Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome three hours a great sports dot to the Petros
and Money Show on air at AM five seventy LA
Sports with the ability to really go anywhere and do anything,
streaming everywhere with the iHeartRadio app hosted by Mad Money Smith.
Check out the fit and Petros Papadakas. That's what we
like to hear.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Here.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
They are on your home of the.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
La Dodgers in Thinking down the Grain.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Petros and Money, Drosen money Rose in Money Rosy.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
That's right, go ahead, you going back up money Hill.
It takes up their time.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Man, my wife, my wife, Okay, shucking down at nine.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
That's my mom, dude, My mom's a pamp.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Nikolais are so good. Nicolas are so good. Nikolais are
so good.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
Dumb ass, dumb ass.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
Yeah, I'm not gay.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
So just there's a lot of people who are see
some of that sweet meat.
Speaker 4 (01:04):
The stories that are familiar will always be our favorites.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
Fin out day, Petro some Money, AM five seventy LA Sports.
We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio App. Remember, anywhere in
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(01:31):
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the iHeartRadio App. Tomorrow is our day.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
Tomorrow, we're going to be out of the BJ's Restaurant
in brow House in beautiful Downy, California. You're expected to
be there along with everybody else, especially if you're a
gateway city type two to five one two one Stonewood
Street of the Stonewood Center. We got great drinking food specials.
We're giving away TVs, great prizes, Chargers, Bucaneers tickets, Clippers tickets,
(02:15):
Dog George, fifty dollars BJ gift cards.
Speaker 3 (02:21):
And we do a pretty good job, if I don't
say myself, Oh, nobody of coercing date. We used to
give us even more prizes to give away like, oh yeah,
here's one pair of tickets to the Chargers. Can we
up to all? Right? You can have two? Here's two
pair of tickets to the Clippers. Can we have three? Ah?
Speaker 4 (02:38):
Right?
Speaker 3 (02:39):
Here's the thing. We try to do everything we can
in the petros and money power to get more prizes
taken to UH to pass along to you the people.
It's it's a festival of giving. That's what it is.
Season of giving.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
It is a cavalcade of generosity.
Speaker 3 (03:00):
Except for the early people. What about them?
Speaker 4 (03:02):
They get nothing and they get a small steak too.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Why is your sticks up, pig?
Speaker 4 (03:07):
But nobody noticed something about your steak? Because the we
are looking to have a hell of a time at
the BJS with you and Downey. It's a big redemption
show for us. Although Tim Kates does not find it
necessary to go.
Speaker 3 (03:23):
Well, he's playing on the phone mechanics back here in
the studio, music to be played.
Speaker 4 (03:31):
I mean, he wasn't at the Torrents event and that
went off gorgeously, So.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
I mean Gino Torretta showed up on an rest.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
So not to mention Joe Hortiz, the GM and the
Chargers and all that. So a lot of good stuff
happened there.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
Any of the carpenter's coming on Thursday tomorrow. You know
that's not cool.
Speaker 4 (03:49):
Why that's just it's so uncool.
Speaker 5 (03:51):
That's that's not cool.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
So uncool.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
LB the LB the pronoun shark is coming through that
cool tomorrow will be there starting. So it's an early show.
Don't just be outside the gate waiting to have a
good time. Fly the gate like the Orange County Cabal
and be there with the Petros. Somebody show tomorrow with
the Bjason Downey two o'clock. But right now it's time
(04:15):
with the top story of the day to sorry of
it day?
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Alright? Pee a billion dollars? Yes, With the sixty six
million dollars deferred from Blake Snell and twenty five million
dollars deferred from Tommy Edmund, the Dodgers have now officially
crossing seven players deferred over one billion dollars to as
(04:51):
late as twenty forty six. So those two plus tail
Will Smith, Freddie Freeman, Mookie Bets, and of course the
well the brunt of it six hundred and eighty million
dollars to the show.
Speaker 4 (05:06):
Halo, Tony, I mean, thank goodness. Will Smith's going to
be around for ten years. That's important, right.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
The Dodgers cracked the code. They're selling it. It's paid
off to have the Guggenheim Partners as their ownership because
so much talk about money and how much are the
Dodgers spending and is this really fair? And the next
CBA is going to have to address all these deferrals.
Why are the Dodgers allowed to get away with this?
(05:32):
It is something that's brought up time and time again.
