Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KMF.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am sixty and you're listening to The Conway Show
on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
Conway Show Man, oh Man, I was.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Watching these eagles during the commercial break there, and they're
fighting over food. The two baby eagles, the eaglitz are fighting.
So if if you go check it out online at
about let's see at the four fifty five mark, you
could see the two eagles fighting like hell to get
(00:33):
some of that fish.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
Man.
Speaker 5 (00:34):
I saw one a couple of days ago, was watching it,
and I guess the shadow was putting like like she
just said, was putting sticks all into Jackie's like around
her feathers as she was sitting on the nest. I
can grab these long, like six inch foot long sticks
and just shove them into her like her feathers and stuff.
(00:55):
And she had mentioned that he'll do that to get
her to move off the nest so he can lay
on the eggs.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
And you can hear him saying, I'm going to hit
you with this stick. You don't get out of here,
I'm gonna hit you at this stand.
Speaker 5 (01:05):
She said. He has a higher pitch than she does. Yeah,
what are you doing? And that tree's moving The wind's
really howling up there. Yeah, and that tree's going back.
Speaker 6 (01:13):
How the little birdies can make it? Man, the little
eaglet's right now.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
They're one hundred and forty feet above the surface there,
and they're already at six thousand or seven thousand feet
so many they're way up there. This is what sounds like.
There's two eaglets fighting each other. One of them has
a lot of fish blood in his hair and the
(01:36):
other one's eating a lot. The other one's getting blood
in his hair. They're fighting like hell over that fish.
Speaker 6 (01:43):
I'll they get the camera up there.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
I know it's fuck climbed the tree to get up there,
but it's it's wild to watch. I mean, they've gotten
bigger just in two days.
Speaker 6 (01:54):
Yeah, yeah, Yeah, you don't see any skin anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
Yeah. And the third one pipping, third egg is cracking.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
This is that wind. It's owling. It's gotta be thirty
forty mile an hour winds up there.
Speaker 3 (02:07):
I hope he doesn't blow these kids out of that nest.
Listen to that wind. Oh my god, all.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
The trees moving, it's swaying back and forth, and this
other little legg is just pipping. Man, all right, We'll
keep an eye on the cool eagles up there. You
can go see them online and just go to YouTube
and type in big bear eagles. It comes up immediately
one of the first things that comes up there. All right,
(02:37):
that's cool. Down here on Earth. We have another crazy
person on a flight. Women took off all her clothes
and decided to start yelling at the crew members before
they took off, which prompted the plane to turn around
and go back to the gate and have her ass
thrown off the flight.
Speaker 3 (02:57):
But she was not arrested. They didn't charge her at all.
Speaker 7 (03:00):
He was so shocking.
Speaker 8 (03:01):
Passengers on this Southwest flight couldn't believe what they were seeing.
Speaker 7 (03:05):
This is getting crazy, Like this is something that you
see out.
Speaker 9 (03:08):
Of a movie.
Speaker 8 (03:09):
A woman on the plane stripping completely naked. Wait, wait,
walking up and down the aisle.
Speaker 3 (03:16):
Was it a pack?
Speaker 9 (03:16):
Flight packed?
Speaker 8 (03:18):
We spoke with one of those passengers who asked to
remain anonymous.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
How about you know you're you're in Chicago and you're like, okay,
days over, I just want to get to Boston, you know,
open up a magazine maybe what that?
Speaker 3 (03:31):
What the christ? How what's going on here with these people?
Speaker 8 (03:34):
She said they had just boarded the plane in Houston
and were about to leave for Phoenix.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
Okay, Houston to Phoenix probably an hour, maybe an hour
and a half, and she couldn't hold it together.
Speaker 3 (03:48):
Probably an hour flight. Come on, come on, sweetie, let's roll.
Speaker 8 (03:52):
When the woman, while fully dressed, walked to the front
of the plane and started yelling.
Speaker 7 (03:56):
I do remember her saying that she wanted to get off.
Speaker 8 (03:59):
The flights also said she heard the woman yell that
she was bipolar.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
Oh, okay, that makes sense.
