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March 3, 2025 34 mins
Bellio is back! / ABC’s Alex Stone joins the show to discuss the latest happenings in the Gene Hackman death. And Tim and Alex also talk about the Oscars - snubs and triumphs. // Tim discusses last night’s Oscars and their recognition and celebration of the LA Firefighters, and he rates the roast that the firefighters participated in. // Tim discusses the Oscars and the screeners that his dad used to get and protect. Then Tim shifts to talk about the few people/actors that have been thrown out / banned from the Academy. // PCH special pass plus rain in the forceast for next week..  
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to The
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app KFI AM sixty.
It is the Conway Show. And yeah whoo, Bellio is
back in Gay in the game Man, good to be.

(00:23):
Bellio is the sweetest daughter in the world. Her mother
needed some attention in Colorado and she said, Ma, you
can count on me, and you split for two weeks
to help your beautiful mother. I love that.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
And if it wasn't for you, which I know you
hate when I do this, but thank you for allowing
me to do this.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
That's right, That's why I brought it up. Also, Steph
Foosh leaves occasionally to help his dad out. That's cool.
I like that. Anytime you go to help family members out,
you never have to say can I have the day off?
You just dig it off. You dig it off, and
it's always a much more important than the crap we
do around here. Oh, horrible introduction for Helkstone. Sorry Alex Man.

(01:02):
I'm sorry, Bud oh Man.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
It was great. I've been relegated to the phone today.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Oh that's right. Okay, So how did you get hooked
up with just the phone today? You going somewhere.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
I don't know. No, the other system isn't working, so
we said it's either this or nothing, but we'll do
the phone.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Okay, Hey, so what did we know about Gene Hackman.
Any news come out over the weekend?

Speaker 3 (01:27):
Well, if I remember correctly, you were the one who said,
no carbon monoxide, that's not what it was. And look
who was right, because at least preliminarily, it doesn't look
like it was carbon monoxide. And they've still got to
do a lot more toxicology to really figure it out,
but coming back negative so far for carbon monoxide in

(01:48):
their blood, and so that goes against what even law
enforcement was thinking early on that you've got two adults
a dog all dead in the same building, no signs
of trauma. But as you pointed out, it was a
huge home. Then it would have taken a lot of
carbon monoxide to knock somebody out and to kill them
in such a big building. But they know that they
had been dead for a number of days, looks like

(02:11):
from his pacemaker about two weeks.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
That still detecting carbon monoxide in a body after that
amount of time can be tough, so they're not ruling
it out yet they think Alex isn't.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
That a bad pacemaker? Then isn't that pacemaker design nowadays
to alert the hospital if something happens.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
It's a good question if there should have been some
kind of a warning. I don't know when he got it,
or if there's different models out there, but they were
able to download the data and to know that just
shy of two weeks before was the last event that
he had had. We still don't know what the event was,
if it had to work to try to even out

(02:52):
the heart rate, or if it read something. But they
believed that was his last day of life. But now
they got to figure out what else was was in
their blood? Was there some medication? Was something else at play?
This is what the sheriff in Santa Fe County sent.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
Manner and cause of death has not been determined.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
The official results of the autopsy an topsicology reports are pending.
So there are questions about those pills that were found.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
About that sounded like the guy calling the Hindenburg. What
did he die in the late the early nineteen hundreds.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
You know, they haven't determined it yet. They got to
work on it. So with the Betsy Arakawa, his wife,
the pills that were all all strewed about, the sheriff
saying those were blood pressure meds, thyroid medication, and thailan
all and none of them, you know, were things that
somebody would take to kill somebody. You wouldn't typically think

(03:45):
that they would be at place. So they got to
look at that. And in the end, there are some
former medical examiners and corners who say that sometimes you
don't really know that. You take an educated guest and say,
based on what we see here that maybe it was this.
It was that they didn't have surveillance cameras getting around
their home. He was ninety five years old. They enjoyed