It's something we addressed around the show Heal Tiny contract
when it became a huge talking point. Deferred earnings ten
years out, the state tax in area of residence after
a ten year deferral is what you will pay, and
(05:53):
that the Dodgers are perhaps skirting one of the great
disadvantages they had to endure when it came to signing
free agents prior.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
Gavin Newsom's gonna come and get his money he ain't getting.
He's gonna knock on Blake Smell's door and be like, hey, Snip,
you could.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
Choke on your s car. Got is what you can
choke on? Newsom, You ain't getting that money. The crooks
and Sacramento are not getting their grubby hands on any
of that cash.
Speaker 4 (06:19):
Now, they the gangsters at opek. That's right.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
They might get their hands on our cash and light
it on fire for dumb ass projects. And hey, listen, people,
for those of you want to say no politics, no politics,
ninety four percent of people believe their tax dollars are
being wasted in California. I'm gonna talk to them, not
you vocal minority six percenters, Okay, talking to the ninety
(06:44):
four percenters that think our state government wastes our tax dollars. Now,
I'm not gonna Man, got a little sidetracked there. You
mentioned Newsom in that smile and that sweater and that hair,
and that I think a little upset. It's not a
political conversation. I'm not here for that.
Speaker 4 (07:00):
I'm not here to stop you.
Speaker 3 (07:09):
The opponent's all for it. With a fourteen point four
percent income tax, the highest of any state, just ahead
of HAWAIII in this great country of ours, for the
highest earners, it has to be addressed. You're talking about
(07:30):
a six hundred million dollar deal for Juan Soto if
he chooses to sign with one of the New York teams.
They're millionaire's tax is ten percent. That means he's gonna
make twenty five million more bucks if he plays there
at six hundred million bucks. In here, yadaw I bit
him by twenty five million bucks to make it an
even deal. If he chooses the Phillies, he makes seventy
million more with their flat tax of three percent. Yes,
(07:54):
that has been in the past a disadvantage for the Dodgers,
And it was with Corey Seeger, and it was brought
up on the air, and I did not hear one
freaking talking head from MLB network puffing out their chests saying,
you know, it's not right. Corey wanted to stay in La.
(08:15):
They offered him the same amount of money, but because
he was going to Texas, he was going to make
an extra forty million bucks because they don't have any
state income tax and they would have had to open
Not one of them said, oh, this is not fair.
The MLB has to come up with something so the
Dodgers can overcome those crooks in Sacramento from putting their
(08:35):
hands on these millionaire's contracts. And for those of you
that say, hey, whatever, man, so much money, what does
it matter. I'd rather make seventy million dollars less than
live here than freaking Philadelphi.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
Man, Wow, yeah that is you know it's a fair point.
Speaker 3 (08:53):
But go ahead and ask yourself, you want to take
an eleven percent pay cut or do you want to
get an eleven percent bonus if someone from Tennessee or
Texas or Florida offers you the same job, but it's
going to pay you in those cases fourteen percent more
than you're making. Right now, your twenty five hundred dollars
paycheck every two weeks becomes twenty eight to fifty. Yeah,
(09:13):
I get actually seven hundred bucks a month, kid me
extra eighty four hundred bucks a year and in your pocket,
you're just gonna stay here. Give it to those Crutch
and Sacramento to do what to build a bullet train
in nowhere?
Speaker 4 (09:29):
Now bullet training nowhere? You knew it was coming stairs
to nothing?
Speaker 3 (09:34):
And yeah, I know, whatever, fourteen percent if you're making
seventy grand a years in which you're getting taxed. But
you get the point. To illustrate, the Dodgers were at
and really are at a financial disadvantage, and they figured
out how to turn it into an advantage. And those
(09:55):
that want to live here after they're done playing, they're
good with it, and they'll be willing to do what's
I'm just as I mentioned about whatever. Man, I'd rather
live in LA than Philadelphia. I'll just pay the taxes.
I'm already making so much money. I don't even know
what the hell to do with it. I guess the
Guide and Gal four generations down the road is unfortunately
going to get the short shrift here because I decided
to stay in southern California some one hundred years prior.
(10:19):
They make a lot of money, they pay a lot
of money into the government, and Newport Beach or Pasaden
or Calabasas or Manhattan Beach, wherever they may be, it's
worth it to them. They'll pay the tax I found
it interesting for Blake Snow going through that contract with
the sixty six mil deferred.
