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January 6, 2025 33 mins
Jon Decker National WH Correspondent on 4 years after Capitol attack, Jan. 6 cases hang in the balance with Trump pardons on the horizon.  Kamala Harris certifies Donald Trump // Potentially Dangerous Santa Winds Tues-Wed // Quad-Demic – what can you do to prevent Flu, Covid, Norovirus and RSV “LOTS of Diarrhea” // Norovirus how to prevent / Tim has a work-around for restaurant silverware / Justin Trudeau resigns as Canadian Prime Minister 
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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 AM six forty.
It's Conway Show. Let's get right into it. This is
January sixth, four years ago today. You may remember where
you were when a lot of Donald Trump supporters stormed

(00:21):
the Senate the Capitol building there. How's a big deal?
How's a big deal? Remember waking up looking at it there,
going oh no, oh no, somebody's gonna get in trouble
for this one. Oh no. All right. John Decker's with
his national White House correspondent. He's been in Washington for
quite some time, and we have the details with John John.

(00:43):
How you, Bob.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
I'm doing great, Tim, good to be with you this afternoon.
And I remember it quite well. Four years ago. I
was at the White House wow, when that attack on
the capital happened, and it was acker a shocker because
I don't think anybody foresaw that happening, and that obviously
changed the entire focus of the Trump administration in its

(01:06):
waning weeks of his administration.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
You know what it reminded me of. And you're a
history boff, you're a political guy, so you probably remember this.
And I don't know how old you are, but if
you're as old as I am, you do. But you
remember like thirty or forty years ago when Russia Parliament
and the Russia capital was attacked by terrorists and it
had sort of that eerie crazy field to it.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
Well, it did. I mean, that was a surreal to
see all of that taking place at the Capitol, which
I met on a pretty regular basis, and to see
all of that, you know, just take place at a
time when we were just anticipating what we saw today,
which was a peaceful process of confirming who the winner

(01:53):
of the November presidential election. Was a very different day
today than four years ago, a smooth process, and infect
him today. Not one Democrat on either the House side
or the Senate side put up any fight in any
way challenged any of the Electoral College votes that Donald

(02:13):
Trump received in any of the fifty states or the
district of Columbia.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
You know, I think was Kamala Harris's missed opportunity today.
You know, they did the states in alphabetical order, which
they always do. You know, Arkansas, Arizona eventually gets to California,
and she was ahead by about fifty four electoral votes
by the time California was read. She should have yelled out,
stop the vote. It stopped the count.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Could have done that?

Speaker 1 (02:38):
How great would that have been? Good here, how great
would that have been?

Speaker 3 (02:41):
You know?

Speaker 2 (02:42):
Funny? Yeah, I think she was focused on her duty
as the presiding officer the president of the Senate, but
that would have been a moment. Yeah, done that.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Hey, so this has happened. This has happened in the
past then when whoever was running for president had to
put their tail between their legs and now bounce the
new president. I think it's happened twice before. I think
it was the third time.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
Yeah. So, most recently it happened when Al Gore presided
over the Senate in two thousand and one and he
confirmed the results of the two thousand presidential election that
he lost very narrowly. And then it also happened in
nineteen sixty one when Richard Nixon was the vice president

(03:25):
running for president, and of course he had to preside
over the Senate to announce that John F. Kennedy had
won the presidential election of nineteen sixty.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Oh, that's wild, you know, it's really weird. John if
you've been able to watch a lot of news today.
I know it's been very busy in Washington. But on
MSNBC and CNN NBC, they're showing a lot of January sixth,
four years ago. And then on Fox and you Knowan
and Newsmax, they're showing January sixth from today. An odd

(03:55):
country we live in.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
It is.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
It shows the divide that exist in America as it
relates to that day. You know, I think that if
you talk to any member of Congress and they're not
on camera, and you know they're not being quoted, they
will tell you it was a terrible day for our country.
It was a terrible day for the institution of the Congress.

(04:18):
But you know, look, politics is at play. The leader
of the Republican Party is Donald Trump, and no Republican
wants to be on the opposite side of Donald Trump
on this particular issue. And they play down what happened
on January sixth, four years ago, and say, let's look forward,
let's not look to the past. And you know, I mean,

(04:39):
to a certain extent, you can look forward, but you
can't forget what happened four years ago.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
For sure.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
Now, John, again, I watch you know, politics out of
one eye. When when they had the Congress and you
know the Senate. In the Congress and the House or
in one room, there's only what four hundred and thirty
five in thirty eight seats in there? How do I
accommodate both of those groups of people? Today? Do some

(05:05):
people bail and don't go to this thing?

