Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's k IF I am sixty and you're listening to
The Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
It is the Conway Show, all right, Ding dong.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Monks is in for Krozier, and Richie's in for Bellios.
So scratch bellio, scratch Krozer right in, Monks on the
news and Richie as the producer.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
You got Monks man.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
I stole that from one of my favorite radio guys
up in the Northwest is a guy named Lars Lars
and I heard him last time I was up in Oregon.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
He goes, he comes on there, he goes, you got Lars.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
I oh, that's such a great radio bull move. I
love that. You got Conway, You got Monks? All right?
All right? You got Stone? Alex Stone is with us?
How you Bob? You got Stone?
Speaker 4 (00:49):
You got Margarite today? A moment ago I died? When
is that that sounds good? When is that?
Speaker 2 (00:54):
You know?
Speaker 5 (00:55):
No?
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I gotta figure that out. Yeah, I gotta figure it
out too. Hey.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
So a growing number of school districts and states are
coming up with rules about and laws banning cell phones.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
What's going on?
Speaker 6 (01:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:07):
So l a USD is the one. This week that
it was finally implemented after they okay, did a while ago.
And this is something that is probably the only thing
that liberal run states and conservative run states are actually
agreeing on this that you've got in Texas and California
and today Illinois they started talking about a cell phone
ban and California as goes into place in the middle
(01:28):
of next year, schools have to have a plan or
districts of how they're going to implement it. But this
is a growing issue that I mean, everybody's on their
cell phone. What would we do in a waiting room
or in an airport or in a meeting without looking
at your cell phone?
Speaker 1 (01:40):
And the old day is sitting in a waiting room
and a doctor's office. You've read your old sports illustrated.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Yeah, looking up at that bad movie on the TV.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Were sitting there looking at the aquarium for an hour, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
And or sitting at an airport and you know, looking
I guess at a newspaper or just kind of hanging
out watching the planes that Yeah, we're sitting on.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
The toilet reading the back of a shampoo bottle, Playboy magazine.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
But now, I mean, like anybody, kids are.
Speaker 4 (02:08):
Doing the same thing in classrooms and at lunch, and
they're not paying attention to teachers, and they're texting one another,
and they're looking up answers on tests. So it's gotten
out of control. So la USD. It is now, in
e fact this week, second largest school district in the country,
almost five hundred thousand students, seven hundred some campuses. It's
a full ban even at lunch that no go on
(02:28):
cell phones or smart watches, where parents kind of get
around the cell phone ban in some places by saying, well,
I can call you and I can text you on
your Apple Watch. Can't do that either. Alberto Carvallo, the superintendent,
says it's time we got to do it.
Speaker 7 (02:41):
Hopefully students are paying more attention in class, there will
be fewer distractions. Students will be able to actually lift
their faces from their cell phones and visually socially interact
with their age appropriate peers in their schools.
Speaker 4 (02:56):
And tim This is mainly about kids bowling one another,
text and organizing groups and different things on campus, so
it gets into too bullying. It's also a big part
of it is a lot of teachers say that they
look around as they are teaching that lesson and kids
are looking down at their phones just like we would
be in a meeting, that they're under their table, like
(03:17):
flicking through text messages and answering people back and giving
answers around. And on mental health that looking at social media,
texting with with other kids, that that they want to
bring down that stress level and that where kids are
are feeling like that, that they're not part of whatever
group and what's going on, that mental health comes into
play here. They've done it in Northern California. They're singing
(03:41):
the praises of it up there, saying at lunch, it's
amazing the kids are actually talking to one another. Wow.
That on campuses right now, kids, you go out to
lunch and they're all especially a middle and high school campuses,
they're just looking at their phones. Everybody's sitting down, no
one's talking, They're they're flipping through texting one another. And
but it's going to be in here in LA. Up
(04:01):
to how the schools want to enforce it. Some are
going to ban them completely. Some are going to lock
them in the phone pouches where kids can't get them out.
Speaker 6 (04:09):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (04:09):
Some are going to use the honor system and just
say look if you do pull them out, you're gonna
get in trouble and and then you'll have a problem.