(04:06):
the privacy. So they're going to look at their cell phones,
they're going to look at their daily planner that they
got in the search warrant. Try to piece this together,
wait for the toxicology to come back. But one former
corner was saying, you know what, they may theorize it
maybe he had a heart attack. She went to get
the meds for him and then she had a medical
episode and in the stress of that moment, and then

(04:26):
the dog starved in the kennel. But that's a lot
of coincidence and what if and then maybe this, but
in the end that that may be what we end
up with.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
Yeah, look, I think at least there's a refund coming
on the pacemaker.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
Well I don't know who's going to go for it,
being that they're both dead, but maybe they should rey.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
Yeah, it didn't work out, so what why? By by
the way, you know, when when I go to a
doctor and and he does a drug test on me
ip in, the company tells me ten minutes later, I'm clean.
How is this taken so long?

Speaker 3 (05:03):
For all those drug tests you do on a weekly basis.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
When I worked at retail, I did take a drug test.
I work at Nordstroms and they made me take a
drug test.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
The I asked the medical examiner here in LA not
that long ago, why does toxicology take like nine weeks
sometimes even longer? And his take was he said, look,
this is different than going to get your annual physical
and they draw your blood and by that night UCLA
Health or you know at CAC did they email you
your results and then you get the phone call because

(05:34):
they've got to do a lot of cultures and it
grows and they wait to see what grows in there
and it's a lot more in depth. They say it
takes a lot longer. They are backlogged in a lot
of places, but something like this, typically you would fast
track it through there. But they say, hey, takes a
lot longer. It can be as little as like two
or three weeks, but it can also be many months.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
I've worked for CBS Radio on ks CAXLS and.

Speaker 3 (05:58):
Oh, I know, I used to listen to thank you.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
I appreciate that. That's why I brought it up Alex
and uh And they came in one day and they said, hey, everyone,
we're drug testing everybody in the building. And Steckler said, oh,
I don't mind, you can drug test us all. But
but this is part of CBS. So I'll show up
down a TV city where you'll drug test everybody down there,
and I'll stand in line with those guys and we'll
drug test everybody. And they called it off.

Speaker 3 (06:23):
They went away at that point.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
Yep, it went away because that's for all the producers, actors, directors,
writers were for all the sitcoms and CBS, and you
know they were all smoking potter, taking pills or coke
or whatever.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
Yeah, I said there'd be a few positives in that group,
A good idea by the company.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Yeah, yeah, but did you watch the Oscars last night?
You look at it?

Speaker 3 (06:41):
I did, I did. Uh. There was a moment speaking
of Gene Hackman that Morgan Freeman honoring his friend. But
I don't have you seen Anora. I have not seen
a Noor.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
I saw the trailer. I think that's that's close. Right.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
Yeah, you're probably like most Americans that you know. As
it kept winning, it was like, this is one move
that was never on my radar. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
It was too bad that Demi Moore didn't win. You know,
I thought she sort of deserved it in all the
movies I saw, which was well, just hers, and I
thought it was great. But I think the Academy Awards
they want to be you know, the Oscars, and the
Academy wants to be different from everybody else. So I
think they look down on movies that win a Golden
Globe or Screen Actors Guild or Director's Guild or Writers Guild,

(07:25):
and they want to go the opposite direction. They go
for more of an artsy not so much commercially successful.

Speaker 3 (07:31):
Look, well, I mean it hasn't always been that way.
This year you could say Wicked gets the rye into
the stick for that in the animation side, the Disney films,
the Avenger films, all of those that no way, I mean,
Wicked could have and it did win some awards, but
that they're not the standard of what the Academy wants.

(07:52):
And even though that may be what most Americans are watching,
that that's not who the voters are going for.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Okay, well I get that, But then it's hypocritical for
the Academy Awards to pull in that audience with the
opening number of Wicked and The Wizard of Oz and
then not give them any awards.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
Yeah, well that argument could definitely be made. Oh look
at the mainstream crowd that they're talking to. And then
in the end it's a little bit of a leadown.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
Yeah, and that speech with Adrian Brodie got almighty YEPI.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
Turned down the music. I know how this goes. Turned
down the music.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
But I mean that's a pretty big feat to win,
you know what, twenty two or twenty five years between
Best Best Actor is a pretty big deal.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
That very it's an amazing deal. Yeah, and look what.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
He's had to put up with. I mean those are
you know, those are what Is it Harvey Weinstein's kids
that he's raising?