Speaker 2 (05:08):
No, it's every member of Congress, so all four hundred
I'm in thirty five members of Congress and then all
one hundred Senators. And it's done in the House Chamber,
which can accommodate all of those members. And of course
in just a few weeks they have, you know, the
address to the Nation by President Donald Trump. Typically in

(05:28):
the year in which he's not just become president, it
would be called the State of the Union. It's just
called a joint addressed to Congress this year. But you know,
I've been in the chamber. It's always a thrill for
me to be in the chamber for the State of
Union address. And I think this year would be my
twenty ninth time inside the House Chamber to see and
I've seen a lot of things over the years. Tim

(05:50):
you know, I can just all of the different events
over the past quarter of the century, you know, including
when Bill Clinton gave his Davie UNI address at the
Monica Lewinsky scandal was breaking, George W. Bush talking about
the axis of Evil. All of these things just have
a I think a historic place in our minds when

(06:13):
it comes to that important address that a president gives
every year.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
Well, we have never met in person, but just by
the tone of your the sound of your voice, I
would have guessed you were probably thirty five. But if
you've been doing this for twenty nine years, you're north
of there. So this typically takes when they do the
electoral College and the account the votes, it takes anywhere between.
You know, twenty two minutes I think was the shortest,
and forty one minutes was the longest, except for four

(06:39):
years ago it took fourteen hours and fifty eight minutes.
That might be a record that we never see eclipsed.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
Yeah, that's a tough one because they took a break
and then they came back in the morning to finish
the count. And that's because federal law mandates that you
have the certification process take place on January sixth. It
must take place on January sixth, here in Washington. We
had a big snowstorm overnight and got close to ten
inches in some places. But you know that does not

(07:06):
mean that they postpone it. It's happened today regardless of
what the weather's like. And I think what lawmakers decided
to do is to stay in town over the weekend
so that they, you know, didn't have to deal with
travel problems today this morning, coming from whatever district they
were coming from.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
You know, Rick D's told me, you know, thirty five
years ago, if you talk about the weather, they'll never
change the station. Is it supposed to be snowing there
all week?

Speaker 2 (07:35):
It's going to be cold here all week. Tim, I
was listening to that weather forecast in southern California. I'd
much rather be there. I have news for you. It's
going to be probably windshill in the mid twenties every
day this week, and it's going to be exceedingly cold.
Also the day that Donald Trump is sworn into office
on January the twenty of two weeks from today.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Oh man, that's going to be an unbelievable What a
time to be there, you know, to be in Washington, DC.
You know, when I was growing up, you know, you
looked at Washington every year, every couple of years, but
now we watch it every single day. There's always news
coming out of Washington, d C. And you're in the
middle of it.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
Well, that's what Donald Trump wants and that's what he
got the first ternament office. He always wanted to be
the top story on every newscast, good or bad, and
he pretty much achieved that every day of his presidency
and it'll be returned to that once he's sworn in
on January twenties. It's going to be a busy first
year in office for Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
John, what's the mood inside the press room? Are people
do they feel a different energy coming to the White
House with Donald Trump? Or they sort of you know
they are they going to accept it? Are they excited
about it? Do they notice the energy change?

Speaker 2 (08:51):
Well, it depends who you ask, you know, because obviously
they're people that represent you know, conservative outlets, they have
one point of view, liberal outlets. You mentioned MSN see.
I think the overall feeling is excitement about a new administration.
It quite frankly has become boring to cover the Biden administration.
He doesn't really have many opportunities to ask questions for

(09:15):
the media, and that's not the case with Donald Trump.
With Donald Trump, you almost have I can recall, you know,
his first term. I asked the question of Donald Trump
practically every day that he was president. And that's pretty
cool when you get an opportunity to ask the president
of the question.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Hey, before before the inauguration on the twentieth, we'd love
to have you on maybe for you know, two segments
to explain to people how the White House. You know,
once once Joe Biden leaves the White House, they have
what four or five hours to changeah, right to change everything. Yeah,
to close the furniture, everything has to come in and
out there in four hours. That must be a zoo.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
Well, it's pretty remarkable what they do, including painting, you know,
if you want, you know, the Oval Office painted this color,
they do that during that time period. Of course, you
probably want a different type of carpet. Maybe Donald Trump
wants to return to the way his Oval Office looked
when he left office. I'm guessing that's the case. But yeah,