Speaker 9 (04:05):
Then when the plane started taxing to the runway.
Speaker 7 (04:07):
She started like jumping up and down, screaming at the
top of her lungs.
Speaker 9 (04:16):
The woman took off all of her clothes.
Speaker 3 (04:19):
Wow, well, Lisa's a show there, what the hell?
Speaker 10 (04:21):
You know?
Speaker 2 (04:22):
Usually they do it without with clothes on, and that's
not as interesting, and.
Speaker 9 (04:25):
Continue to yell.
Speaker 7 (04:26):
Well, it was very evident that she was having a
mental breakdown.
Speaker 8 (04:29):
At one point, another passenger said, the woman grabbed up and.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
The old days crouched when you had a mental breakdown.
Nobody knew it. We just had it home or maybe
at an airport or something, and nobody had any video cameras,
so nobody would know. Now, you have a mental breakdown.
Hundreds of millions of people are going to see you
at your worst moment, hundreds of millions.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
What is that angel you run that floe?
Speaker 10 (04:52):
Well, no, but I think I know somebody who might
have been. But I have a legitimate question about this
woman who you have the breakdown on the flight? Do
you think that she gave the flight crew a box
of candy.
Speaker 3 (05:06):
Box of seas.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
That's possible, right, and they weren't thankful enough, and she
went nuts, took off all her clothes, that's possible, possible,
and continue to yell.
Speaker 7 (05:18):
Well, it was very evident that she was having a
mental breakdown.
Speaker 8 (05:21):
At one point, another passenger said the woman grabbed a
flight attendant. Everyone on the plane trying to remain calm.
Speaker 7 (05:28):
I just kind of kept to myself. I didn't want
to serve any problems, and I was just hoping that
the plane wouldn't take off, which it didn't, thank God.
Speaker 8 (05:34):
The plane returned back to the gate, where another worker
came in and covered the woman with a blanket before
she took off.
Speaker 9 (05:41):
The lady just.
Speaker 7 (05:42):
Runs out of the airplane, and who knows where she went.
Speaker 8 (05:46):
Houston Police said she was taken to a hospital for
medical evaluation.
Speaker 9 (05:49):
At this time, she isn't facing any charges.
Speaker 3 (05:52):
Wow, how about that? No charges with this woman.
Speaker 7 (05:55):
I've never experienced anything like that.
Speaker 3 (05:57):
Yeah, No, none of us have alone there. You know
that shouldn't be a shock that you've never experienced that.
Speaker 7 (06:04):
I've never experienced anything like that.
Speaker 8 (06:07):
We've covered several unruly passenger incidents happening on Phoenix flights.
According to the FAA, twenty twenty one had the highest
number of incidents in recent years, with nearly six thousand reported.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
Yeah, that was the lockdown year twenty twenty one.
Speaker 8 (06:22):
Well, that number has dropped significantly since then. It's still
hired them. What was reported before the COVID nineteen pandemic
just in complete shock on what happened.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
You can you believe that that the pandemic is almost
five years old? You know, it started in early twenty twenty.
It's almost five years since the beginning of that pandemic.
It seems like yesterday and I was talking to Matt
in the IT department, and we were recalling because we
both have very distinct memories of being able to go
out to dinner for the first time. He went to Applebee's.
(06:54):
I went to Denny's and you know, remember the every
third table was filled and then you'd have two tables.
Speaker 3 (07:01):
It was taped off. It was a weird situation I had.
Speaker 5 (07:04):
I went to a performance of by Buddy Guy, legendary
blues guitarist in Montclair, and it was the night before
they shut everything down.
Speaker 6 (07:15):
Oh wow, And we were inside this place and he
was just like, well, no pandemic, parandemic. You start playing
some music. Then they shut everything down the next day.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
I remember, do you remember when they had basketball games
and they at halftime they're like, everybody, please leave the arena.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
The game has been suspended. And you're like, oh no,
what's going on?
Speaker 6 (07:36):
Old your breath as you leave the arena.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
Yeah, And then you got home and you sort of
went to the store to pick up supplies. You didn't
know what you were gonna get, and you sort of
bought crap you don't need any way, just to get
stuff in the house. And every street was empty, every
street there was nobody out, and we were all blaming
each other and panicking.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
It was crazy. It was crazy. All right, weckon back.