So keep them in your backpack. So it's going to
be up to each individual one. Sure, but the kids
at l a USD kids make guys.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
They'll get around it. Yeah. The their take on it,
like if I didn't have my phone with me, it
would make me feel stressed. I don't really kind of
like it because like if I have something to say
to my parents or tell them and I can't use
my phone, Like, what's the point.
Speaker 4 (04:37):
Yeah, right, it's about calling mom, that's sure, to not
call anybody else.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
But the argument against it is if there's a school shooting,
you know.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Yeah, And that's the thing.
Speaker 4 (04:46):
There have been parents who have said, one, they don't
like that they can't monitor their kids, you know, some
of them track them and find my iPhone and or
communicate to say, hey, somebody else is going to come
pick you up today, or you got this after after school.
They want that open communication because the world that we
live in. And others have said, what about in an
emergency on earthquake or an active shooter? Right, but that
is so far and few between that the district is saying, yeah,
(05:10):
but this is a learning problem every day that is
going on, and there will be exemptions for students who
have medical conditions like diabetes or a heart condition where
they've got a Bluetooth device.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
There's a big rise in diabetes right right.
Speaker 4 (05:24):
It's like marijuana back when you needed migraines to get
a medical license. So if you have a medical reason why,
and you can show that you've got a Bluetooth device
that you need to communicate to your phone, then they
can keep them on or for translating. But most of
the kids at LAUS States, a lot of other districts
are going to do it, and everybody in California, every
(05:44):
school district will do it beginning next year.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
That I get because you're a little younger than I am.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
But you know, when we finished high school at two
thirty or three o'clock on a Friday, it was done
until seven thirty on Monday, And if you weren't invited
to a party over the weekend, you didn't know until
next week. Now you know instantly when you're not invited
to that party, and it's really and it really is
damaging to kit you.
Speaker 4 (06:08):
Know where everybody is, you see it on Instagram or
and by the way, it's a friendship breaker.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
This social media has broken up more friendships than it
has put together because you know, like, for instance, you know,
we post stuff on the internet and and I you know,
and and people constantly call me and go, oh, I
didn't know you.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
You know, you felt that way about this or this
way about that.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
And I'm and I'm you always have to like defend
yourself and in the in the in the past, you
would just keep those effing thoughts to yourself.
Speaker 4 (06:36):
Yeah, and everybody now that wants to know what you're
doing and what you're up to, and nobody really cares,
right exactly you're posting.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
And you see the stuff that people post where it's
why did you put that on there?
Speaker 4 (06:47):
I don't care that you went to the doctor today
and they found that, you know.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
And then people taking pictures of the meal they ate,
you know, just eat it. Yeah, enjoy it. Enjoy that, buddy.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
Are you watching the game to the big hockey game?
Oh no, Usa one, we're talking hockey. Yes, it's a
big deal to little puck thing on the ice we're
talking about.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
That's right, man, It's gonna be a big deal. You're
gonna miss out. You should watch it five o'clock tomorrow.
All right, thanks for coming on. Man, you got stone,
Man got stone right. All right, It is the e
Conaway Show. We are live on kf I AM sixty.
We've got a lot going on here.
Speaker 8 (07:27):
Man.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
We've got the Calabass landfill residents physically blocking the debris
will go through that. We've had another plane crash that
kind of sucks, right, that's horrible. And then we have
one of the office, one of the stars of the office,
Mindy Kayley, is in the news. We'll tell you what
all right, lots going on here on KFI. Keep it
(07:48):
here on KFI, and and and all night long. Right,
what else are you doing? Where are you gonna go?
You know, what are you gonna do? Flip around the other?
Crap on the radio. There's a lot of crap on
the radio, a lot.
Speaker 9 (08:00):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
A six.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
There is a man. We got all kinds of air
accidents nowadays. We had the Delta plane crash. A survivor
of that crash is speaking out about the traumatic landing
at Pearson Airport up in Toronto, where a delta flight
was coming in I think from Minnesota and hits the runway,
(08:30):
does a cartwheel, which is not what you want on landing,
and everybody survives. Everybody survives. And I saw this on online.