(10:14):
quite a lot gets done in that interim period between
the swearing in of Donald Trump and then Donald Trump
of course witnesses the inaugural parade and then he makes
his way over to the White House. And when he
makes his way over to the White House, it looks
a lot different than when Joe Biden was in there.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
That's great. We'd love to have you on to talk
about that more extensively if you get some time.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
Absolutely, all right, buddy, I'm.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
I appreciate you coming on. John Decker twenty nine years
doing this in Washington, National White House Correspondent, really appreciate it.
And we'll have him on again before the twentieth because
that kind of stuff interests me more than the political end.
You know, how they can literally in four hours change
an entire house, the size of the White House, the painting,

(11:01):
the furniture, you know, Joe and Joe Biden's clothes get removed,
thrown into a moving truck. Donald Trump, Millennia's Trump's you know, closet,
their shoes, their shirt, their food, everything has to come
in and out of there in four hours. That's remarkable.
All right, that's great, John Dekker, thanks for coming on.

(11:23):
We're live on KFIM six forty. The big story tomorrow
is this wind. We'll talk about when we come back.
But there's gonna be a tremendous, potential, life threatening, dangerous
winds starting tonight, late tonight into tomorrow. So please be
aware that spread the word on social media, spread it
to your neighbors, especially if you live in one of these,
you know, areas where you're susceptible to a lot of

(11:44):
the wind.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (11:52):
It's cool of John Decker, White House corresponding, come on
with us. We got a connection now in the White House.
This guy's been to the White House twenty nine years
while Donald Trump was president eight years ago to four
years ago from what twenty sixteen, actually twenty seventeen, twenty
twenty one. This reporter who's now with us, John Decker,

(12:17):
I guess it's been with iHeart for a long time,
but now he's with the show. He asked the question
almost daily in the in the briefing. So we have
a direct connection to Donald Trump and his presidency, and
we're going to get a lot of news broken here
on kfive. So another reason to listen. Thank you very
much to everybody that followed us on Facebook last Friday,

(12:40):
we said we're fifteen hundred people shy fifteen hundred people
shy of three hundred thousand followers and belly O, we
did it. You did it. We have three we did it.
What's the number now? I know you can look at
it real quick. Yeah, yeah, you're a numbers lady. I'm
a number lady. But it's over three hundred thousand, Hold on, hold,

(13:05):
and I think that's huge.

Speaker 7 (13:07):
You know, three hundred, nine hundred and twenty two.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
Wait, one hundred, nine hundred and twenty two thousand, All right,
three hundred thousand, nine hundred and twenty two. Yes, is
the way layman people refer to that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay,
three hundred thousand, nine hundred and twenty two people following
us on Facebook. Wow, that's huge. Thank you to all
of them. What is KFI? It's five hundred thousand? Do

(13:31):
they have they beat us by two hundred thousand? Not really? No?
Where are they third? Seventy seven thousand? Wait the whole
station is yeah okay, but I didn't mean to bring
that up. I thought they were higher. Sorry, I don't
want to do that. All right, let's talk about these
these wins. This is going to be an unbelievable day. Tomorrow. Look,

(13:53):
there are some areas where you're not going to get
wind at all, and you're going to say, oh this.
You know this young kid on KFI, he blew it.
You know, he tried to scare the hell out of
us with the wind. I'm just telling you that everything's
lining up to be an horrible windy day in southern California.
And we saw what happens. We saw it in Ventura,

(14:13):
we sought in Malibu, and God forbid, nobody wants this
to happen. But I'm telling you you have got to
be aware of this news. You got to spread it
around your neighbors, your family, your friends, online, offline, wherever
you are. This is a big story coming out tomorrow.
We're going to tell you exactly when these winds are
going to start as well. You got to be aware
of this.

Speaker 8 (14:33):
There's the potential for some pretty dangerous stuff coming away.
You can see behind me just kind of a real slight,
little breeze kind of moving.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
The trees behind me.