We have one of our favorite guests.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
Coming on, Dean Sharp the house whisper will chit chat
with him.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Yeah, he's always great. This guy.
Speaker 11 (08:06):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on Demyan from kf
I AM sixty.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Dean Sharp is on this station every Saturday from six
to eight am. On Sunday, nine am until noon, the
house whisper and he joins us, you, Bob.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
I was thinking about doing this bit with my shirt off,
but hey, look maybe not.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Why not? You know, the weather's perfect for it. Enjoy yourself.
Speaker 6 (08:33):
Who's stopping you?
Speaker 2 (08:34):
Hey, I don't Dean, I don't know if you saw
this story. I'm gonna play a little bit for you
here and then I'm gonna get your reaction to it.
But it looks like they're bringing shop class back in
a big way in high school.
Speaker 11 (08:47):
Yeah, even if you are going to college, you benefit
from going to shop, you know, so you can do
stuff around the house.
Speaker 3 (08:53):
Oh my god, soldering gun. No one knows how to
do anything.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
We need people that know how to do so.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
They're bringing back shop class.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
I can't tell you how much I learned in Portola
Junior High in mister Peyton's electric shop, and then mister Vineyard,
who is a pe teacher, but he also taught would
in wood shop as well. I think I still have
those skills from Junior High.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
I got you.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
I'm right there with you. Woodrow Wilson Junior High School,
a multiple shop class.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
I always I always remember mister Peyton, the electric teacher.
He must have gotten zapped a lot. He had the
biggest fingers I've ever seen in my life.
Speaker 3 (09:30):
No doubt.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
I'll tell you what though. You know, I'm thrilled if
that's the case.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
I am. I am pleased as punch, and it's not.
Speaker 1 (09:41):
It's actually goes way beyond just oh well, maybe you'll
be able to turn that doorknob. Now you know, there
was a study done. I don't have time to pull
it up right now, but there was a study done
just maybe three or four years ago the National Health
Service in Great Britain having studied adult mental dexterity with
(10:07):
their fingers, and it was something that came out of
med schools in Great Britain, and the idea was this,
never before had they had such a well informed, uh
you know, uh student body as far as the facts
and what everybody was failing were surgical procedures. Surgical procedures
(10:28):
they literally no longer had the general dexterity of generations
past of literally just you know, brain, two fingertips working
things out, and so if for no other reason, shop
class brings you to that point and and you know,
reconnects you with your hands.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Well, I've always said this, and I and people thought
I was kidding, but I'm actually serious. I think we've
reached a pinnacle. And I think that our great great
great grandchildren will have a couple of friends. Not everybody,
but we'll have a couple of friends who are still
on all fours.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
Probably you know, talking run it's probably the case. It's probably.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
And guess what, they'll have better and less back pain
than us. That's true, that's true'll enjoy themselves for sure.
But I learned a lot in electric Shop. I learned
what to touch, what not to touch. I learned how
to you know, to bring your electric sensor up to
a wire to see if it's hot. That saved me
a couple of times. And even just a little things
(11:29):
around your house changing out a lamp or a socket
can save you a ton of money. And there's a
lot of pride that comes along with doing something like that.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
There is there is now I know she's not listening,
but my my daughter in law just about fifteen minutes ago,
she said, oh, do you have a couple of double
A batteries And she was lighting up this little wire
led lightset and I said, sure, here you go, here
a couple of double as. And then she turned around
to me and said, oh, to open up this container.
It I need ah, I said, a screwdriver. Oh yeah,
(12:04):
that and one of those there was a screw It
was like it might as well been a gigantic hurdle
in the middle of the road.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
I would listen to Corolla a couple of years ago
when we actually quite a few years ago, when his
kids were, you know, babies, and they got nice Christmas
gifts or Birthday gifts, and he was yelling at his
sister in law or somebody else in the family family
that they didn't have a Phillips micro screwdriver.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
He couldn't believe it. He goes, you got kids and
you don't have a Phillips micro screwdriver.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
You gotta have one. It's true. That's exactly what I
reached for. That's what she was looking for, that's what
she needed. That's so great.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
Hey, I know a lot of people are you know,
thinking of selling their homes this time of year, you know,
when you get into spring and getting into summer. Is
there a rule of thumb when it comes to painting
the inside of your house before you sell it? Do
you all do you do it all in one color?
