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October 11, 2024 32 mins
Neil Saavedra fills in for Bill who is out on vacation. Milton Update / Trix are for kids, but breast milk is for adults! / $5000,000,000 for housing GONE / Lt.Dan, who stayed in his 20ft sailboat during Hurricane Milton.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to KFI.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I Am six forty the Bill Handles show on demand
on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
Hey everybody, Neil Savandra in four Bill Handle this morning.
Wayne will return on Monday as Bill is on vacation.
Happy to be here with you on a foody Friday.
That seems fitting, doesn't it. I will be with you
tomorrow as I am every Saturday with the Four Reports
starting at two to two five Tomorrow. We're out at

(00:30):
the Oh gosh, we're gonna be at the Manhattan Beach Food.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
And Wine Festival.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
That's pretty awesome, right, All kinds of amazing chefs out there,
great packages to go enjoy yourself. If there are tickets left,
you can check out at m bfoodan Wine dot com
MB Food and Wine dot com for the Manhattan Beach
Food and Wine Festival. A lot of really cool things

(00:59):
going out there, all right. Floridians are, of course picking
up the pieces after Milton made landfall. Dangerous category three
hurricane cut through the state as a Category one storm
before moving offshore. Keep in mind, we still have folks
in Georgia in parts of Georgia with power outages. Was

(01:19):
hearing from some of them. Yesterday on our talkback features,
saying that they are still battling with power outages. Nothing
is being done in their eyes at some points there.
Why is this important? Well, a couple things. They're fellow
Americans that are sitting there dealing with all of this
crazy weather. But also if people are looking to move

(01:42):
out of Florida or get away, they're most likely going
to be hitting into Georgia.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
And you know, Georgia is still.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
Having its own issues as well dealing with all that. So,
deaths from Helene nationwide have reached at least two hundred
and twenty seven people, according to reports from CNN and
the Associated Press. That makes Helene the second deadliest hurricane
in the US this century. In North Carolina, officials say

(02:11):
one hundred and twenty people are confirmed dead.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
Thus far.

Speaker 3 (02:17):
Sad thing about these numbers are always expected to rise
as we get more information. All right, As you remember,
COVID nineteen wreaked havoc, but not as much havoc as
horrible it was that people died, not as much havoc
as the decisions that are made. You know, I was
once told that life is ten percent what happens to

(02:41):
you in ninety percent how much you react to it
or how you react to it, and so we get
this pandemic, horrible thing with COVID nineteen. Our reactions are
to it government wide, individually, getting the vaccine, not getting
the vaccine, whatever it may be. Those are the things
that we're going to be dealing with after when this

(03:03):
becomes a yearly endemic type situation. So one of those
things was California students. I was lucky. On a personal note,
I was lucky. My boy is seven going on eight,
and so it didn't affect him in the same way.
He was still young and out of school, and when
he did go into preschool, it was an outdoor school,

(03:27):
so it didn't affect him same way, although he did
have to wear masks and things like that. But if
you had a kid that was in school and had
to do with the garbage learning that goes with trying
to learn out of school by way of video and
the like, there was lots of problems. So the good
news at this point is this scores are up. They're

(03:47):
going up, especially with the Latinos Blacks, low income kids.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
That's great.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
Los Angeles schools did better than the state average.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
Great.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
We need more and more of this news. Some school
districts like Compton saw big improvements. Wonderful, but with good
news comes from not so good news. Most students still
aren't meeting the state's expectation in math, English, and science
the big three there to be able to have those
numbers continue or to continue to have them wobble is

(04:18):
not good. Still not back to where we were before
the pandemic. That's crazy making. I had said on the
air when this stuff was first going down that we
will deal with the pain of the decisions made here

(04:38):
in California and beyond for a decade or more at least,
and we do not have footing. I was at the
doctors the other day and I said, you know, I
remember before the pandemic, you could get an appointment in
a couple of weeks for anything, dermatal, you're going whatever,

(05:01):
You're going to go see a doctor for about two weeks.
Now it's two to three months. And I go, what's
going on? He goes, I don't know, but I don't
think we've still made up for the pandemic. We're still
seeing patients, still trying to catch up. So we're still

(05:23):
not back to where we are before. The pandemic. When
it comes to testing school testing. Some interesting things coming
out of these studies are more California students are considered
economically disadvantaged now, so obviously there's more people in that
category due to not.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Not coming out of the situation of the pandemic.

