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. Still working
on a lot of major stories. Obviously, that story of
New Orleans is still really fresh and we'll be talking
about that for weeks or months to come. Cyber truck
story in Vegas another big story. And then we had
(00:24):
the plane crash today in Fullerton. That's another major story.
The shooting in New York outside of a bar, ten
people got got shot, another major story. And it seems
like this year has started off so poorly, so many victims.
And I don't know if you saw any of the
(00:44):
video of the people trying to get out of the
way of that truck in New Orleans, but man with
that thing was flying. He had to be doing fifty
sixty seventy miles an hour running down people. And just
seeing the people running out of the way. You know,
there are nine people in a group and they all
(01:06):
split and eight of them made it. One of them
got hit directly with that truck, and it's really really
sad to watch, really really horrible. Hopefully that's the end
of that crap. We all know it probably isn't, but
we can hope and pray that that is a wrap.
It really affects us as a nation. It bums us
(01:29):
out radically, radically, and hopefully the FBI somebody can figure
this thing out.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Somebody can you know, this guy joined ices.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
Six months ago and so that should put the government
on high alert. If a guy joins ices online, they
should be monitoring that to try to stop that crap.
But again, if we have any more details, we'll bring
those to you. It's a horrible story, so we don't
(02:05):
want to keep harping on it and you know, just
bum you out completely.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
But it is a big story.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
The Fulton plane crash will have updates on that as well,
and there's two people that have died unfortunately. And and
then the Vegas story, Elon Musk Elon must actually send
uh he's dispatched a Tesla team to retrieve the footage
(02:32):
inside the exploded truck. And they have a lot of
information on this. You know, when you when you go
to refuel your your cyber car, your tesla, when you
go to throw some more energy into it, they can
tell where you are and they have video a lot
of these most of these these cars have cameras on
(02:54):
them and they can tell a lot about you. So
let's find out if there's any more information on this
sky and this truck that blew up outside of the
Trump Tower in Las Vegas.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
So the question is are we able to recover the
video from the cyber truck. And many of you may
know that those cyber trucks contain a tremendous number of cameras. Again,
mister Musk has sent out a number of his folks
that will be arriving here this afternoon with the intent
to try to capture the part of that captured all
of the video from inside of the truck.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
Okay, and then some more information the cyber truck terrorists.
New details on the suspect who shot himself right before
he shot himself in the head right before that truck exploded.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
New details emerged.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
Authorities say the truck explosion outside of Las Vegas hotel
was linked to a suspect who was active duty military.
The FBI now searching a home in Colorado as they
follow these new leads. Officials confirmed that thirty seven year
old Matt Livelsberger, a Colorado Springs resident, is believed to
be behind the Las Vegas cyber truck bombing. The US
(03:59):
Army confirmed that he was an active duty Green Beret
and he had been on approved leave at the time.
Speaker 5 (04:05):
We haven't even gotten into the phones or the computers,
which are usually very, very instructive and informative to us
as we investigate, and we've got a lot more work
to do to trace him.
Speaker 4 (04:15):
During a press conference, Las Vegas police and ATF officials
said they're not ruling anything out following both domestic and
international leads. While looking into forensics evidence, Las Vegas police
say he had shot himself in the head before the
vehicle burst into flames. A handgun was found at his feet.
They've also recovered military ideas.
Speaker 6 (04:36):
We've identified two semi automatic handguns recovered from the Tesla.
We have successfully traced those firearms, and I can tell
you that Matthew Leivesburg lawfully purchased both of these firearms
on December thirtieth, twenty twenty four.
Speaker 4 (04:53):
The US Army also released details about his service. He
joined the army in two thousand and six and had
a long career with overseas deployments, including Afghanistan. Authorities are
now looking into a possible connection between him and the
suspect in the New Orleans attack. Sources told the Associated
Press they both served at Fort Bragg, but there was
no overlap in their assignments. The FBI and police are
(05:15):
currently searching a home in Colorado Springs, which is believed
to be his home.
Speaker 7 (05:20):
I'm sorry, I don't know what to say. He just
he seemed like a normal guy, you know, like when
I would let he had a dog, you know, and
we would always come out together at the same time,
it seemed like, and he'd say hi and sorry, and yeah.
He seemed normal. His wife is very nice, they just
(05:43):
had a baby.
