now been postponed, Laur, what are
you hearing from the teams and the reaction to this game.
Speaker 12 (33:43):
Being moved, Well, certainly a football game pales in comparison
to the importance of the tragedy that we're talking about here,
but it is an element of this conversation as we
look to see what the next steps will be. And
in speaking with Georgia team officials throughout the day, they
have been waiting to gather more in from but while
that's been going on, they have a shelter in place
at their team hotel. They're in lockdown. Nobody is leaving
(34:06):
nobody's coming in.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
Well, I haven't even thought about that.
Speaker 1 (34:09):
I imagine they are not the only hotel that's on lockdown.
I bet most of the hotels in the area are
on strict lockdown. And you're not getting in without an ID,
without a card, without a key. You're not going into
a to a local bar or a restaurant there without
being radically identified. And I imagine there are a lot
(34:32):
of restaurants that are not going to open today, Krozer
in that area where this happened, Is it mostly bars
and restaurants?
Speaker 2 (34:40):
Oh? Yeah, everything right, Yeah, pretty much?
Speaker 1 (34:42):
Yeahstant Yeah, they've got to all be closed.
Speaker 2 (34:45):
There's no way they're going to open up.
Speaker 11 (34:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (34:47):
I'm really fascinated to say. Well, but again they've they've
gone out of their way. Officials in the city have
gone out of the way to say, we're back to normal,
We're getting back to normal. Have no reason to fear anything,
you know.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
So that's why it.
Speaker 1 (34:58):
Should be Yeah, you know, I mean they you know,
guys like this like this Jabbar, this guy who has
killed fifteen people injured at least thirty five. They want
to disrupt our lives and our freedom, and we should
immediately go back to living the way we did, you know,
an hour before this happened.
Speaker 7 (35:16):
Yeah, and we're talking earlier about what New Orleans is
kind of like. And when you're in that French Quarter,
you're almost kind of isolated for what you hear about
New Orleans otherwise, you know, the danger or whatever. It's
such an isolated area. I'm sure that's part of why
they're saying, no, no, no, get back to the quarter man.
Everything's all good here.
Speaker 1 (35:34):
That's got to be the most secure area of the
entire state of Louisiana.
Speaker 7 (35:40):
Oh yeah, it's got it. Oh yeah, what else are
you're protected in Louisiana?
Speaker 1 (35:44):
Anyways, All right, let's get back to some more reaction
from Georgia and Notre Dame over this horrible incident, this
horrible terrorist attack that happened in New Orleans at three
point fifteen a m.
Speaker 2 (35:59):
Last night.
Speaker 12 (36:00):
They're making sure everyone is as safe as possible. And
here in the stadium, they just open it back up
the Superdome recently, so we were able to get back
into the stadium, but they had been sweeping it once
again with dogs who can detect explosives. They had done
that a couple days ago. And they felt the stadium
was secure. They did it again just to make sure,
but of course taking every precaution possible. Georgia telling me
(36:23):
they'll wait and see as they find out what's going
to happen with this.
Speaker 2 (36:26):
Game going forward.
Speaker 12 (36:27):
But of course they are paying attention to the victims
that have dealt with this tragedy. And there is one
Georgia student who is injured, was in critical condition. He
is receiving medical treatment. They are keeping an eye on
him as well. But we'll continue to gather information here
as we look toward what will happen going forward for
this Sugar Bowl.
Speaker 1 (36:47):
Okay, the Sugar Bowl postponed until tomorrow at one pm
our time. We are live, It's the Conway Show. We're
working on all these major stories for you here. Krozer
is gathering all the information that he can. Earlier we
ad Brian Gann on the KFI National correspondent. He's been
on this story all day long. If he has a
more information, we'll check back with him. But right now,
(37:09):
what we know is fifteen people have been killed, thirty
five people injured in New Orleans and this terrorist attack,
that's a big story. The cyber truck that blew up
outside of Trump Tower is another big story.
Speaker 2 (37:22):
The Rose Bowl is a story.
Speaker 1 (37:23):
And we're also following an amber alert coming out of
Inglewood and we'll give you that description as well when
we come back. Lots more in the hour leading up
to mo Kelly mos not in tonight, but Chris Meryl'll
be in and we'll take you from seven to ten
pm tonight. We've got it all covered for you right
here on KFI AM six forty then and he'll go
on till ten. So we'll have live news now for
(37:45):
till ten pm live right here.
Speaker 2 (37:47):
It's a Conway show. You got Conway.
Speaker 9 (37:50):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty