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January 21, 2025 39 mins
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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 apps. I am
six forty. It is the Conway Show. And man, it
was windy in Burbank last night. We got a lot
of wind. Then it died down, and we get a
lot of emails saying, hey, it wasn't windy at my place.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Why you guys make it such a big deal of
the wind.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
Okay, all right, I don't know if I have to
go into this. I don't know if you noticed, we've
had about twelve to fourteen thousand homes burned to the
ground because of the wind. Just because of it wasn't
windy in your area or in your backyard doesn't mean
other people weren't suffering from wind. And we have to
we have to warn people about these winds because of
what we've seen over the last two weeks. So I'm

(00:42):
sorry if it's inconveniencing you for us to talk about
the wind where it's not windy in your backyard. A
fairly selfish email, by the way, when they say, hey,
you're overdoing it with the wind. Really telling people that
have lost everything that we're overdoing it with the wind.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Get out of here. What's wrong with you people?

Speaker 1 (01:02):
All right, let's talk to Alex Stone here from ABC News.
Alex Stone, how you bob make the wind go away?

Speaker 3 (01:09):
Muddy?

Speaker 2 (01:09):
I was it windy out and say, and now you're
you're part of it?

Speaker 4 (01:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:11):
Yeah, it was pretty windy over and I was a
little breezy. But we got what one more of these thirday?

Speaker 1 (01:16):
I think, And that's it. Hey, Look the San Diego.
Parts of San Diego had gouts up to one hundred
miles an hour.

Speaker 5 (01:21):
Yeah, they had like half a dozen fires that broke out. Yeah,
they got on them really quick.

Speaker 6 (01:25):
Today.

Speaker 7 (01:25):
There was one near what's the big mall in San Diego?

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Oh, mall, the San Diego. Oh, I got him, I
know that mall.

Speaker 5 (01:34):
Yeah, they had to do some evacuations. But they've got
that one contained now. But and then are we gonna
do this again next week? We might get some rain
this weekend, but are we gonna have more wind next week?

Speaker 2 (01:42):
I think so? And what and what's the rain gonna do?

Speaker 1 (01:45):
Is a lot of the the brie gonna wash into
the ocean and muck up the ocean?

Speaker 5 (01:48):
I don't know, Probably, well, I don't know, But is
it gonna be enough rain? Remember last week and they
were saying rain it was like a ten percent chance
and then we got nothing. Yeah, it's it's a little higher,
like fifty percent. Yeah, it's a lot of guesswork. But
I welcome the right one hundredth of an inch, So
I don't think it's gonna be a lot.

Speaker 3 (02:02):
It's good.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
It's gonna be eighty degrees on Thursday for a lot
of southern California, and then the high on Saturday and
Sunday will be in the lope in the high forties.

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Low fifties. Wow, big change, big big eighty degrees. Welcome
to January and Alaninia.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
Yeah, it's nutty, it's nutty. Hey, So about the birth
right here, I know you want to you always are.
You're a big birther fan. You like birthing. You always
talk about births and births, and you got more birth news.

Speaker 7 (02:27):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:28):
So you know the President's Birthright Citizenship Executive Order that
he signed last night, and there's a lot going on
with it today. Twenty two states, all led by Democrats,
California being one of them, that they are now suing
that this was not a surprise that this was coming,
and he's clearly fulfilling campaign promises.

Speaker 7 (02:47):
And he had talked.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
About it a lot, in fact, floated it back in
I believe, twenty eighteen and didn't move forward with it.
Back then, had said it so many rallies he was
going to do this. And so today California and the
other twenty one states, they were ready with this river
of lawsuits coming down, and they're saying that what the
president is trying to do is to change the Constitution,

(03:08):
which that would take two thirds vote of Congress and
ratification from the states, and that if the court upholds
what these states are saying, that a president can't do
that on his own. So today all of these lawsuits
in Massachusetts, California, Arizona to New Jersey, Nevada getting involved
Arizona as well, and New Jersey's Attorney general today said

(03:28):
this executive order is an.

Speaker 3 (03:30):
Assault on the rule of law.

Speaker 5 (03:33):
It attacks a right that is core to our nation's
earliest days. So timod issue here is a fourteenth Amendment
which the very first line of the fourteenth Amendment says,
somebody born in the United States is a US citizen.
So the Attorney's General of the States. They're going to
the court and saying, look, it is clearly the first
line of in this amendment in the Constitution, and that

(03:54):
a president cannot overrule that document with a stroke of
a pen, no matter what a president might believe, what
a president has promised his followers, what a president might want.
And today Rob Bonta here in California.

