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October 2, 2025 35 mins
(October 02, 2025)
Amy King joins Neil Saavedra for Handel on the News; Bill is out for Yom Kippur. First bipartisan shutdown negotiations surface on Capitol Hill after funding bill blocked again. Vehicle, stabbing attack near synagogue in Manchester, England leaves 2 dead as Jewish community marks Yom Kippur. Dodgers sweep Reds, advance to NLDS to face Phillies.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
I know, I am out of here, young keeper, which
I have never worked my entire life. So I'm taking
off the day and Neil, of course it's in for me.
And then on Friday I'm back again where we do
the show and nothing changes.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
And now Handle on the news. Ladies and gentlemen, here's
not Bill Handle.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
He is a captain of fluency. Eloquent that comes to mind, and.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
I stand when I pay sometimes. Today is a day
I'm Bill Hayden KFI AM six forty live everywhere on
the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Good Morning.

Speaker 4 (00:58):
It's yom kipper day of a tonement and where practicing
and nonpracticing Jews all over the world spend time atoning.
I think they're supposed to fast as well, I remember correctly.
I don't know if Handle's doing that, but he took

(01:19):
the day off, and I thought Anne was joking yesterday
when she was taking and she's off today too.

Speaker 6 (01:25):
I did too.

Speaker 7 (01:26):
I didn't find out about it until yesterday afternoon I
started doing show prep.

Speaker 6 (01:29):
I'm like, oh, he too. Anne is off well.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
I sent her some stories and she said I wasn't joking.
So we're happy to have Matthew here with us. I
adore the man. He's very fun to work with.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:46):
Just a hard working kid does his job. I think
Cono can learn something from him. And it's weird to
see someone with work ethic.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
I know it freaks and look it.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
No cap nothing, no cap about his cap is what
I'm saying for the kids. Uh, Cono flashing gang signs.
I don't listen to. I don't live in San Borduna.
I don't know what that means.

Speaker 6 (02:11):
But at six am, Neil six six and five. Yeah,
let's not start that way.

Speaker 8 (02:17):
Good morning, mom, but good morning, I warm up. You're
a great host and a great human.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
I swear you're like my little brother. I love it.
I'm gonna give you noogies, give you noogies. No, who's
going to get a niggie? Not that guy. Let's not
be a Cono. Let's be a co yes today, Okay,
let's do it. I haven't heard that one before.

Speaker 6 (02:38):
No, I haven't heard that one before.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Well, you know that Kno is a Mexican. Not a Mexican.
That's true.

Speaker 4 (02:48):
Yeah, that's true. Together, we make a whole Mexican. That's true.
We make one Mexican. Growing up, we were part of
the half breed crew, because yeah, which is which is?

Speaker 3 (03:00):
Let me tell you.

Speaker 6 (03:01):
What's your other half? Kna Uh Well I never did
the twenty three and me.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
But just I think just like.

Speaker 8 (03:07):
A white, like generic, generic white guy. I have no clue,
no European stuff. I mean, my dad thought he was
Mexican until he was like twenty years old. So and
then he realized he's not.

Speaker 6 (03:21):
Hmm, I'm not going to make it.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
So area.

Speaker 6 (03:27):
Oh, and all of a sudden, we can't hear Neil.

Speaker 3 (03:30):
Oh that's me. Wasn't he a cop? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (03:33):
He was thirty years Pomona. Wow, Pomona, Wow, Pomona. That's
the real deal.

Speaker 8 (03:40):
Yeah, especially in the eighties, it was very light. He
lived a long life.

Speaker 4 (03:47):
Thank you for your service, sir. And the good thing
is he's also team Neil. That's the word on the street.
He is like most cops.

Speaker 8 (03:56):
Yeah, most cops do choose Team Neil over team for.

Speaker 4 (04:00):
Sure, which is good on pro law enforcement. So that's good.
It does good to my heart.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
All right. I know it's a holiday and all of
that for many.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
But how about we dip our toe in a little
bit of that handle on the news lead story.

Speaker 3 (04:15):
I came too shut it down, shut it down down.
I came to shut it day dose.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
Bipartisan talks on reopening the government.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
Maybe are materializing.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Keep in mind, and we'll talk about this a little
bit later coming up. But the middle ground really and
Amy jump in if I'm speaking incorrectly here, but it's
really about Obamacare and tax credits, right, that's the stickler
in the middle of it.