Speaker 2 (05:45):
Yeah, that's an unusual story, it really is.
Speaker 1 (05:48):
But then again, you always hear this, you know, when
somebody you know commits an act like this, you always
hear like, Oh, he's normal.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
He was an everyday guy. He waved to us.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
His wife was really nice, he had kids, he had
a dog, he was a you know, he went to church,
whatever it was.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
And then.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Something snaps, something snaps, And I think there are a
lot of people out there like that who are close
a lot of pressure in society.
Speaker 4 (06:17):
A massive explosion erupted outside the Trump Hotel in Las
Vegas Wednesday morning, shaking even the upper floors of the building.
Guests described the hotel trembling, with some on the twenty
fourth floor feeling the impact.
Speaker 8 (06:30):
I like touched the revolving door.
Speaker 9 (06:32):
I was about to go out to get our car,
and a lot of fireworks started going off, just like
dozens of fireworks NonStop.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
Once the fire was under control, authorities discovered gasoline and
mortars in the bed of a Tesla cyber truck. The
driver was killed in the blast. Seven others suffered minor wounds.
Officials are now investigating whether this incident was an act
of terrorism.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
Okay, and again any more details will have that for you.
Somebody texts me saying, Hey, where is this donut shop
that needs help in sam Pedro. It's called the Donut
The Donut. It's open every day from five thirty am
until noon. They close at noon. Don't know why, but
they do. It's at sixteenth and Gaffy gaff E Y
(07:17):
one six one five South Gaffey Street in San Pedro.
Again open at five thirty am and they close at noon.
They also have a GoFundMe Save the Donut Preserve a
sam Pedro landmark. This young lady has been working there
or I don't know, middle aged, I don't know, I'll chesse.
But she's been there for forty years and she needs help.
(07:40):
So they put together a GoFundMe a four thousand dollars goal.
It's already at twenty four hundred and sixty four dollars.
So if you're in that neighborhood, it's a residential neighborhood.
There's only a couple of businesses there. I think there's
a place where you can get a haircut, and Joe's
Diner is there, amend that donut shop and the cleaners
(08:03):
and everything else around. It is residential, and so if
you want to slide into there, you gotta wait till
tomorrow five thirty am until noon. Sixteenth and Gaffey Street,
j F F E y sixteenth and Gaffy. It's called
the Donut And I saw her making donuts that they
look spectacular. So maybe you can save that donut place
(08:24):
and people can enjoy their donuts and Sam Pedro, that
would be.
Speaker 8 (08:28):
Great, all right.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
We got to take a break. When we come back.
We have the house whisper with us. He's with us
every single week, So Dean Sharp will be with us
and we'll talk to him when we come back.
Speaker 10 (08:39):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on Demyan from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 8 (08:46):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
This is great.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
Everybody enjoys Dean Sharp, the house whisper. He's on every
Saturday morning six to eight am, Sunday from nine am
until noon and he's with us.
Speaker 7 (08:54):
Dean.
Speaker 8 (08:55):
How you, Bob, I'm good, I'm good.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Happy New Year, man, Yeah, happy Near you to you too, man.
Did you do anything cool anything special?
Speaker 8 (09:03):
We just hung out.
Speaker 11 (09:04):
We hung out with laid Low, you know, had the
fam over and played Taco versus Burrito with my eight
year old granddad.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
That's the way to go, buddy.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
Hey, I was I was at a friend's house up
in Oregon and he's like, like me or you on
on the level of you know, you've got a lot
of tools at your house. You've got a lot of
extra nails and screws. You probably have a bucket full
of them. And and I was thinking, has this ever
happened in the history of the world where a guy has,
(09:36):
you know, a whole bucket of nails or screws and
he and he uses all of them, all, like ten
thousand of them, and he gets down to his last
two and he puts it into a wall and then
he dies.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
I bet that's never happened.
Speaker 11 (09:51):
Yeah, I'm sure it is never ever. I inherited buckets
of screws from my father. I did too, but we
keep them. I think there are some jars with nails
that were made in the eighteen hundred or something.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
Right, but we keep them.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
We I move them from one house to another about five, seven,
seven years.
Speaker 11 (10:11):
Ago because it just feels so wasteful, right, you know,
I mean it feels it.
Speaker 8 (10:15):
I gotta tell you.