Speaker 6 (04:05):
Said president has overstepped his authority by a mile.

Speaker 5 (04:10):
So what they're asking is a court to enter an
injunction in this to stop it from going forward. No
doubt they'll get a preliminary one, probably because any court
will say, while we figure this out, you know, let's
put it on hold for now. There are some though,
Tim Schullers, who are looking at this saying he signed
so many executive orders last night, that huge stack on
his desk, that yeah, the president probably knows some of these,

(04:32):
including the birthright one, that they're going to get hung
up in the courts. But by overwhelming the courts, you know,
it's kind of like, we'll look over here, while these
other ones don't have any problem going through that it
may be trying to kind of just know that so
many are going to go that way. One more We
talked to Kim Wheel, one of our contributors constitution expert.
She says that the court, especially if this goes to

(04:52):
conservative courts that overwhelming them, may help him out.

Speaker 8 (04:55):
It's going to take, frankly, some time to unpack it
all and a lot of work by lawyers and judges,
and I think he understands the Supreme Court at the
end of the day can only take a handful of these.
So if the challenges wind up in very conservative circuits,
it might be the law of the land, even if
it conflicts with the Constitution or federal statutes.

Speaker 5 (05:15):
What this executive order would do mayby born to a
non citizen mother would not be a citizen unless the
father is a citizen or a Green card holder, even
if the baby is born on US soil, which dies.
At least on the face of it, it seemed to go
totally against what's in the fourteenth Amendment. So we'll see
what the courts do here. But no doubt that the
President knew it was going to get fought.

Speaker 1 (05:35):
There are a lot of countries where you know, birthright
is birthright, citizenship is a right if you're born on
the soil.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
You know, Europe and Australia.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
There's a lot of them, but most of the time
it's either one or both parents are citizens, or at
least one one of them is. But you know, the
most difficult country in the world to become a citizen
of happens to be And I looked this up today,
the Vatican, the ones I grew up Catholic. I heard
them preaching all the time that every person has the

(06:06):
right to do everything, and every birth is great and
all this stuff, and everybody should be a citizen. And
then you try to become a citizen Vatican and they're like,
no way, dude, no way.

Speaker 7 (06:15):
You're babies are popping out of Vatican.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
I wonder, yeah, okidding, But you know, look, I gotta say,
we need a lot of federal assistants here for these fires.
We need a lot of federal assistance for infrastructure. We
need a lot of federal assistants to get water into California.
And with that being said, the people that are in
charge of this of this state, you know, Adam Schiff
bonta mayor Bass the city of la and then sober

(06:38):
Off who's been chosen by mayor baths. They all hate Trump.
And there's got to be like a limit on that.
I understand you don't like the guy, but to give
him the middle finger all the time and then expect
them to write a check is just not going to happen.
We need a lot of assistance from the FEDS, and
we put together a lot of people hate Trump on
the front line.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
Oh absolutely, It's gonna be interesting to see what the
White House is, what they dangle by saying, yeah, but
to get that assistance, you're gonna have to do this
and what the state ends up doing because it's going
to be a fight for the next four years.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
I guess he's coming on Friday. Donald Trump's coming on Friday.

Speaker 6 (07:12):
It is.

Speaker 7 (07:12):
I didn't know that. Yeah, I think, so that's quick
in the White House and get on the road.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Yeah, but man, I hope that.

Speaker 6 (07:19):
You know.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Look, even if you if you hate the guy, I
think you got to bite your tongue until we get
the check. You know, guy's not gonna write a big
check with people throwing tomatoes at him and I've hurling
insults of the guy.

Speaker 7 (07:29):
Yeah, I get that help and whatever you want the.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
Money, that's exactly show me the money, buddy.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
I dream remember that movie which one Jerry mcgwah, yeah, yeah,
show me the Mondy, show me the Mondy. That's right, buddy.
I appreciate you coming on and we'll lot it talk
to you, so all right there he Goesh, that guy's great.
Alex Stone, Man, Alex Stone, you know, I got a
call today. I'm very rarely like starstruck. I've met the

(07:55):
stars that I wanted to meet. I met the Vince Scully,
I met Bob Miller and Patricia Heaton. Those are the
big three that wanted to meet, and I've met them
all and it was great and I enjoyed that. I'm
not really that starstruck when it comes to people, but
I am sort of in a way where people who
get things done, you know, we talk. Yeah, that's exactly right. Bellio, Yeah,

(08:20):
Bellio's on that list. Belly was not supposed to be
here today. She's supposed to have a radical surgery. They
wanted to talk about that. She wanted to stretch her spine.
She always dreamt to be six feet tall, and they
wanted to stretch her spine. And I thought it was
a bad idea. But I guess it's a new advertiser
or something.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
So spine stretchers. Ahoy, is that the name of the company?