Speaker 4 (10:37):
And you went through it, you and boris exactly right.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
He got a fifty two million dollars signing bonus January
twenty fifth. The Dodgers will hand him fifty two million
dollars before taxes and before agent fees and all that. So,
I don't know in California with taxes here, what does
fifty two million become like five hundred grand something? Along
those lines because they're trucks at Sacramento. But you get
(11:02):
probably twice, say fifty percent twenty six million bucks in
his pocket. You park it somewhere safe. The guy's gonna
make a million and a half bucks a year just
for parking it. Here's your signing. But hey, hey, Blake,
how'd you make that one point five mililesterear?
Speaker 4 (11:14):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
I just took a check and I put it in somewhere.
I get a check every year for one point five
million bucks. That's just the signing bonus. He's still going
to make thirteen million dollars a year in salary, and
in ten years he's going to cash out his sixty
six mili in deferred maybe in Florida, making an extra
eight hundred and fifty k doing so because of the deferral.
(11:36):
Because the owners of the Dodgers are the Gougenheim Group
and their financial background likely well, I can't imagine this
would be legal, and some people would have issues with it,
and the Dodgers could getting a lot of trouble. But
I would assume with the old Gougenheim partners in twenty
twenty four having an annual revenue as in, they made
five hundred and twenty one million dollars at a place
(11:59):
worth three hundred three forty five billion. I'm assuming a
company who's two billion dollar investment in the Dodgers that
is now worth five point five billion, and they make
a hint to the Hey, you know what, Blake, then
hold on to the sixty six mil for ten years,
and when it's time for you to take it. I
think there's gonna be a little something nice there, you know,
the way that we're running it, And if you want,
you just keep it with us, and we'll just keep
(12:20):
it where we had it this whole time, and it's
probably gonna be a nice number for you.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Move.
Speaker 4 (12:23):
It's not fair. How do you stop the Dodgers? How
do you stop the Guggenheim from throwing all the cash
around Magic City and buying all the wings?
Speaker 3 (12:31):
They can't all the lemon pepper wings are ours, lou Williams.
You get nothing at your table for one at the
end of the bar. Nothing.
Speaker 4 (12:40):
That's the thing.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
It's Mark Walter. Hey, Blake's now Mark Walter.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
Here.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Uh, this is the financial vehicle that I've been using.
I'm worth twelve billion dollars. You just got your one
hundred and sixty million dollar contracts. So if you want
a little bit of advice, just to have your guy
called my guy and we'll, you know, do the thing
or whatever from the Wolf of Wall Street and everyone's
going to be great. It is an advantage that we
could not have imagined, because this is not what we
(13:07):
think about. We just wonder, hey, will the owners pay
the free agents that are theirs as opposed to some
other highest bidder. Will the owners make trades for players
that other small markets can't afford? Is it fair? I
don't care. What I know is of all the teams
in town. The Dodgers recognize that in an era where
(13:27):
professional athletes are paid like CEOs of fortune five hundred companies,
you better be able to speak the language of CEOs
of fortune five hundred companies. Sho Hey Otani sixty eight
million deferred? Hey show, Hey, we see that you make
one hundred million dollars in endorsements every year. How would
(13:49):
you feel about only making two million bucks in salary?
Will defer sixty eight million since it doesn't appear as
though you're going to need it anytime soon, and we
can help you in that watch baseball cards.
Speaker 4 (13:58):
Hey, he wants that three one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars worth of e Bay baseball cards that.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
He bought, And that just goes to show you what
kind of guy he is. P It's not about the money,
it's about the cards. It's about holding that baseball card
and saying, look at this thing. Look at this seven
hundred thousand dollars Ken Griffy junior rookie future stars on Todd.
Look at this f face Billy ripken bat flawed Flear
(14:28):
that is in my collection that I can now look
and gaze upon. Because money is not why I do
this baseball and winning and the money is a bonus.
He's got more than dough to do. He's got more
enough money to know what the hell to do with it.