Speaker 7 (04:46):
Yeah, So the Republicans passed a continuing resolution. They say
what they want to keep talking although nobody's been talking,
but they want to extend it for like seven more weeks.
And this is the same one that was passed back
in March. And now the Democrats are saying, no, we
want to add, we want to extend this, want we

(05:07):
want to reverse some cuts to Medicare and Medicaid, and
it also has to do with Obamacare and subsidies.

Speaker 3 (05:15):
So true.

Speaker 4 (05:16):
Yeah, So they're saying they saw just a tiny bit
of hope. I mean, nobody's everybody digs their heels, and
that's kind of what happens, especially now and especially with Trump.
This happened last time he was president, and you can say, oh, well,
he's just a big bully and a lughead and all
those things. But the reality is you could also say

(05:38):
that he knows what he wants and he doesn't want
to bend. So who knows how that's going to be.
But the glimmer of hope was that they saw some
folks on the floor, about a dozen senators huddled on
the floor, and that was the first thing they saw
by partisan kind of engagement. We'll see if that turns anything. Today,

(05:59):
of course, is day two, and we'll get into a
little bit of what to expect because we hear these
things and we've heard them many times. A government shut down.
What does that mean. Well, there's some real people affected.
There's a lot of TSA agents and the like that
are working without pay right now. You know, there's a
lot of jobs out there that you can't just drop

(06:21):
and say okay bye.

Speaker 6 (06:23):
And they they will get paid.

Speaker 7 (06:25):
Well, of course, they're just working without a paycheck now,
which you know, I think that's it's a huge thing,
especially because there's so many people because that are living
kind of paycheck to paycheck right now. So if you
don't get the paycheck what do you do and hopefully
that hopefully it's not going to.

Speaker 4 (06:42):
Last outside that that that will throw off your flow
and if you you know, everybody likes balance in those things,
but you know, you want you want to rhythm in life.
So we'll see how this continues to go. But we'll
break down a little bit more coming up later on
what the government shut down is all about and how

(07:03):
it's going to be affecting us here at all.

Speaker 7 (07:08):
Oh, it's my turn, yeah, okay, yeah, I hate this.
The crazies are not only in the US.

Speaker 6 (07:14):
There was.

Speaker 7 (07:17):
A car ramming and a stabbing today in Manchester outside
a synagogue, of course, comes on yam Kapur. Two people
have been killed and three others were seriously wounded. Police
are saying that a guy tried to plow into a
crowd outside a synagogue in Manchester at about nine thirty

(07:40):
this morning local time and then got out and stabbed somebody.
Apparently he was trying to get into the building but
wasn't able to get into the synagogue and was shot
and killed by police.

Speaker 4 (07:53):
Yeah, that's it brings me back to the core of concern.
Everybody's worried about the weapon at hand and I get it.
Guns are dangerous and you can take out more people
with a gun, but the reality is we need to
find out why people want to kill others. That's the
big problem, because if I got stabbed to death, or

(08:16):
if I got ran over by a car, I wouldn't
go Thank god it wasn't from a gun.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
It's just not how life works.

Speaker 4 (08:24):
The fact that we're wanting to take each other's life
is the problem.

Speaker 3 (08:29):
And we have a major.

Speaker 4 (08:31):
Mental health problem, not only in the United States apparently,
but also there in the UK. So White House federal
government will soon begin layoffs. We heard about this. We
are just talking about the government shutdown. We're on day two.
The likelihood to me is probably tomorrow. If it extends

(08:52):
into tomorrow, I think Friday is when you're going to
start hearing about layoffs.

Speaker 3 (08:56):
That's my guess.

Speaker 4 (08:57):
Well it was.

Speaker 7 (08:58):
Interesting too because I was talking to Karen Travers with
ABC earlier and they had Vice President Vance came out
and he said, hey, we're looking at it. Probably not
nothing imminent, right, it's going to be a couple of
weeks away. And then Press Secretary of Caroline love It
comes out and says, yeah, they're imminent.

Speaker 6 (09:18):
Like, dude, got to get on the same page on
this one. Again. It's going to affect so many people.