Speaker 3 (08:47):
Is he?

Speaker 1 (08:48):
Yeah, he's I mean his wife is the ex wife
of who is the guy that ran? Is that Harvey Weinstein.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
I don't know. I didn't know this. I didn't know
the background.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
Here. Wait, Crozier, you know this better than anybody. Harvey
Weinstein's ex wife is the current wife of Adrian Brody.

Speaker 4 (09:08):
Girlfriend or girlfriend Gina Chatman's children with Harvey Weinstein.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
Okay, So so that guy wins an Academy award then
hooks up with Harvey Weinstein's ex and is raising Harvey
Weinstein's kids.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
They learned from you, that's fine.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
They call him Popsy, you know, the the the guy
with what does he have? He has Lynn syndrome or something.
He's got that that syndrome where your long legs, you
have long teeth, long fingers, everything's long on you. It's
called lin Linman's disease or something like that. Buddy, I
don't know. I I guess I'm too into it. I
go too deep on this kind of crap. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
No, No, it's fascinating. I had no idea.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
But I mean, look to raise, to raise those two
kids who aren't your home? Aren't your own? And and
uh and uh, you know, and to explain where dad is,
who's in prison for rape for the rest of his life.
It's a big deal.

Speaker 5 (09:58):
You know.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
You got to give me some credit for, you know,
trying to raise those kids properly.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
Sure, yeah, so I give.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
Him that, buddy. I really appreciate you coming on and
I we'll catch you. We'll catch you next next Oscars.
You gotta tell you, right, thanks man, Right there, he goes,
Alex Stone. That guy's great man, ABC News is Alex Stone. Yeah,
but that's a true story. Adrian Brodie's girlfriend is the

(10:25):
mother of Harvey Weinstein's kids. They were married that she
was married to Harvey Weinstein for a long time and
had two children, and then in twenty seventeen, when it
came out that he was raping everybody in town, she split.
But she probably had a hard time splitting. You know.
She was used to private jets and everybody kissing her

(10:45):
ass and his ass, and everybody was afraid of him.
Everybody in Hollywood was afraid of that guy. Everybody. There's
not a single actor or director who wasn't afraid of
that guy. That Harvey Weinstein and now he's in prison,
probably for the rest of his life, which may not
be long. And he's always sick. He's going down with something.

(11:06):
But man, what a crazy night in Hollywood. Woolf and
that's the you know, that's the woman who caught his
gum too. Remember he walked up on stage with gum
and he didn't realize he had in his mouth, and
he threw it at her and she went to catch
his gum, which is kind of odd. Don't you just
stick it in your pocket and have the guy at
the cleaners, I give you an eighty dollars tab to

(11:27):
pull that out. Sorry. I know people are gonna hate it,
but I just swallow the gum. Okay, that's that's not
bad either. Sallow. Yeah, right, you could swallow it. Your
knees aren't going to stick together, despite what grandma told you.
I never heard that. Oh you never heard that. Oh
that's my grandmother laid that out us all the time.
You swallow that gum, your knees will stick together, Like,
oh no, I don't my knees to stick together. I

(11:49):
still today. Don't swallow it because that might have a loser,
because he's a loser.

Speaker 6 (11:58):
You're listening to Tim conwayjun on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Well, the Oscars were last night. That's a big deal.
Is a company town. A lot of businesses are in
business because of show business. So when show business is
in the news, you've got to super serve it. As
they say, you know, it's part of this town. It's
the company business. Look, if we were doing radio in

(12:25):
Pittsburgh and there was the you know, steel Business Awards
we would give, we would tell you who won the
Steel Business Award, or if it was Florida, we'd tell you,
you know, who won the Tourist Awards. So this is
the business in Los Angeles. It's show business. The Oscars
last night they celebrated the LA firefighters. That was a

(12:47):
cool deal LA firefighters, and some skeptics, not me, but
some skeptics online were saying, Hey, what are we applauding?
There was a fourteen thousand homes that burned to the ground. Okay, okay,
but if it wasn't for the firefighters, that number probably
had been twenty two thousand homes that burned down. These
guys saved a ton of homes that you're not aware of.