We mentioned Mookie's got a house in Tennessee. Freddy's wife
is a real turt. They probably got a spot in
Florida or Georgia where there's a flat tax. And this
(14:52):
is what also is interesting, folks, there's room for them
to spend a lot more, a lot more. They made
five hundred forty nine million dollars in revenue in twenty
twenty four, and they spent technically without deferrals, two hundred
(15:13):
and forty million of that on payroll. That is forty
three percent. The Phillies spent fifty three percent on payroll,
the Astros fifty seven percent of their revenue on payroll,
the Braves fifty percent, the Padres forty nine percent, the
Yankees forty five percent. So there is even more room
(15:36):
for the Dodgers to get in line with what are
the playoff caliber teams in terms of how much of
their revenue they can spend on payroll to be in
step with the rest of the league. So you want
to bitch, you want to moan, you want to pitch
a fit. I didn't hear you doing it when they
were losing free agents because of the fourteen point four
(15:58):
percent millionaire's tax. That led to people leaving California for Florida,
for Texas, for Tennessee, like Corey Seger did when the
money was equal, but the taxes were forty million different.
So now you don't Now you don't get to leave dead.
Both goes on the door. Now you've got to deal
with this. Because the Dodgers finally figured out a way
(16:21):
to even those steaks, it led to Blake Snell and
Tommy Edmond and Sho hal Tani and Tao and Teo
Scar and it might lead to Juan Soto, who the
hell knows because they cracked the code because their GM
isn't a guy with a freaking Caesar cut that makes
up stories about mana from Heaven and Heath Ledger. He's
a freaking twelve billion dollars CEO of a three hundred
(16:45):
and thirty billion dollar financial house and he sorted out
how to play within the rules and get every single
guy to come here and win freaking World Series championships.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
And that's why you got a parade really rich, really
rich hedge fund people in Chicago that wear their hat
in a weird way.
Speaker 3 (17:03):
That's true.
Speaker 4 (17:04):
We'll be back with more.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
And he writes his speeches on notebook paper people, not
on his iPhone, so it looks weird when he's scrolling
through it.
Speaker 4 (17:11):
Congratulations, I have a word to.
Speaker 3 (17:15):
Say, Hold on page twelve.
Speaker 4 (17:18):
And the justice. We'll be back. We have some coaching
carousel talk in the college world as that is spinning,
and then we'll do your debt and a live guy
Birthday of the day. We're on all the way till
six thirty tonight the four Clippers.
Speaker 3 (17:31):
Foodball, Petros Money A five seventy LA Sports. It is
the season of giving. We have teamed up with our friend,
Pastor Matthew and all the folks over at dream Center
LA the Justin Turner Foundation raising money to give ten
thousand presents to those in need. You can help. You
(17:53):
can donate either at our website AM five to seventy
LA sports dot com or at Dreamcenter dot org. Kates,
did you donate your thousand dollars at Dreamcenter dot org
at AM five to seventy elie sports dot com or
did you hand a payper checked Pastor Matthew himself. I
handed a check to Dave Wis. That's what I did.
Speaker 4 (18:10):
Actually, actually I heard that Cats did it through the Gougenheims,
So most of that thousand dollars has deferred. Yeah, just
like the top story of the day where matt haralded
the Dodgers' ability to spend money and snatch up players
to contribute to their dynastic ways. You could podcast that
(18:31):
on the iHeart app for your smartphone. We also talked
to David Vassa, who had some inside information about what
the Dodgers are doing podcast that as well, and of
course James Worthy in the three o'clock hour. Thank you
for listening, and we'll be on all the way till
six thirty because there's going to be a Clipper game.
But Matt, we're hitting the road tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (18:53):
It's important Downy back to BJYS going into an epic
Packers Lyings Thursday Night football contest. If you have friends
of either of those squads, why not watch it at
BJ's and use the Petros and Money show as your
pre game. We will be giving away Chargers Buccaneer tickets,
Clipper tickets, fifty dollars bj gift cards, and a host
(19:16):
of other prizes. You will have drink and food specials,
and you will have the Petros and Money community with
which to conversate. We will be there again two to
five pm on a flex alert going into Thursday Night football.
It is the Stonewood Center, BJ's Restaurant in brew House
in Downy, one to one Stonewood Street. All right, we'll call.
Speaker 4 (19:35):
This the flip top story of the day.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
I'll clip you out, I will look you out. This
is the flip top story of the day.
Speaker 4 (19:43):
Matt, there is this is the time of year we'd
like to fire up the coaching carousel, even though today
is technically night signing day, which used to be a
big deal. I mean we might even be live at
the BJS at Westwood up UCLA signees. If it was
fifteen years ago.