Speaker 4 (09:24):
Isn't it kind of like good cop, dumb cop?

Speaker 3 (09:27):
Yeah? What are we doing?

Speaker 4 (09:29):
I don't know. Yeah, but this is an interesting administration
when it comes to the fact that oftentimes there's at
least two, sometimes three different point of views coming out
from the same mouth. I mean, as far as being
communicative that way, I think it's.

Speaker 7 (09:45):
Because things change that fast, and I think Trump changes
his mind a lot.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
Oh, I agree. I agree.

Speaker 4 (09:54):
He's by the seat of his pants and he may
say one thing and then when he's in front of him,
I say another. I think that's absolutely legitimate. But it
still is happening and makes it look like it's it's
hard to follow.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
Yeah, yeah, he's hard to follow.

Speaker 6 (10:12):
How about those boys in blue? Made me crack my voice?

Speaker 7 (10:19):
The Dodgers one last night they beat the Cincinnati Reds
eight to four. Mookie went four for five, drove in
four runs. I think you had three doubles. So they
didn't have a ton of home runs last night like
they did the night before, but they still were able
to rack up the score and beat Cincinnati. And now
they're off to Philadelphia. National League Division Series starts Saturday.

(10:45):
You got nothing to say about that, Neil. You've turned
off your microphone again, haven't you. Yeah?

Speaker 4 (10:49):
Sorry, I fidget. I fidget. I've always done that since
I'm going.

Speaker 6 (10:52):
To get you fidget one of those fidgets.

Speaker 3 (10:54):
Then I play with my on and off button that
came it does.

Speaker 6 (10:59):
Oh it came out wrong.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
Sorry. AnyWho do you watch every game?

Speaker 2 (11:05):
Do you?

Speaker 1 (11:06):
Well?

Speaker 7 (11:06):
I listen to every game. I listen on the iHeartRadio
app because the game last night, Yes sports that's the one,
and it's it's a fabulous way to participate in a game,
especially when you don't have ESPN and that's the only
place that was airing last night.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (11:25):
I like listening to games too. I just think it's
really good for your brain. Yeah, picture everything that's going on.
But yeah, I don't watch every game. Well, not a
big sports ball guy.

Speaker 7 (11:37):
Well, it's the Dodgers and you can watch on Saturday
afternoon when they're in Philadelphia.

Speaker 4 (11:42):
I kind of have a thing, kind of a thing
I do every Saturday afternoon.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
Oh there's a show or something.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
Yep, KFI AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio.
App Good Thursday morning to you. Neil Savada in the
morning crew here handles taking his Jewish hall Day off
even though he's secular as hell and married to a
Shiksa and he's just uh, I don't know, he's just

(12:08):
one of the boys in my eyes, but he is out. Oh, Amy,
you and your puns. My goodness, Amy K. King and
I with the handle on the news this morning. Amy says,
things that go bump in the night, in this case,

(12:31):
two airplanes, if it happened at night. You got two
Delta Airline planes that collided. And this is when they're
taxing there in New York's La Guardia. Yeah, I know,
it's uh, this happened last night. So it did happen
at night, leaving one flight attendant injured and forcing dozens
of passengers to plane. You had two flights. One was

(12:55):
departing for Roanoke, Virginia, and it got struck or it
struck the nose of another flight that just arrived from Charlotte,
North Carolina. They call it a low speed collision, thank god.
But you know, I remember in high school I took
a bus to you know, to and Fro and the

(13:18):
woman who drove the bus was hilarious. She was constantly talking,
yelling at other drivers and stuff, and she would say
if somebody cut her off, she's like, oh, sorry, sorry,
that's my fault. You probably didn't see the huge yellow bus.
And that's all I can think about. When I hear
like two planes getting close, it's like, really, how do you? Yeah, massive,

(13:43):
massive vehicles, And I get it, they're a limited view.
They're not made for driving. They're made for flying where
there should be some distance. But you always go like,
how do you not see another plane?

Speaker 3 (13:58):
I don't know. I'm not a pie. You'd have to
ask Gary Hoffman.

Speaker 7 (14:02):
But yeah, she's moving out and she is. Hurricane Amelda
weakening after rolling through Bermuda. It brought a lot of
rain and powerful winds to the islands as a Category

(14:22):
two storm, and now she's passed over the top of
Bermuda and has weakened to a Category one hurricane as
it continues.

