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October 8, 2025 30 mins
(October 08, 2025)
Amy King and Neil Saavedra join Bill for Handel on the News. Trump suggests some federal workers won’t get paid after shutdown. Attorney General Pam Bondi clashes with Senate democrats in hearing. US air traffic control staffing hit for second day, delaying flights. US latino population hits 68 million milestone.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listenings KPI AM six forty the Bill Handles show
on demand on the iHeartRadio app. There's an old adage
and that is human beings they walk with their feet,
they stood with their face. No, no, that's not right. Okay,

(00:21):
it was right. No, no, it's it's not right. I
don't remember it correctly.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
And now handle on the news, ladies and gentlemen, here's
Bill Handle.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Good morning. You ever had one. It is a Wednesday,
October eighth, when we are into a holiday Wednesday, and wow,
fair amount is going on? Anybody? See Pam Bondy yesterday
appearing in front of the Senate, the fucking smack oh
man screaming at the senators every time they a Democrat

(00:59):
asked her a question. She screams back, I mean screams back.

Speaker 3 (01:04):
She wasn't streaming, she was screaming.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
It was you talk about now in terms of people
appearing in front of the Senate, in front of the House,
and it is it used to be well on a
I would say quasi bad or a good level. People
were intimidated by you go in front of Congress and
go in front of a committee. That is something really serious. Now,
now if it's a Republican committee, and you're a Democrat

(01:31):
or you're pro Democrat, you scream right at him. You
just throw it back, and it's the other way around.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
I think both sides are doing lots of screaming. But
she did call Adam Schiff a failed lawyer and a liar.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Yeah, I know, that's terrific. And when and when it
came to Camy was brought up, uh and Tom Homan
was brought up, who is headed border Security, And she
was asked, why wasn't he prosecuted because the FBI allegedly
has a videotape of him accepting fifty thousand dollars in cash.

(02:06):
And she came back with, we investigated and there's nothing there.
There is no case. However, let's talk about Komy. By
the way, the Komy case is going to explode on them.
But it doesn't matter. You know, when you talk about
weaponizing the just Department of Justice or any governmental, any
governmental energy or the irs, it doesn't matter. You're on

(02:28):
their radar screen, you're in trouble because if the Justice
Department or the DA goes after you, whether or not
you are guilty or innocent, it's going to break you,
it's going to break you. A defense. Kmy's defense is
going to cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not more.
And I don't know if it's being funded. It probably

(02:49):
is by some organization, but it's at least it's getting entertaining.
I mean, when's the last time you heard someone a
witnessed scream at the center of the congress person in
the scream you are a liar, You're a failed attorney.
I have this great stuff. I mean it just that's
the way it's going these days. All right, A quick hello,

(03:10):
hello Amy, Hi Bill. I always calls me on my exaggeration.
I always say it's closer to screaming than not. But
that's what's side your point. Wearing the Dodger judge. Oh, so,
what happened with the game? I didn't pay attention.

Speaker 4 (03:24):
Well, that's because there wasn't a game last night. The
Dodgers played today. Game starts at six oh eight. They're
back at Dodger Stadium and leading the series two games
to none.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
So if they win today, they sweep and go on.

Speaker 4 (03:36):
To the championships. If they lose today, they played Game
four tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
And you have tickets for that. I heard that, and
I have.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
Tickets for that, So it's I'm really in a quandrum.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
Now did you buy the tickets for that? Yes? So
what do you do if the Dodgers win tonight? Do
you get to go to just an empty stadium and
look at the grass?

Speaker 4 (03:57):
They do refund you. It takes about six months, but
they do refunded.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
By the way, how much were the tickets? Can I ask.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
For this one? I think there were?

Speaker 4 (04:11):
There are different prices for different series, like why I
think it was like three fifty or four hundred for
these per.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
Ticket per game. Wow. And then you have Super Bowl tickets,
for example, decent tickets, the three that are available thousands,
tens of thousands of dollars.

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Oh yeah, they're going for a lot more than that,
I would imagine, But we got them because we're season
ticket holders.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Of course you are, and well with a.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
Bunch of other people. I couldn't on my own.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
No, No, I get it, No, I get it. And
that's basically you almost have to be you know, but
they still charge you for all the championship games. Oh yeah,
I get that. All right, Well, hello to you and
any Kate, Hello and Neil, Good.

