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February 12, 2025 28 mins
Atmospheric river brings light snow to Frazier Park, with brunt of SoCal storm yet to come/ Sierra Madre Rainstorm Preparedness in the area from the upcoming heavy rain and potential mudslides. // SoCal burn areas prepare for what could be the biggest storm so far this year. // Vertigo Symptoms, is it vertigo or just dizziness? // Tim Predicts Earthquakes and a connection with Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano/ SoCal’s forecast for the season broken down. 
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Transcript

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. It is
The Conway Show and it is going to be raining
radically tomorrow. We have not seen a storm like this
in quite some time, maybe a year, I don't know,

(00:20):
maybe eighteen months. Haven't seen a storm like this in
a while. It's huge. If you see it on Doppler
radar or any one of these news stations, these TV
news stations, it's massive, a massive storm coming right into
southern California. Lots and lots of rain, and it's already
starting up near Fraser Park. They're already starting to get

(00:44):
a little bit of this atmospheric river light snow in
Fraser Park.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
And that's that's a big deal.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
That's where all these storms begin before they start torturing
us here in southern California.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
This snow is beginning to fall once again in our
local mountains. Look at it come down. This is video
from a free park overnight. Elevations of sixty five hundred
feet could get anywhere from one to three inches of snow.
The Town Pass is also getting a light testing of snow.
The CHP says if you have to travel through the
grape Vine, make sure you are prepared for the unexpected.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
Yeah, maybe chains Palisades. Let's keep an eye on the Palisades.

Speaker 4 (01:19):
Hundreds of k rails are in place, as well as
thousands of sandbags. As the storm approaches the Palisades burn area.
It's been a light drizzle for much of the day
out here. Michael Schiloub has lived in the Palisades for
thirty years. He says before the fire, rainway created a
little flooding, but after the burn.

Speaker 5 (01:39):
That there could be a lot of mud, mud sliding,
and that a lot of toxicity is going to pour
down this hill into the ocean.

Speaker 4 (01:47):
Cruise have been where can you remove the hazardous ash
and placing sandbags and these green socks to trap the
hazardous run off. Mayor Karen bassays, with all of the
preparations in place her office, this is concerned what the
rain will do to the burn area.

Speaker 6 (02:03):
Well, I'm definitely worried about the debris flow. Worried that
you know, we haven't obviously haven't been able to move
all the debris and the idea of the rain and
then the scarring on the hillsides, So I'm concerned about
mud slides throughout the city because this is going to
impact the whole city. But debris flows when it comes
to the palisades.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
You know, if the city of la were smart, they
would send a couple of people to Lahina and find
out what they did in Lahina after that major fire.
Eighteen months after that fire, there are still very very
few homes that have been built. There are still some
areas that haven't even been cleared in Lahina. Still there's
like six or seven homes that still need the debris

(02:43):
removed in Lahina, and that was eighteen months ago at least,
I'd send somebody over there take a look around.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
So now we wait and see what the rains will bring.
There's plenty of worry to go around when you talk
to those who live in and near the burn area.

Speaker 6 (02:59):
Sure worry about the debris flow.

Speaker 7 (03:03):
With those hills coming down wherever in the hills the
fires were.

Speaker 5 (03:08):
I don't think my worrying's going to help much, So
we're just going to deal with it as a.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Ca Yeah, I like that game. I like that game.
You know, you can't worry yourself to death.

Speaker 4 (03:17):
So the k rails and sandbags, for the most part
are in place, and when you look at the burn
scars and what's still there, you begin to wonder with
the heavy rain, how much debris will slide down.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
Right, And then we have landslides to worry about. They're
worried that some of those hillsides are going to slide
right into PCH, into the ocean, like massive hillside slides
right into PCH could close it down for months. They're
they're not going to say it's going to happen. They're
worried about it, concerned about it.