Speaker 3 (20:03):
We used to have our own facts machine that routed
both USC and UCLA annettance to us.
Speaker 4 (20:09):
I don't miss getting up at six in the morning
and waiting like the catcher and the ride by that
fax machine.
Speaker 3 (20:15):
Print print, print, print, Come on.
Speaker 4 (20:17):
Made you like a Stiller and Owen Wilson banging on
it trying to get something to come out.
Speaker 3 (20:23):
Come on, come on.
Speaker 4 (20:27):
But some coaching carousel news Matt USC's most promising coach
on the staff. I would say Dan and Lynn would
be a close second, but the most promising coach on
the staff, matt ense was hired by Fresno State. Ohoo,
Presno State recognized that USC linebacker coach matt Enzo was
(20:52):
deeply overqualified for his position coach job at USC, and
he will be the next Bulldogs coach in the five
point five to nine. I'll fire up that carousel. I
love it. Yeah, as is a Midwest small college guy
from Waterloo, Iowa and Wartburg College, Go Knights, and he
(21:17):
came up with Chris climb And at North Dakota State
University as a decordinator head coach from twenty nineteen to
twenty twenty three, a sixty and eleven record. Leave You're
a message, leave you jump up the trunk. He came
to USC Why Matt to escape the Fargo fish Bowl?
(21:41):
The Fargo Fish Bowl is real to a man, Every
North Dakota State coach says, I can't take it. They
watched my everide move. They got nothing else to do
up here while drink and watch football. He lasted one
year helping to improve the US defense and now Matt
ends is gone, gone to the Green v So good
(22:04):
luck to him and not going to be easy for
Lincoln Riley and Dean Lynn to replace him. Now. As
you know, Matt gus Melson, former Arkansas superstar high school
coach with Mitch Mustain. Gus Malson stepped down at UCF
(22:25):
in Orlandito Why to become the offensive coordinator at Florida State.
Chip Kelly Style left him holding the bag at UCF
and apparently the University of Central Florida called Lincoln's agent
(22:47):
to see if Lincoln Riley, who has the momentum of
a glacier at USC, was interested in.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
Moving Man wow Man freaked.
Speaker 4 (22:58):
Out and reportedly you'd be shocked to know. And then
you wonder why the story came out anyway at all.
Lincoln Riley is not interested, No, because he's on year
three of a ten year, ten million dollar a year.
Speaker 3 (23:18):
Deal and to stay tax in Florida. Somebody out to
reach out to Lincoln let him know they pay you
a send amount of money link.
Speaker 4 (23:24):
I hope he's listening.
Speaker 3 (23:25):
You're gonna make fourteen percent on that.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
Why is that story out? Is leno? Is Lincoln trying
through his agent or Bruce Feldman, to show his desirability
and flex.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Some muscle letter of intent? Day was terrible, but you
see F wants me?
Speaker 4 (23:42):
Does UCF really want him?
Speaker 3 (23:44):
No?
Speaker 4 (23:46):
USC fans are thinking, is this a way out? Is
this the way off this carousel of death? And the
answer is no, No, he likes it way too much.
And his gigantic mansion here and pallas Already's estates yes,
(24:09):
felt felt. Some people are saying that Feldman and a
few others floated this and this is their time of
year to float such turns. I float, but I don't think. Look,
I don't think the Chicago Bears are gonna save Troy
from Lincoln Riley. I don't think it's gonna happen. No,
(24:30):
I don't think the Dallas Cowboys are gonna save USC
from Lincoln Riley.
Speaker 3 (24:37):
You can't win that presser.
Speaker 4 (24:38):
Now, that's all that USC won with Lincoln Riley is
the presser. USC is gonna have to pay Lincoln Rody
to leave. And the estimation this is even worse, Matt.
The estimation in the athletic story is that it's twenty
million dollars more than I thought it would to get
(25:00):
rid of Lincoln Riley. It is ninety million to uproot the.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
Rileys, ninety million dollars to pay him to not coach
your team.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
Ninety million to uproot the Rileys out of the Rossler estate.
In Palace Verne's.
Speaker 3 (25:13):
Estad that ain't happening.