(13:11):
So stick that in your pipe and shove that down
the back of your throat. Huh, sorry, sorry, I hate
when people are just dumb, you know, dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb.

Speaker 7 (13:22):
The fire service who bravely responded to and battled the
polisades and eating on.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
Fires a mighty what an introduction like the fires just
wanted award? Is that Conan O'Brien doing that the fire
servicemen responded to and that the craziest fires there.

Speaker 5 (13:41):
And eating one fires sound like the name?

Speaker 7 (13:53):
Yeah, no, yeah, you're right, by the way, I don't
know I did this just a second ago, nodding went
thank you like I was. Guys On, behalf of everyone
in Greater Los Angeles, thank you for all that you do.

Speaker 3 (14:14):
Now.

Speaker 7 (14:14):
I know you're gonna find this hard to believe, but
there are some jokes even I'm not brave enough to tell.
So on behalf of myself.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
Would you please read what's.

Speaker 7 (14:23):
In the prompter and remember everyone in this audience has
to laugh.

Speaker 5 (14:28):
These are heroes.

Speaker 7 (14:31):
Yes, take it away, LAFD.

Speaker 3 (14:35):
Captain Eric Scott.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Okay, Eric Scott's the guy we have on right bellio.
He comes on with us that Eric Scott was he
the guy that was thrown into the ocean in an
suv halfway to Catalina. No, no, no, that was not him.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
Well, our hearts go out to all of those who.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Are here's Eric Scott's the first joke from the firefighters. Well,
our hearts go out to all of those who have
their homes.

Speaker 7 (15:01):
And I'm talking about the producers of Joker too.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Mm I don't get that was a joker too. Was
not successful. The producers had to sell their homes. It
was terrible. Oh is that right? Yeah? Amazing almighty. Never
seen anybody stand up and point at me like that.
Just spend two minutes talking to O Kelly about it.

(15:25):
He'll let you know that. Is that right? Okay? I'll
ask Kelly.

Speaker 7 (15:29):
And I'm talking about the producers of Joker too.

Speaker 8 (15:40):
Kind of early to do the lost your house jokes
in l A. No, No, okay, all right, okay, none
for the producers A joker too apparently.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
Guess not? I guess not, ma'n ouh damn. Best delivery
of the night, all right?

Speaker 7 (16:00):
Next up, Los Angeles Fire Department pilot Jonath Johnson to
play Bob Dylan Timothy Shallomy learn how to sing. In fact,
his singing was so good he almost lost the part hewn.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Is where he asked Steph Fuche to explain the jokes.
What is the joke there? That's pretty good because Bob
Dylan's a terrible singer. Yes you are, man, I tell
you you're like a literally like a Seinfeld writer when
it comes to these jokes.

Speaker 7 (16:33):
And finally, Pasadena Fire Department Captain Jody Slicker, it's.

Speaker 3 (16:39):
Great to be back with Conan.

Speaker 1 (16:41):
Usually when he calls, he's stuck in a tree. Okay, okay,
all right, mild joke. I think a sort of stereotypical
fireman joke. You know, they only come out when the
cat stuck in the tree. It's happened twice.

Speaker 9 (17:06):
Conan is cat like.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
I don't I think Conan actually did get stuck in
a tree once. I think I remember that where he
went he went up to get the cat and he
got stuck. Maybe I'm wrong, but I think that I
think that did actually happen. All right, that's the Oscars
winners and losers when we come back. Who was the
big loser, who was the big winner? And big moments

(17:29):
best moments, ma'am. I don't know. I thought it was
a cool show. I watched. I fast forward a lot.
I was up about three hours behind in the actual broadcast,
and then fast forward to a lot of the makeup
and hair. Sorry, sorry, it's just not where I live.
With the makeup and hair awards and then those speeches,

(17:49):
I can't there's nothing, There's not enough there for me,
and so I've got to press on. Sorry, I know,
just shallow, shallow as hell. I'm totally guilty.