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Okay? And I hope that works. I hope that works
out for you.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
But a couple of years back, we had the guy
on who was in charge of buying all the food
for Disneyland, and I love I could have talked to
that guy for nine hours, nine hours. You know, what
do you buy, who do you buy, where do you go?
How do you know where to put the pop Gordon stale?
How do you know what what right?

Speaker 7 (09:00):
He get right?

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Where do you keep all the fresh stuff? Where's the
best restaurant? All that stuff? I could talk to them forever.
And then another guy, another set of guys. I used
to live in Seal Beach in a oak Wood's apartment
and there was a community barbecue where you know, you
bring your own charcoal and you can use the community barbecue.
And I would go out there and cook, and I
would wait until the Boeing test pilots all the there

(09:24):
was like nineteen units in that building of current and
former Boeing test pilots. And I waited and I looked
through the drapes. I could see it from my place,
and I would see them out there and boom, grab
the burger, grab the you know, the coals, and I
hit it. And I talked to those guys for hours,
and man, they told me the greatest stories ever. I'll
tell you one great one when we come back. They
told me a great story. A couple of them got

(09:46):
fired for this, but a great Boeing test pilot story
that got a couple of people fired and caused it
could have caused a tremendous amount of damage. But I'm
interested in people like that, people who are like doing
stuff and getting their hands dirty. And that's why I
got a call today and I was like stunned. I
got a call today from Bob Crane, who owned Sea

(10:09):
Crane Radio, and I didn't want to let him off
the phone. I want to ask him a million questions
about the radios. I love radio. I grew up, you know,
making my own radio from seven to that from my
radio shack. I would buy the radio assembly kit and
I'd make my own radio. When I was nine, my
birthday gift that I wanted forever was a Cbee radio
and I used to talk on the radio. When I

(10:31):
was nine. I would talk to truck drivers and I
could pick him up coming southbound on the one oh
one from about Agra Hills and talk to him all
the way until they got to Glendale. And I was
nine years old, staying up till three. I'm talking to
truck drivers on my CBE radio.

Speaker 9 (10:46):
Nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
And I asked my dad a couple of years before
he passed away, I said, hey, Dad, was that odd
that you had a nine year old in the house
talking to truck drivers alone until three am? And you
know what his response was, never thought about it until
just now.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
How great is that?

Speaker 9 (11:01):
But they knew you were on the CB with at night.

Speaker 2 (11:04):
Absolutely yeah. My dad would come in and go, hey,
it's two thirty.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
You know, how about the wrapping it up with the
road gators and the convoys. You know, I don't remember
somebody asked me that and I don't remember. And I
and it's not that I'm embarrassed by I just don't
remember what it was. I just don't remember what it was.
But man, I I really I couldn't believe that there's
a truck driver he's hole in gas or groceries across
the valley flats and I was able to talk to.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Him, and they loved talking to me.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Maybe they saw my modeling photos back then.

Speaker 3 (11:34):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (11:35):
I don't know. I don't know, Belly, I didn't look
into it. I didn't look into it. I just thought
those guys were great. Man, those guys are great. I
love truck drivers.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
When I went to.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
Utah with the student skiers, I went to I don't
like skiing, but I also didn't like my mom. So
I got a week away at Utah and I used
to sit next to the bus driver and listen to
him talk on the CD all the way to Utah
and all the way back.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
I'm a goofball. I just love radios.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
And to get a call from Bob Crane, who owned
Sea Crane Radio, was like a touchdown. It's like meeting
I like the president.

Speaker 10 (12:07):
Now.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
It was great, man, it was great. All Right, we'll
come back.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
I'm gonna tell you a Boeing story and we'll come back.
The test pilots told me this story and I confirmed
it with another one.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
This is wild.

Speaker 11 (12:16):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
We're live on KFI M six forty. We'll talk about
the weather as well.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
The wind warnings.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
We've got everything covered for you right here on KFI.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
More nouth crows coming up at the bottom of the hour.