Speaker 11 (10:16):
You know, it's a it's an interesting subject that you
brought up, because I have really had to you know,
hone it in, you know, just rein it in in
recent years because I get kind of retentive about it
now because I hate, hate, keeping all these excess nuts
(10:37):
and bolts and screws. So I try and figure out,
like a little project that I'm doing, if I don't have,
you know, and of course nine times out of ten
you are actually have to go to the hardware store
and get a difference, Okay, Right, So so I try
and figure out do I need six? I probably should
get seven, But what if I only use the six
then I'm gonna have that seventh one and I'm gonna
(10:57):
feel bad about throwing it away.
Speaker 8 (10:59):
So if not, and then I'm never gonna use it.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
I know that everybody in Oregon that I know, that
you know, has tools and fixes crap around the house themselves.
Whenever they buy screws that are loose, you know where
you have to reach into that bin and throw a
couple in a bag. They always throw extras in and
then write the wrong number on the bag.
Speaker 11 (11:21):
They they always do. But by the way, that's an
awesome experience. Though used to get loose, you know, loose hardware.
These days from a hardware store, it's like the best
thing in the world. It's so classic to walk into
a hardware store and say, hey, Bob, you know, I
need a pound and a half of sixteen penny nail.
Speaker 8 (11:38):
He just reaches in with a scoop, right them up.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
But they do it at the Do It Center.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
They still have that where you can reach in and
and buy it by the pound.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
I love that.
Speaker 8 (11:48):
I love that.
Speaker 11 (11:48):
Oh I hope that never goes away. There's so much
nostalgia attached to that. My dad used to have, you know,
the whole back of the workshop had like baby food
jars and Mason jars where he had attached the list
to a seen that he just grabbed the jar and
you unscrew it from the bottom. Yep, you know, every
so you could see what was in there. Didn't matter,
they just got dusty. We just stared at them for years.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
I went through, uh, last summer, I went through a
spell where I was gonna empty out this whole jar
of screws and nails and separate them and then put
them in little tiny drawers and what looked like a
you know, a tackle box, you know, with ninety ninety drawers.
And I did that all and then I needed something.
(12:31):
I needed screws. And the first thing I did home depot.
Of course, that's the thing. I know, it's it's it
works like this. You never use them. But you know
what if you go to a guy's house and he
doesn't have a collection of unused screws, you know this
guy never doesn't. I've got Krozier as a box of
a bag of that jar of that crap too.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
We always got a wall.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Yeah, but one of the essential tools I went to
I'm not bragging, but I went to Walmart the other day,
and I had to buy a micro Phillips screwdriver because
all the toys that you know that the kids and
grandkids have, they all come with battery packs. They used
to be just secured by a plastic you know, a
knob or a plastic hold. Now they all have Phillip's
(13:16):
tiny little screws on them for some reason.
Speaker 8 (13:18):
Yeah, what is the deal with that.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
I don't know.
Speaker 12 (13:20):
I don't know.
Speaker 8 (13:20):
It's a pain in the ass.
Speaker 11 (13:22):
It's not like we're you know, you're not installing a
five year battery, that's right.
Speaker 8 (13:26):
These are like double A alkaline.
Speaker 11 (13:27):
They're gonna be changed out in two weeks.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
And I also, and I'm sure you do this as well,
but if you have anything that take screws, are anything
it takes batteries, I should say, and it's a Christmas
ornament or it's a Christmas decoration, you have to take
the batteries out of it before you put it back
into storage.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
Oh yeah, otherwise next year it's gonna be all corroded.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
Yeah, and it's gone. Yeah, that's absolutely gone.
Speaker 11 (13:52):
Well, this weekend I figured we would start our first
shows of twenty twenty five just by me running through
my list of essential home toolkit and so we're gonna
get into it. Not only are we gonna list out
the tools, because that's easy enough, you can just do
a list, but I want to explain why these are
the tools to have on hand around your house, starting with,
(14:15):
you know, the lack of a toolbox, which you know toolboxes,
surprisingly enough, not huge fan when it comes to that.