Speaker 6 (17:59):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
The Oscars were last night and Harvey Weinstein's wife was
there with Adrian Brody. That's kind of that was a
story that a lot of people overlooked. And he's only
one of Harvey Weinstein. I believe it's one of I
don't know, maybe seven or eight people that have been
kicked out of the Academy. Here, the Richard Gear was

(18:25):
kicked out. Do you know that Richard Gear? What in
nineteen ninety three? I remember this. Richard Gear was banned
from the Academy Awards for twenty years after he went
off script and denounced the Chinese government on stage.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
Oh yeah remember that, I do know?

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Yeah, yeah, Well, I guess he's back now, but it
was twenty years, twenty years suspension and then Carmine is
it Carl Karatey Karity, he was kicked out, and he
gets kicked out for like a sort of a crazy reason.

Speaker 3 (18:57):
You know.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
They used to give VHS tapes to people if you're
in the academy, to watch all the movies. Yeah, and
then there was a time stamp on it, and if
you got caught selling them or copying them, you're out.
That's what he did in twenty In two thousand and four,
actor Carmine Coardi was the first person to be permanently

(19:18):
banned from the Oscars and he was illegally circulating sixty
VHS tapes to his friends. So, you know, I got
caught up with that. My dad was in the academy
and he got all those VHS award, you know, all
those VHS tapes. And back then, you know, you couldn't

(19:40):
get the movies online, you didn't go to the theater.
They sent you VHS tapes in a nice beautiful box,
hoping to get you to vote for the movie screeners. Yes, yes,
exactly right, Belly it alnods like you you work at
the Academy with your lingo. So the screeners, Yeah, yeah, yeah,
the screeners. And I remember being in my dad's house

(20:01):
and I said, hey, can I can I take the Godfather?
I think it was Godfather two or three? Can I
take that home and look at it? And He's like, yeah,
you know, there's a there's a stamp on that with
my name on it. If it if if you make copies,
I'm gonna get thrown out of the Academy. Do you
mind just watching it here? And I'm like, oh, man,

(20:23):
I knew he knew. Yeah, he sort of did. Huh yeah, yeah,
but so I I if you had if my dad
had the movies, he had to go to his house
and watch them. Man, he protected those like it was
you know, like it was a safe with all of
his valuables in it. Man, he really protected me. He
knew that. Carmine, Yeah right, okay, yeah, I would have

(20:44):
carmined him for sure. I think, yeah, yeah, yeah. I
had the whole tape duplication system set up anyway, I
could have run like forty copies an hour. Yeah. On
the Harvey Weinstein also thrown out. I think every knows
the reason why right banned from the Oscars and expelled
from the Academy over his sexual abuse allegations. You know

(21:07):
who else is thrown out? Bill Cosby? Bill Cosby is
thrown out. And in twenty eighteen, actor and comedian Bill
Cosby was expelled from the Academy and permanently banned from
attending the Oscars when he was convicted of sexual assault
charges later overturned. So I don't know if he's back.

(21:29):
I don't know. I don't know. Polanski was thrown out.
I think people know that story. In twenty eighteen, director
Roman Polanski was expelled. They didn't expel him til twenty
eighteen from the Academy after he was convicted of unlawful
sexual abuse of a minor. They used another term that

(21:49):
I'm not going to use on the air for abuse.
And then Adam Kimmel. I don't know who Adam Kimmel is.
In twenty twenty one, cinematographer and actor Adam Kimmel was
banned from the Oscars due to a history of sex crimes.
Oh boy. And then Will Smith was thrown out for
ten years when he punched out Chris Rock. So seven

(22:12):
people have been banned from the Academy. Some for five years,
ten years, fifteen, twenty years, some lifetime bands. Oh man,
all right, let's find out who the winners were and
losers last night, because they're losers or winners I don't know.
And the Oscar goes too?