Speaker 5 (04:54):
Morning, Good morning, Willie Wolf and Cono, Good morning, happy.
Uh fluff another day.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Uh, it's what today? Fluffer nudder fluffer, noter nudder fluffer nutter.
Now I know what a nutter is, and I know
what the hell is Okay, I don't know what those
two combined are. It's a peanut butter and a marshmallow
sandwich done on a Porno set. Oh it's delicious evented

(05:24):
in nineteen sixty okay, by an advertising company, just when
porno really exploded, you know, when the Supreme Court was
making all those rulings on First Amendment in porno and
very How's that for a coincidence? Huh uh? And good morning,
Good morning Bill, And uh it's got here I go again.

(05:47):
Mike Morris, Mike Harris.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
No, it's Randy Fuller today.

Speaker 5 (05:52):
Yeah, but it's Randy.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
That's close. Hello, Randy, Hello there, good morning. Who the
hell are you? I'm just some guy walked in heads obviously,
I have no idea. Are you connected to the station?
We are a homeless guy on the street that they grabbed.
Are you a college stone? Usually I'm I'm I come
up in the afternoons when I do come up, but
rare morning appearance for me. Yeah, I can see you

(06:16):
know you sound like you're about to fall asleep. Oh okay, anyway,
welcome aboard.

Speaker 5 (06:22):
You very much.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
Oh okay, there we go all of it. Any other
bits of news is going on? I don't think really, no, no,
we have some news across the board. And of course,
oh is it going to be Trump news today? Just
a little tiny bit and we start with that. Oh
and today other than you know, fluffer day national fluffer

(06:44):
weather one of the two. You know, that's fine. What
other national day is it? I think we're now going
to start a segment every morning with Amy's going to
go today is and then we go through the list.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
I used to do that.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Yeah, we can start that again just for fine, just
throw you know, a couple of uh, a couple of
the of the national holidays, if you were, if you
will out there for our our friends in radio land
to appreciate. Okay, guys, ready to do it. I know
I use radio Land all the time, and you always
look at me, Neil, like I'm out of my mind.
All right, matter of fact, you look at me like

(07:20):
I'm out of my mind every time we anytime we.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Look and just said that it's national. Start the effing
news day today.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Ah, got it all right, So let's do that. Yeah,
and I handle on the news with Amy Neil and
me lead story. I got. Well, let me start with
Trump news how Lee highly unusual. Uh. The yesterday the
President floated the possibility that some of the furloughed workers,

(07:48):
federal workers are not going to get back pay. Now,
the law says they do get back pay. And it
was Trump who signed that law during his first term,
and so what is that about? He goes, we'll see,
we'll see some people don't deserve back pay, and of
course they're going to get back pay unless he just
decides I don't care about the law at all and

(08:13):
put it may go to court, and you know he
will lose on that one because the law is very clear.
So I don't know if it's to pressure on the
stopping of this fight that's going on where the government
is shut down, maybe to avert that I don't know,
but some people getting pretty upset about it. And air

(08:34):
traffic controllers, man, there's a story there. But let's go
on and talk about Pam Bondi.

Speaker 4 (08:40):
Yesterday, Well, Pambondi was in the hot seat and she
was firing off a lot of accusations and comments about
the Democrats who were questioning her. Attorney General Pambondi was
in a battle with the Democrats. Of course, like we
were talking about, the republic were all very nice to her.

(09:01):
She said she took office with two main goals to
end the weaponization of justice and return the Department to
its core mission of fighting violent crime, and the Democrats
one by one accused her of doing the exact opposite.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Yeah, I mean, that is the accusation. You're stopping the
weaponization by weaponizing. And when the senators asked, but when
you go after targeted people, when the president tells you
to go after a person specifically, that's not a weaponization.
And she went right back saying, no, you were weaponizing.

(09:35):
We didn't, Are you a liar? I mean, just on
and on and on, and she deferred, it deflected everything.

Speaker 5 (09:42):
And then Republicans would grill her.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
Yeah, yeah, what Ted Cruz said to her, You know,
we thank you for upholding America and bringing America back
the Department of Justice to where it should be, and
that is dealing with the law, because the pre Vis
administration did not. It was weaponization it is crazy, horrible,
it is crazy. It's crazy. It's all crazy. It's all crazy.

(10:06):
The difference is that there is establishing a new procedure,
which there will be no procedures. These hearings, these Congressional
incentive hearings, are simply going to be accusations. And then
who's ever on the hot seat screaming right back?

Speaker 2 (10:21):
I mean, I just say, they keep the octagon. Once
it's there on the South Lawn, they keep it. And
that's where we'll hold these congressional sessions.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Okay, one more and then we'll take our break.