Speaker 4 (25:16):
Ninety million dollars and the declining annual results. So have
fun picking through the sea moss of signing day and
the first portal opening. I'm not doing it. And in
other news, as far as waking up to find out
that you are the eyes of the world. This very week,
(25:38):
Matt Colin Cowherd got the sleep out of his eyes
and said this on his show. It just dawned on
me us he has gotten worse the last three years.
Speaker 3 (25:52):
Fight don't fight all, fight all. Well, that's my My
podcast has no sponsors.
Speaker 4 (26:00):
I feel a bit like John McClain and the Great
Christmas Movie on a Century City die Hard, where I
want to say, welcome to the party, pal, Are you kidding?
It just dawned on me that USC has gotten worse
the last three years.
Speaker 3 (26:17):
Maybe yeah, yeah, you went a Heisman with Kleb three,
you know, at the start of the three years ago,
so technically two years ago. You fall apart last year
and this year is an unmitigated disaster from about week five.
And it just hit him today, just hit him yesterday
or something like that.
Speaker 4 (26:35):
Now, Matt, I did a big dissertation yesterday with cats
that everybody can podcast about USC's situation and a year
end o bit of sorts about the twenty twenty four
season and people can look them up. Of course. Lincoln
Riley was asked today would you really go to UCR
(26:59):
for the Bears? Would you really go to these places
that aren't really offering you a job, Lincoln, And his
answer was, I tell him I'm a USC trojan, and
here's where I want to be.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
It's like forever.
Speaker 4 (27:11):
Yeah, you guys, look, maybe they flipped one d Lineman,
what about the ten other blue Chips that flipped during
the week after they lost to Notre Dame. You idiots
have nothing to celebrate nothing.
Speaker 3 (27:27):
Our sun and day is a mess. Can you do
me a favor and link this Central Florida story?
Speaker 4 (27:33):
Well, of course I can. I have a Saturday podcast, Lincoln.
There's nothing to celebrate here. It's a depressing situation at USC,
and like we said yesterday, there's no light at the
end of the tunnel. This guy signed a deal that
he's gonna make them literally like shucking a crab. He's
(27:54):
gonna make them pull it out of the shell to
get him out of here. They owe him ninety million
dollar if he wants to leave so well, or they
want him to leave. If he wants to leave, they
don't owe him anything. But let me tell you something,
he does not want to leave.
Speaker 3 (28:12):
It's really hard to get by on ninety mili in
southern California.
Speaker 4 (28:16):
Well, you just read that story.
Speaker 3 (28:17):
You know, you know the guy's paying fourteen point four
percent in taxes. You're just burning that money.
Speaker 4 (28:22):
I see how he big got into so much trouble, right.
Speaker 3 (28:26):
Just lighting that money on fire.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
Lank.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
You know he go down to Central Florida, you get
the same amount of money. We're talking about one point
four million bucks more in your pocket. Can you believe that?
Speaker 4 (28:35):
So the carousel will keep spinning. There's gonna be stuff
that interests us, stuff that doesn't interest us. The two
air raid guys that are left in the world got jobs.
Kittley got the job at fau Go Owls Goyles. He
was the oc at Texas Tech. He's like one of
the last air raid people. And our Buckle one of
the other last air raid people. The oc AT Wazoo
(28:57):
is now the oc AT Oklahoma. So a couple last
gasps of the air raid and the carousel continues. We'll
talk more about it as the week goes on. Coming
up next Your Dead and the Live Guide Birthday of
the Day, Poor La Musica everybody, and thank you for listening. Yes,
(29:18):
we love you and we want to see you.
Speaker 3 (29:21):
Tomorrow.
Speaker 4 (29:21):
The Petrosenbody Show will be hitting the road. A flex
alert tomorrow at two o'clock line from Bjay's Restaurant in
brew House and Downy. Alert to all the Gateway cities, industry, commerce, everybody, Wittier, Lamorada.
We want to see you, and of course our friends
(29:43):
in Downy we want to see you at the Bejys
on the corner of Firestone and Lakewood Corner at the
Stonewood Center.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
I have your dead guy pee.
Speaker 4 (29:54):
Yeah. Why does he get to that?
Speaker 3 (29:55):
Yeah? Walter George Perch Junior day my request.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
We have Debbie representing the strippers of America on the
highbreat here we go. I think that's disgusting, don't you.
I don't consider it very lady life for you to
(30:19):
come in here and shake your garry air.
Speaker 4 (30:21):
In the air.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
If it, Bill's good? Do it?
