Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Gary and Shannon and you're listening to KFI
AM six forty, the Gary and Shannon Show on demand
on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
There was a gunman who hijacked a metro bus and
led the lapd on a pretty wild chase very early
this morning, but it ended with one of the passengers
having been killed.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
For more than an hour, a bunch of black and
whites followed this bus as it made its way from
Vermont Knowles in South Alay North into downtown. Police were
able to use spike strips on the tires surrounded it
with a swat team about two am, and that put
a stop to this.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
But yeah, it.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Started when the suspect got on the bus, argued with
the driver, shot a passenger as others on the bus
ran out nine one one began to light.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
Up flood of call to dispatchers.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Bus driver hits the panic button and triggers the emergency
message like you said on the light display.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
Eventually, the spike strips debilitated the bus to the point
where I couldn't go any farther obviously, when they stopped
near Alami and Sixth, that's when police stormed inside with shields.
One of the passengers was able to escape through a
window as police came into the bus. Video showed the
bus driver climbing out of a window and run into
safety behind an armored vehicle that was out in front
(01:13):
of it. They still have not yet exactly said why
the person got on the bus in the first place,
why he would have shot somebody, but they did find
one passenger suffering from multiple gunshot wounds.
Speaker 5 (01:25):
No one else was injured.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
Well, Miss Amy King has an exciting weekend coming up,
to say the least terrifying weekend.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
Oh, it's gonna be great.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
You want to go, I will watch your You're gonna
go instagram live on this.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
We're gonna we'll definitely be putting out a video. I
don't know if I want it live, Okay, So tell
everyone what's going to go on. So we're going over
the edge.
Speaker 4 (01:49):
We're raising money to help out the Union Rescue Mission.
I'll be repelling twenty five stories down the Universal Hilden
you know, the big black hotel on top of the
hill by Universal Studios. Yes, yeah, so you know why
not go jump off that? But we're doing it for
a really good cause. In it's to actually help people
(02:11):
who are homeless, not just throw money at them. But
Union Rescue Mission eighty six cents out of every dollar
you donate goes right to them. They feed tons of people,
and they also have housing programs like to get people
into housing and then help them transition, like help them
get a ged, help them get a job, and get
them back into society. So it's why we're behind this
(02:32):
particular organization. They get no government funding because they have
dry shelters. That means no drugs and alcohol in their shelters,
so they're all privately funded. It's crazy, yeah, and we're
trying to raise money. And I got to tell you,
Neil just jumped ahead of me in fundraising and I'm
kind of ticked.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
Where do I go?
Speaker 4 (02:52):
I'll fix it right now. Okay, just help one dot org.
Just just help the number one dot org. And there's
a Team iHeart page and then you can look at
team members and there's Amy and there's Neil and a
couple other people with Ihearted doing it. And if you
can make a donation, we'd love it. If it's a
big one, great, if it's a little one great, whatever
(03:14):
you can do, we appreciate it. And I'm going over
the edge Friday at three pm.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
You could come by and watch if you want.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
So anything you can do to help would be greatly appreciated.
And of course we would love to get more people
off the street. So you can't help all of them.
There's too many. But you can't just help one. There
you are, Okay, I'm gonna fix this right now. Just
help the number one dot org.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
So were you just standing on top of the building
and then someone said, hey, if you're up here, we
have an idea.
Speaker 5 (03:45):
Maybe we could turn this into a charity event or.
Speaker 4 (03:48):
Well, you know, I did watch tom cruise repel into
the stadium at the Olympics, and I thought that looks fun.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
That may and perfect sense.
Speaker 4 (03:56):
Yeah, and then the Union Rescue Mission said, hey, you guys,
we're doing this fundraiser.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
So yeah, well the best of luck. Thank you again.
Just help the Number one Just help one dot org.
Look for the Team iHeart page and then find Amy King.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
I'm putting you over Neil right now.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Hey, thanks, Shannon, I can't have that, I know, right,
He'll be on the show in a half an hour
to get back at.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
Me right well.