Speaker 5 (10:32):
You got it.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
US air traffic Control, as you heard Bill just saying,
highly problematic during the governmental shut.

Speaker 5 (10:39):
Down, you now have more than three.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
Thousand flights being delayed. And these are widening number of airports.
You've got Houston, Nashville, Dallas, Chicago, O'Hare, newer these are
you know, we had our very own Hollywood Bob Hope
Urbank Airport, and this is going to be one of

(11:03):
the impacts we're going to see. Even though you know
there's a lot more going on, these are ones that
we can see immediately.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
Well, yesterday was that for six hours there was no
one in the control tower because they didn't have staff.
I mean it was empty and there was still control.
There were still a quasi control tower out of San
Diego because there are some redundant systems. But you're going
to say, now they're starting to call in sick, and
it's you're told.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
You're not going to get paid, and it's like one
of the worst jobs in the world stress wise.

Speaker 5 (11:37):
Yeah, when you show up, you barely show up here.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Yeah, isn't that. Yeah, you're right, And and they don't
give me back pay. I get paid, you get.

Speaker 2 (11:47):
You imagine you as an air traffic controller. It's like
you're coming back from microwaving your frittatas and there's three
planes crashing and.

Speaker 5 (11:56):
I had to go to the bathroom.

Speaker 1 (11:59):
Yeah, pretty much. So what's wrong with that you do
for Tata? Why if a little bit I would do
it in that tone of voice, frozen, it's not. I
don't do it in an apologetic tone of voice and go, hey,
I'm having a fortana. You got the show's gotten in
my way. Enough of that.

Speaker 4 (12:17):
A whole lot of Latinos are living in the USA.
For the first time in American history. One in five
people in the US identifies as Latino. The twenty twenty
four US Census Bureau shows that that was an increase
of two million persons compared to population estimates from twenty
twenty three, and altogether, researchers believe the Latino population in

(12:38):
the US is now over sixty eight million.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
No, the demographics, At what point, I think they're on
the way to becoming the majority of Americans those that
identify as Latino. Is there any information on that, because
I think they're on the way to do that. I mean,
the population growth is very very well la of course
southern California, it's ridiculous in terms of the numbers, but

(13:06):
a lot of concentration here, But in general, I think
they're on their way to becoming the majority group of
people in the United States.

Speaker 3 (13:12):
That information is not included in the census report.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Well there you go. Okay, moving on.

Speaker 5 (13:17):
We do like the sexy time and a lot of
us are Catholics, So no condoms AnyWho that.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Yeah, Well, I'm just saying, so you you practice saying
that you less two of us in one's a boy,
one's a girl, there's going to be a population bubble.
Not necessarily because if you're successful at practicing Vatican Roulette,
then you do well rhythm, that's the rhythm method method.

(13:48):
That's why God invented basil temperature thermometers. And just look
that up.

Speaker 5 (13:55):
You know what.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
This is a perfect segway from your mouth to trash
fees going up, and.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
Yeah, why don't we do that? Okay, that was not trash,
by the way, that was legitimate. Okay, moving on.

Speaker 5 (14:04):
To Angelists City Council.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Just yesterday they were increasing the trash collection fees.

Speaker 5 (14:11):
They voted on this.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
It is going to go up to fifty five ninety
five a month per unit. But I mean, any hike sucks.
But it's been like seventeen years. These people bust their humps.
You ever see those drivers coming and dealing with our
refuse and yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
They don't get out of their trucks anymore. Somehow they
have those those automatic machines, those grippers that the same
company that makes those things at check that's where you
go and you grabble the toys, same company that does that,
just sideways and much bigger.

Speaker 2 (14:46):
It's not this stupid stuff that we do. This is
uh no, but the money work this is double in
some cases. I mean, this is a lot of money. Yeah,
but this is what it comes down to. First of all,
the trash program has been subized big time by LA
to the tune of about half a million dollars a day.
Our budget is going spiraling out of control, and we

(15:10):
got to pay for it. You know, it's funny they
talk about affordable housing, and nobody ever says about property
tax and the cost of utilities and everything. How about
those being affordable as well, because.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
We're used to those that's already those are already baked
in because we know they're going up.

Speaker 5 (15:28):
If they're going to go up, I don't mind that.
It's the track, and.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
I pay for my trash. It's a private trash collector
because I mean, you know, one of these gated communities,
so the city doesn't touch it. But we're charged per can,
per bin, and if you're an extra bin, there's an
extra twenty twenty five dollars or whatever they a charge
you a month. I mean, it's really expensive. Some politics.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
It comes Comy.