There was a guy explaining, a pilot, a former pilot,
explaining why the airlines still go with those you know,
(08:50):
really sort of ancient seatbelts. You know, they teach how
to use the seatbelt on the plane, you know, put
the belt buckle in the class right, and they look
like old archaic technology, but he said, those seat belts
save lives. First of all, they have a tremendous amount
of load that they can hold. I think it's three
(09:11):
thousand pounds with the pressure that those seat belts can hold.
And secondly, you know, in your you have a seat
belt in your car and you press the button to
you know, to dislodge it or latch it, or you know,
take it off, and there's no pressure in a car.
You know, seatbelts kind of loosey goosey on you, so
(09:34):
it's easy to take it off. But if you're upside
down in your car, some people don't have the thumb
pressure and the strength to take that seatbelt off, you
got to really push down on that button to release
the seat belt. Well, in the airplane seatbelts, they're designed
so anybody can do it. You need literally, like I think,
(09:55):
three or four pounds of pressure to pull it open
and you're out. And that saved a lot of lives
because are overweight passengers, and there are some who are flying.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
I've flown next to some of them.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
I don't think that some of them would have the
strength to press the button to release the seatbelt.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
But with the class, we just take.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Your your four three or four fingers and pull it
back and boom, you're out. So I think those seatbelts
saved lives yesterday in that crash. And I don't know
about you, but every time I land now in an airplane,
whether it's at lax Burbank, Portland, Seattle, wherever it is,
I tighten that seatbelt right before landing. I give it
(10:37):
another tug. And when my daughter was younger, I'd reach
over and tighten hers up as well. And my wife's
I said, we got you gotta tighten these things up
when you land now, because it is a wild wild
West out there, the wild wild West with these flights,
all right, here's a guy, a survivor speaks about it
out about his experience on this Delta flight that crashed
(10:58):
in Toronto.
Speaker 8 (11:00):
We are joined now by one of the passengers, John Nelson. John,
thank you for joining us. Walk us through what happened?
Any warning at all?
Speaker 10 (11:08):
No, it was a normal flight from you know, Minneapolis.
I had been on the flight from Detroit coming into Toronto.
Speaker 6 (11:17):
Here.
Speaker 10 (11:18):
I was paying attention watching out the window as we
were coming in. I did notice, you know, the winds
were whipping pretty hard and the.
Speaker 6 (11:27):
Runways were snow covered.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Did the pilot say anything, Yeah, he said the F
word about three times, really loud.
Speaker 10 (11:37):
No, there was no warning we were coming in for
our landing. And when the plane came in, it was
we hit the runway really hard and like extremely hard,
and we kind of popped up and it felt like
we were.
Speaker 6 (11:51):
Leaning to the left. And then what.
Speaker 10 (11:54):
Happened was it was just incredibly fast. There was a
giant firewall down the side. I could actually feel the
heat through the glass.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
You imagine that huge fireball on that plane. And nobody
died and nobody got seriously injured. I think there's still
two people left in the hospital and they're gonna make it. Man,
what the safety on these planes is incredible.
Speaker 10 (12:14):
And then we were going sideways. I'm not even sure
how many times we like tumbled.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
Yeah, we did some cartwheels. I think it was like
three or four cartwheels.
Speaker 10 (12:22):
But we ended upside down. I was hanging there in
my seat belt upside down.
Speaker 8 (12:26):
So you're saying, how many times do you think you
flipped more than once?
Speaker 4 (12:30):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Hard to count, you know, George, Really hard to count
when you're when you see your life flashing in front
of you.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
How many cartwheels you did?
Speaker 6 (12:40):
I'm not sure at least once for sure.
Speaker 8 (12:44):
And then so you're hanging upside down?
Speaker 6 (12:46):
How did you get out of your seat?
Speaker 2 (12:49):
I released the seat belt.
Speaker 10 (12:50):
Yeah, at that point, everybody was quiet for like a
moment or two, and then.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
I bet that changed.
Speaker 10 (12:57):
Everybody was trying to like scramble to make sense of
what just had happened.