And I'll tell you why toolboxes are designed originally, you know,
with the lid and the latch and the whole thing
for builders like me, for guys who need to grab tools,
(14:36):
throw them into the back of a pickup truck and
transport them. Right, So the lid, the locking, the latches,
all of that not really necessary for a homeowner. I
for years, and i'd recommend this. I love a good
bucket boss, a good five gallon bucket organizer, especially for
those projects around your house. Right, so you get one
(14:58):
of these Cordura can visc organizers that slides onto a
three dollars five gallon bucket that you can get anywhere,
and wow, what a great toolbox that is for the
home because all of your tools can be in the
little pockets displayed for whatever project you're working on. You
can put your supplies, like your screws and your nails
(15:19):
down inside the bucket and just carry it over to
where you're working. And some of them even come with
a little seat so that once you're on the project,
you can sit there and sit on the bucket that's
holding your tools as you get whatever it is done
that you're trying to do.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
That's a great idea.
Speaker 8 (15:34):
You know what.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
I had to change out a light and exterior light
the other day. And I go to change it out
and it's one of those lights where you have to
put everything in orders. It's a hanging on a chain,
So the chain has to go on, the wire's got
to go through it, the nut's got to go at
the circular day, it's got to go in a certain order,
or else you've got to back the whole thing out.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
I always screw those up.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
I always have to assemble them and disassemble and assemblement
and dissemble them like three or four times. Yeah, even
when I concentrate, it tries to me crazy.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
But the two things, the.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Two tools that I like, and I got a really
good modern I'm I stud finder, and those new ones
tell you not only that there's something behind the wall,
but what it is.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
Yeah, it's true. It's true.
Speaker 11 (16:18):
Stud finders have come a long long way, a long way,
and you don't have to pay, you know, hundreds of
dollars these days for a decent one, right, and the other.
Speaker 8 (16:26):
And the other one.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
I love and I and I think this has saved
my life on at least a dozen occasions.
Speaker 11 (16:31):
Is the voltage tester. Voltage testers are are something that
I wish every homeowner had, and not that I want
every homeowner to get into the electrical work on their home,
but when it comes to like why is this outlet
now working? You know that kind of stuff of just
solving at least for peace of mind, getting getting a
sense of like, is it a problem in the wall?
(16:52):
Is it the outlet? Is it at the panel? A
voltage tester? And what we're talking about a non contact
voltage tester, right, so we're not talking about the little
probes that you stick in.
Speaker 8 (17:02):
Right.
Speaker 11 (17:02):
People are like, Oh no, that's that's what I'm gonna
electrocute myself. Now. This thing looks like a glorified fat
marker pen and it literally goes off as you get
it near the outlet. If there is voltage to be detected,
because what it's really looking for is the electromagnetic field
that is produced by voltage. If there is voltage in
(17:22):
a switch and an outlet, as you get the sensor
close to it, boom, you get an indication. Yeah, that's
a live wire, that's a live outlet, and so you
know what you're dealing with.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
And they almost all have that universal that that repetitive
beep when you get close.
Speaker 8 (17:39):
Yeah. I don't know who came up with that, but yeah,
it's a thing.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
Another thing that I love. But sometimes I hate to
say this. It's too strong. I like masking tape, I
like duct tape, but that grilla tape that's there, you're
that's there for life. You know, you put it with
with grilla tape. I don't know what these people have
put on that grilla tape, but got it. That stuff's
strong and it's thick.
Speaker 11 (18:02):
Yeah, and I mean the adhesive is amazing and the
tape is thick.
Speaker 8 (18:06):
Yeah. We use gerrilla tape for like door hinges around here.
Speaker 11 (18:09):
I mean, it's just just it's incredibly powerful stuff. Not
that don't ever make the mistake of using gerrilla tape
as masking tape. That's not the it's not gonna work
out well for you.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
But we had a guy on the show about fifteen
years ago. I was at kalas X and the guy
came on and he was one of the early employees
with three M. He worked at the company three M,
and he came up with a tape that wasn't strong
enough to be scotch tape, and but they kept it
around just to see if anything else in the future
would need that sort of you know, a connection, that
(18:43):
sort of you know, stickiness, and they kept it and
they kept and they kept it for thirty forty fifty
years and they finally used it with those stickham tabs.
You know, there's what they call where you put it
on pieces of paper post it notes.
Speaker 8 (18:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
Yeah, he created post it notes like fifty years ago,
you know, at least that kind of adhesive, and they
didn't use it for another fifty years.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
I thought that was interesting, that's cool.