Speaker 8 (14:40):
Right now, however, we will see those winds certainly pick
up here over the sunning give an idea, Kays it
was coming our way. In terms of warnings and watches,
over southern California. The red flight warn't in effect, kicking
in tomorrow early morning tomorrow, but lasting through Thursday, even
around six pm or so.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
Okay, I know sometimes I do it too. I'm guilty.
I half assid I'm listening to the radio while i'm
you know, baking or sewing or you know, doing whatever
cleaning around the house, and I sometimes you half ass
listen to it. Don't half ass this, don't half ass this.
This is a big deal. Winds are coming in tomorrow

(15:14):
early morning and staying for two days, two days.

Speaker 8 (15:18):
Kicking in tomorrow early morning tomorrow, but lasting through Thursday,
even around six pm or so. Those areas in a
red pretty much all of southern California looking ahead to
some dangerous, dangerous wind high wind warning set up as well.
We're talking about sixty seventy mile prior wins we coulding
the acage.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
You hear that.

Speaker 8 (15:34):
We're talking about sixty seventy mile prior wins We cooking.
The occasional winds in the upper Mountain airs up in
that seventy eighty mile per hour range. It's certainly dangerous there, and.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Also seventy to eighty mile an hour gus seventy to
eighty miles an hour faster than you drive. That's how
fast the wind's going.

Speaker 8 (15:51):
And also very very dry conditions too.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
So unless your Krozier Curzer, you strike me as a
fast driver. Is that true or false?

Speaker 9 (15:58):
I am a careful, studious driver at all times.

Speaker 1 (16:01):
Do you get your car back?

Speaker 8 (16:02):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (16:03):
Yeah, how's it feel? It's so nice? Is it better
than it was? Oh that's great?

Speaker 9 (16:08):
Yeah, yeah, it's very nice. Guy did great job. Thank
you brother, Thank you to the insurance company. Oh good,
I was. It was a little bit sketchy because of
the five cars that were involved, the two behind me
took off one of the very front who I had
the least damage and the least contact. They've threatened to
sue anybody and everybody. Really, yeah, there's always one person.

(16:30):
They're gonna show you. They tried, and then well, your
insurance company, it demnified. Your insurance company already said I was,
I was least at fault.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
Yeah, okay, good, you're out. You're done. You're done.

Speaker 8 (16:40):
And also very very dry conditions too. So we'll see
that temperatures will be mild to somewhat warm, but it's
gonna be more about those winds.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Yes, okay, so it's gonna be windy and dry. You've
got to get a human of fire. If you don't
have one already, get one. It'll save your voice, it'll
save your throat. It'll make you feel better. You won't
feel all dry like you know, your veins are filled
with illuminum foil, you know, after you maybe you remember
when you drank a lot and you wake up the
next day, you feel like there's foil in your veins.

(17:11):
That's what dryingess does. So get yourself a humidifier. Costco
has got some beautiful ones, a two and a half
gallon top loaders cool. Miss God, I know way too
much about humidifiers at this age.

Speaker 8 (17:24):
And the very very dry condition giving those red flag
warnings that effect kicking in tomorrow until Thursday. So since
the next couple of days, that's your dangerous stuff. Now.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
Yeah, well, yo, if you went out on a date,
on a blind date and a guy talked about how
great is humidifier was, is that a positive? Positive? I'm exiting?
Is that right back to you, young kid? Damn it?
All right? Thank you to the three hundred twenty two
people follow us on Facebook. I can't tell you what

(17:54):
that means to us. I can't tell you how great
that is. We've been working on Facebook for so long
and Belly has been so great at this and she
really deserves an ad A girl. You deserve an ad
a girl, Belly. Oh you did it. And we have
three hundred thousand, nine hundred and twenty two followers. That's huge,

(18:15):
absolutely huge.

Speaker 6 (18:17):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
Well, all right, this is the first Monday back for
a lot of people. We decided to come back early,
so we're back last Monday. Yeah, where are you all
beg Yeah, and everyone's said everyone's back today, all you know,
rusty and from vacation. We've been back for a week.
So we're knocking this thing out. You know a lot
of the salespeople have been. They were back last week.