And is it always that sort of tan color?
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Uh? You don't have to do it all in one color.
You can have some bold feature walls, but it is
a huge mistake to keep that all purple room that
you did for your daughter, you know, a couple of
years back. And no, it doesn't have to be that
tan color. Actually, statistically speaking, the best thing you can
do is to paint it, you know, just a slightly
(13:28):
warm white, just a slightly warm white. You want those
rooms as bright as possible and uh, you know, bouncing
as much light around as possible, because that's what makes
the place feel as roomy as possible. And this is
like a cardinal rule of staging a home.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Staging a home is a really and there's a fine
art form to it. What you want to do is
you want to inspire their stories, see them living in
your home. So you don't necessarily want to like empty
out the furniture or anything like that, and you keep
the furniture. Let them see, Oh this is the way
furniture could fit in this room. A blank room actually
(14:07):
way worse than having furniture in the room. But what
you do want to do if you're staging your home
to sell is purge it of all of your direct
family personal stuff. Because the minute I'm walking down the
hallway and I see you and your daughter in a photo,
I'm like, oh, this isn't my house, this isn't my house,
And you want to pop that bubble for me, you know,
allow me to imagine my life in that place.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
This will be a test again, Dean Sharp as well us.
This will be a test on how far you go back,
because it certainly was for me. I go back to
a gallon of paint used to be about nineteen dollars.
Speaker 3 (14:44):
How far do you go back?
Speaker 1 (14:46):
That's about right, I'd say, you know, I'd say, a
good a good gallon of paint. I mean you could
you could pick one up for fifteen sixteen bucks, but yeah,
a decent gallon of pain. You'd be like, whoa you
spend twenty dollars Right now?
Speaker 3 (15:01):
You can't get out of there. Under fifty bucks. No,
not for the good stuff. Not for the good stuff.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
And good paint is really worth it. I made you
know that discovery the last time I painted my daughter's
room really good paint. I got it at Catalina. Yeah,
Catalina Paint. Yeah, really worth more dealer. That's right, Benjamin Moore.
That's exactly what it was worth, every single dime of
that paint.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
That is the stuff that I have been using, Benjamin Moore,
on every level of home, like starting with the state homes.
But I use it for everybody who will allow me
to for what like going on forty years now.
Speaker 12 (15:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
And the guys who work at the Catalina stores, they're
not just employees there. Most of them are either painters
or have a great knowledge of paint too.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
Absolutely, I always tell people, Hey, if you if you're
buying paint, you want actual advice, go to a paint store.
Not the paint department right where you know last week
they that guy was working in garden Center. But go
to a paint store. They know what they are talking about.
They're gonna they're they're gonna get you set up.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
And I read this stat recently that California and more specifically,
Los Angeles leads the nation in curb appeal, whether they're
going to come in and see your house or not.
Most of the nation it's fifty to sixty maybe seventy percent.
If they drive by and they see it and they
don't like it, they move on. But in Los Angeles
it's ninety five percent.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
We got a lot of homes. We got a lot
of homes out there, and so you know, people, people
aren't going to waste time pushing in on something where
they're already, you know, not feeling right about it.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
All right, well we'll come back.
Speaker 2 (16:38):
I want to I know you've told this this in
the past, but people are who are new to the show.
I want you to tell them what you can purchase.
And I think you know what I'm talking about for
the outside of your house that's really big, that will
double its value after you put it in. I love that.
I really thought that is okay. I love that rule
of thumb. You'll you'll know when I come back. I
(16:59):
love the rule of thumb.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
Though. All right, we're live. It's Conway Show. We have
Dean Sharp with us.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
He's on every Saturday and every Sunday right here on
KFI Saturday from six to eight am, Sunday from nine
am to new noon, and we'll come back. I'll tell
you what you can do to the front of your
house that will double the value that you spend. Whatever
you spend, it is going to double the value. And
I got this rule thumb from Dean Sharp.