Speaker 11 (19:04):
Well, you know, you know, you remind me of the
fact that I was just looking over some notes on
some archives today and it's been a couple three years
since we've done our an adhesive show, and I think
now that you brought that up I think I got
to set some time aside and do a show about
adhesive so people understand what the right one to use
in the right circumstances.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
Please tell me when you're doing that, because I had
to glue something onto a glass door, a glass shower door,
and I went through nine different products before I got
it right. You know, even though it says on it
it'll it'll hold plastic the glass, sometimes I don't believe that.
Speaker 11 (19:40):
No, it all depends it really, it all depends. It's
all about the prep and it's about the right adhesive.
There is an adhesive out there undoubtedly that'll get the
job done. But the universal like super glue stuff that
people talk about, yeah, it does. You know, it really
has to do with chemistry and at least understanding you
know which one is going to work in the right place.
(20:01):
You know, you brought up Scotch tape, and I often wonder,
and you know, I don't want to say it too
loud because I don't actually want this to happen. But
you know, in this politically correct world of cancel hell,
oh yeah, I'm shocked that Scotch tape is still called
scott tape. People obviously do not know where it got
its name. Idea was that, you know what, it's cheap
(20:25):
and it works kind of Okay, let's call it Scotch tape.
We're oh, I see okay, right, I get it like
a miserly scotsman. I mean it is a corectly ethical
I mean, uh ethnic slur it is. It's it's totally
uh you know, a jab at the Scottish people. But
you know what, they don't seem to care.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
Okay, I'd like to one up you on this.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
I the team that beat Georgia today in the Sugar Bowl,
the Fighting Irish.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
How about that?
Speaker 11 (20:54):
Yeah, exactly, hystereo like because you know they're prone to violence, right.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
The drink fighting Irish. That's the name of the team.
And nobody complaints.
Speaker 8 (21:06):
You're proud of it.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
That's proud of it, and you can't deny that it's true.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
All right, buddy, I'll be listening.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
I love the idea of this this weekend of just
getting your tool belt together and your toolbox together and
putting in at one of those home Depot or Lowes buckets.
I think it's a great idea. I will be listening.
Thanks for coming on, Bob.
Speaker 8 (21:24):
Thanks Bro.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
All right, there he goes Dean Sharp.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Everybody this weekend Saturday six to eight am, Sunday nine
am to noon, get your your annual you know, toolbox,
your tool bag or your tool bucket together this weekend
and the essential tools on the house whisper Saturday and
Sunday morning right here on KFI.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
We're live on KFI.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
We'll come back up with any updates on the Fulleton
story plane crash right near the Fullerton Airport into a
furnishure manufacturing facility, and if there's an update, we'll have
that for you.
Speaker 10 (21:57):
You're listening to Tim conwaytun you're on demand from KFI
Am sixty.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
We had an update around five o'clock, and I'm going
to play that for you again, just because I know
there are some people that weren't in their car and
listening at five oh four.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
You were doing other things. I get it, I understand.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
I mean I wish you were here, and maybe next
time you will be, so don't have to do it
and then play it over again for the listeners who
already were here and were prompt and stayed for the
whole class. But we'll play it for you here because
it is a big story. Fullerton Airport is surrounded by
a lot of there's a lot of homes around Fullerton Airport,
(22:39):
a lot of businesses. And this plane tried to get
back to the airport obviously trouble flying, most likely engine trouble,
and crashed into a facility that makes furniture. And I
think it's an assembly line that produces furniture down there
in Fullerton. And here's an update on the plane crashing.
(23:00):
Happened a little bit after two o'clock this afternoon, they say,
right around two o nine to two ten. And and
that's a big story in that area. There's a lot
of streets closed. If you're on the ninety one of
the five at that interchange, if you drew drove directly north,
exactly one hundred percent north due north, you'd run right
(23:21):
into the airport and the and the vicinity of where
this happened.
Speaker 13 (23:25):
He's an assembly line worker who says that when the
plane crashed, he ran out of the building as fast
as he could.
Speaker 14 (23:32):
Take a listen, we're working, we're paying attention to the
job or doing our job, and I don't.
Speaker 12 (23:36):
Know already just hear an explosion and a bunch of
fire came out and we were just like, oh something,
we got to go. So we just dropped everything and
ran people that a lot of people are very close
family members are kind of worried for them as well. Yeah,
so it was kind of it was kind of crazy,
very nervous. It sounded like a movie like when they explosed.