Speaker 8 (03:48):
Yeah, this could prove to be a long rest of
the week with all the rain that is expected. Now,
this map should give you a pretty good idea of
what folks living in the shadows of the Eaton fire
are facing. The red area here shows the highest likelihood
of debris flow in this you can see there is
a lot of red in this map. Now, taking a
look over at the Palisades fire zone, a lot less red,

(04:09):
but still a lot of homes in danger. Officials are
warning be ready to be evacuated. With the rain already falling,
the dangers are rising.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
God these two areas, the eat and Fire area Palisades, Malibu,
they can't get a break. They can't get a break.
All the fires and now all the floods, all the mud.
It's I don't know how much more they can take.

Speaker 8 (04:34):
All those homes that survive the Eton and Palisades fires
are now facing another, possibly disastrous threat. They could see
back of their homes. LA County public Works officials say
they've contacted every home in vulnerable locations, and those locations
are plentiful. This ABC seven Eyewitness News animation shows how

(04:54):
the fourteen thousand acres that burned in the Eton fire
now pose the serious risk of life land slides. Without
plant roots in the ground holding top soil in place
in the San Gabriels, that soil could come rushing down
the hillsides, threatening homes in Altadena and other foothill communities.
Much of the same and Palisades were nearly twenty four

(05:15):
thousand acres PERNT.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
Homes up into.

Speaker 8 (05:17):
Penga Canyon, which mostly survived the fire, now faced potential
debris flows.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
Yeah, you remember the fires that burned up in It
was Santa Barbara. It's maybe about about seven, eight, nine
years ago, and they had that huge, massive mud slide
where I think they were God if I remember I
think forty people died and they still didn't and they
never recovered. I think there were seven or eight people

(05:43):
that still to this day have never been recovered. And
that slide didn't happen near the one oh one where
it ended up. It happened way before that, where huge
boulders gave way and tore through that area and knocked
down home after home after home.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Was that the Thomas fire.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
I don't remember it was a Thomas fire or not,
but it was just in that in that city that's
right before Santa Barbara.

Speaker 9 (06:13):
Is that Comscheita or something like.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
That, No CoA that was That was about ten years
before that. That was a radical one. They caught that
on CAKEL. Remember they caught that landslide live on CAKEL
channel nine and that wiped out some homes there. But
this is the really wealthy area before you get into
Santa Barbara.

Speaker 2 (06:31):
And Mona Monasito.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
That's exactly right, Yeah, Monacito and that boulder and those rockside,
the slide and that mudslide came through that area and
literally wiped out thirty or forty homes in that area.
So that's you got to be aware of and be
afraid of of mountain slides, rock slides, boulders coming from
high up in those mountains behind Palisades and Malibu and

(06:55):
rushing towards the ocean.

Speaker 2 (06:57):
That twenty three people died in those slides.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Still have recovered seven or eight people I think. I
think there were seven or eight people that still to
this day have not been recovered, and so you know
they must be buried in in you know, tons and
tons of debris and rock and mud. And that was
a radical, radical slide, and so we don't want that
to happen here in southern California. But the Eton Fire

(07:21):
area and the Pacific Palisades Malibu area, they have that
kind of potential because it's all it's you know, we're
seeing the same movie again where there was a radical
fire and then really strong rains and winds, you know,
weeks later, and that's when it happened.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
So please be aware of that. Please be aware of that.

Speaker 10 (07:41):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
Lots of rain coming in.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
It is going to be a wet, crazy, crazy day,
so be aware of it.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Evacuations Sierra mad.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
Evacuations out in Palisades, of course, Malibu.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
They're everywhere, so you've got to be aware of this.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
The major rain is coming into the San Fernando Valley
between around two to seven pm or three to seven
pm tomorrow, Orange County six to nine pm. Out at
the coast, the really heavy stuff between noon and four,
maybe two and five that area where the major major

(08:35):
you know, an inch per hour, inch and a half
per hour, and we're really going to see it come down,
So be prepared, be aware that it's coming.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
It's coming.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
It's huge if you've seen it on the radar or
one of those doppler deals. A lot of orange and
some really bright red, which means an inch and a
half to two inches per hour.