Speaker 12 (12:32):
LA's helping people out that are taking in victims of
the fires.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
We'll take a look at the two ten freeway when
we come back.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
All right, a lot of you have been affected by
these fires. I know there's you know, thousands and thousands
of people and you really don't know what to do.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
You know, you don't.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
You found a place, maybe in a relative's house to stay.
But now it's time to take action. So if a
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(13:09):
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(13:30):
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Speaker 2 (13:55):
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Speaker 2 (14:17):
It's a slow going past Sadena.

Speaker 10 (14:21):
We're starting on the eastbound side of the two ten
where it loads up at Mountain Delays, taking you all
the way to Citrus. Even the westbound sides in on
that slow action away from Sierra Madres. You continue back
towards Fair Oaks. Now it's tough and pomonent. This is
the ten eastbound slowing in stretches leaving the fifty seven
freeway all the way into Redlands tough and Rubedo sixty

(14:43):
eastbound loading up at rubidou Boulevard delays all the way
to Heacock Street in Mareno Valley. And let's also check
out that drive on the four oh five west LA
southbound slowing from Sunset Boulevard in stretches all the way
to Pelo Verdi in Long Beach with Southern California's most
accurate traffic reports, I mean Angel Martinez.

Speaker 13 (15:06):
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(15:27):
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Speaker 15 (15:49):
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Speaker 15 (18:21):
I would like to thank you Low and KFI for
your incredible service tonight.

Speaker 4 (18:27):
No one else discovering this.

Speaker 18 (18:29):
I just know what KFI does and our responsibility to
the community is make sure that the community is informed
and also armed with the correct information and the latest information.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
Later with Moe Kelly to make.

Speaker 18 (18:41):
The decisions that they have to for themselves and their family.

Speaker 11 (18:44):
Weeknights, seven to ten pm on KFI AM six forty
more stimulating talk.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Duck and I'm about to put the he Oh what
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Speaker 4 (19:01):
God.

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There's one line in this song we can't play on
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Off there? You can probably be able to pick it out.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
Now you are back off them, that's not it.

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Ten Roger them is getting in handsump here.

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one thousand dollars. We're going to keep an eye on
the wind. If you can do that pretty clear by
the trees give it away that it's windy out there.
Looking out right now to flag on Olive and Alameda,

(20:20):
and it's pretty it's just sort of flapping in the wind.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Not much wind.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
So the eastern San Fernando Valley is okay for now,
but there are some areas out there that got a
lot of wind, a lot. I know that Deborah Mark,
who does the anchors for Gary and Shannon and also
John Colebelt, she got a lot of it out in
the in the west San Fernando Valley.

Speaker 2 (20:41):
So it's weird.

Speaker 6 (20:42):
You know.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
Some areas get hammered in some areas not at all,
not at all, but got to keep an eye on
those areas that are being hammered, all right. I lived
in Seal Beach at a place called the Oak Woods
off of First Street and PCH. I think it was
first Street in Pch. Third Street. First, I don't know.
I used to go to the community barbecue in our

(21:03):
apartment building. There's probably about three hundred units there, and
the test pilots from Boeing used to all stay there
because they worked in Boeing, which is in Long Beach,
and it was fairly close. And those guys were really
like the last of the real cowboys, you know, literally
taking off in an airplane that you're supposed to fly
for the very first time. Nobody's ever flown a plane,

(21:23):
you know, like the seven forty seven or the DC
ten for McDonald Douglas, or the you know, the seventh,
the Triple seven was seven eighty seven. You know, these
planes have to eventually, you know, once they're designed and
once they're assembled, somebody has to sit in the cockpit
and take that plane from the ground all into the
air for the first time. And it's nerve wracking. You know,

(21:45):
nobody knows that that plane's gonna take off in land
because it's never been done before. And so these guys
all had great stories and the two the.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
Two come to mind. What was a joke.

Speaker 1 (21:57):
One was these new seven eighty seven, the Dreamliner. They said,
there's a room for there's only room in the cockpit
for a pilot and a dog. I'm really they're gonna
have a dog on the flight, he said, yeah. He says,
the pilot's job is to feed the dog, and the
dog's job is to bite the pilot if he touches anything.