That's how it sounded. It's like pieces. They just sounded
very crazy, very tra medic friend family friends did get
(23:56):
bre they got they get they got to m to
the hospital after like two lines away from it.
Speaker 14 (24:01):
So it's one line and the no one works on
this line and another line so where they got a bad.
Speaker 12 (24:06):
And we're working in Just it was crazy, crazy experience.
Speaker 13 (24:09):
Yeah, yeah, Cortes, you can tell in his interview he
was still really shaken up, and he told us that
he's very very worried about his coworkers. Some of them,
he said, are his family friends and they were burned
in this explosion. This plane crash. This all happened just
after two o'clock two nine, is when police received reports
of that plane crashing down into the warehouse here on
(24:29):
Raymer Avenue. This is just about a commercial block from
the Fullerton Airport. Again, now we know eighteen people injured.
Some of them were transported to the hospital, some of
them were several of them, I should say, we're treated
and released here at the scene, and we're told from
the police department that they were mostly minor injuries. But
again that update just about ten minutes ago. We do
(24:50):
know that two people are now confirmed deceased here at
the scene. We're going to continue to gather some more information.
But if you don't need to be in this, it's
probably a good idea to avoid it. There's a lot
of emergency personnel here and the investigation is going to
go into the night. We're live in Fullerton, Heady Chang,
NBC four News back to you.
Speaker 15 (25:11):
Thank you very much for that.
Speaker 16 (25:12):
And we heard that Orange Thorpe and the ninety one
freeway are the best alternates because there are so many streets.
Speaker 1 (25:17):
Yeah, well that was a That report is about an
hour and twenty minutes old. And when we first went
on today, the Gilbert Street from Melvin all the way
to our Tisher was closed and now there's just they've
opened it up where now there's just a little bit
of the northbound lanes on Gilbert that are closed. So
(25:39):
our Tisia and Gilbert is back open, and also Melvern
and Gilbert are back open there. There's still a lot
of traffic around there. The fire department is still there,
the NTSB will be there for the not already there,
and there'll be a lot of investigation going on all
through the night. Anytime there's a plane crash, they want
(26:01):
to get as much information as possible to maybe learn
something about how to prevent that or how this happened.
All right, when we come back, we're gonna have a
something a little lighter here, space exploration in twenty twenty five.
What's on the horizon where we going in twenty twenty
(26:21):
five when it comes to space, we're finally gonna launch
and get to Mars when we come back.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
I will tell.
Speaker 10 (26:27):
You you're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
We'll get to the space story here in a second.
And also there's any updates on the Fulton plane plane
crash into a manufacturing furniture manufacturing facility right near the
Fullerton Airport. And two people have passed away, so that's
horrible news. Wayne Osmon has passed away, the brother of
Donnie and Marie Osmon at seventy three original member of
(26:56):
the Osmond singing group, Wayne Osman, who is the original member.
On Thursday, I passed away, confirming the news by social
media in Salt Lake City after suffering a stroke, a
massive stroke.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
So that's sad news.
Speaker 8 (27:15):
You hear.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
You occasionally heard about Wayne Osmon, the brother of Donnie
and Marie Osmond. But but the one Osmond that they
you never heard about, the one they really didn't like
talking about, was Lee Harvey Osmond.
Speaker 17 (27:31):
Sorry, I thought it was Oswald, Donn Marie Oswald.
Speaker 16 (27:50):
What's their big hit?
Speaker 2 (27:51):
I'm a little bit country.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
Yeah, I'm a little bit rock and roll. But the
one brother they don't like talking about is Lee Harvey Osman. Sorry, look,
is the only time you can do that line? Bellio, thank you,
Bellios for what Bellio's in charge of our social media
(28:16):
and she knocks it out on social media and the
year end numbers, the year end numbers came in and
on Facebook, KFI has seventy seven thousand on Facebook.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
That's a respectable number, don't you agree?
Speaker 8 (28:34):
Oh yeah, that's great.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
That's a respectful, very respectable And we this little tiny
show has two hundred and ninety eight thousand on Facebook. Wow, yeah,
that's all Bellio. All of it is Bellio. But we
we really dominate on Facebook, Bellio, and you really kicked ass.