Speaker 3 (05:48):
So not only are we still seeing the kids, they're
catching up in some ways getting better but not completely
when the test course, but also you've got kids that
are now set back because of home situation mom and
dad maybe not working, or work has been cut or
things have changed. Science scores are the lowest of the

(06:10):
three subjects. Math and English alongside six and eighth graders
showed some of their biggest improvements, which is a good
thing because those are eighth graders. Obviously you're knocking on
the door of high school. Sixth graders, you're knocking on
the door of middle school or junior high as we
say sometimes out here. So education leaders happy about the progress,

(06:33):
but still trying to catch up. The main takeaway here is, yes,
things are getting a better a little bit. It's taking
a long time. It's very slow. Skills schools are still
working hard to help the students recover from the pandemic
and the impact on learning, but they still are at
a deficit. Keep in mind they often lost money, they

(06:57):
had issues. The amount of fundraising. If you're a p
and you know about the amount of fundraising going on
to a place that is supposed to be covered by
tax dollars is insane. These poor teachers that are putting
their own money into being able to get the most
basic of supplies. So what was already a mess is

(07:17):
it became a larger problem during the pandemic, and now
after the pandemic is barely scratching its way back to
the top. Something we're going to be dealing with, maybe
not on the school level, but with local economies and
everything like that.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
I say, for a decade or more.

Speaker 3 (07:34):
Somebody pirate porch pirating at my house. How nuts is that?
RN camera All of our cameras went off, and you know,
I got a really really good look at him, but
I had something delivered. Now I feel bad for the
guy because I'm building a haunted house for my kid's school.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
So it was just candles.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
It was like fake candles and not even real candles, like,
so it's you know, it's a it's a sucky get
but the soob like walked up and it just it
just triggered, and I'm like, wait a second, it's a he.

Speaker 5 (08:18):
Just got burgled. Sucks. How horrible dare you? And they're
not even like a young kid. He looked older and
he may even be me HINTI.

Speaker 3 (08:30):
Wow, I'm flabbergasted. I'm blown away. I'm glad that he
got something that sucked.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Oh I'm so smooth. Do you feel violated?

Speaker 3 (08:53):
Well, I don't know that I go that far. I
don't want the guy on my porch. But violation to
me is like being in prison.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
I don't want that. But man, I was sure was.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
Zero to beature as punk. Well, ca, if I am
six forty live everywhere in the.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Eye hurt or I want to hit him in the eye.
I want to cook him root in a nick funk.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
Okay, if I am six forty live everywhere on the
iHeartRadio app Neil Savandra in for Bill Handle this morning,
Wade will be to be back filling it. Oh man,
I just want to.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
Or I'm.

Speaker 3 (09:33):
Mmm righting the sword flexes to wind downer you we
can cry when we'll be back on Monday.

Speaker 1 (09:43):
All right, back to what does it so? Casual and entitled.
You deserve the crabby candles punk.

Speaker 3 (10:00):
Then getting my good stuff might have been a phone
charger in there, like you know, portable phone charger, but
cheap like thirty bucks.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
But still, it's just it's your stuff. Sures you bought it.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Oh, I'm gonna track you down. I'm going to haunt you.
I don't have money, but what I do have is
a set of skills. I will find you and I
will kill you, all right, Ay, breast milk silly host

(10:36):
transitions are for kids. Breast milk for grown ups. Why, okay,
let's talk about something you might not expect. A little
weird adults drinking breast milk.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
I said, for good I will find you.