Speaker 2 (22:18):
You get it. Their computerized, they fly on their own. Yeah,
ding dog. All right.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
So this is the story that I was told, and
then I confirmed it about three or four weeks later
with another seted test pilots.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
I go, hey, do you ever hear the story? He goes, oh, yeah, A.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
Couple of guys got fired over that, and I go, okay, yeah, okay,
maybe there's a true story. So when the seven forty seven,
when they just created and produced the seven forty seven,
one of the test runs was taking one from Seattle
where they make them, to Hawaii, refuel it, let it
sit there for a couple of days, have guys on
the ground to look at it to make sure it's okay,

(22:51):
and then fly back to Seattle. Well, they would do it,
you know, they did it over several months. They'd fly
it there and sit for a couple weeks, and then they'd
fly back to Seattle. And one time the guys flying
back to Seattle and they always had escort jets with
this with the seven forty seven to look at it
and see how it's operating. And those guys were all
in on it. They said, hey, let's see if we
can take it low enough to see if it fishtails,

(23:16):
if it's low enough to the ocean to see if
we can get a tail of water.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
And they did it.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
They took it down to I don't know, fifty sixty
feet to see if it fishtailed water. The seven forty
seven completely empty. The only guys that were at risk
were the pilots. And they did it and they said
there was it was. It wasn't as big as they
thought it would be, but there was definitely, you know,
waves of the ocean they created. Well, because they did this,

(23:42):
they fell out of radar, and the and the people
at Boeing thought that that plane had crashed and they'd
sent out rescue planes and they got panicked and they
eventually came back.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
But people got fired over that thing.

Speaker 1 (23:57):
But man, what cowboys these are to take a seven
forty seven that they've just designed low enough where it
fishtails water in the Pacific. How about if there was
a cargo ship in front of him, you know, going
six hundred miles an hour, not a lot of time
to react slamming into.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
A cruise ship or a cargo ship.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
A lot of guys I saw that last day with Boeing,
after that, the last day of Bowie, after that, back
in the sixties or seventies, late sixties, early seventies.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
Wow, those guys.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Are the best Boeing test pilots, man, real cowboys out there.
All right, we're gonna keep an eye on the weather.
We'll come back and give a report. We're live on
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (24:38):
We'll come back.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Alex Michaelson to be with us. No, No, he's not
coming on today because he's busy.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
Oh man, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
He's busy today. He's got a lot of things going on.
So he told us he can't come on with us today.
And so when he calls up Friday, we're gonna say,
you know, we got a lot going on too. We
got a lot going on too. Really, we'll talk to
you maybe next week. Maybe it won't be so busy. Yeah,
dig dog with this guy, we'll come back and give
you a report on the wind. See if it's dying,
if it's coming back, and what's going on this weekend

(25:05):
with the rain.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
That's where all the sand.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
Bags are now going Wild month in southern California.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
Wild.

Speaker 11 (25:12):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
We had another windy night. I hope everybody made it.
It was a long night for a lot of people.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Long night.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
Remember when we were on yesterday Bellio, I think we're
the first one on that hemet fire.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
You had photos of it pretty quickly.

Speaker 9 (25:32):
Yeah, from the Watch Duty app. Yeah, Chris Sperry was
on it first. That's how I was alerted to it.

Speaker 3 (25:38):
Is that right?

Speaker 4 (25:39):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (25:39):
Yeah, yeah, give him a credit.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Excellent, But that hemid fire broke out. They extinguished it,
but there's a lot of people that got worried, and
rightfully so we have a huge audience in that part
of the world. Hemmet Inland Empire, Fontana, Riverside, San Bernardino.

Speaker 9 (25:57):
You were voted number one were that's right in the
La Times.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Well, I don't want to bring that up. I'm glad
you did.

Speaker 9 (26:01):
You should you should number.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
One radio show in all of radio in the Inland Empire.

Speaker 9 (26:08):
So fabulous taste.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
I think they're great, I really do.

Speaker 3 (26:12):
You know.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
The Inland Empire is what the San Fernando Valley used
to look like in the nineteen seventies. These wide streets,
big lows, big home depot, big shopping centers, huge walmarts.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
I love it.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
I love it all, and I belong out there. You know,
the hat is a great place to eat with those
big sandwiches and the big and small fries is enough
for like nine people, so good.

Speaker 2 (26:36):
Yeah, it's great. And you know, you get Coco's out there.
There's a lot of Denny's, you know.

Speaker 9 (26:45):
I just I'm all your places.

Speaker 1 (26:47):
All my joints are out there. They're all out there,
and it's just a really cool hang. I like the
for some reason. I like the wide streets, you know,
where you can actually don't feel like you're going to
crash into somebody when you're passing another car. Here in
La All right, so they have it fire, Let's get
back to and find out how much damage anybody lost,
any structures loss.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
I should say.