Speaker 6 (14:32):
To move out into the Atlantic.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
Amelda is the ninth named storm of the twenty twenty
five Atlantic hurricane season.

Speaker 3 (14:40):
Already number nine. What is that.

Speaker 6 (14:42):
Already it's October?

Speaker 3 (14:45):
I guess you're right, But when.

Speaker 7 (14:47):
Is Hurricane se you know, we were just talking a
couple of weeks ago that it was like there.

Speaker 6 (14:52):
Hadn't been any, there hadn't been many, and then all of.

Speaker 7 (14:55):
A sudden, we've had five or six in the last
just very short period of time.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
It seems like you can put all the disasters in
the middle of the room, and I will natural disasters
and I'll pick earthquakes every time.

Speaker 7 (15:11):
Yeah, Hurricane season runs actually from June first to November thirtieth.

Speaker 3 (15:17):
All right, Jane goodall sad news.

Speaker 4 (15:19):
I mean, lived a wonderful life, for sure, but you
hate when the good ones go. She was a renowned
conservative at conservationist. Rather died at ninety one. It seems,
you know, the good old message of peacefully natural causes,
peacefully in your sleep. She was here in California to
do a speaking engagement in Pasadena.

Speaker 3 (15:40):
I believe m M. But uh.

Speaker 4 (15:45):
She is just an amazing human being. And I have
some thoughts on that. We'll break down a little bit
about her life coming up in the next hour, and
some thoughts on what makes people like that stand out?
What is about them where they can pretty much be
across the board. People see and appreciate them for what

(16:10):
they do. They're not a political figure, although I'm sure
they have to deal with political issues with their causes
or focus. But there's just something about them makes them
stand or feel like they stand taller than the rest
of us. And we'll talk about that coming up in
just a little bit.

Speaker 6 (16:27):
What's worth taking all your clothes off for in public?

Speaker 3 (16:30):
Anything?

Speaker 6 (16:32):
Pena eminem For this fifty five year old. It was.

Speaker 7 (16:39):
In protest of the district's policies on transgender students' restroom
and locker room access. She's an lgbt LGBTQ plus activist.

Speaker 6 (16:50):
Took off most of her clothes during a school board meeting.
Didn't like that. Whatever their policies are, and what was that?

Speaker 3 (16:58):
What were we learning there?

Speaker 6 (17:00):
I'm not sure she's held up.

Speaker 7 (17:04):
Oh, she held up a gym uniform, suggested that middle
school students are uncomfortable in locker rooms where they have
to change in front of their transgender classmates.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
And so she changed in front of everybody.

Speaker 7 (17:20):
I guess, and she removed her top, revealing a sportspra
in forming the board that she wanted to give them
an idea of what it looks like.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
Huh m.

Speaker 4 (17:34):
Okay, fair enough, We uh I think we're a little
weak on the protesting in this country. The whole sitting
in front of cars, blocking freeways, taking your clothes.

Speaker 6 (17:47):
Off, singing songs.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
Yeah, I don't. I don't know. It's like we need
a class on protesting. Probably.

Speaker 7 (17:55):
Well, I'd rather have that than you know what happened
after George Floyd when they were burning down cities.

Speaker 4 (18:01):
Yeah, but I was that really part of the protest
or was that just wing nuts and and Antifa and
all of that business. I don't know, Amy, you had
a quick correction.

Speaker 7 (18:16):
So the woman who strips down at the school board meeting,
she was actually an anti LGBTQ plus activist, and so
she took her clothes off. She started stripping down and
said it makes people uncomfortable, and so that she started
taking her clothes off and basically said, see this is
what you would be exposed to. That's something to that effect. Yes, okay,

(18:37):
So I just wanted to clarify I made it worse,
Amy K.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
King, I should have caught that.

Speaker 6 (18:43):
You should have.