Speaker 3 (10:51):
You heard right. So here's the basics about this. People
have been using breast milk for a long time.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
Did you know that. I mean not just feeding the babies.
I will trik you down, but for all kinds of things.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
This is throughout the ages, not just baby food, but
the first century. Pliny the Elder, and with a name
like that, people were going to them all the time
looking for information. He recommended it for fever, for gout,
healing from poisonous beetles, because that's a problem, especially ringo.

(11:27):
In the seventeenth and eighteenth century England and even in America,
breast milk was prescribed for ailments ranging from consumption, which
is what is that? Is that tuberculosis consumption? I think
it's tuberculosis to blindness. Oh you're going blind, have some
bow milk, that'll you'll be good to go back here. Now,

(11:53):
in modern day, some grown ups are starting to drink
it thinking it might be good for them. So here's
the breakdown here. Breast milk is awesome for babies, right
It's got fats, it's got proteins, vitamins, special sugars that
helps babies grow and stay healthy. But for adults, we
don't really know. It's a bit tricky. The good and

(12:15):
the bad of this is. The good news is scientists
are finding some cool stuff, some things that are in
breast milk that might help with medical treatments.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
That's wonderful.

Speaker 3 (12:26):
The bad news is that drinking breast milk probably won't
do much for healthy adults.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
So it's not like, you know, we went through the
bone broth thing.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
I don't know if that's still a big thing right now,
But like, oh, bone broth is the most magical thing
in the whole eyed world, and everybody's looking for that elixir, right,
So it doesn't look like milk is that unless there's
an issue that the things like these fats, these proteins,
vitamins and sugars that they're going to help with you
if you are not healthy, there's something if your body

(12:57):
doesn't need these things the way a baby does, and
it's not gonna do crap for you. So the weird
weird stuff on all this is that some people are
buying breast milk online. Now, I hope you would know this,
but your old powd Neil is going to reinforce this
for you.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
I believe what I'm saying it.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
Don't buy breast milk online. Okay, but why Neil? Well,
I'm no Pliny the Elder, but I will tell you this.
You don't know where it came from. You don't know
it is, and it's it could be biologically hazardous because
someone It's not so much that you want to buy it.

(13:38):
I get it, you think that maybe's can be good
for you. It's that somebody felt the need to sell it.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
We don't know them.

Speaker 3 (13:45):
That's the X factor there, so don't do that. People
trying it for things like building muscle or curing hangovers,
and for the science on that says that doesn't work.
But researchers are seriously looking at milk new ways. They're
making fake versions of bread breast milk sugars. Well, this

(14:06):
is what formula is people that might help with things
like heart disease or arthritis. They're using breast milk to
check moms for early signs of breast cancer.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
Well that's but how does that help me?

Speaker 3 (14:18):
Yes, you want to chest the test the breast milk
for the woman to see if her breasts are bad.
But it's not like I'm buying it online swigging it
and going uh oh, I taste breast cancer. Yeah, so
there's nothing, there's nothing for me. So the bottom line here,
it's amazing for babies, not necessarily a magic drink for us.

(14:39):
And if you're a healthy adultult it's not going to
do anything. And having said that, I will tell you
that one host and I'll tell you who it was
when we come back. One host here at KFI served
her breast milk to dinner guests.

Speaker 6 (15:01):
Dud Dud, dud dud dun, dun, dun, dun, duh, it's
not you and dun no no, no, no, no, no no,
it's another female host.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
I'll tell you when I get back.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Let's get the news now with Amy King. I swear
to God, I will find that guy.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
I will.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
I will find him, and I will take that stupid
jacket off that he was wearing, and I will punch
him in the eye because porch pirating is one of
the worst things in the whole wide world. Hey, everybody,
Neil Savadra in for Bill Handle this morning. Wayne will
be filling in starting again on Monday, so don't fret,
my pet.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
You'll have him back on Monday, Big news Day.

Speaker 3 (15:45):
Obviously, things is still the repercussions of such a horrendous weather.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
Situation.