Speaker 4 (15:53):
Former FBI director James Comy is going to be arraigned today.
He'll fear appear before a federal judge in l Lexandria, Virginia.
The charges against him are for providing false statements and
obstructing a congressional proceeding. It stems from Comy's congressional testimony
back in twenty twenty, where prosecutors claim he lied about

(16:16):
his knowledge of a leak of classified information that was
later reported by several news outlets. He had testified that,
in his words, he had not authorized someone else to
be an anonymous source in news reports. Actually, that wasn't
Comy that said that. That was the prosecutors who said that.
They said that statement was false.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Yeah, I we're gonna see. From what I understand the
reporting is, it's pretty flimsy. The accusation. I think it's
based on one person, a deputy of his, saying yes
he did know, and Comy says no, he didn't. Based
on that Comy's lying, and he's being brought in front
of a federal court.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
Why would you even bring those charges if it's.

Speaker 6 (16:51):
Flimsy, because it is a political trial. Because it doesn't matter.
Said earlier, it doesn't matter if you're weaponizing the Department
of Justice, any side that does that. So if you
throw something up, you know you're gonna lose. And what
do you care because you've just broken that other person.

(17:12):
You've wiped out life savings because it has to be defended.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
That's a win.

Speaker 5 (17:19):
That's also just dragging their name.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
I don't like you know what, I don't know. It's
a lot of people, uh, you know, would think it's
a badge of honor, and a lot of people on
Nixon's list, for example, his enemy's list. You know, the
IRS went after people during Nixon days and it was horrific.
And if you've ever and they go through it with
a fine tooth comb and they can make your life
so miserable. And it's just that the government has the ability
to do that. When the government decides that they're going

(17:44):
to use their own governmental power to go after people
for political reasons. Uh, it's it's devastating for those people.
Not only is it it's it's it tarnishes the administration.
But you know, I mean, call me. They almost didn't
get out of the grand jury. And it's impossible not
to get out of the grand juror enough jurors said no,

(18:06):
there's nothing here. They got it, but it was close.
Usually it's unanimous. Getting a grand jury indictment is the
easiest thing in the world. There is no bar to it.
No one defends you. You're not in there. It's just
the prosecutor goes, hey, this is what we think we have. Okay, indictment.
Almost half of the grand jurors in this case said

(18:27):
there's nothing there, but they're going to go forward anyway.
We'll see. There's probably gonna be a motion to dismiss
and we'll see what happens with that.

Speaker 5 (18:34):
All right, We talked about this yesterday.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
Trump cracked the door open about healthcare discussions, but then.

Speaker 5 (18:43):
Shut it.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Yeah, I'm not talking, but now I'll talk, but only
if the Democrats cave big surprise. We'll see how far
this goes, because we're now into are we into our
second week already? I think we are. It's day eight, Yeah,
second week of the shutdown, so it's longer than most.
A lot of shutdowns happened. You know. They won two
days and that's it, and so there have been some

(19:06):
two weeks shutdowns. A big one was thirty five days
during Trump's first term. Right now, the Republicans are getting
more blamed for this than the Democrats. So politically speaking,
this is not good news for the Republicans because they
get hit with blame. Interesting enough, they're the ones that
won the continuing resolution. They're saying, hey, just get the
government going and then we'll talk about everything else. And

(19:28):
the Democrats are saying no, and the Republicans getting blamed
for it. Earthquake news.

Speaker 3 (19:34):
Why have one big quake when you could have two?

Speaker 4 (19:38):
So there's a groundbreaking news study that was published recently
in the journal Geosphere, and it says that for thousands
of years, large earthquakes on the Cascadia Subduction Zone were
quickly followed by large up earthquakes on the northern San
Andreas Fault. Of course, then San Andreas is in California.
The Cascadia Subduction is offshore California's northern coast and runs

(20:03):
up along with Washington and Oregon and into British Columbia.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
Yeah, there's a huge story here. I'm going to do
this at seven o'clock because it's something we probably didn't
even know that we actually have a series of Bogo
faults in California. Buy one, get one, all right, we
can move on if you want.

Speaker 5 (20:28):
No, I'd like to sit in this awkwardness.

Speaker 6 (20:32):
Aye.

Speaker 5 (20:34):
Hey, so you should you shouldn't? You shouldn't you should?