Speaker 6 (13:01):
And so we released the SEATBELTSA.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
And by the way, where are the three guys who
promised before the flight took off that they'd help everybody
out of the plane.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
Where are those guys?
Speaker 1 (13:10):
Oh, they're inside the terminal at a Chick fil a already. Well,
that plane is still loaded with people.
Speaker 10 (13:16):
And so we released the seatbelts like that kind of
fell to the floor which is now the ceiling, and
help the lady next to me and get out of
her seatbelt.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
Oh that's a cool guy, right. He helped the lady
get out of her seat belt.
Speaker 10 (13:27):
And help the lady next to me get out of
her seatbelt. And then you heard the flight ascendants yelling
open the door. Everybody, take your stuff, and you know,
get out now, right.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
So take your stuff. That's not what you're supposed to do.
You're supposed to just get the hell out. You're not
supposed to take anything with you. You don't, you know,
grab for your luggage or your cell phone. You just
get out.
Speaker 10 (13:46):
Everybody, take your stuff, and you know, get out now, right.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
So I don't think they needed that, right, Hey, you
got to get out now. I think everybody their natural
instincts where we got to get out. We got to
get out of this thing. We're upside down, we had
a fireball, it's eight degrees outside, it's really windy, there's
a fire on the plane. I think everybody's natural instinct is, hey,
we've got to remove ourselves from this area.
Speaker 10 (14:12):
They were professional. They were trying to get us out
as quickly as possible. Yeah, everybody in the cabin was,
I would say, relatively calm.
Speaker 6 (14:19):
We all worked together and got out.
Speaker 10 (14:22):
Of there as quickly as we could because we could
smell fuel as we were getting out of the plane.
Speaker 6 (14:27):
That's really remarkable.
Speaker 8 (14:28):
You're saying it was silent after you guys flipped over
and then everybody pretty calm.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
Wow. Oh yeah, what a crew.
Speaker 10 (14:34):
Yeah, I mean, you know, in the moment, it feels hard,
but yeah, I would say that, like everybody worked together
and we just helped each other get out of there.
People tried to pick up phones as we were crawling
out of the plane, And.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
It must be a plane full of Canadians, right, If
it was all Americans, they'd just be stabbing each other
trying to get out, pickpocketing each other's wallets, trying to
steal each other's phones, you know, trying to take a
a watch off a guy who can't get a seatbelt off.
It must have been full of Canadians where they helped
each other out get out of that plane.
Speaker 10 (15:07):
Once we got out, that was when I took the
video that you saw. And then Shortly thereafter, there was
another explosion from the far side of the plane, and
firefighters and EMT were trying to get out of the way,
and they were professional and on site very quickly.
Speaker 8 (15:23):
What was going through your mind?
Speaker 6 (15:24):
Could you believe you'd survived a crash?
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 10 (15:28):
No, It's something that I don't think you can ever
even really prepare for. I just remember, as we were
like tumbling, I was just trying to keep I tried
to just keep from hitting my head right and just
try to protect myself and my body. I was trying
just to do the best to make it through it.
Speaker 8 (15:45):
And you had your seat belt on the whole time?
Speaker 10 (15:47):
Yeah, yes, yes, yes, absolutely, I had the seatbelt on
the whole time.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
I wonder if this crew, I wonder if these passengers,
next time they fly will pay really close attention to
the pre flight speech from the flight attendant.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
How bet they do.
Speaker 8 (16:02):
Has anyone from the airline contacted you since the crash.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Yes, they gave three free drink coupons for your next
Delta flight. I thought that was light, but some of
the guys up front enjoyed that.
Speaker 10 (16:14):
Yes, they you know, we were escorted throughout the airport
for the day.
Speaker 6 (16:19):
They did put us up in a hotel.
Speaker 10 (16:21):
There's been an airline representative helping us get toyletrees and clothing.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
And did you get a chance to swear at the
pilots who almost killed.
Speaker 6 (16:29):
You and try to make travel arrangements for today? Well,
we are glad you were.