(28:58):
We have nearly three hundred thousand followers on Facebook.
Speaker 2 (29:03):
It's huge and we're.
Speaker 16 (29:06):
Very can we encourage people that are not following us
to follow us on threads and TikTok and X and
Instagram and Facebook at Conway show.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
It does help, It does help, It does help. We
have fifty eight, seven hundred and twenty seven thousand on Instagram.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
We'd like to see sixty.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
And we beat KFI on that one as well. How
about that KFI beats us on X by nineteen We
beat the KFI on Facebook by two hundred and twenty
one thousand. Seems like an ass kicking. And then on
threads we beat KFI. We have eleven thousand, they have
eighty four hundred. They beat us on TikTok, so we'll
(29:51):
get them.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
Follow us on TikTok.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
But that's a lot total, Yeah, total people following liking
whatever it is, four hundred and eleven thousand people. That's
a lot, Belly, Oh, you've done an outstanding job.
Speaker 2 (30:07):
Outstanding job, well, it's because of you. Thank you well,
that obviously, but I mean you didn't think it's talking
about Bellio.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
We do it every Thursday at six fifty and it's
being brought to you by Advanced Hair, one day treatment,
life changing results. Make your point me today at Advanced
hair dot com. Advanced Hair dot Com. All right, where
are we going in twenty twenty five? When it comes
to space?
Speaker 8 (30:32):
We go into Mars.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Are we going to another planet? We're going to the Sun.
Where we go it?
Speaker 9 (30:36):
America's twenty twenty four space Odyssey had drama.
Speaker 6 (30:39):
Flowing star Liner is back home from space overnight, but
it came back with an empty cabin.
Speaker 9 (30:45):
Breakthrough technologies, and international intrigue condo. But above all, it
was yet another year of triumph for Elon Musk's space test,
flying six uncrewed starship rockets that one day will carry
(31:05):
astronauts to the Moon and maybe Mars. With stunning new
capture technology for the booster rocket, space X will soon
provide the ride home for astronauts Sunny Williams and Butch Wilmore,
whose ten day mission last June to the space station
will last nine months.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Wow, there's supposed to be for ten days. They lasted nine.
Speaker 9 (31:28):
Months until at least late March, after NASA brought the
troubled Boeing Starliner spaceship home empty, concerned it wasn't safe
for the astronauts.
Speaker 7 (31:38):
Where both you know Navy, we've both been on deployments,
were not surprised when deployments gets changed.
Speaker 9 (31:46):
Twenty twenty four was also another big year for the
Chinese space program, landing a second robotic mission on the
far side of the Moon, then returning home with soil
samples that suggest ancient folk cannic activity. China is moving
at full throttle to land its own astronauts on the
Moon by twenty thirty. That's also NASA's goal for its
(32:10):
Artemis program.
Speaker 18 (32:11):
And it is widely late for us to land on
the South Pole, so that we do not see portions
of that south lunar South Pole to the Chinese.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
But NASA is another space race, another space race getting
back to the Moon. But we're getting to the Moon,
whatever you believe.
Speaker 9 (32:33):
But NASA is now delaying an Artemis loop around the
Moon until twenty twenty six to improve the heat shields
needed for re entry. The goal now a moon landing
in twenty twenty seven, New astronaut doctor Chris Williams.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
See, this is what the skeptics that don't think we
ever went to the moon. This makes them even more
skeptical that we still can't get there, that we're still
working on heat shields. You know, fifty fifty five years
after we initially went to the Moon, we're still working
on heat shields and delaying projects because we don't have
(33:10):
the technology to get to the moon.
Speaker 9 (33:14):
New astronaut doctor Chris Williams. Have you dreamed of being
among the first to return to the moon.
Speaker 6 (33:20):
I absolutely hope it's me and uh, you know, and
that I get the chance to do that.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
Did you hear how he paused when he said return
to the moon.
Speaker 9 (33:27):
Have you dreamed of being among the first to return.
Speaker 12 (33:31):
To the moon?
Speaker 2 (33:32):
To go got initially? I mean return to the moon.
Speaker 6 (33:35):
I absolutely hope it's me and you know, and that
I get the chance to do that.
Speaker 1 (33:38):
Well, that's everybody. He's an astronaut, he hopes it. Look,
I hope it's me. I'd love to go to the moon.