Speaker 3 (27:07):
You could feel just how dry the air is. And
you know, those small fires a major concern because they
can grow rather large pretty quickly in these conditions. You
see all of the trees behind me here, everything blowing around.
I mean it has been really strong overnight into this morning,
getting a little bit stronger with sunrise. But certainly these
conditions they can be damaging winds. They can add fuel

(27:30):
to any new fire. Let's show you video here of
one major concern last night. This is a fire that
was dubbed the Chambers fire. It started in Hemmet near
Chambers and Gilbert Streets just after six pm yesterday.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Right and we had we were on it right after
six pm. Chris Berry, Sharon Bellio the watch app or
watch Duty or duty watch or watch My Duty whatever
that thing is.

Speaker 9 (27:55):
Watty, I don't know, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
That's Jay Leno's favorite app.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
Yeah. Fortunately it was burning in flat open land. Still.
Hand crews jumped on this one quickly.

Speaker 13 (28:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
That McSweeney Elementary School, McSweeney, what's a cool name from
McSweeney Elementary School.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
To keep any of the flames or embers from spreading
this fire, cal Fire says the forward progress has been stopped, yes,
meaning it's not expected to grow. That is the good news.
The winds are still howling though across the IE.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
I like that he explained what forward?

Speaker 3 (28:28):
What the progress has been?

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Progress has been stopped?

Speaker 3 (28:31):
This is right, CalFire says, the forward progress has been stopped.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
Forward progress has been stopped. I have no idea what
that means.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
What was it again? Forward progress?

Speaker 3 (28:43):
CalFire says, the forward progress has been stopped.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
I still don't get it. Please tell me what that means.

Speaker 3 (28:48):
Meaning it's not expected to grow. That is a good news.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Good Okay, that's great.

Speaker 3 (28:52):
The winds are still howling though across the Ie.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Winds get crazy out there in the Lenu.

Speaker 3 (28:57):
You hear it, you see it there in this video.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
This is from It's always a Walmart parking lot for
the trees, they're all moving. The carts are flying around,
always a Walmart or a Target, Low's or home depot.

Speaker 9 (29:09):
Man, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
The wind gets crazy in those parking lots.

Speaker 3 (29:12):
You hear it, you see it there in this video.
This is from a Fontana and rialto in this part
of the Inland Empire, where the winds were just whipping
up last night, likely to keep people awake. Also though
it's triggering public safety power shutoffs. Razina Ranch in North
Fontana listening for his wind. That area has seen power

(29:32):
out for much of the past two to three weeks.
Families are using get two to three weeks. For much
of the past two to three weeks. The hell, families
are using generators to try and get by. I work
weekend graveyards.

Speaker 17 (29:46):
So I'm really concerned for my family when I'm gone
if the generator goes down.

Speaker 3 (29:50):
You know, I have an autistic sun.

Speaker 4 (29:52):
So my mom lives with me. She's disabled, she's eighty three,
she has medical equipment.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
Oh my god.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
And then my husband is on a heart monitor.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
Oh my god. Were life out there and check.

Speaker 3 (30:05):
This one out. This is in rialto a fire at
a so called Edison substation. But you see how the
flames spread and you see those embers blowing and the
strong gusty winds. Of course, that put fire crews on
a major call out because of these weather conditions.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
God bless that woman. I want to hear her again.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
Man, She's got a lot on her plate, and she
sounded like she was handling it all. She sounded like
a really beautiful woman.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
I'm really concerned for my family, not that dude. I'm so.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
My mom lives with me. She's disabled, she's eighty three,
she has medical equipment and then my husband is on
a heart monitor.

Speaker 1 (30:40):
What a beautiful woman that is, right, taking care of
mom who's disabled, you know, invited mom into the house,
and then taking care of her husband who's on a
heart monitor. She's like running a nursing home out there,
and it doesn't sound like she's about the crack under
pressure handling at all.

Speaker 5 (30:57):
Brad.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
And you see those embers blowing in the strong, gusty wins.
Of course that put fire.

Speaker 7 (31:02):
You know that.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
That's also further proof when when at the end of
your life, you got to make sure you have daughters,
a wife, or a sister. That's what you gotta have
at the end of your life. A wife, a daughter,
or a sister, perhaps an aunt or a female cousin.
The females are going to be the ones that help
you in the end. Guys, they're gonna bail on you. Oh,

(31:26):
they got a lot going on.

Speaker 9 (31:27):
They may not help the way a woman would.

Speaker 1 (31:29):
That's exactly what the point of the topic. That's exactly right.
You crystallize my thoughts. The women are the ones that
help in the end. They have big hearts, they have
big souls, they have big I just love for the
family and the guys. They got a lot of crap
going on and they bail.