Speaker 6 (22:33):
Are they playing us?

Speaker 8 (22:33):
All?

Speaker 3 (22:35):
Well?

Speaker 2 (22:35):
Maybe Anora the Big Winner.

Speaker 1 (22:39):
Did anybody see that? Anybody on the show see a Nora? Man,
I'd like to see that. Right, it's about the hookers
bearing rich, wealthy Russian kids. Isn't every movie about that? Yeah,
it wasn't that every movie that comes. Yeah, right, that's right. Yeah,
it's a dark Cinderella story. That's what it is. It's
exactly what it is.

Speaker 10 (23:00):
Oscar Night twenty twenty five. Some movie greats, honoring an
underdog story on an off screen Anora, Anora winning five
Oscars in all, including Best Picture and serving up the
Big Night's biggest surprise in Best Actress. Mikey Madison after
a strong Awards season for the Substances to.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
Me, Moore, You know that Mikey Madison is a woman.
By the way, she grew up in the San Fernando
Valley or somewhere in the valley, I don't know, but
Local Kids twenty five years old. I think that Mikey
Anderson the oscar.

Speaker 10 (23:34):
Going to Honora's Meteorite of a leading lady. Twenty five
year old, Mikey Madison, how about that?

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Twenty five years old and you've already won an Academy award.
Twenty five years old. I think it's too early. I
think it's too early. I think I had to wait
for good things in life. If you peak at your
career at twenty five, it is only downhill from there. Ry, Mikey,

(24:00):
maybe you'll come back and have you know, eight more
Academy Awards as possible. It's a good actress. But you
don't want to peak too early. You want to peak
in your in your late fifties, early sixties, and when
you really hit your stride, you get the job you want,
you get the you know, whatever is going on in
your life. I think you got to keep working, working, working,
in bang you peak in your fifties or early sixties.

(24:23):
Like for instance, the Las Vegas got a hockey team
in the NHL, and the very first year they went
to the Stanley Cup Finals and won the first game.
Then they got beat four in a row by Washington,
I believe, and then they won the Stanley Cup three
years later, three or four years later, So they had
a total of three or four years of struggle before

(24:44):
they won the Stanley Cup. I had forty five years.
We'll get them again next year. That's why when the
Kings won the Cup in twenty twelve, it was a
big efing deal for me, a huge emotional deal for
me that the Kings won the Stanley Cup. The people
in Vegas, they're not going to experience that. You've got

(25:06):
to go thirty forty or fifty years. That's why in
Chicago with the Cubs, you know, you got to go
thirty forty to fifty sixty years between championships to really
really love it and enjoy it and celebrate it and
have it affect your life because you're a loser for
the other forty or fifty years, a total loser. And

(25:27):
I think she might have peaked too early. Sorry again,
I hope she wins every year, but you gotta be
careful with that. You gotta be careful with peaking too early.
Man got to peak later on in life, like Belly O,
you peaked, I don't know, I would say. With the
Lakers broadcast.

Speaker 9 (25:44):
Yeah, yeah, right, what what what? What?

Speaker 1 (25:47):
What are you getting at? Just say?

Speaker 2 (25:50):
Was everybody like chirping in the background, high is he
gonna say it?

Speaker 9 (25:54):
Is he gonna say it?

Speaker 1 (25:55):
What's gone? This time? I was listening to Petros and
Money program over there, and they said that you were
great at getting people. You worked on the Lakers broadcast
and one of your jobs was to get celebrities to
come up and be interviewed by Matt mney Smith.

Speaker 9 (26:11):
Yes, in the pre and post game show.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Yeah, and they said you were really good at that.

Speaker 9 (26:14):
That's not what they said, though, right.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
That's that's right. Yeah, you're right. What they said was
that you failed.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
Yeah, but that I couldn't get coal hammels on. That's right,
and that Matt is still reeling over that.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
That's right. It's not my fault. The guy said, no,
I know, it's my job. But how many people heard
them say that today? Who are all listening at kfive?
A couple hundred? So I gave you a lifeboat of saying, hey,
they praised you over there.