Speaker 5 (04:22):
Tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
Also will remind everybody because we're gonna be live at
our news and bruise at Bjay's Restaurant and brew House
in Huntington Beach on Beach Boulevard, and we'll make sure
that we remind everybody again tomorrow. Okay, you appreciate it
all right when we return. There's a lot of a
lot of secrets about these Disney people. And I'm not
(04:43):
looking at you, Amy, but I'm totally looking at you.
Have you been to Club thirty three? Oh, don't say
it like.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
Oh yeah, No, she she spent some time there. She's
not just been there one time. She us still like,
hang out there? What what are you looking at? I
believe she may have prolonged a relationship to hang out there. No,
I did not prolong their relationship to hang out there.
Speaker 5 (05:07):
It sounds like there's a story, and we'll do that
when we come back.
Speaker 3 (05:10):
Oh darn, I gotta leave right after this.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
I love Disneyland when it comes to a couple things.
I don't love all these strollers, but I do love
the nostalgia and I love hearing the details of the
secrets of Disneyland. And there is a couple that's been
banned from Disneyland they're suing and they're spilling all of
these secret details. Diana and Scott Anderson are their names,
(05:34):
and they estimate they've spent about a million dollars living
out their dreams at Disneyland. Now they're both sixty years old,
and from twenty twelve to twenty seventeen they were members
of Club thirty three.
Speaker 3 (05:45):
Of course, not a lot.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
You don't know a lot about Club thirty three unless
you're privy to somebody who's been inside, and even then
people are very cagy about what goes on. It's the
exclusive private lounge where the wealthiest disney Files escape the crowd.
You can have cocktails, there's gourmet meals.
Speaker 3 (06:03):
These two, this couple, they.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Said they would visit Disneyland as many as eighty times
a year.
Speaker 5 (06:09):
Yeah, and blow all kinds of money.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
Think of the thousands of dollars that they're spending on
hotel rooms, food and drink transportation. They're paying for access
to the special events, including dining in the Haunted Mansion.
Speaker 5 (06:23):
Ride.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
I didn't know you could do that, but for twenty
five hundred bucks the New Year's Eve parties.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
They say their social circle revolved around friends they had
met at Club thirty three. In fact, after twelve years
on a waiting list, they were finally invited to join
Club thirty three and twenty twelve. They paid fifty thousand
dollars in sign on fees and dues their first year
for a Platinum pass, which gave them guest passes to
bring along their family and friends. And this is where
(06:52):
their social circle revolved, they said. But it all came
to a crashing halt when their membership was terminated in
twenty seventeen because the husband, Scott, was accused of being
drunk inside a Disneyland park. He says he was suffering
from a medical condition vestibular migrainevestibular thank you, which causes disneyness.
(07:16):
So they sued to be reinstated. They've lost that legal
battle that went on for seven years, and now they
face a huge legal bill and exile from Disneyland.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
So they said, the first four years, like you said,
joined in twenty twelve Club thirty three. They paid fifty
thousand and sign on fees. The first four years were bliss.
They mingled with Hollywood A listers. In twenty seventeen, they said,
the magic began to fade. Prices went up quality decline
and ms Anderson was suspended for using salty language.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
Yes, she said she had been drinking at the bar
when their alcohol service was suddenly cut off after her
friend split her mirmosa. I'm sure there was more than
one split mimosa involved with her salty language. Apparently she
complained to the manager and said the words to the
effect of what the f is going on? The suspension
was swift came immediately on the night their membership was
(08:11):
terminated the same year, twenty seventeen, the husband, Scott, says
he was with fifteen to twenty friends at Club thirty three,
that he had two beers and a glass of wine
over three hours. Right at nine point thirty, he was
found slumped on a park bench by two security guards.