Speaker 11 (17:22):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty Dean Sharp.
Speaker 3 (17:29):
The house Whisper is with us. Dean.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
I love your rule of thumb when it comes to
doing something in front of your house that will double
the price or double the value of whatever you spend.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
Do you know what I'm talking about? Yeah, I know
what you're talking about. You know, I know.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
It's a tree. Yeah, big tree, Big trees, I mean
big trees. People are shocked about that. They're like, you
know what trees? Big trees can get expensive, you know,
And the truth is, yeah, I know, I know. I
plan them all the time. We've got clients who want
a full size, mature tree overnight, so we go out
and buy. If we're not talking about trees that come
(18:05):
in the twenty gallon or the fifty gallon or even
the thirty six inch box. I'm talking about trees we
have to crane in in the six foot wide by
six foot wide box or bigger.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
I'm not suggesting everybody do that for their lawn, but
I'll just tell you this. What Tim is saying is
absolutely true. The Arbor Society, the National Association of Real Aturs,
the National Landscaping Association, everybody's got this statistic. It holds
true across every study, and that is, you pop a
big old feature tree in your front yard and you will,
(18:40):
on average increase the value of your home by anywhere
from about five to fifteen percent. Now think about that. Wow,
you got to Let's say you got a five hundred
thousand dollars house. That's how much your home is worth.
Five hundred thousand dollars. And you go out and you
go crazy and you you buy a fifteen thousand dollars tree,
(19:04):
But which, by the way, for fifteen thousand dollars, I
can get you a tree that is twenty five feet tall,
has a twenty foot mature can it be going on
in it? And we just boom pop it into the yard.
The next day your property has increased. Let's be moderate
and just go halfway by let's seven seven and a
half percent, and that is thirty seven five hundred dollars.
(19:26):
That's so a fifteen thousand dollars tree increases your home's
value the very day it's planted by you know, thirty
seven grand. So yeah, you double your money on a
big tree.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
And Krozier and I both have had a lot of
success with Moon Valley. I don't know if you've used
them before, Oh, Moon Valley.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
I almost exclusively use Moon Valley when it comes to
mature feature tree. That so they're pretty much the only
place in town where you can go and buy what
I was just talking about, which is like, you know,
I've got a species of tree I'm looking for, and
I show my client, Hey, you can have the ten
foot version, you can have the fifteen foot version, and
have the thirty five foot version, So which one do
(20:05):
you want to go with? And they're the only place
in town where you can make those kinds of offers and.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
Go into any Moon Valley.
Speaker 5 (20:11):
Man, it's like it's it's a man's dream just to
drive through that place. And it's so big they usually
have to take you on like a golf cart around.
Speaker 3 (20:18):
The place exactly. And the one.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
And the nice thing about using them is they guarantee
it too, so if the tree dies or anything happens
to the tree, they'll come out and replace it for you.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
If you let them plant it. Yeah, they will guarantee
it for an entire season, which is all it takes
to prove whether it got planted right.
Speaker 5 (20:37):
I had an avocado tree a year ago that was
planted and by October because of the weather, and it
just wasn't It didn't. It didn't take. They came out
and replaced it with another avocado tree and it's looking
good now.
Speaker 6 (20:48):
Since.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Yeah, these guys are they're all about. Don't go to
Moon Valley looking for posies, Okay, Moon Valley is all
about trees. They're about trees. They're about the big stuff.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
And I think this is the everybody's series of visits
to Moon Valley. You go there, you look at the trees,
you look at the price tag, and you go, what
the f And you leave, and then you come back
and you're like, Wow, I really like that tree, but man,
it's still expensive. Then you come back and you say, Okay,
I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna buy the tree. And
it's the best decision you've made.
Speaker 3 (21:18):
Yeah, yeah, that's usually the case. That is very much
usually the case.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
The Moon Valley that we go to most of the
time because I'm out here in eastern Venture County are
the massive Southern California grow lots out in Fillmore Off
which there's like nine multi acre zones out there. It's
all Moon Valley and it's great.