(18:45):
I remember Leslie was here, that Roy Lee. You see
that guy upstairs? Okays the best Yeah, the stalwarts man,
that's right, Yeah, the big guns upstairs. All right, we
have a I hate to keep doing that, but the
neuro virus, you know, it's gonna wipe out a lot
of people. And this thing is not being killed. The

(19:09):
actual neual virus is not being killed typically by purel.
So if you thought, you know, hey you got purel,
that'll protect you, not in this case. This case, you
need to bleach your counters, not your hair, not your hands.
Don't ingest it. But yes, you got to bleach your counters. Bellyo.

(19:31):
We got to get bleach in here. Is that something
we're working on?

Speaker 10 (19:34):
Bleach?

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Yeah? Do you want think about bleach?

Speaker 11 (19:37):
Bello?

Speaker 1 (19:37):
I don't let me check? All right, all right, right
here we go. Nero virus. It's going to be bad.

Speaker 11 (19:45):
And that's the neurovirus. Bug is crushing families and decimating workplaces.
We're seeing a spiking cases of the brutally contagious virus
all across the nation. The CDC says the virus spreads
quickly and easily.

Speaker 10 (19:56):
Katie case Megan Schiller asked a localest.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
What you want to do? I want quickly and easily
with the neuro virus, you know, could last a couple
of days, a lot of five throwing up, you know,
from both ends, if you know what I mean, if
you know what I mean?

Speaker 11 (20:11):
All across the nation, the CDC says, the virus spreads quickly.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
And easily, quickly and easily.

Speaker 10 (20:17):
Katie CA's Megan Schiller asked the local doctor what people
can do to avoid catching it?

Speaker 1 (20:21):
Okay, that's a great question. What can we do to
avoid catching the neuro virus?

Speaker 2 (20:27):
All right?

Speaker 1 (20:27):
Something good?

Speaker 3 (20:28):
Health experts say, just ten viral particles of this nasty
auura virus can make you essentially move into your home's bathroom,
take up space on the floor.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
Ten little parts. And they're talking about parts per million.
Ten that's nothing, that's like less than a drop.

Speaker 3 (20:44):
We asked doctor Brian Lamb with Alleghanty Health Network to
explain the symptoms.

Speaker 12 (20:48):
Yes, you'll be basically laying on the bathroom floor, not
feeling good, abdominal pain, nausey, I possibly vomiting, lots of diarrhea.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
Oh my god, oh nobody's eating. I've never heard that
term out of a doctor before. I've heard of just
diarrhe and we always assume that the level of it
is extreme.

Speaker 13 (21:11):
Lots of diarrhea, he said, Yeah, what is lots?

Speaker 1 (21:20):
Without getting into great details, every ten minutes, it's got
to be, it's gotta be on a time. The lots
is the beginning. Oh yeah, I don't.

Speaker 9 (21:28):
Say you've already hit the lots category for me once
it starts.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
Yeah, it's hard to put the damn up.

Speaker 13 (21:34):
Lots of diarrhea, all right, kind of sounds like he's, uh,
lots of diarrhea.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
Sounds like he's doing a kid's book.

Speaker 7 (21:40):
Lots of diarrhea.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
That's the name of a really bad kid's book. That
sounds like Michael Monks. Yeah, doctors say it does sound
like Michael Monks.

Speaker 12 (21:47):
Lots of diarrhea. That's your body's way of getting rid
of it.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
When do you know that it's time to take yourself
or your young child to the emergency room.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
I got a good sign lots of diarrhea. Yeah, then
take your kid in when.

Speaker 7 (22:00):
Your child can't really hold down fluid.

Speaker 12 (22:03):
So if your child starts to become lethargic, you know,
if they just won't drink anything more, if they have,
you know, their diapers, if there if it's a very
very small baby, you know, if they're not really wetting
their diapers. Okay, that's when you really wanted to start
to get a little kit of concerned, because that tends
to show possibly you're heading into a little bit of dehydration.

Speaker 7 (22:22):
For most of us, as adults.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Well know, okay, so the dry diaper on babies is
not a good sign. You know, we grew up with
the opposite of that. Dry driper is a good sign.
Not here.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
A lot of parents worry it's going to me. What if?

Speaker 11 (22:36):
What if you go to the doctor and they just
send you home because they say that you have a
hereditary condition.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
That's true. Well, that's what angel is commenting on. I
found out early on that diarrhea was hereditary, and a
buddy of mine said, what does that mean? I said, well,
it runs in your genes. Whatever. I'll just get whatever.