Speaker 9 (31:48):
But I know a lot of men that take care
of their moms.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Is that right?

Speaker 9 (31:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (31:51):
You want a name.

Speaker 9 (31:52):
Two My brother. My brother takes good care of my mom.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
That but you always complain that your brother is not
taking good care of your mom like you do.

Speaker 9 (32:04):
No, But to your point, my brother does a lot
for her. But he does it. He can't do the
things I can do. And it's because I'm a it's
a female female thing, that's right.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, yeah, my point.

Speaker 9 (32:16):
But he does do what he can do.

Speaker 2 (32:17):
Yeah, okay, all right. He must be listening.

Speaker 11 (32:22):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on Demyl from kf
I Am sixty.

Speaker 2 (32:28):
Conway Show.

Speaker 1 (32:29):
We are keeping an eye on all things weather. You know,
the weather is really important out here. Back you know,
three four years ago, we'd never talk about the wind
and always thought it was odd when people did, you know,
it's gonna be windy, But now it's the only thing
anyone is talking about the wind. What's going on with
the wind. Is it gonna you know, wipe me out?

(32:50):
Is it going to be severe? And we don't know
we just have to warn people through the Weather Service
and tell you when they perceive that there's going to
be a you know, an emergency out there.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
And so maybe it's not windy in.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Your backyard, that's that's great, that's fine, you would, you know,
dodge the bullet. But other places it's tremendously windy and
people need to know. People need to know what's going on.
So look, if we bore you a little bit with
the wind conversation, I get that. But I'd rather bore
you for two minutes and have a guy save his home,

(33:23):
then I get a guy get wiped out.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
So that's the way we're.

Speaker 1 (33:26):
Gonna roll around here and from you know, until we
can come up with some kind of solution for this wind.
Maybe they can put up a I don't know, a
big stone wall on top of the mountains and keep
it out of here.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
Doesn't look like that's gonna happen, all.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
Right, we have this is I thought, this is interesting
and I don't understand this at all. Emergency room tips,
listen to this. It's it's it's preparing for an emergency
room visit. I don't know, I don't know if you
prepare for that I think you know, you fall off
a ladder and boom, that's in your you know you're
to do. But there's emergency rooms. Preparing for an emergency

(34:03):
room visit now with doctor.

Speaker 11 (34:05):
Darien giving tips on how to prepare for an emergency
room visit.

Speaker 19 (34:08):
Yeah, there's some basic things everyone should have. If this
is a reminder, I hope it is. It's remembering to
keep your paperwork. We're talking about past hospital visits, past surgeries,
past procedures. Also a list of your medications, and I
think most helpful the names and numbers of your doctors.
As an emergency physician, follow up is really important for us.
So making sure that that patient has a contact point
and also contacting their primary doctor is something I often do.

Speaker 2 (34:31):
Okay, when you don't.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
Have that n I get I get that, I get
that you should have, but look, you're not thinking about
stuff like that when you're going to the emergency room.
It's because your body's on fire. Your body's on fire.
You can't take it anymore. I think it was Brian
Reagan that said he said, it's really uncomfortable to call
an ambulance on yourself.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
You know, hey, can.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
You come get me?

Speaker 2 (34:50):
I'm the guy on the floor.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
You know, you call it an emergency, You call an
ambulance for other people, you don't call for yourself. He's
the best man. That guy's the greatest. Hey, let's try
to get him on bellio. He hasn't been on it
in a couple of years. I love that guy, Ryan Reagan,
and he's got a very funny brother too.

Speaker 19 (35:09):
But when you don't have that number sometimes it can
be really difficult, especially in a busy day.

Speaker 16 (35:13):
So you're basically telling us, we have some homework to
do today.

Speaker 3 (35:15):
You got some plan.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
The last time I was at an emergency room, he
was in a place called Saint Helen or Saint Helen's, Oregon,
and I screwed up my neck where I couldn't get
out of bed. I was like screaming, and my wife
took me to the emergency room. I literally couldn't move
my back or my neck. And I get into the
emergency room. I'm sitting there talking to the nurse and
she's asking me a million questions and then a guy

(35:37):
comes in who had an accident with a chainsaw. Remember
this is Oregon, this is way outside of Portland, and
the guy had a chainsaw accident, and the nurse said,
what's the problem. He said, I lost two fingers and
they're in this cooler. And he had he had a
shirt I remember this, a shirt wrapped around his hand

(35:58):
and he had two fingers in the cool like a
like an igloo cooler. And the nurse said, all right,
hold him one second. Almost so done with this guy.
I'm like, what, no, no, no, no, no no no, you
gotta take me first.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
No, I said, you gotta take this guy first. This
guy is two, he's missing two fingers.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
He's in shock, he's he's he's very calmly telling the
nurse he's missing two fingers. They're in the cooler. Can
I please be next? Isn't that wild?