Speaker 9 (26:44):
Well, I was just keeping it real.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
Is that what we do now?

Speaker 9 (26:46):
We're keeping it real?

Speaker 1 (26:47):
Is that we do over here? Now? Okay, all right,
well then let's keep it failed. I failed, Okay, I didn't.
I didn't do my job, all right? And when then
we landed on the moon, I guess for the first
time over the weekend, I guess that's a big deal.

Speaker 6 (27:02):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KF.
I am six forty.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Hey that Michael Monks, who's a talented report around here.
The guy also makes homemade ice cream. Stephanush, how is
it the homemade ice cream? What flavored you get? Stepfa?
It's delicious. I got coffee and it's good. Huh, it's
so good? Is that right? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (27:23):
Matt got coffee and I got coffee.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
And what Krowzier is any good? You'll you'll be honest.
It is a bold flavored coffee ice cream.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
Is that right?

Speaker 1 (27:33):
Oh yeah, Belleo, do you like it? I do like it.
I could use more coffee flavor.

Speaker 9 (27:39):
My part is not as bold as Crosiers, is that right?

Speaker 1 (27:43):
I just let Bethany though she's in trouble because if
Monk's coming here with homemade ice cream, she's got to
get to step up her game. She bakes. Yeah, all right,
And I told him, I said, he goes, Hey, do
you want to and I said, I'm lactose and tolerant.
I'll have to jump out this window if I have
that ice cream and high tail at home. So I'm
fun to be with, I guess I don't know. Yeah,

(28:04):
I wonder if my if my wife thinks like a man.
My husband's not that fun to be with.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
Oh definitely, I'm sure we think. And we only have
three hours a day.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
That's that's right. That yeah, right, well, okay, all right,
I can reduce that. I mean, if you're if you're complaining,
all right, Oh, tomorrow we've got a Trump speech, right,
you got Trump tomorrow at six pm. He's given some
kind of speech to Congress tomorrow. So six pm tomorrow

(28:38):
Trump wall to wall for you people out there who
hate him. Sorry, but we're playing it all right, that's
what we've been told. Okay, pch the new passes. You
have to have a new pass to get out to
pH Pacific Coast Highway and to uh you know, if

(28:58):
you own a home out there or a condo or work
out there, you have to have the new pass or
else you're going to be shut down.

Speaker 11 (29:04):
You might want to think twice about going on the
water official to urging people to stay out. A lot
of the fire debris has been swept into.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
The ocean, and I saw that a lot of that
fire debris. You know, those homes are right on the ocean,
and we've had high tide and it's come in and
taken a lot of that crap out to the ocean.
I don't know how long that's going to go on,
but it's kind of screwing up all the other beaches
in the Santa Monica Bay area.

Speaker 11 (29:27):
With more rain expected this week, it could get even worse.
As for this new pass, well, it's reserved for residents, businesses,
essential workers, contractors, as.

Speaker 9 (29:37):
Well as school and metro buses.

Speaker 11 (29:39):
This pass, we'll get people access for areas of PCH
that have been restricted after the fire. Those eligible will
be reviewed on a case by case basis. All original
passes previously issued will still be accepted. You can go
to these three different locations to start applying for those passes.

Speaker 1 (29:57):
To here you go three locations to get a new
pass for p passes.

Speaker 11 (30:01):
A disaster Recovery center over at you still, a research
park west off West Peaco Boulevard. Then there's a Malibu
Campus Interpretive Center on Civic Center Way and Malibu City Hall.

Speaker 1 (30:12):
All right, Malibu City Hall. I think that's your best
bet at least know where that is.

Speaker 11 (30:16):
Now. The debris from the fires is impacting local beaches.
You can see the debris floating in the ocean from
these aerials taken just a few days ago.