Speaker 2 (08:59):
That's a lot, a lot.

Speaker 11 (09:00):
After a very active fire season, this next winter storm
could really add insult to injury tonight. It is a
race against the clock to prepare homes, highways, and storm drains.
As a winter storm moves in. Storm preps are ramping up.

Speaker 10 (09:16):
We're looking at very intense rainfall rates to bring the
potential for significant debrif flow.

Speaker 11 (09:22):
The National Weather Service issuing a flash flood watch with
this map showing the high risk areas including the Palisades, Franklin,
Eton and Bridge fire, burned scars.

Speaker 6 (09:31):
Nobody wants, you know, big storms for sure, after especially
after a fire.

Speaker 9 (09:36):
We're very prepared, very prepared. We have a lot of
retaining walls and reinforcing, and now with this added rain
is even marstress and it just seems like it just
doesn't end.

Speaker 11 (09:47):
From Holmes to highways. This view from Air seven showing
the prep work along PCH which is closed from Chautauqua
to Carbon Beach Terrace in Malibu. Caltran's bolstering damaged retaining
walls with temporary steel plates.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
You know, there's gonna be a lot of PCH closing
this year. It's going to be open for a couple
of weeks, It'll be closed for a week, two weeks,
it'll be open and closed. It's going to be on
a week to week or maybe even a day to
day process. And when they're going to keep that PCH open,
and even if it is open, it'll be one lane,
very strict speed limits, twenty five miles an hour through
most of the burned scar area. It's going to be

(10:22):
a real nightmare for the next year or so to
rely on PCH.

Speaker 6 (10:26):
I know that public Works is very focused on debri flow.

Speaker 11 (10:29):
That's the case in Altadena where k rails line the
streets near the foothills left charred by the Eton fire,
with erosion control veils filled with straw blocking storm drains
from toxic property runoff.

Speaker 7 (10:41):
These the older homes up here, we know we have
lead take. We know we have asapastis.

Speaker 11 (10:45):
In San Bernardino, five months after the Bridge fire, last
minute preps are also underway. In Mount Baldy.

Speaker 2 (10:51):
We're just digging a trends for our frint Carmen back here.

Speaker 4 (10:54):
She just didn't have enough room for the water flow,
so we're just giving her a little.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Room and then the plants to come back and add
a COVID plight.

Speaker 11 (11:01):
The incoming storm also a concern for residents Inventura County,
like those in Camillo who are still rebuilding three months
after the Mountain fire tour through their community. Ventura County
fire officials say extra staff will be on hand.

Speaker 12 (11:14):
We encourage residents that feel that they may need sandbags
to plan early.

Speaker 8 (11:19):
Come down to the fire station.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
Phillip sandbags as needed to help protect your property. All Right,
you got to be aware of this.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
It is going to be a radical rain for about
twelve hours, and I don't think anywhere in southern California
is going to escape it. I think it's going to
hit Orange County as well as La County, Ventura County,
all the way down to Riverside or I'm sorry, ocean side, yeah,
Riverside as well, but ocean side San Diego. There's a

(11:46):
big golf tournament, the Genesis Golf Tournament, the tiger Woods Tournament,
which is usually up here off of Sunset Boulevard and
the Palisades, and they've moved that to Tory Pines, the
South Course at Tory Pines.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
But Thursday tomorrow is It's smart Thursday.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
Yeah, Thursday is the opening day for that tournament and
it probably will be rained out, so they're looking at
possibly thirty six holes or extending Friday's tournament and Friday's coverage.
But that's always a great tournament, and it's always at Riviera,
or it has been since since it started. No, it's

(12:25):
not true. I think it. It initially started in Thousand
Oaks and then it moved to Riviera, and now it's
going to be at Tory Pines at least for this year. Well,
they can clean up the Pacific Palisades area for the year.
It'll probably return to to the Palisades and Riviera probably
next year. All right, we're going to take a break here.