Speaker 2 (30:27):
What's happening?
Speaker 3 (30:28):
I got a field? Good do it?
Speaker 2 (30:30):
Oh yeah, great?
Speaker 3 (30:32):
You are here.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
You are here to hold down the ardithe You are
here to defend I understand the strippers of America.
Speaker 5 (30:41):
Is that right?
Speaker 3 (30:42):
Yes, that's right, all right, defend the strippers of America.
Debbie quick Bio born in Oakland. Father was a seaman
marine shipping mom of famous Baudeville performer, childhood star in
all of the bronkal Billy Westerns. Parents divorced when he's thirteen.
They moved to Hollywood with his mom uh and his siblings.
Goes to the no longer in existence Hollywood Professional School
(31:05):
of the Arts sixteen. He's a DJ working at Kiev
Like Chicken Kiev k I e V. Glendale, writing entertainment
columns for the Early Times in the Evening Vanguard sixty eight.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
The Curvy sort of TV long a big torch in.
Speaker 3 (31:19):
Glendale nineteen sixty eight. In his late thirties, he launched
his Wally George Show on the radio k t Y
m Inglewood. It was an audio experience at first, but
of course it would lay the foundation for this.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
I'm ugly.
Speaker 3 (31:34):
People here are zoom?
Speaker 2 (31:42):
Yeah, Hey, Tony, won't you turn around?
Speaker 4 (31:45):
Turning?
Speaker 5 (31:45):
Hey?
Speaker 3 (31:46):
Playing that cute little pony.
Speaker 4 (31:47):
Tail he's got there?
Speaker 3 (31:54):
Hey, what do you bet? He and Rudy Krafts are
going steady?
Speaker 4 (31:56):
What do you say? Yeah, Matt, you know, I mean,
I don't know why you wanted to go through my
whole childhood today. Well, and this is exactly what it
was like growing up in Los Angeles between the like
the late mid to late eighties and early nineties. Anybody
who was anybody in the Orange County area and Long
(32:19):
Beach in Sampedro crept all the way up to us
on the hill, Big Wallet, George.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
Fans, Oh yeah, Sacks went on there hill. Anybody who
was Saxon went on there, man, They all went on.
Seventy five, he got into TV because he was producing
the former Mayor of La Samuorty show on KCOP TV
Door Cracked. He gets his own spin off in nineteen
eighty when he was forty six.
Speaker 4 (32:41):
Hot talk about Puzzo Hound that your.
Speaker 3 (32:45):
Hot seed shows up when he moves to Kdoc and
Anaheim in eighty three. It would change the world forever.
The signature wig the stripper, the stripper arguments predated Howard Stern.
Speaker 4 (32:58):
Wait a minute, that was a winning uh.
Speaker 3 (33:01):
He was bringing strippers on and insulting them before Howard Stern, ever,
did the combative in physically intimidating guests, wrecking the set.
Were there well before Heroldo. George was the father of
it all. And on a local super station, katieoc Kates.
Speaker 5 (33:17):
Speaking on behalf of a new organization she just formed
called Bimbos of America. He is Bimbo Crystal, here's she come?
Speaker 3 (33:27):
Yeah, Bimbo, Christal the PC shake that movie shake? How
about the horns?
Speaker 4 (33:39):
See he's acting disgusted, but he knows.
Speaker 3 (33:42):
What he's doing. He knows what he's going to do
backstage after the show.
Speaker 4 (33:45):
He knows what he knows what his audience from OCC wants.
Speaker 3 (33:49):
Oh, they're going to touch themselves in their dorm rooms.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Battle back.
Speaker 3 (33:53):
Bimbo's down the audience, Yes, what is this? Ye got
it for you? Wale Katioc shut down in ninety two.
George tried to keep the episodes rolling, but it was
reruns that led to it lasting and continuing to be
(34:14):
iconic throughout the nineties. Now it is alive in perpetuity,
thank you to YouTube. He did slinging around, married ten
plus times, six kids, No bastards though, no bastards. Rebecca
de Mornay was born to he and Jane Eager, his
second wife, and all of those kids, all six of
(34:35):
them born to one of his ten plus wives, so
no bastards. Lived in Sherman Oaks for a long time
and then Garden Grove.
Speaker 4 (34:43):
Listen, I have I have boundaries. Come on.