Speaker 4 (18:44):
Yeah, I'm a son of a bitch. We need fact checkers, Yeah,
and ask me. But yeah, that makes more sense. I
don't know, you know, I get it if you as
a parent. I have an eight year old and and
I'm obviously concerned as to what he's exposed to. But

(19:04):
LGBTQ writes, I think get complex when you get into
trans discussions and the whole anti LGBTQ stuff. As an
American does is I would hate to be called that,
by the way, an anti lgbt It just seems an American,

(19:30):
all Righty, David the singer with the four in his name,
his manager brings silence. And this is a horrible story story.
Celeste Reevas, if you remember, is the name of the
young girl fifteen years old, at the center of the
death investigation as to why she was found in the

(19:54):
trunk of the tesla that's owned by David the singer.
And there's a lot of questions here. I mean, it
does seem obvious, but often that's why you have good
law enforcement, because it's not always as obvious.

Speaker 3 (20:11):
But now his.

Speaker 4 (20:14):
Manager is coming out, John Marshall. He's publicly denied any
involvement in the death of the fifteen year old girl,
Celeste Revs Hernandez. Her teenage body was ruled a homicide.
And it's crazy because it's gross, but it was so
decomposed and she was dismembered that it was very hard

(20:37):
for them to even find a cause of death. And
so they're still doing the investigation. But Marshall, who owns
a record label and media company called Mogul Vision, went
on TikTok to address the comments that he was involved.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
He says he was not.

Speaker 6 (20:59):
No, nobody needs we're.

Speaker 3 (21:01):
So judging this morning.

Speaker 4 (21:02):
We keep pausing and going h ah.

Speaker 7 (21:06):
I just think it's gonna be interesting to see how
this all plays out, because, like you said, on the
face of it, it looks very obvious, like there are
so many indicators, like but it's all circumstantial stuff like
that he wrote this David Guy wrote a murder anime
song or something like that.

Speaker 4 (21:24):
The weird thing is, we're so used to, you know,
television procedurals, the cop shows and stuff, and we hear
terms like circumstantial evidence. The vast majority, the vast majority
of cases that are tried in the United States are circumstantial.
It's not it doesn't mean that it's weak evidence. It

(21:46):
is just a different type of evidence. Yeah, and in
this particular case, it does look weird unless the guy's
being framed that it all points to Hims.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
The tattoo on her finger that's the same as.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
His, anybody in the back of his cards. But there's
also a reason that that the cops haven't locked this
guy up.

Speaker 6 (22:06):
Yet either, have not even detained him.

Speaker 3 (22:10):
Yeah, so you know, people have more information.

Speaker 6 (22:14):
Okay, I'll move on again. Nope, don't need to see these.

Speaker 7 (22:19):
A judge in Idaho has blocked the release of some
of the graphic photos taken by investigators after Brian Coberger
killed those four Universities of Idaho's students.

Speaker 6 (22:32):
They The judge.

Speaker 7 (22:33):
Ruled that the release would cause extreme emotional distress for
the victims' families and that it outweighs the public's interest
in how the investigation was conducted or the scrutiny on
how the government acted. She ordered the city of Moscow
to black out portions of the images that show any
part of the victim's bodies or the blood immediately surrounding them.

(22:54):
Apparently it was very gruesome and grizzly. The judge of
the public does have an interest in seeing an investigation records,
so other photos and videos and documents connected to the
case can be released.

Speaker 4 (23:07):
You know, the thought of that there's some things you
can't unsee, and there's been many times. I mean, I've
worked in KFI for thirty years plus, and trust me,
there were times where we saw stuff that was not
given to the public and you can't unsee that stuff.

(23:28):
And it's pretty heinous, and I don't want to get
too graphic, but I want you to understand something about
how our bodies work. After we saw Charlie Kirk shot
in the neck and everybody's like, holy hell, our bodies
roughly have about a gallon or so of blood in them.
And when you think about that, you think us, that
doesn't sound like a lot. Drop a full gallon of

(23:52):
milk on the floor, and imagine just how bloody murder
scenes can get, especially with multiple people. And the thought
of seeing all of that is completely unnecessary, I would
imagine at this point, because that's just it's decided.

Speaker 6 (24:11):
He admitted he did it.

Speaker 4 (24:13):
Yeah, there's no there's nothing that can be gained by that.
And I think we continue to get a little desensitized
for some of those things because everybody's on a hunt
and now you can get it on your your cell
phone to see all kinds of things happening. Anybody remember
back in the day VHS days, the movie Faces of Death.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
Co noo gets a nod on that one at tracks.