(12:46):
When we come back, I got something interesting to play.
You play for you here. It's Vertigo. There's a lot
of people complaining. At least I have a lot of
you know, friends that got some email as well. A
lot of people are in dizzy in the in the
last couple of months. I don't know what it is,
but I get a lot more people friends, family, people

(13:06):
who email us.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
A lot of people.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
Complain about being dizzy. So we come back, Well, well,
I'm going to play some Vertigo. How do you tell
whether it's vertigo or you're just I don't know, you're
just dizzy.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
But it affects a lot a lot of people, a
lot of our listeners as well. Don't forget tonight, that big,
huge meeting is tonight at Calabasa. It's seven pm at
the Calabasas City Hall, right right off the one on
one freeway there near the Commons, just north of the
Commons there. So pack that meeting and don't let these people,

(13:42):
you know, shove all of this debris into your landfill,
and then you regret it for the next thirty, forty
or fifty years. If your kids come down with, you know,
some kind of an ailment over the last forty years,
you have an opportunity to do something about it. Tonight,
tonight in Calabasi, it's seven pm City Hall.

Speaker 10 (14:01):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Vertigo and dizziness.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
How do you know if you have vertigo? Is it
just dizziness? Is it the postibular system that's out of whack.

Speaker 7 (14:15):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
Let's find out.

Speaker 1 (14:17):
From people who are trained in this, because a lot
of people complain that they're dizzy all the time nowadays.

Speaker 11 (14:23):
Well, how do I know if I have vertigo or
if I just feel dizzy?

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Great question.

Speaker 12 (14:28):
So I hear this question almost every day in my
practice because these are common symptoms, and they are also
symptoms that can be really scary and uncomfortable if it's
the first time you're experiencing them. So typically, dizziness is
really a non specific word. It describes a range of
sensations like feeling woozy, wobbly, faint, lightheaded, vertigo is a
little more specific. It is described as the sensation of

(14:51):
your surroundings moving around you. So a lot of patients
will say this feels like the room is spinning around them,
or like the ground is swaying or tilting. I've also
had tons of patients tell me that they feel like
they're walking on a boat on choppy water. So if
you are having those vertigo symptoms, it could be coming
from one of two places. Problems in the inner ear

(15:11):
can cause this. That's the home to our vestibular system
that deals with balance. Or it can be due to
problems within the brain. And I want to kind.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
Of go away, why what was the last.

Speaker 12 (15:23):
One that deals with balance? Or it can be due
to problems within the.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
Brain, problems within the brain. That sounds pretty serious.

Speaker 12 (15:31):
Or it can be due to problems within the brain.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
Problems within the brain.

Speaker 12 (15:34):
I don't want that, And I want to kind of
go over some reasons that you might want to get
checked out for vertigo. So if you're having vertigo that
is sudden and onset, that's severe, that won't go away,
good idea to go get checked out. Also important to
know if you have in addition to vertigo, serious neurologic
symptoms like severe headache, weakness, numbness, inability to walk, slurred speech,

(15:57):
double vision. Those are signs that may be something more
serious is going on, and you should head to the
er for a more urgent evaluation. But the good news is,
no matter what the cause of your vertigo is, we
do have plenty of medications and therapies available to us
to treat it.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
Right, doctor Crow, thank you? Do you hear that? That's
good news at.

Speaker 12 (16:14):
The end, No matter what the cause of your vertigo is,
we do have plenty of medications and therapies available to
us to treat it.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
That's great, brow, thank you. All right, we can treat it.
We can treat it, or they can treat it.

Speaker 2 (16:24):
I can't treat it.

Speaker 9 (16:25):
They have been Have you ever been dizzy like that? Tim?