Speaker 2 (36:24):
Did she? I mean, consider whether word? Didn't? She just
reply with it, sir. It's a Tuesday two for Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (36:33):
And she took him right away, and they called a
you know, emergency stat doctors running in to save this guy.
And I guess they they tied these uh, you know,
sewed these fingers back on this dude.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
I don't know what happened to him, but man, oh man,
so casual. He walked in.

Speaker 1 (36:49):
Excuse me, where can I see somebody I have two
missing fingers and they're in this cooler, and I think
you got to retire the cooler. I don't think you
can take the same cooler to the lake or to
the beach, you know, when summer comes around.

Speaker 3 (37:02):
To go to neighbors. Nobody I know.

Speaker 19 (37:03):
And that's why I think you should always have an
emergency folder in your house so that God forbid you
have to do, you have something to grab so that
you can go. It's just for an emergency room visit.
There are so many things that go on. Being prepared
helps to ease that frustration and hopefully make it faster
for you. And it seems obvious, but why is it
important to know your medications when you're going in. Well,
often during an emergency visit will have to give medications

(37:25):
I'm stabilizing certain conditions, and if I don't know your
prior dove, sometimes it can be more difficult, that can.

Speaker 3 (37:30):
Take more time and can delay your care.

Speaker 19 (37:32):
And so knowing your medications, knowing the doses that you're on,
knowing your allergies, and even possibly having your pharmacist number can.

Speaker 1 (37:38):
Be helpful because yeah, that's what I'm gonna have. I
got a bumper sticking out of my back from an accident.
You have your pharmacist number, Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, you
should be around.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Let me give it to you. And even possibly you
have your pharmacist number. Hey yeah, this guy's nuts.

Speaker 19 (37:53):
And even possibly having your pharmacists number can be helpful
because often I'll have communication with the pharmacy.

Speaker 1 (37:57):
I know a lot of people. I've met a lot
of people in my life. I have never met anybody
who has even the name of their pharmacists, let alone
where it is. What the guys you know? I don't
know any think about it? Or the phone number? Where's
the phone numbers? The pharmacis phone numbers help.

Speaker 19 (38:15):
Me understand what medications have recently changed so that I
can get good clinical care.

Speaker 16 (38:19):
Also, we've talked about this a lot, but it takes
a long time when you go to the emergency I'm.

Speaker 3 (38:25):
I'm so happy you brought this up.

Speaker 19 (38:26):
We were just talking about the average time at an
emergency visit, remembering it's four to six hours on average.

Speaker 1 (38:32):
All how about that four to six hours on average
for an er visit.

Speaker 19 (38:36):
Remembering it's four to six hours on average, and sometimes
it can be a lot longer, especially if that waiting
room in this full so you've got to come with
your patients.

Speaker 3 (38:43):
That's a long time.

Speaker 19 (38:45):
It's an incredibly long time. And just that is just
it in general. If you can imagine when you need
things done, procedures, when you need dosages or medications, sometimes
it can take even longer. I'm often reminding patients about this,
but again, patients is key.

Speaker 2 (38:56):
It's what a nightmare.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
I've heard nightmare stories where it's like ten hours, twelve hours,
you sit in that emergency room, just sit there, your
body's on fire, you think you're dying, and then they
take one patient after another after another before you.

Speaker 2 (39:09):
All right, we are going to keep out. We're keeping
on everything here.

Speaker 1 (39:12):
We've got a lot of you know, we got the
wind that's going to subside. That's great, but we have
weather coming in this weekend rain and that might you know,
certainly will if there's enough of it.

Speaker 2 (39:24):
It'll take a lot.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
Of the toxins at least in the eating fire down
towards the two ten free win if you're in the
Palisades or Malibu, right out to the ocean. So got
to keep an eye on that as well. It is
a crazy beginning to twenty twenty five, and we're keeping
an eye on all of it for you right here
on KFI AM six forty Conway Show on demand on
the iHeartRadio app. Now, you can always hear us live

(39:47):
on KFI AM six forty four to seven pm Monday
through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeart Radio
app

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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