(23:07):
I'm gonna save it all for flappers and I'll just
do sports scores here.

Speaker 9 (23:12):
You know, that's a good word for the topic of discussion.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
How dare you?

Speaker 3 (23:18):
A lot of parents worry it's going to wipe out
the whole family once everyone returns to school and daycares.
Doctor Lamb said, you need to take these precautions.

Speaker 7 (23:27):
Number one, wash your hands.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
Okay, here we go. Here's the big precautions and how
you can save your life.

Speaker 12 (23:33):
Number one, wash your hands all the time, especially after
you've used the bathroom. Okay, and make sure you wash
your hands well too. This is not just one of
those you know, cursory. Run them under the water, soap, water,
wash your hands, get under your fingernails, you.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
Get onto your fingernails. Going on with this guy.

Speaker 7 (23:52):
Get under your fingernails, you know, really clean your hands.

Speaker 13 (23:57):
Man.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
Don't touch your face. You know, the people on an
average touch their face sixty times an hour, once a minute,
all day long, an average of sixty times. Now, I
learned that from doctor Breaker Sherry. That's a lot. That's
a lot with this virus nor virus going around. The
Other thing is I just touched my face. Oh, you're done.
You're done. It's gonna be a lots of diarrhea. Yeah.

(24:21):
I don't know what's going on with you, but you're
loaded up, you know, yeah, you're done.

Speaker 7 (24:29):
Lots of diarrhea.

Speaker 12 (24:30):
Yeah, oh bobo, especially after you've used the bathroom.

Speaker 7 (24:34):
Okay, okay, and make sure.

Speaker 12 (24:35):
You wash your hands, I know, get under the nails, soap, water,
wash your hands, get under your fingernails, right, you know,
really clean your hands. The other thing is avoid family foods.
So okay, so when I'm talking about are scared.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Foods all right?

Speaker 3 (24:52):
It is spread by sharing food or eating mutensils, which
a lot of us probably did over the holidays. That
also can spread. As you mentioned people not washing their
hands after the bathroom and then going and touching things
contaminating surfaces. Use your imagination, people, so touch your.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
Face, you know. I never I never trust these greasy spoons,
you know, the guys doing the dishes in the back.
I never think that those guys are on top of it.
So I've got I've got a workaround it. They don't
like it at restaurants, but I have a way that
you don't have to use their silk dirty silverware and

(25:30):
how to know it's really really clean. And I'm gonna
tell you that about that when we come back. I
will tell you how you can avoid using dirty silverware
at a restaurant. That's how get this nor virus.

Speaker 6 (25:39):
By the way, you're listening to Tim Conway Junior on
demand from KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
Let's i'll finish up here with the neuro virus story.
This is going around. It's going to affect a lot
of people, and I'm going to tell you how you
can avoid it when it comes to silverware. I got
a great, great tip. Then I think I create I've
never heard anyone do this before me, and I think
I've turned some people onto it. So let's finish up
with the story. Then we'll get to a tip that

(26:07):
could save your life.

Speaker 7 (26:08):
Here scared foods.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
All right, it is spread by sharing food or eating utensils,
which a lot of us probably did over the holidays.
That also can spread, as you mentioned, people not washing
their hands after the bathroom and then going and touching
things contaminating surfaces. Use your imagination, people, so you're.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
The most guys only wash their hands in the bathroom
if there's another guy watching them. But if you're alone,
put on those hockey skates. You're gone. You're gone. There's
another guy in there. You give it a cursorary Okay,
two seconds worth of water, eight paper towels and you're gone.

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Go and stock up, especially you Josh with the toddlers
on all of the disinfects. You can get your hands on.

Speaker 8 (26:51):
Point.

Speaker 3 (26:51):
We are in for a wild ride if this. If
this gets us, Okay it doesn't.

Speaker 10 (26:55):
And now we're talking about the shared foods. People watching
those movie marathons this time of year, those are the
ones that probably should be paying extra attention to.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
Get your own popcorn and ask everyone like, did you
wash your hands? Make sure, especially the little ones, because
you know they don't believe them.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
Yeah, I don't believe that ever.