Speaker 7 (16:28):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (16:28):
Yeah, I'm dizzy.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
I would say four or five days a week and
I just blow it off, you know, like I screw it.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
That's just where I.

Speaker 9 (16:37):
Am enjoy the ride.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
Yeah, I panicked the first couple of times that happened.
It happened when I was on the air, when I
was working it from home during COVID and I was
doing a live read and I thought I was going
to pass out. And I finished it and I and
I yelled to Jen, I, hey, Jen, you got.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
To keep an eye on me. I'm going down. I'm
going down. And I really panicked and she's like, what
do you mean You're going down? And I'm like, I'm
passing out. Shees, what do you mean?

Speaker 1 (17:02):
I'm like, I'm dizzy, I'm going down. And then it
just sort of went away. And I never really had
any treeven do you get that?

Speaker 9 (17:10):
You know, it happened one time and it woke me up.
And it woke me up because I felt like I
was spinning to the right and I was just like
holding on in bed, just going holy cow. So I
called my doctor because I'm like, this is it.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
This is how it ends, right, That's how it always ends.

Speaker 9 (17:27):
Yeah, And she she got me in and checked me
out and she goes, you know, I think it's just
these ear crystals that have dislodged from your ear drum.
And I'm like, what are you talking about. This is
a medical doctor, Okay. So she did a couple of
manipulations on my head. She said that they reset and
immediately the disneyness went away.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Really, yeah, maybe maybe I do that. You know, I'm
afraid of passing out like that, and and and when
no one's around, and then you know, that's that's a wrap.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
Another one.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Another fear of mine is dying on the toilet, you know,
like Elvis.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
You and have that has that. Yeah, And I got
so much in common with Toallla. Oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
We got our daughters with those heavy backpacks, got the
passing out and dying on the toilet. Man, oh man,
we're like brothers.

Speaker 10 (18:21):
Yeah kind of.

Speaker 1 (18:22):
But yeah, that's the fear of mine because no matter
you know, how many people you know miss you or
love you or enjoy you or speak about you behind
your back after you're gone, they're always be like, yeah, he.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
Died on the toilet, just laughing at you, all right.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
I mean people still laugh at Elvis that he died
on the toilet, you know, and he was Elvis Elvis Presley,
like he go, hey, died.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
On the toilet, he told full of concrete. Didn't he
die in the toilet? Didn't he die on the I
don't know. I think that was always sort of the
mythology behind it. A tool and full of concrete from
all the prescription pills oh wow.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
That's and and also he loaded that up with with
he had like caul King too, and the peanut butter
that he had, you know, So it wasn't just the pills.
He was sealing it up with peanut butter as well.
So that guy went for it man with all the

(19:20):
all the pills and the dehydration. He's always dehydrated, and
then loaded up with uh, you know, skippy. And that's
that was a wrap on him.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
All right.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
The weather forecast will come back. We will give that
to you. We can't stress this enough. Tomorrow is gonna
be a radical day. We'll be with you. We'll be
with you here on KFI. All the shows are here,
no one's on vacation. We'll start with with Amy in
the morning, Amy King, then Bill Handle, Gary and Shannon,
John Coleblt, myself, Moe Kelly, and then George Nori and

(19:52):
we'll all be here live. So you can turn on
the radio at any point tomorrow, whether you're scared to
death of this rain or it's flooding you out, and
you information. We will have it for you all day long,
all day and if we have to go into night
and blow out some programming or commercials. You know, we
do that here on KFI to bring you all the

(20:13):
information that you need.