Speaker 3 (34:47):
He died in two thousand and three at terrible seventy one,
he would have been ninety three today. P A hero
to you, a hero of your childhood, thank, a hero
to many, and someone that will be radio.
Speaker 4 (35:00):
Show late at night under the moniker Xavier Savior.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
Hey, mister George.
Speaker 4 (35:08):
That's not how I sounded us.
Speaker 3 (35:12):
Yeah, you tried to make your voice deeps You're like, hey,
mister George, it's Xavier.
Speaker 4 (35:17):
I may or may not have been sexually harassed by
the old f P.
Speaker 3 (35:20):
The old f P. Welly, George, happy birthday.
Speaker 4 (35:23):
Wow, thank you? Uh Matt, A little headier for your
A live guy.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
I got here, I'll dare you.
Speaker 4 (35:30):
Jazz Torch singer Cassandra Wilson, Yes, she's sixty nine today.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (35:44):
Hey hey Cassandra, they celebrated you on a show. Oh
yes they did.
Speaker 3 (35:51):
Yeah you said sixty.
Speaker 4 (35:54):
Yeah, they've played a bunch of three. You're a very
dignified African American feet bail artists from Jackson, Mississippi. But
they played a bunch of bone or sound show me
a booby terrible, terrible, that's not that's how not to
(36:15):
be that. We're showing you an example of.
Speaker 3 (36:17):
How nuts right don't do that, especially.
Speaker 4 (36:19):
Around Cassie Wilson classically trained exactly, thank you, sorry, coach.
She went to Millsaps College and Jackson State, ended up
getting her PhD. She worked in a bunch of cover
bands all the way through school, went to New York
and started singing with m Bass, a famous jazz funk
(36:42):
outfit from Brooklyn.
Speaker 3 (36:44):
Of course we know about her, I mean, come on,
so I didn't even acknowledge.
Speaker 4 (36:47):
The exactly, and we don't even need to bring up
the fact that she was also in an avant garde
trio called New Air.
Speaker 3 (36:55):
Because that's it, and you with an umlat.
Speaker 4 (37:00):
Loop, that's not true. Her first solo record was produced
in Germany in nineteen eighty six, and that was when
she was established as a serious musician. She found big
time critical success. Oh there she is, turn it up, dates,
(37:21):
love it, very serious, seriousness.
Speaker 3 (37:27):
You've learned the meaning of the blue.
Speaker 4 (37:31):
She had a broad critical success with Standards in nineteen
eighty eight and an album of a you know songs
like this.
Speaker 3 (37:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (37:40):
At that point, Matt once she put her puzza down
in eighty eight. She was eighty eight. Now the great gate.
She could record with whoever and however she wonted. In
ninety six, she wanted Grammy for Best Vocal Jazz Performance.
She performed on Wynton Marsalis's Blood in the Field Elm,
(38:01):
which was a Pulitzer Prize winning Miles Davis was her
biggest influence, and she did his big Lincoln Center shows
in nineteen ninety seven. Not enough crack cocaine in the world.
Speaker 3 (38:17):
We all have marthins.
Speaker 4 (38:21):
She was married to a guy for two years. You
don't know, and Mada'm like Wally George. It's I hate
to say it. She did have a bastard.
Speaker 3 (38:29):
Well, she didn't have a picture of the Space Shuttle
in John Wayne behind her desk. Reagan the Duke exactly.
Speaker 4 (38:40):
In the late eighties she gave birth to a bastard.
This is interesting. She was also married to some director
for three years. She lived in sugar Hill in Harlem
in a big apartment, and former residents of the same
apartment count Basie, Lena Horn and Joe Lewis. And you know,
(39:04):
Joe Lewis used to live there. Because there's a certain
closet you open it, you just catch an upper cut
right in every time. Oh, don't open that. Sorry, Sorry
about that oht Cassandra Wilson sixty nine Today. Yeah, we're
(39:30):
gonna see you tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (39:32):
Hi, Brow, dead and alive.
Speaker 4 (39:34):
Keep your pizzel in your pants tomorrow and downy. We're
looking forward to seeing you.
Speaker 3 (39:38):
But we still have or don't see what happens.
Speaker 4 (39:42):
I'm pretty sure I know what's gonna happen. We have
a fun fact. We have quick hits and we will
say good night for Clippers Wolves right after the next
sec