Speaker 2 (20:39):
City of La said it's going to appeal recent court
orders that says ore a recent court order rather that
prevents the LAPD officers from targeting members of the press
with crowd control weapons.

Speaker 5 (20:53):
So I know this sounds a little strange, but what
you had. What you had was.

Speaker 2 (21:00):
Pushback during some of the Trump protests with using the
so called less than lethal rounds and things like that.
And now Los Angeles is looking at that saying, well,
they have to be able to do something for crowd control.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Uh, this is LA and the Department of Homeland Security
together together, they're taking the same side. Yeah, I'm saying,
you know, and true, how do you differentiate when you
have a crowd going you have to use crowd control
and all of a sudden you're supposed to see who
is a reporter who is not a reporter.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
And on top of that, Bill it's not like the
old days when reporters were reporters. I mean, you have
they have all of their press IDs, You've got citizen journalisms,
you know, digital press. You've got all these different and
it's not themselves. You can't recognize every you know, mic
flag in the same way. Otherwise, just people to come

(21:56):
out with mic flags and.

Speaker 1 (21:57):
There is no there is no legal definition of reporter.
There's no licensing.

Speaker 2 (22:02):
You're a reporter, sure, so you gotta side with the cops.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
Amy, you have a reporter's license, right, Okay.

Speaker 5 (22:13):
What do you mean a reporter's license.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
That's the whole point I'm making. There's a you can't
tell who a reporter is. To your point, everybody can
call themselves a reporter. There's no licensing, there is no
legal definition that if you are this, then you are that,
then you are a reporter. No one knows.

Speaker 3 (22:29):
You can be like recognized by official agencies.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
Yeah, but what official agency? The AP? Well, how about
the National Association of the Digital Reporters that you just create? Well,
no law enforce law enforcement, I understand, Yeah, launch understood. Right.
In the meantime, absolutely, and you can go into places
where the public is not allowed to go. Absolutely in

(22:56):
the meantime. In order this story about telling who is
a reporter who isn't. So you have that little name
tag thing, a little lanyard, and you've got a crowd
going crazy in front of you. Well, and the sea
and the Homeland Security are right, how do you tell?
So we're going to use the same the same force,
and we're just if they get caught up in the

(23:16):
if you get basically caught in the same net, there's
not much we can do now. The issue of them
using artillery to stop the demonstrations, that's a different issue
at some point. All right, Moving on, chicken.

Speaker 4 (23:30):
For every pot and a refrigerator for every apartment. Governor
Newsom has signed Assembly Bill six twenty eight into law
that requires the landlords to have refrigerators and a working
stove in their rentals. Apparently you don't have to have
that now. I do remember that when I first moved here,
going to apartments and going where's the fridge?

Speaker 3 (23:51):
And they didn't have to supply them. But that's changed.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
It's not that weird. I mean, you think about this,
people moving in apartments and you have less money obviously
than people that are blind homes. And you go from
an apartment to an apartment, do you bring your own
refrigerator with you? It's I mean, it makes it makes
no sense not to have that, and it's I view
this as a loophole. I mean, if you're renting an apartment,
you have to produce a fridge and a stove? Can you?

(24:15):
How can you not? But the loss is heating hot
and cold water is basically it weather proofing, and that's it.
They don't have to give you. I don't even know
if they have to give you a stove at this point.

Speaker 3 (24:26):
Well they do starting on January first, twenty two, which.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Is and a refrigerator.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
I've never gone into a place didn't have a stove,
but I haven't gone into them without refrigerators.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Yeah, that's true, I think practically speaking, but I don't
know if the stove is required under law. It certainly,
I have no idea, but refrigerators. People don't take refrigerators
with them. Of fact, most rentals, most rentals have wash
your dryers. Now you know, that's just part and parcel
of it. Also, people put it in and they leave,
and you know not how many people take washer dryers

(25:01):
and refrigerators with them. It's a pain. It's not easy,
all right.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Santa Catalina Island, if you remember they dealt with this,
I don't know last year or year before something. The
mule deer they're back and they're problematic. You've got like
over I don't know, twenty one hundred of these deer.
They are not indigent indigenous, so they cause problems and
they need to get rid of them. And if you remember,

(25:28):
people freaked out that they were killing them by rifles
or whatever from how about airborne from helicopters? And now
they said, okay, well we've got to still do it,
so we'll do it from professional contractors that would shoot
them on the ground.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
What difference does it make.