Speaker 3 (15:56):
I'm sorry a little preoccupied if you did in here.
My house was porch pirate, and while I was on
the air doing my duty to inform you, dirt bag,
I saw it. My wife thought he was delivering something.
He stole something. So it's preoccupying me because people are trash.

(16:17):
All you got was prop candles for by kids schools
Halloween haunt. So good on you, buddy. You stole from
children any who, people with much worse situations going on.
You've got Floridians picking up all the pieces after Milton
made landfall dangerous category three hurricane. Of course we're still

(16:41):
looking at the aftermath of that for those that were
thinking of leaving and going to Georgia. Georgia still dealing
with Helene and the aftermath, many of them still without power.
Just insane, a situation we talked about earlier with Amy King.
One person has died, twenty three people have been rested
after an elevator had an issue, some technical issue at

(17:04):
a Colorado tourist mine. So there's an old gold mine
where people were, you know, they go and they check
it out, and people were trapped a thousand feet underground
for six hours. Can you imagine what your head starts
to do after that. California officials have sees nearly one

(17:25):
point seven million dollars worth of fentanyl this month in
two traffic stops. So I get it when people complain
about traffic stops, whether it's minorities or what, or whether
they're a hass or whatever it is. But you know
what I will tell you, it seems like traffic stops
are the key to nailing people for the most part.

(17:48):
It just they seem to produce so much anyway. So
that was some of the headlines going on in some
of the news bits you need to know right now.
As far as the question I left you with, what
female talk show host here at KFI actually gave breast milk?
You'll have to listen to the podcast if you don't

(18:08):
know what I'm talking about, because I'm not going to
go over the whole breast milk thing. Again, that's too indulgent.
A little sure Kono would love it, but the regular listener,
they're not going to dig that. So we were talking
about breast milk. Adults are drinking breast milk. Now, it's
a whole thing. Go back and listen to it on
the podcast, Doctor Wendy Walsh gave breast milk in food

(18:33):
to dinner guests. Now, if I remember the story right,
she told it on the air.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
If I remember the.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
Story correctly, she basically was out of milk and a
dinner party that she was throwing and just put her
breast milk in there because she was breastfeeding at the time.
So if you had that on your being go card,
God bless you. You know what what is I because

(19:01):
I'm talking about milk, and then I feel like if
I do this story, I kind of want some time
to do it. I'm gonna I'm gonna move some things
around here, Amy King, you ready for news? Because I
want to get into this but I don't want to.
I don't want to try, and I don't want to

(19:21):
cut it short. You got it, I'm ready.

Speaker 1 (19:23):
You got some news? All right? Well, we'll be back.
I just want to be ready for you, that's all.

Speaker 3 (19:28):
I don't know if Will's ready, but I'm ready. Well,
Will's always ready. He's ready to sing, he's ready to dance.

Speaker 7 (19:36):
He is singing and dancing, you guys and dolls.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
I was looking for a reason to plug it, and
where's it at.

Speaker 7 (19:42):
It is in Alta Dina at the historic Barnesworth Amphitheater.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
Thank you, Amy King?

Speaker 3 (19:52):
Is that right?

Speaker 1 (19:53):
I don't know. It sounded right to me.

Speaker 7 (19:56):
I think I think that's it, but I'll ask Will
just to I'm trying to remember if that's the name
of the theater.

Speaker 1 (20:01):
But it's going on.

Speaker 7 (20:02):
His opening night was last Sunday. Said it was really fun.
Oh that's cool, and tickets are available.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
That's awesome.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
Yeah, everybody, Neil savedra in for Bill handle Wayne Resnik
will be filling in for Bill starting on Monday again.
Thanks for hanging out on this Friday morning. I watched
someone parch pirate live while I was here working today.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
Oh it's infuriating. I tell the story. You can go
listen to it, but man, oh really grinds my gears.