Speaker 9 (30:24):
This comes after recent ring.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
You know, I don't know how they're going to rebuild
those homes, crusher. You don't work about construction line to
you know, those homes that were right on the ocean
during high tide, that water comes right up to the
property line and it's splashing against the water the breakwall there.

Speaker 10 (30:41):
How do you.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
Rebuild a house when there's water? How do you pour concrete?
How do you get builders out there? How do you
get contractors out there and construction guys when the water
is literally lapping up into the house.

Speaker 4 (30:52):
I don't know what the codes currently are, but I mean,
you know, look, they build bridges and they go down
into the water and into the ground underneath, and it's
just a matter of how deep and how thick you
want to make those footings.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
But I was listening to Adam Corolla. He had a
good point, You're gonna have to build break walls there, uh,
in order because everything's on septic tank, and you can't
have a septic tank come in contact with the ocean,
so you don't have to drill down, pour concrete pours,
you know, put steel in and you might be you know, again,
Corolla said this, and he knows more about construction than

(31:23):
I do, just barely. But you might be three or
four million dollars into construction before you even put up
one wall, you know, with just the foundation and the
and the and the break wall and the new septic tank.
It's gonna be very expensive. I don't know who's gonna
pay for that. I don't know if insurance covers that
or not. But man, oh man, there is a lot
of work to be done out there, a lot.

Speaker 11 (31:43):
This comes after recent rain as toxins from the burnt
homes along the coastline.

Speaker 9 (31:48):
Run off into the ocean.

Speaker 11 (31:49):
The nonprofit Hill the Bay is raising concerns over the
safety of water quality. It's warning that untreated sewage, trash
and other contaminants is creating potential the risks to beachgoers.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
Yeah, Heal the Bay is a good organization. They've been
around a long time, and you get a sense that
they're frustrated because they've been around a long time and
the bay it's not any healthier than it was when
they started.

Speaker 11 (32:13):
While local health agencies say some beaches might be saved
based on utine sampling, heal the Bay is arguing more
extensive testing is required to fully understand the impact of
the storm.

Speaker 1 (32:25):
You know, when I was a kid and we had rains,
those beaches were never closed. Now, I don't know whether
they just didn't close them because they didn't know there
was feces in the water, or we had a better system.
I don't know, but when it rained when I was
a kid, the beach is never closed ever. Ever. Now
they're closed all the time, a couple days before the rain,
during the rain, a week after the rain. And they

(32:46):
tell you not that you know, one hundred yards from
station six to one hundred yards from station nine. I
don't know how they do that with it's not exact science.
I don't know. My rule of thumb in Santa Monica
from Torrents up until Zuma, from Zooma to Torrents, don't
go in the water. Don't go in the water. You'll

(33:06):
be healthier if you don't go in the water if we.

Speaker 10 (33:09):
Were not to Santa Monica pures the tennis pure further zonn.

Speaker 1 (33:12):
I wonder how many people who live in Malibu swim
in the Pacific Ocean. I bet it's two percent. I
bet two percent of the people who live in Malibu,
the Malibu Colony, live on the coast actually dive into
the ocean and go swimming in the ocean. I bet
it's less than two percent, much less than two percent.
I bet zero zero. Nobody's ever been in the ocean period.

(33:36):
But that's that's a big deal. The pollution in this
ocean is going to last for a long long time.
And then we've got rain coming up. I don't know
if you guys know this, you know because you're not
the weather freaks like I am. But we got rain
coming up Wednesday and Thursday. Seventy percent chance on Wednesday,
sixty percent chance on Thursday, and then Monday and Tuesday,
Wednesday of next week, exactly a week from today, Monday,

(33:57):
Tuesday and Wednesday, rain, rain, rain. We have five days
of rain coming in the next ten days, five days
of rain, and the high in the San Fernando Valley
is all going to reach fifty four degrees on Thursday.
It's that's cold. Fifty four degrees in the San Fernando
Valley on Thursday. Five days of rain coming up in
the next ten days, more pollution in the ocean. It sucks,

(34:20):
all right, Well, there's a fun hour. We're live 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 iHeart Radio app.

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