Speaker 4 (24:44):
Didn't they show that in drive ins in sand Burdu
wasn't that?

Speaker 3 (24:48):
Like?

Speaker 2 (24:48):
So?

Speaker 8 (24:49):
Yeah, it was that, And then the early internet was
the pain Olympics was another one.

Speaker 3 (24:55):
Oh, it was horrific the things that you saw. And
I remember that.

Speaker 4 (24:58):
I you know, I was pretty kid when someone popped
that in and I watched very little of it, and
I'm like, no, I'm out. I don't need to somewhere
like police shootings, you know, where there's an obvious bad guy,
and so you're like, uh, you can. But some of
it was just like no, I don't need to watch
somebody off themselves or anything like that. All right, So

(25:22):
we all remember nine to eleven the attacks kind of
a big deal here. Seems like sometimes we get so
distant from things we forget about them. But you have
a US judge just yesterday blocking the federal government from
diverting or withdrawing thirty four million dollars in funding to

(25:43):
protect New York's transportation system from terrorist attacks. I don't know,
I mean cuts or cuts. I get it, but I
don't know why you would want to take money away
from this particular cause in that particular city that has
had it's more than its share of terrorist attacks. Seems

(26:07):
strange for a strange place to cut.

Speaker 7 (26:13):
Ooh, look what's getting a makeover? Your driver license? The
California it serves.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
A new.

Speaker 7 (26:21):
California Department of Motor Vehicles has revealed a new design
for its driver licenses and ID cards. It will include
images of California's iconic redwoods poppies and the coastline poppy Puppy.
Also has enhanced security measures, like a digital security signature
on one of the two barcodes on the back of

(26:42):
the card won't have a magnetic strip anymore. The fee
for the driver license is going to remain at forty
five dollars, and ID card costs to thirty nine dollars.
The last time the card was made available with the
new design and security features was in twenty ten, and
then also got a bit of an upgrade in twenty
eighteen when they implemented real ID.

Speaker 4 (27:03):
You know, the real ID thing was hitting during COVID
if you remember.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
Oh yeah, the original deadlines right yeah, between.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
Originals, original original deadline. So I've got a tiny little boy,
my wife's working and I have to go drag his
poor butt too into the DMV to get my photo,
and all of that stuff. You could only go in
one at a time. You had all this distance between

(27:32):
you standing outside of the DMV. I it was just
post surgery.

Speaker 3 (27:40):
Maybe for me. I can't remember. I'm puffy.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
I mean, i'm puffy now, but I was puffy and
it is and you had to wear a mask. So
my goatee is like shifted to the left or something,
and I'm bloated, and it's the worst picture in the
whole wide world ever. And I usually don't care about
such things, but every time I look at it, and
I think about how they kept pushing that date back

(28:09):
like somem bitch, you know, could have at least maybe
put on some my shadow, take the shine off the
top of my forehead.

Speaker 3 (28:20):
Something. But anyway, all right.

Speaker 4 (28:24):
Pope Leo in the news says those against abortion but
in favor of the death penalty are not really pro life.
I disagree in the sentiment. I guess I would be
pro innocent life. I'm not sure why you want to
compare a child, an unborn child, to a murderous human being.

(28:46):
I find them to be different. But Pope says no.
He says, you know, because it's in the news right now,
because you've got a woman who will get into maybe
a little bit later, who is about a year out
from getting off horrible, horrible crime scene.

Speaker 3 (29:08):
If you read that.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
So, I'm like, I think it's inhumane personally to look
at human in the face that has the ability to
think and say we're going to treat you like an
animal and put you in a cage for what you did.
I think it's more humane to say, there is nothing
you will bring to this planet anymore, and we're not

(29:30):
going to put you in a cage.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
Go meet your maker. It's meaning personally, I just.

Speaker 4 (29:37):
The whole thought about how it's better to put someone
in a cage who knew very well what they were
doing and wouldn't want it done to them, to just say,
all right, well, all in all things, you throw out
the trash and you're no longer beneficial here. God God
can sort out the details.

Speaker 7 (29:58):
Wouldn't it be interesting if the appeals process was streamlined
and that kind of stuff, Like everybody who's been convicted
and sentenced to death, like they didn't have.

Speaker 6 (30:08):
Thirty years or something.