I'd love to see that, sucker. But belly, would you
go to the moon.
Speaker 2 (33:48):
You'd go, wouldn't you?
Speaker 19 (33:50):
No?
Speaker 18 (33:50):
Oh? I hate the Moon, you know me, I hate it.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Okay, all right, easy, easy, baby easy.
Speaker 12 (33:55):
Jarrett now opening Dragon Brazilient.
Speaker 9 (33:59):
Jared became the first commercial astronaut to perform a space
walk in twenty twenty four near Berkshire.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
Looks like a perfect world.
Speaker 9 (34:09):
He's now President ELK Trump's choice to lead NASA.
Speaker 2 (34:12):
There we go.
Speaker 9 (34:13):
There were more space tourist flights in twenty four, and
a private probe named Odysseus landed on the Moon but
then tipped over.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
In twenty twenty four. We landed on the Moon and
that sucker tipped over. And you think we went nineteen
sixty nine. Okay, okay, okay.
Speaker 9 (34:31):
Landed on the Moon but then tipped over.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
Tipped over in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 9 (34:36):
Twenty twenty five will be a year of private business
and China pushing to go farther faster.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
All right, So we're not going to Mars. We're trying
to get to the moon in twenty twenty five. We're
going to try to get to the moon. That makes
people think that we never went, well, we're in twenty
twenty five, were still trying to get there, all right, Well,
I don't know, you think what you want, but it's
(35:08):
impossible for some skeptics to believe that we've been there.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
Well, we keep putting it off.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
In twenty twenty five, it seems odd, all right, real
quickly a rent increase. Many tenants are facing a significant
rent increase.
Speaker 2 (35:23):
This is not good. It's gonna be a tough time.
Speaker 15 (35:25):
You know, in Los Angeles, more than sixty three percent
of residents rent their homes, and unfortunately, this year they'll
see an increase in their rents.
Speaker 1 (35:32):
I didn't know that sixty three percent of the people
live in LA are renters. That's a huge number.
Speaker 19 (35:37):
You're getting ready to celebrate the new year, and then
you get hit with, oh, but your rent's going to
be going up in thirty days.
Speaker 15 (35:44):
It's happening to millions of tenants in the city and
County of LA. Letters like this one are being sent
to renters informing them of upcoming rent increases. For Jasmin Kannick,
who lives in the West Adams District, her rent is
set to rise by four percent.
Speaker 19 (36:00):
Four percent is a.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
Lot of money.
Speaker 19 (36:02):
It's not twenty dollars, thirty dollars. It's usually one hundred
dollars or more.
Speaker 1 (36:06):
Stepho's you're a renter. Did they increase your rent this year?
Are you going to see a rent increase? They did not,
because luckily my landlord is my dad. Oh oh I
didn't know that.
Speaker 8 (36:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Oh your dad owns your building. But yeah, I didn't
know that.
Speaker 2 (36:20):
Yeah, no he does.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
So wait the building, you your your apartments, and your
dad owns that.
Speaker 14 (36:25):
It's well, no, it's a property. Yeah, it's just a property.
It's not a like a part like a condo. Okay,
oh that's great. But yeah, because they take him to
you know, your toy mans and get his meals and
pills and all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
So yeah, because if he rents, if he raises your rent,
you're like, like, Dad, I got to work too much
and take you to doctors. You know, I'm pretty much yeah,
paying off all my rent to you. Oh that's great.
I'm glad that you're you're not going to see an
increase because you already pay a lot, don't you.
Speaker 2 (36:53):
Yeah, well I did. Now my dad's helping me a
little bit. Good for him. That's great. You've got a
great relationship with your dad, I do.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
Yeah, that's a special relationship, buddy.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
I respect that more than you know.
Speaker 8 (37:05):
And he thinks.
Speaker 14 (37:06):
I play a couple of clips of our show, and
he thinks you're just like the funniest, Is that right?
Speaker 2 (37:12):
Yeah? Would he rent to me? I think you would. Okay, yeah,
Well let me introduced moo Kelly then we'll talk about it.
Speaker 8 (37:19):
Okay, okay, all right.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
Well, Kelly's up next to this whole team right here
on KFIM six forty Conway Show on demand on the
iHeartRadio app. Now, you can always hear us live on
kfi AM six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand on the iHeart Radio app