Speaker 3 (20:38):
All right, California pledge five hundred million, half a billion
dollars to help tenants preserve affordable housing. Guess how much
they got. The people in need got zero, not a nothing.
So in twenty twenty one, California promised this half a
million to help keep housing affordable. So how this works

(21:02):
is the money was meant for Community Land Trust. These
are groups that buy buildings and then they keep the
rents low, right, so they figure this out. Big news.
Think about that twenty twenty one pandemic. All that stuff
is hitting people are in need of help. They were
worried about the raising rents. And I'll tell you. I'll

(21:25):
give you an example. Luke Johnson, eighty five years old
out in the Silver Lake area of Los Angeles, that's
the east central part of Los Angeles. He and his
neighbors were excited about the program. Their landlord wanted to
sell their building. This was a perfect opportunity. They hoped
that a community land trust could buy it using the
state money. Of course, the states saying, hey, we promised this,

(21:47):
but three years went by the state didn't give out
any money. Nothing. Why well, the program got stuck in bureaucracy.
What are the chances The state agency in charge took
way too long setting it up, so the money is
basically consumed and they get nothing. So during this time,

(22:09):
California's budget gets super tight. Lawmakers get frustrated that no
money was spent for this program, so back in June
of this year, they decided to cancel the entire program.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Three years.

Speaker 3 (22:26):
Nothing, not a penny, they canceled the program. This leaves
people like Johnson Luke Johnson in a tough spot. The
community land trust can't buy their building because it doesn't
have state money. Now Johnson and his husband might have
to leave the apartment that they've called home for decades.
I think, if I remember correctly on a couple other

(22:49):
stories I was reading, is maybe even forty years or something.
Housing advocates are disappointed, rightly so as those that are
sitting in those plays is hoping for a little relief.
They say, preserving existing affordable housing is important. Now, why
think about it. How much do we hear of complaints

(23:13):
that we need more housing, we need more housing. Well,
preserving inexpensive housing is right up there with making more housing.
Otherwise you're going to have people not being able to
live where they are now, and that's going to be
a compound the problem. It's not incredible math. So what's next. Well,

(23:37):
at this point, the community land trusts are looking around.
They don't have that half a billion dollar coming in
that was promised by the state. They're trying to raise
money from banks and charities. They're hoping to create a
one hundred million dollar fund, and they're going to buy
properties and keep them affordable. So what's the lesson in this?

(24:02):
I was frustrating reading this through this last night and
going this breakdown. This story is on a loop. It's
over and over again. The big lesson. You know, even
if you're not someone like me, I'm a smaller government guy.
I like and think that governments are better when they're smaller.

(24:25):
You have to agree with this that the government, whether
it's federal, whether it's state or even local. The way
it is now, it's too big to even manage and
fulfill the programs they've already created, the ones that they
already believe in, the ones that they've already promised, like
this one. Even when the state wants to help White

(24:49):
Wick do with housing, we hear about a day in
and day out, we need more housing, more affordable housing.
They're allowing ADUs, these additional dwelling units to go up
on properties.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Matter of fact, that's what blew up in Long Beach
the other day. You remember that that was an ADU.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
The money is continually mismanaged, The programs fail time and
time again. And I'm seeing this trend, and maybe you
are as well that more and more, on all levels
of need, it's not the government, it's the private sector.

(25:29):
They're either coming to the aid or being asked to
come to fund or facilitate needs that the government has failed.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
For example, now this is on a national level.

Speaker 3 (25:40):
Entrepreneurs like Elon Musk, love him or hate them, he
and other billionaires have basically privatized the space program. They
have privatized space travel billions of dollars. And not only
have they privatized it, but they've improved it by being

(26:04):
able to recycle and reuse parts of the rockets, so
it got better.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Being privatized.