Speaker 7 (30:10):
They just they just did executed somebody in Florida, I
believe earlier this week had been on death row for
more than thirty years.

Speaker 4 (30:19):
Yeah, that's ridiculous. I think on the longest end, you
should have ten years for appeals. If people can't prove
you innocent within that time, you know, thirty years, it's ridiculous.

Speaker 7 (30:32):
And I think they can do it more because of
like DNA, which they didn't have a long time ago.

Speaker 6 (30:36):
And I think they did make mistakes.

Speaker 7 (30:38):
No, I don't think they can find the mistakes now,
at least I'm hopeful for that. Remember the woman who
had the crap beaten out of her at a Rose
Bowl game.

Speaker 6 (30:50):
At a concert?

Speaker 7 (30:52):
Oh yeah, yeah, so she is now suing the Rose Bowl.
So as you'll look, there was a concert Rufus Dussoul.
This was back in August, and she and her fiance
and some friends drove over from Phoenix and they were
at the venue and she spilled a drink on a

(31:15):
guy in front of her, and she said, you know,
it was an accident, She wasn't intentional. She apologized. He
got mad, yelled and walked off, and then he came
back and then they got into an argument. It escalated
and she got punched in the face and was knocked unconscious.
So now the lawsuit is against the Rose Bowl operating Company,

(31:39):
and it alleges that the venue negligently managed, administered, and
provided security services at the Rose Bowl and so negligently
treated patrons such that Zavala, the guy who apparently hit
the woman, was permitted to violently assault plaintiffs for several
minutes without any security guards intervening to protect plaintiffs from

(32:01):
fur their harm.

Speaker 3 (32:03):
Well, you got to find the deepest pockets.

Speaker 7 (32:06):
I suppose how many security guard are there and how
many people are there?

Speaker 4 (32:11):
Yeah, I mean, I don't know if you're covering a
it does seem weird that you couldn't get a security
guard over to certain areas quickly enough. And if you can't,
then maybe you're under staff security wise. But I don't
know if they're at fault. I mean, I don't know.
You go somewhere and they have security for a reason.

(32:32):
Who are they protecting? They're protecting the space or we
use security? Are they protecting me? Are they protecting the broadcast?
Are they protecting everyone that works for the station?

Speaker 1 (32:46):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
We should test that out.

Speaker 4 (32:48):
You should put a hood on or something like a
mask cono and rush and we'll see what they do next.

Speaker 3 (32:56):
Time we have our live bruck.

Speaker 4 (32:57):
No ease, No, you've probably got all the gear right,
all the cla la clova and okay, uh, hey, a
python was found in an out burger animal style. Yeah yeah,
so uh this is really weird. So cow in and

(33:19):
out burger customers surprised. Of course, employees, I would imagine,
we're surprised. The snake has been reunited with the owner,
but it was taken into the care of the Pastena
Humane Society. But how how creepy is that? I mean,
gorgeous animal.

Speaker 7 (33:36):
Well, what's even weirder is this snake is was found
about like thirty five or forty miles away from home.

Speaker 3 (33:43):
Yeah, I don't know about that.

Speaker 4 (33:48):
Like that. That's a little fishy that it. You know,
It's like.

Speaker 6 (33:54):
The python had been missing for two months, you.

Speaker 3 (33:57):
Have, but nobody saw it anywhere.

Speaker 7 (33:59):
I don't know, And it disappeared from its home in
San Bernardino, and initially they thought that it had escaped.

Speaker 4 (34:07):
But yeah, that tracks okay, all right, well that's fine,
But going back to the owner and.

Speaker 3 (34:16):
People were freaked out.

Speaker 7 (34:18):
You know, you think of incredible journey. You know where
dog runs across country. You don't think of a snake.

Speaker 4 (34:24):
I just think that you know, a dog, you can go, oh,
that dog just running around. But a snake you'd go, hey,
that probably shouldn't be out, especially a big o' python.

Speaker 6 (34:32):
Yeah. No, I want in and out, though I know
a double double with a snake.

Speaker 4 (34:40):
We got a little while before it opens, all right,
Neil Servader in the morning crew with you. Stick around,
much more to come. This is kf I heard everywhere
on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
You've been listening to the Bill Handle Show.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
Catch my show Monday through Friday, six am to nine am,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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