Speaker 5 (21:39):
Yeah, the one I go to, the one I go
to all the time in Laverne. It's like, it's like
what you say, because they're not under where a lot
of these nurseries are under power lines, they don't have
that restriction, so it's exactly like you say, they can
grow the trees almost as tall as they want there.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Yeah, exactly. Is there a specific tree that's better than others?
Speaker 1 (21:58):
No, No, there is. I mean, it's a matter of taste.
It's a matter of the vibe that you're looking for,
and that's what I always start with. We always start
with the look that we're going for, and then there
are better trees for better regions and better zones for sure,
for sure. So for instance, you know, I never encourage
anybody to get a birch tree in Southern California because
(22:20):
birch trees. Now there are houses that have them and
they're doing just fine, but they take a lot of water,
and there are diseases that we've got out here that
can just like take them out, take them out in
a day. And it's a big investment to lose a tree.
And that's just because birch trees don't belong here, right,
They're an East Coast tree and they just don't thrive here.
(22:43):
So there are trees that thrive amazingly well. And there
are trees that if you're looking to save money and
you want to get a smaller version, there are trees
that are native to southern California that grow very fast,
like ash shamel ash trees three feet a year.
Speaker 3 (22:59):
Oh wait right down, what is it? Shamel ash?
Speaker 1 (23:01):
Shamel ash three feet per year. And this is a
tree that doesn't lose its leaves, you know, during the
fall and winter. It just drops gentle leaves throughout the year,
so it stays green all year round. If you're looking
for a tree that gives you that autumn effect, Sycamore
trees sycamore trees or any derivation of sycamore, also native
(23:22):
to southern California, grows in just about any kind of soil, clay,
sandy soil, loamy soil. Another tree that grows at about
three feet in height a year. I mean, they just
go and go. I've got four of them in my
yard that I bought that. I was looking at them,
staring at the top of them at eye level, just
(23:43):
what four or five years ago.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
They're towering. They're towering over me now in my yard.
And what are those? Would you plant sycamore? Sycamore is okay?
Speaker 2 (23:52):
I look running the risk of this sounded like a
infomercial for Moon Valley. They have a thing there called
moon juice that I put on my plants, and I've
grown about four years ago. I put in fiicus that
were at eye level, like you say, and now they're
all at least twenty to twenty three feet twenty four
feet high, all of them.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
Yeah, moon just is great. Comes from the moon.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Actually, I don't know what's in that stuff, but man,
it works, it works.
Speaker 3 (24:20):
I tell it to everybody, Buddy.
Speaker 2 (24:22):
I'll be listening on Saturday, six day, six to eight
am and Sunday nine am to noon. We always appreciate
you coming on. Love it, love it, Thank you, all right,
Dean Sharp the House Whisper Man.
Speaker 3 (24:34):
Yeah, I like that show.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
I tune that in when I'm ever going to any
place early on a Saturday or Sunday, and I like.
Speaker 3 (24:41):
The vibe of that program. I enjoyed.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
Tomorrow, Alex Michaelson's coming on and he has he's in
this controversy somehow with Gavin Newsom is an exclusive. How
did Gavin Newsom's interview would Charlie Kirk happen? Kirk says
that Newsom's wife connected the two of them, and Kirk
also tells Alex Michaelson he was surprised that Newsom was
(25:08):
so quickly agreed that it's unfair for those born male
to complete to compete in female sports. So he's gonna
come on tomorrow at five oh five and that's going
to be an interesting segment. So if you got to
do anything between now and five oh five, set your
watch for your alarm clock.
Speaker 3 (25:28):
Be back here five oh five tomorrow. It'll be fine.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
It'll be a Friday. Keep it light with the hell
and don't forget the big show. The sport Fishing. Sport
Fishing Show is this weekend sport fishing show in Orange
County at the Orange County Fairgrounds this weekend. So buzz
on down there. If you like fishing, you're gonna enjoy it.
Speaker 11 (25:48):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
We have a brand new Hollywood Walk of Fame celebrity
that got their star. That's a big deal for these celebrities.