Speaker 5 (25:45):
That's the whole point to me.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
We're going to kill them. We're going to kill them,
and they're eating and it makes sense to get rid
of them because they're eating native plant that native yeah,
which causes what well, what ends up happening is they're
invasive plants that that they're eating the natural plants that
are indigenous, and then and then the non native plants

(26:08):
come in take over those burn up. I mean, it's horrible.
So you kill the deer. By the way, deer are
really just big rats, you know that they eat everything.
I had them in my backyard and you couldn't kill them,
and you couldn't. It was horrible. So anyway, they're gonna
get rid of them, and they should and then you have, oh.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
It actually protect them from wildfires because or protect the
island from wildfires, which is because.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
Again, you've got you've got the non native, the invasive
plant life coming in and taking over, and the plant
life and non native stuff burns very quickly and easily.
And that's exactly it. Amy. You're going to say, what.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
Are they going to do with all these dead deer?

Speaker 1 (26:50):
Are the nison? Well?

Speaker 3 (26:51):
Are they going to use it? Are they going to
throw them away?

Speaker 4 (26:53):
Because I think that two thousand dead deer could go
and help feed a lot of animals, news, it could.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
Go to feed people, fertilizer.

Speaker 4 (27:03):
It could be done for a lot of things. If
they're just going to discard them, I'm totally against it.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
I think that how do they use it? How do
they use it? You know you have to. You just
can't take a pile of dead deer and then throw
them someplace. They go here, you take care of them
in a slaughterhouse. I mean, it's all regulated that. No,
under the law, you couldn't, Amy, You really couldn't. You.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
You could take them to the Alpine Zoo and Big
Bear they have all kinds.

Speaker 1 (27:28):
Of are that What are they going to do with
two thousand dead deer? They could stacks deer at the
Alpine Zoo. I'd go see it. I'd like to see
a stack of two thousand dead deer. I pay money
for that.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
I just think throwing them away is wasteful.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
It is, but you still have no choice, at least
I don't think so. Oh, here's some news, good news
from the Amy Neils School of Disney.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
Oh, the spendiest place on Earth. Not really?

Speaker 4 (27:59):
Well does World and Disneyland are going to be raising
prices on various tickets and annual prices effective annual passes,
effective immediately. But it's not raising prices on absolutely everything.
So if you go on non peak days, you can
still get the tickets for the same price, but the

(28:20):
peak days and passes are what's going up.

Speaker 1 (28:23):
Yeah, so early November, early December, in the middle of
a snowstorm, you'll probably get pretty decent prices.

Speaker 5 (28:29):
But why would you want to go on the peak
day anyways.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
I don't understand that. Yeah, I don't understand that at all. Yeah,
i'd share this story. I've shared this story with you
before when I was a lot younger, in my twenties thirties,
Maybe March February, March midweek, going to the park. There
are five thousand people in the park. You wouldn't wait
for anything.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
I was in the park yesterday and it was nothing.
It was the easy piece of getting around everywhere, all right,
Dolly part and sister speaking out free to Parton, pardon
you know a lot of people may or may not
know this, but she's got eleven total siblings. Man, that's all.
That's that's bigger than a small Mexican family. So she's

(29:14):
got her sister. Free to Parton, who said, pray for
her sister. She's up all night praying for her. Dolly
has some unknown ailment right now that made her postpone
her upcoming Las Vegas residency.

Speaker 1 (29:28):
That is not a good sign.

Speaker 5 (29:30):
No, she's seventy nine years old.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
That's not a good sign. That we don't know what
she has. We know that she is, we don't know
where she is. And her sister says, pray for her.
And I'll tell you when when Dolly Parton dies, which
of course you will at some point, hopefully not soon.
It's that's going to be a loss where she is.

(29:53):
She is a national she is a national treasure.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
I've seen her speak before and she's very powerful and compelling,
and she seems very lovely and kind. But she even
joked about it. She said that she had several procedures
needing to be done, and she joked they were all
part of her one hundred thousand mile checkup.

Speaker 5 (30:15):
So she's in good spirits.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
It's very funny. She's very self deprecating. She's brilliant songwriter
and performer and everybody loves her.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
And I love her line about you know, it costs
a lot of money to look this cheap.

Speaker 5 (30:28):
It is a great line.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
How do you beat that? You really don't? Okay, we're done, guys.
This is KFI AM sixty. You've been listening to the
Bill Handle Show. Catch my Show Monday through Friday, six
am to nine am, and anytime on demand on the
iHeartRadio app.

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