Speaker 10 (20:15):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am six forty.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
This last segment is being brought to you by Advanced
Hair one day Treatment, Life changing Results. Make your appointment
today at advancetair dot com. This we're gonna we'll get
one more rain update here. But this makes me nervous.
There and kill Away a kill Away are volcanoes exploding
in Hawaii, and every time that happens, I think there's

(20:44):
gonna be an earthquake in La or in California. And
happened a year ago on my brother's birthday. That's why
I remember this. That's why it bothers me. My brother's
birthday is December fifth, in twenty twenty three.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
I remember this very specifically exploded.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
There was earthquakes there, and literally moments later there was
an earthquake in Fullerton, and I'm like, those have to
be connected. That has to be connected somehow. So I
don't want to bum you out, but Kilauea is exploding,
There's lots of lava going on, and I think there's

(21:22):
a connection to California, and there has been in the past,
and I hate it, but you gotta be aware of it.
All right, Let's talk about the weather here one more
time with Dallas Rains, I think the premiere weather guy
in Los Angeles. Dallas said it would be like this.
Wasn't that his slogan Fritz and Dallas said it would

(21:44):
be like this? Or is it just Fritz?

Speaker 2 (21:46):
I don't know. Maybe it's Dallas.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
Whoever here it is, Here we go because Dallas Rains
is the premier guy I think in La Now.

Speaker 13 (21:54):
Well, today we had some light to moderate rain across
southern California. The snow level dropped around six feet early
this morning, but now it's back up and that snow
level is going to be quite high. The live megadoppler
tonight scanning for friends in Ventura County. Nothing much going
on for you at this time. Some cloudy skies. Every
once in a while, a little drop of two of
rain come down.

Speaker 7 (22:14):
That's it.

Speaker 13 (22:14):
They did have almost a quarter of an inch of
rain down at Disneyland today and there's some light snowfloory
still going as the radar sweeps through that area at
this hour.

Speaker 7 (22:23):
The flash flood Watch.

Speaker 13 (22:24):
We'll go intofek tomorrow morning and stay all day long Tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
All day long with the flood watch.

Speaker 7 (22:30):
It will end at four a m.

Speaker 13 (22:32):
On Friday, and that's for our friends of the ie
all the way up through Ventura County. I'll show you
just a second how heavy the rain's going to be tonight.
Not very much, some light showers. Drive carefully. Then tomorrow afternoon,
some very heavy rain will come through. Soak out and
that may even have a thunderstorm with it. There's a
possibility of water spouts bending around off the coast of

(22:52):
southern California all the way from Ventura down into the
Orange County area. So we put those thunderstorms in that
four yes too. You can see tonight the satellite view.
So there's the center of this slow. This slow has
been very powerful to it created thirty five foot seas
out there.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Oh my god, you hear that thirty five foot way powerful.

Speaker 13 (23:12):
To it created thirty five foot seas out there. That's
going to not only bring rain Intoskia, but on Friday,
we'll see some big surf coming in to the west
facing beaches ahead of this cold front.

Speaker 7 (23:24):
So we're looking at.

Speaker 13 (23:25):
Maybe five six to ten foot waves, maybe a little
bit more.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
When they say west coast or west facing beaches, you
guys know what that means. Redondo Beach, Hermosa Beach, Manhattan Beach,
the other beaches Santa Monica are south facing. Malibu faces south.
Almost all the coast up to Ventura really faces south southwest,
and then all the beaches south of Law of San

(23:53):
Pedro those are all southern facing beaches until you get
down to Laguna where it starts to make the turn,
and then ocean side San Diego, La Jolla, those are
all western facing beaches. For people that aren't familiar with California,
that's how it rolls. We have south facing beaches and
west facing beaches. The west ones in La Permosa Beach,

(24:17):
Redondo Beach, Manhattan Beach, parts of Marina to del Ray,
and up into Pacific Peninsula those are west facing.