They like those stars on the Walk.
Speaker 13 (26:05):
Of fed Christina le.
Speaker 14 (26:10):
Actress Christina Ricci getting a star on the Hollywood Walk
of Fame today.
Speaker 15 (26:14):
From the moment I stepped on a film set, I
knew I was home.
Speaker 14 (26:17):
Her fellow Yellow Jackets cast Mets seen in the crowd,
with praise from Patty Jenkins, who directed the two thousand
and three film Monster, which Ricci starred in.
Speaker 15 (26:26):
You hold such a special place in my heart, and
I mean, what was shocking to me was I can't
believe that you don't already have forty stars.
Speaker 14 (26:35):
Ricchie is known for her roles in Casper, Hi Wednesday
and the Adams Family called the Adams Family.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
That's cool.
Speaker 15 (26:43):
I'm going to electra kid him, but we're late for
the charity Yaks.
Speaker 14 (26:47):
She began her acting career at the age of seven,
when a local theater critic noticed her standout performance in
the school Christmas play.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
Does she related to Christine Ricci? Christina Ricci, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (26:58):
Maybe, I don't know. Possible.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
We've got some good news if you live in Pasadena, Pasadena,
some great news. Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford. He saw that
there was a need for new equipment, new uniforms, and
this guy stepped up, next.
Speaker 3 (27:16):
Thing, You guys are suiting a booted next year, we
got to all the uniforms.
Speaker 16 (27:25):
Yeah, you saw that, reacting as if him walking in
wasn't great enough. It was cheers of joy from the
players who lost all their uniforms and equipment in the fire.
Stafford and his wife Kelly donated the items. The Bulldogs
went from winning their first championship in ninety one years
to the devastation of the wildfire.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Brand new uniforms for Pasadena the high school players.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
That is fantastic, all right.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
The grape Vine. I know we didn't talk a lot
about weather today. We know it's raining outside the valley
right now. It's supposed to be tapering off tonight and
then Tomorrowaturday, Saturday and Sunday should beautiful in southern California.
But it looks like light rain in the San Fernando Valley.
And then Friday, Saturday and Sunday sixty two, sixty six
(28:11):
and seventy the San Fernando Valley sunny all day Friday,
Saturday and Sunday. Beautiful weekend coming up, but then rain Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday of next week. Monday through Thursday precipitation. It'll
all start around one o'clock on Monday, go out throughout
(28:34):
the evening, a little bit of a break on Tuesday.
Not much rain on Tuesday, and then the big heavy
rain will be Wednesday, starting about six pm for most
of southern California into Thursday and Thursday. Wednesday to Thursday
about an inch maybe an inch and a half of rain.
So let's check out the grapevine. If you're a trucker,
(28:55):
maybe you live in northern California. You're going to visit
family in Redding or Sacramento, maybe San Francisco. You're driving
up to Oregon or Washington. What are the weather conditions
ahead of you?
Speaker 15 (29:09):
Yes, conditions looking good out here right now. You'll notice
the road smooth behind me, But officials tellus with gah
to me, the big concern as we head to this afternoon,
of course is the rain and the.
Speaker 9 (29:19):
Snow, but also the ice.
Speaker 15 (29:20):
With the cold temperatures we've seen, if these roads ice over,
that is definitely going to make for a dangerous drive, a.
Speaker 9 (29:29):
Slick and slow commute.
Speaker 15 (29:30):
This morning for motorists on the Grapevine you can see
vehicles navigating the snowy conditions on the highway and with
more moisture on the way. Seachp is on alert this afternoon.
Speaker 4 (29:41):
There is more rain coming in as we all know,
with the possibility of snow, so as you're traveling through
the Grapevine, the roads are going to more likely stay
wet all day long. That's right, so slow down.
Speaker 15 (29:52):
This is video of Interstate five this morning. On both
the north and southbound I five, motorists saw slick roads
and flurries. But do you even ask the flurry subsided?
The possibility of road closures still remain.