Speaker 8 (16:32):
Okay, it sounds like you and your fellow passengers really
did keep your heads about you.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
Yeah, I wonder what that was like.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
You know, when you get off a flight, you know,
the pat the cockpit doors open, and sometimes you stick
your head and you go, hey, thanks for the flight
or nice landing, whatever. I wonder what that was like,
getting off the plane with the pilots upside down in
their seats and people swearing at him. You let me
add this guy, Let me at this guy, you son
of you piece you this guy.
Speaker 2 (17:01):
I'd love to have been in there and seen that
kind of odd.
Speaker 9 (17:04):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on de Mayo from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
All right, Paul Pelosi is in the news. Yeah, there
he is, Paul Pelosi, who is the husband of Nancy Pelosi.
Remember he had that that break in where the guy
wanted to I guess, break the legs of Nancy Pelosi
and end up taking a hammer to Paul Pelosi. I
think that guy got twenty five years in prison for that,
(17:33):
so that was a bad decision. And then Paul Pelosi,
who has had I guess he's had some kidney problems
and now he's had a kidney transplant. And Paul, if
you noticed in the past, he likes to take the drink.
He has been pulled over a couple of times. He's
(17:55):
also I think if you go back and look at
the video of him with the man with the hammer
trying to knock him out, well, the cops got there
in San Francisco. I think Paul Pelosi had a drink
in his hand. In his hand, so very traumatic experience
having a guy in the house with a hammer wanting
to break your wife's legs and then puts a hammer
(18:15):
through your skull, and yet you still have a mixed
drink in your hand. So the guy likes to drink.
I'm not getting down on him for it at all.
I enjoy it myself, but he needs a kidney transplant.
I don't know how old Paul Pelosi is. I think
he's in his eighties. Let me see Paul Pelosi's age.
(18:37):
Let's say, how hold this guy eighty four? Wow, eighty
four years old? Who I made it right? Eighty four
years old and he needed a kidney transplant and he
got one from a relative. I think it was his
daughter that gave him the kidney transplant.
Speaker 11 (18:52):
Let's find out we are learning Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi's husband Paul,
is recovering after a kidney transplant. Pelosi's office says Paul
had the transplant Friday in San Francisco. The kidney came
from their daughter, Jacqueline. Paul was released from the hospital
yesterday and is recovering at home. This is the latest
health challenge for the eighty four year old, who had
a number of injuries in a home invasion in twenty
(19:14):
twenty two.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Yeah, so the question is can you drink after you've
had a kidney transplant? And do you have to hide
it from your daughter who gave up the kidney? All right,
because she probably is not thrilled with giving up a
kidney and then all of a sudden you're whacking it
with vodka and gin.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
So I had to look that up.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
But but first of all, let me tell you what
a kidney does. I used to do a you know
what film strips are? You know what a film strip
is where you know, you watch it in like seventh
or eighth grade, and it was just a piece of
film and they would tell you like two or three sentences.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Then you hear that peep and would it would it
would forward another frame.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Well, I used to do a film strip off about kidneys,
and let me see if I can remember the script.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
It went. It's something like this. It's uh, I gotta
cant remember what it was. It was. Oh.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
One of the important jobs of the kidneys is to
clean the blood beep and as it moves through the body,
it picks up extra fluid, chemicals and waste. Deep the
kidneys separate this material from blood and is carried out
of the body in urineep. If the kidneys are unable
(20:33):
to do so and this condition is untreated, deep serious
health problems result an eventual loss of life. That concludes
today's film strip. So that give you an idea of
what kidneys do. And you can drink. You can drink
again after, you know, after you have the kidney, but
(20:56):
you've got to slow down. You've got a really sort
of you know, you start gradually begin consuming alcohol slowly
over a period of time. You also have to limit
your alcohol intake. Stick to moderate alcohol consumption.
Speaker 4 (21:12):
You know.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
I guess it's you know, by whatever gender age. There's
probably some guidelines there as well. Stay hydrated, Drink plenty
of fluids, especially water while consuming alcohol if you've had
a kidney transplant, and avoid binge drinking.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
Oh, this guy's in trouble. This guy's in trouble.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
Excessive alcohol consumption can put a strain on your new
kidney and increase the risk of complications. Monitor any adverse effects.