Speaker 10 (27:10):
Take yes, saw exactly all right.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
Okay, so here's the tip. You know when you go
to one of these cafes. I hate the term greasy spoon,
but I think it got the name or the term
greasy spoon because the guys in the back were a
little relaxed when it came to washing silverware. And I

(27:33):
understand that. I understand that you're in the back, nobody's watching,
and you're rifling through the forks, the knives, the spoons,
and you want to get the hell out of there.
I get it. I think the biggest one, the biggest defender,
is the spoon because a lot of that spoon, a
lot of the metal in that spoon goes into your lips,

(27:55):
and it's been in twenty other people's mouths that same day,
that same day, two day, use a spoon at a diner.
Twenty people used it before you, maybe thirty. That is
going to set you back a little. Now you're going
to think about it. Here's the workaround. I got it

(28:17):
for you. Okay, go to Target, Go to Smart and
Final go to Party City. All of these stores and
I'm familiar with all of them. They all sell plastic
silverware that is the color silver. Okay, plastic silverware that

(28:37):
is the color silver. So when you go to a
Denny's or Cocoa's or whatever you're going, you bring your
own fork, your own knife, and your own spoon. It's plastic,
but it looks silver, and then you discreetly bring it
out and the people even eating at your table won't

(28:59):
know that you're no longer using silverware that thirty people
used that day. And if the water isn't hot back
where they're washing dishes, you're gonna get whatever the last
guy got through your spoon, your fork, or your knife.
So go do it. Now, go today, because his Nora

(29:22):
virus could be horrible. Remember what we heard at the
beginning of it. You know what it produces, and this
is a doctor saying this, lots of diarrhea, yeah, lots
of it, yeah, and more than you could ever imagine. Right,
So you can imagine lots of it, lots of diarrhea.
Now imagine more that's gonna be you. Or you can

(29:45):
get yourself silver color plastic utensils. I have them at home.
I take him to restaurants, and by the way, I
don't take him home with me. I leave them there.
So it's got to be shocking for the guy doing
dishes where he does silver spoon, silver spoon, silver spoon,
plastic spoon, and he probably gets pissed and throws that
away and puts it. Ah, maybe that's true. I didn't

(30:10):
think about that. Yeah, I don't know if they have
a bending test for that or not. But get your
own silverware. It's a very smart idea. I came up
with it. I've I've had two or three ideas in
my life. This is one of them. Your own plastic
silverware that looks silver. It's the color silver, the color silver.

(30:31):
Take it to a restaurant, enjoy yourself. Ding dog. All right,
justin Trudeau is resigning. He is no longer going to
be the big cheese, the big what do they call it, president,
prime minister? I don't what they call it up there
of Canada. That's a big deal, belly Oh, I don't
remember last time a prime minister resigned. I don't follow

(30:54):
Canadian politics that closely, but this is a big deal.
It's huge.

Speaker 4 (30:58):
I mean turmoil in the gup. Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau announced he's stepping down.

Speaker 5 (31:03):
This country deserves a real choice in the next election,
and it has become clear to me that if I'm
having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best
option in that election.

Speaker 4 (31:16):
Trudeau announced his resignation as leader of the ruling party today.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
You know, on a website that follows politics, the chances
of him being re elected were less than one percent,
less than one percent. That's why he bailed.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
This comes ahead of this year's general election, which Trudeau
was expected to lose. He remained prime minister until.

Speaker 1 (31:37):
Expected to lose get a less than one percent chance
of winning.

Speaker 4 (31:41):
In which Trudeau was expected to.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Lose, expected to get wiped out, not lose.

Speaker 4 (31:45):
He remained Prime minister until a new leader of the
Liberal Party is chosen.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
All right, there you go. And I have a feeling
that Canada, that Canadians are going to do what the
US did. I think they're going to I think you're
going to see a conservative press in Canada.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
I do.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
I don't know who it is, but I think the
pendulum went so far the other way and it's coming
back and it's going to go even further to the right.
So that's today. That's the sort of age that we
live in. The pendulum used to swing very little when
I was a kid. Little left, little right, little left,
little right. Now it's way to the left, way to

(32:23):
the right, and you better look out when it comes
back because it could knock you off your ass. All right,
we are live. The big story. Remember is the win
tomorrow Tomorrow, Wednesday into Thursday. Radical winds in southern California.
Be prepared, Get ready for a wind event that's gonna
last two days, sixty seventy eighty mile an hour winds.

(32:46):
Don't ignore this, don't do that, don't do that. Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now you can
always hear us live on kf I Am six forty
four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and and anytime
on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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