Speaker 3 (26:14):
On the state level, this very affordable housing project that
I was just telling you about that failed by the
California state government, and what are they doing now? They're
turning to banks and charities to help. Instead, they're going
to the private sector to ask for help locally. Back

(26:35):
in it was April, because I remember talking about it
back in April. I think LA's mayor Karen Bass. Do
you remember when she came out and she was appealing
to wealthy Angelinos and she's asking them to contribute financially
towards solving the city's homeless crisis.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
Can you believe that.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
You're a business, an entrepreneur, whatever you are, and you're
in your home and the mayor is calling you to
help solve that. Now, I'm all for the community coming
together and using whatever resources we all have to make
things happen, but it's compounded by the amount of money
we've already had. They're looking for public private partnerships is

(27:20):
what she was looking for, something called La four La.
Now you remember this is after she had included in
her first city budget as mayor here in Los Angeles
an allocation of one point three billion for initiatives to
address the homeless crisis. One point three billion was put

(27:40):
into that budget. She devoted about a fifth of that
money to Insight Safe Now you remember you hear this
a lot. That's our signature program. Moved the unhoused into
some of the city's largest, you know, from the city's
most largest and most dangerous encampments, trying to get them
and that's a goal.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
I'm down for that now I did.

Speaker 3 (28:04):
I know everybody loves to jump to conclusions about who
everybody is when they make any because we cannot separate
logic from your bias. We can't separate logical thinking, reasonable
thinking from the R or the D that you vote for.
I'm no longer a Republican, I'm not a Democrat. I

(28:24):
don't adhere to either party. I vote and have voted
for a long time for the person that I feel
suits our need at the time. What's going on in
the world, and this is locally and nationally, So if
you're going to try and peg me, then you are
the problem. Keeping more tax money in the hands of

(28:45):
people doesn't mean turning our backs on those in need.
That's the problem that everybody thinks, well, yeah, well, the
tax always have to go to the government because they're
the ones that are going to help people. Know, we're
seeing the exact opposite now we are reversing it.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
But you know what it does.

Speaker 3 (28:59):
It makes people think different because it's their money, not
their money they gave to another entity that is now
spending it. They're going, how can I build a better rocket?
How can we solve the homeless issue without all the
bureaucracy and the red tape and the garbage that goes
with well, we can't do that or the government.

Speaker 1 (29:20):
You've got a building.

Speaker 3 (29:23):
In downtown that's covered with graffiti because we can't use
it for whatever reason. And I know there's some logistical
issues for homeless people. And it was built by some
financers out of China, I believe. And there's there's it
just sits there. There's not They say we can't convert it,

(29:43):
we can't do this. Meanwhile, it's that's saying it's better
for the guy I saw the other day halfway in
the gutter and halfway in a bus shelter on sunset
boulevard not two miles from my home. That guy's better
off than whatever they can't do in that building. You

(30:03):
get that, get rid of bureaucracy, you get better management.
These are the types of things that I think will
excel when we come together. We're instead of digging our
heels in in some kind of cult partisanship that everybody's into.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
So so mark my words.

Speaker 3 (30:21):
I don't care if you're on the left, I don't
care if you're on the right or any part of
the political spectrum. You gotta admit the notion of the
government being the sole funder the big mommy or daddy
and this guy the facilitator of the needs of its people.
It's bloated, it's over right, and it's a failure. And

(30:42):
if you see smaller government as some sort of Reagan
ass kind of talking point type thing, you're missing the point.
We have to invigorate progress where promises and blank checks
that have been funded by our tax money have left
huge deficits and Americans still on square one, going where
is the help? And now the money's gone because in

(31:05):
the hands of someone else it might have been better.
I know, it's a little we the people, a little
early for we the people on a Friday morning. But
holy hell, it's it's not working. Over and over and
over again. Tons of money, massive mind boggling amounts of
money are going through the cracks because we think that

(31:29):
this group of people that we elected are going to
handle our money better than we can as a community
seeing a need and taking care of something. And you
know what, the ones that said, oh, this party is
heartless and doesn't want to help people and doesn't want
national programs or local programs are now the ones going
to the people saying, hey, can you can you do

(31:50):
this because we can't Neil Sevandri and for Bill Handle
this morning, let's get the latest. Oh no, actually we're
going to to the top of the hour. This is
KFI heard everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
You've been listening to the Bill Handle Show. Catch my
Show Monday through Friday six am to nine am, and
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