Pay attention to how your body is reacting to alcohol.
And I wonder again, if he has to hide it
from his daughter, you know, and she comes over, Hey, mom,
here to have dinner with you, and he's like, oh,
(21:51):
I can't have a shot and a beer.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
She gave me the kidney. I got it, I got it,
I get do it. I can't do it. I can't
do it anyway.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Paul Pelosi is eighty four years old and has a
fresh kidney from his daughter.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
What a great daughter? Would your daughter donate a kidney
to you?
Speaker 6 (22:11):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
I imagine mine might.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
I don't think i'd ask her to do that, though,
I think i'd try to get it somewhere else.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
He's eighty four. How many years does he have left?
Speaker 4 (22:21):
Three?
Speaker 1 (22:22):
Four, ten max? And you're going to ruin her whole
life to get three or four more years.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
Out of your life. I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
Plus, look, there's a lot of reasons you get into
kidney problem. I think his is probably too much alcohol,
and so I don't know how i'd react. I would
probably deny. If my daughter offered a kidney, I would
say no. I said, I had a nice run here.
(22:55):
You to keep that kidney. Maybe your kid needs it
one day, maybe your husband needs it one I think
you keep that kidney and you spend it elsewhere. Don't
give it me. I got another two three years left.
I'll be fine. I had a nice long run with nance.
I'm gonna deny the kidney. I think it's a selfish
(23:15):
thing to do. I think it's very selfless of her
to donate the kidney, or to offer the kidney. I
think it's selfish to take it from your kids. There's
a weird thing going on there. I understand if you're
thirty six and your kids seventeen. You got to hold
your whole life in front of you. Maybe taking the
kidney then, but at eighty four, taking a kidney from
(23:36):
your child at eighty four.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
Uh, something yuck about that. Something yuck about that.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
Can't put my I can't really pin where the yuckness is,
but it just doesn't seem right, just doesn't seem right.
Speaker 9 (23:50):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six.
Speaker 1 (23:54):
Forty Calabasis landfillm I didn't know there was a landfill
out there until recently. I think a lot of people
live in Calabasas didn't realize it either. It's on the
north end of town, up near Lost Virgins, like north
of Lost Virgins, like the outside way, outside of the
Commons and the Calabasaes that we all know, you know,
(24:17):
the Calabasa that we know. It's the Kardashians, it's the
golf course, the Commons, the restaurants. And then there's a
way north of that, about two three miles north of that,
there's another little bit of Calabasas that has a landfill
and there's homes around it, and the people own those homes,
they hate the landfill, and now it's getting international attention.
(24:39):
It's unbelievable out there Calabasas.
Speaker 12 (24:42):
It was quite a scene earlier this afternoon, early this
morning here at the Calabasas landfill.
Speaker 6 (24:48):
The bottom line for these residents is this.
Speaker 12 (24:50):
They don't want that debris being dumped and what they
say is their own backyard. Trucks bringing in debris from
that the Palisades Fire were stopped at the entrance of
the Calabasas landfill.
Speaker 2 (25:04):
The protesters who say they.
Speaker 12 (25:06):
Live nearby don't want any debris from the Palisades fire
coming here.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
The message is we do not market Palisades fire debris
to be in our community landfill. This is a residential neighborhood.
Speaker 5 (25:17):
So it's got six schools immediately surrounding us, a park
within one hundred yards.
Speaker 3 (25:22):
My house probably within a football field to the landfill.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
Yeh wow, you live within a football field of a landfill. Man,
Oh ma'am, what did that house run? Is that the
forty bucks?
Speaker 6 (25:34):
I don't know.
Speaker 9 (25:35):
I love a.
Speaker 5 (25:36):
Football field to the landfill and this top tip debris
does not belong here.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
Did the people who bought those homes did they know
they were buying next to a landfill. I don't know,
one hundred yards from a landfill seemed really really close.