Speaker 13 (24:25):
Overnight tonight, it's just some very light showers. Don't worry
about it too much. I don't think we have any
real problems. Tomorrow morning the rain will start to increase
a little bit. But it is that coal front right
there that has all of the energy with it, the
lift along it. The red areas are up to an
inch of rain per hour falling, and anytime you have

(24:45):
those kinds of intensities, as the front moves through the
area tomorrow afternoon, you can get flooding, no doubt. That's
why we have the flash floodwatch in effect. As the
front makes its way, by seven thirty or so, it's
headed out into the Riverside area and heavy rain with that,
and by maybe tomorrow night eleven o'clock, certainly into Friday morning,

(25:06):
there'll still be some snow up there, heavy but it's
up above seventy five hundred so at the very tops
of the ski areas there some very heavy snow, and
then things start clearing out nicely. I think by Friday
afternoon Friday evening, we're looking pretty good. Rainfall total tonight
are not impressive. That's okay, we don't need any heavy.

Speaker 7 (25:24):
Rain because watch what happens.

Speaker 13 (25:27):
Once we get that front coming through, everything just really
starts to pile up.

Speaker 7 (25:30):
Yes, watch what happens.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
All right, You got to watch what happens because that's
the big rain is Thursday, that's when you got it.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Watch what happens, Yes, watch what happens.

Speaker 13 (25:41):
Especially along the fu Hill areas of the San Gabriel Valley,
because that's where we get that oregraphic forcing of the
air as the winds will be blowing from the south
right into the face of those mountains, and when you
do that, it lifts the air, condenses the rain, and
then you can get some excessive rainfall amounts.

Speaker 7 (25:59):
Yes, watch what happens. Yes, even Loo.

Speaker 13 (26:02):
Good to Beach at almost two inches of rain down
there him it could get two and a half.

Speaker 7 (26:06):
Wow.

Speaker 13 (26:06):
Here's the forecast for tonight. Rain is out there sixty percent,
but nothing heavy. All right, Watch what happens. Yes, Beach
is about forty nine overnight lows in the mountains to
night twenty six.

Speaker 7 (26:17):
You'll get some snow early.

Speaker 13 (26:19):
Watch what happens, all right, as the snow rises tomorrow,
the snow level rises.

Speaker 7 (26:23):
Look at the rain coming down in the middle of
the afternoon.

Speaker 13 (26:26):
This is three o'clock Covina, Glendale, all in the fifties.

Speaker 7 (26:30):
It's a cool day with periods of heavy rain.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
Yeah, three o'clock is the big witching hour for a
lot of people in southern California.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Three pm tomorrow, maybe.

Speaker 13 (26:39):
Even some lightning that shows up on the seven day.
And also it's gonna get windy winds will come out
of the south.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Okay, so we have winds radical rain, and it all
starts around three o'clock for a lot of people here
in southern California. We'll go on at four, so we'll
be on when all this heavy stuff is happening.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
Four to seven pm is when the San Fernano Valley
is going to get whacked by this thing.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
So you got to be aware of that. Be aware
of it.

Speaker 13 (27:06):
Fifteen twenty five thirty five miles per hour in gus
showers into Friday morning, and then we'll see things starting
to improve the weekend. Right now, I added some sunshine
in their forest. Yes, a few clouds around, but overall
a warming trend is coming. On Sunday, we'll hit seventy
and hold that for Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of next week.

(27:28):
This may be the only big storm of the season.
That's my forecast.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Oh that's great, the last big storm of the season.

Speaker 13 (27:34):
Watch what happens, Yes for us in southern California. So
if we get through this, I think we're in very
very good shape.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
That's great, all right, maybe the last storm of the season.
That's possible. That's certainly possible. That would be great, though.

Speaker 13 (27:48):
Very cold in the Valley's tomorrow high's only the upper fifties,
but it warms up nicely by Sunday. It looks like
about seventy out there at Van Eyes. At the beach's
gusty winds, rain will start.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
We'll be checking with everybody tomorrow. Get a good night's sleep.
It's gonna be radical tomorrow, and we'll be with you
right here on KFI mo Kelly's hooker up next right
here on KFI AM 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 iHeartRadio

(28:23):
app

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