Speaker 4 (30:06):
It's not necessarily the snow that we shut the great
write down or we do escorts. It's because of the
ice making it unsafe for the mortaring covert.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
Yeah, the ice is a big deal, so be prepared
to slow down. Might be some you know, some closures,
so be prepared. Has some food in the car, maybe
some water, and maybe a little bit of toilet paper,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
Yeah, nature calls.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
You're stuck in the car there, you get out and
the grape vine is it gets a little gift.
Speaker 3 (30:36):
That's happened before. Not to me, but I've seen that
happen before.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
All Right, the Palisades, they a lot of people are
not into this, but it looks like it might be
moving forward. There's a gas station out there that burned down,
and now they're going to turn that into a huge
apartment building.
Speaker 13 (30:51):
Justin Kohenov has big plans for the shell gas station
as family owns in Pacific Palisades on the corner of
Via Dela Pause and Sunset, which was just in the fire.
What could be the town's tallest apartment building wo eighty
to one hundred apartments for rent, two to three bedroom units.
Speaker 12 (31:08):
People need a place to live, and some people might
not be able to afford a home, but they can
afford to rent an apartment.
Speaker 9 (31:18):
So we think that that's the best use for it.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Okay, maybe mixed the motions over that you live in
the Palisades, not thrilled with having a ten story building
right where there used to be a gas station. And
if there's eighty to one hundred units on the lot
of a gas station, it's got to be at least
ten stories, maybe twelve, maybe fifteen.
Speaker 12 (31:36):
We don't want to change the community, and we don't
want to build something that looks out of place. We
want to build something that looks like it belongs here.
Speaker 13 (31:44):
Koonov grew up in the Palisades, went to Pally High,
and like so many says, he wants to see the
town return to the close knit community it was before
the fire. Over seven hundred rent stabilized units burned, and
ten percent of Konov's new building would need to be
affordable housing. But adding to the population of the Palisades
(32:04):
concerns Councilwoman Tracy Park. After the chaotic evacuation we saw
on January seventh, it took some people hours to get
out of town.
Speaker 9 (32:13):
Gridlock was so bad on sunset.
Speaker 13 (32:15):
That cars had to be bulldozed to make way for
first responders.
Speaker 17 (32:19):
I have major concerns about adding new density into a
community where we have done that for decades without the
concurrent investment and adequate infrastructure.
Speaker 3 (32:33):
To support into what.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
Infrastructure, Yes, big pronunciation of infrastructure.
Speaker 17 (32:41):
Infrastructure port those growth spurts, we saw devastating consequences.
Speaker 9 (32:47):
Throughout the Palisades.
Speaker 13 (32:49):
There are signs that say the town is not for sale,
and cohenof agrees, but believes his proposal won't change the Palisades,
but rather expedite it's comebackhof family says they hope one
day to turn this gas station into apartments, and the
fire has expedited their timeline, but also giving them the
opportunity to bring housing to a city that needs it. Overall,
(33:13):
residents want to build back safer and smarter without the
town becoming unfamiliar.
Speaker 9 (33:18):
We definitely need some lower income units. You know, there
are a lot of people lived here for a very long time.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
They were on rent control and they were only paying
fifteen hundred or two thousand dollars a month in Pacific.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
It's going to be a battle over that because right
now they don't.
Speaker 17 (33:32):
Have the infrastructure.
Speaker 2 (33:34):
Infrastructure, infrastructure.
Speaker 3 (33:37):
Yeah, so there's gonna be a battle over that.
Speaker 2 (33:40):
We'll see, we'll see what happens all right, Tomorrow, We've
got a big show. We've got Alex Michaelson coming on.
The big controversy right now is Governor Newsom is doing
a podcast and he's reaching out to everybody, not people
just on the left or in the Democratic Party, but
people on the right. And Charlie Kirk was one of
(34:01):
the guests that he had on and they were talking
about biological men playing in women's sports, and that got
off the rails a little bit for Governor Newsom. And
Alex Michaelson is all over that he knows exactly how
it happened, how the interview came about, and he'll be
on with us tomorrow at five five to chat about that.
(34:23):
But right now, Moe Kelly and his whole crew 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 iHeart
Radio app.