Speaker 12 (25:50):
At a town hall meeting in Calabasa's last week, the
Army Corps of Engineers in Ellie County Public Works told
residents the Calabasas Landfill is designated to fully accept disaster
related waste, adding that the county owned facility, we go
it is not accepting household hazardous materials as part of
the debris removal.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
From what I understand, I think that that that landfill
out there, that landfill was only supposed to get household waste,
you know, garbage we throw in our black cam and
it's not supposed to get any industrial waste. And and
so this you know, waste from the fire, these contaminants,
(26:30):
I think is a gray area.
Speaker 12 (26:31):
The protesters were told they'd be arrestedive they continued to
block the public road.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
Uh oh uh oh, we'll see how strong this protest is.
They're going to get arrested out there.
Speaker 12 (26:41):
Protests were told they'd be arrested ive. They continued to
block the public road.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
What they're bringing in is not allowed to be here.
Speaker 7 (26:48):
And I mean, frankly, this landfill is not sewn us.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
We are within the miles of many schools.
Speaker 9 (26:55):
There are tons of families to share.
Speaker 6 (26:56):
The major businessespect here.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
This is not something that should be allowed.
Speaker 6 (27:02):
There is a lawsuits.
Speaker 12 (27:03):
So even with the legal action going through the system,
the dropoffs here are going to continue. And nobody was
arrested today. They left at noon and we're told they
plan on being here tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Oh, it's gonna be a big battle out there.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
These people in Calabasas do not like this landfill and
it being used for this natural or this you know,
fire disaster.
Speaker 6 (27:25):
Liven the Garay Hills.
Speaker 12 (27:26):
I'm Sid Garcia, ABC seven.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
I see Garcia. Man, that guy's great. He's been around
a long time. Sid Garcia, that's a cool dude out there.
I get that all right. Mindy Kahaling is in the news.
She was in the office. I think a lot of
people enjoyed her in the office. The big star, big
Hollywood starlets. Find out why she's in the news.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
The newest the Hollywood want to fame get a star
on the Walk of Fame.
Speaker 3 (27:58):
Well, it all started on NBC when I was in
the office twenty four years old, killing before staff right
in you early office eight years over one hundred episodes.
So I love NBC. I love that that was where
Agan offensive a long lash there. I was always an
ambitious kid and telling my parents that one day was
(28:20):
going to take it. But what's so special about this
moment is that when your kids are just saying that
because you hope your parents believe it, so that the
fact that it actually became true is so meaningful to me.
I wish my mother was here to see it, but
I feel lucky that my dad is. So yeah, I'm
just back to.
Speaker 4 (28:41):
Well.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
She seems like a nice person, right, sad that her
mom is not there. I don't know what happened there,
but her dad is. That's a cool deal man, to
get your star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. For
a lot of people, that is a big, big deal,
huge huge.
Speaker 2 (28:58):
Deal, all right.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
And then we're also grocery outlet in Altadena is in
the news. They have reopened so slowly, but surely businesses
are going to come back to the Altadena area. And
this is a big one because a lot of people
rely on the grocery outlet there. They don't want to
drive four or five miles to get their groceries and
(29:22):
then you know, sometimes you can't get home before all
the frozen food is thought out and they want their
local grocery store open, and it's open again.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
Grocery outlet out the Dina located.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
On Lake Avenue with the iconic mural on its building
greetings from AlSi Diena that everyone in this community knows well,
you know, grocery outlet. They're then able to reopen since
the fire, a community hub before the fire, and during
this recovery process. It's been six weeks since the eating
fire tore through Altadena. This video captured the flames as
(29:56):
they spread to the businesses on Lake Avenue.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
You know their slogan Outlead Bargain Market, you know, that's
their slogan. Mondo used to work with us and he
was singing it one day and we shut the the
the audio off and let him finish it. And he
thought it was Grocery Outlead Farmer's Townhouse.
Speaker 4 (30:17):
That was so funny.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
Grocery outlet, Farmer's Townhouse.
Speaker 6 (30:23):
I think it's that. Whenever I hear that jingle.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
I do too, every time I hear it, Grocery out Lead,
Farmer's Townhouse. Mondo's the best man, That guy's the best.
All Right's conn My Show. We're live right here on
KFI AM sixty Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now,
you can always hear us live on KFI AM six
(30:46):
forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime
on demand on the iHeart Radio app