They reported back to Club thirty three management that he
smelled of alcohol he was slurring his words. They were
terminated on the spot. The jury took just forty five
(08:37):
minutes of deliberating to rule against them. Yet, you don't
get to go to Disneyland, get drunk and ruin Club
thirty three and you know, be slurring your words on
a park bench in front of children and a jury
in Orange County take your side.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
That's just not going to happen.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (08:57):
I've heard of people. I think my I think my
wife knew some.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
I don't know anybody who has an official membership to
Club thirty three, but I I mean, I'm sure I
do at some point. It's just not something I asked about.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
This couple claimed that eighty percent of the members sold
access to the club in return for dinner, drinks or
one hundred and fifty dollars in cash. Other members would
buy Club thirty three merchandise polo shirts, napkins, handbags, mugs
and sell it online at a markup.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
And they said that Disney staff members would monitor a
private Facebook page for Club thirty three members, and if
members complained on that private page, they would face repercussions
in the park, they said, celebrity members were afforded special treatment.
You know why, because they're celebrities. They were able to
flout the strict rules, like Rebel Wilson. For example, she
(09:50):
revealed last year that she'd been suspended from the club
for taking pictures in the bathroom and joked that membership
was being was akin to being a member of the
Disney Illuminati. The other there is one Thanksgiving Diane and
Scott said that they were having lunch in Club thirty
three and it was closed at short notice. The dining
room was so that Tom Hanks and his family could
(10:11):
have a private dinner.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Scott Anderson said he sued Disney because he believed his
integrity had been maligned. I became known as the drunk
in the park. Missus Anderson. Diana now sees Club thirty
three as a cult. We all laugh and we go, God,
we were in a cult. We didn't even know it.
Speaker 3 (10:29):
You guys are ass hats.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
That's what you are. I defend Disney. There is a
new report on the state of parenting in America. Also,
why is childcare so expensive? We've got a lot of
stories about that as well.
Speaker 5 (10:42):
Residents of Wyoming have the most positive outlook on life.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
That makes sense to determine where states land on the
scale of optimism and seeing the bowl half full instead
of half empty. A yogurt brand did a study with
the support of a group called Wakefield Research, and your
Optimism Index score would range from zero to ten based
on ten different metrics, including how likely you were to
(11:08):
persevere in challenging situations, how often you exercised, how often
you eat a healthy breakfast things like that. Okay, yeah, yeah,
Maryland was number five, okay, where Alabama was number four.
New Jersey was number three, California was number two. Wow,
and then Wyoming number one.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
Kathy just sent me some pictures. I love burger wars,
don't you. It's always so much fun. So two days ago,
USA Today comes out with the best fast food burgers
in America, and the number one spot was Habit.
Speaker 3 (11:36):
Number two was in and Out.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Now both based in California, of course, but now everyone
knows the in and out in your Lax, right. The
billboard went up the same day that this survey came out,
and the billboard right outside the In and Out at
Lax says congrats on being number two in and Out,
and then the Habit logo and the Habit girl or whatever.
And then they took out also a a backpage at
(12:02):
a full ad in the paper deer in and Out,
and there's a big trophy that says number two. There's
so much emphasis on winning in today's society. Let's take
a beat to celebrate the silver medalists, the runners up.
There are hundreds, if not thousands, of Burger options out there,
and yours was just voted number two by USA to
Day's ten Best Number two. That's pretty darn good. So
(12:24):
here's to you, in and out. Congrats on number two.
Your friends, Habit Burger and growth.
Speaker 5 (12:28):
Oh that's great.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
It's not wonderful. I love a healthy competition.
Speaker 5 (12:33):
So that statistic that.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
We were talking about was that of the twelve shows
that won Primetime Emmys just a couple weeks ago, two
of them Hacks on HBO Max Hacks and Apple TV's
The Morning Show. Those two are the only two to
have been filmed in California.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
Other states and countries have been ramping up incentives to
arrest productions away from California, and it's working. This is
a warning sign that we are no longer the worldwide
leader in entertainment.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
Well, one of the things that we have done as
a result we being California is right now we have
a three hundred and thirty million dollar film and Television
tax credit program, which offers studios and producers credits of
up to twenty five million based on eligible spending of
twenty to thirty percent on productions in the state. But
we may need to triple the size of our program
(13:28):
and expand the types of productions that can apply for this.
Just give you an idea of recently, the the movie
Wicked that is coming out later this year was filmed
almost entirely in the UK. All of the Marvel movies,
Think Avengers, Captain America, all those, most of that is
based in Georgia. Barbie, for example, another huge movie that
(13:54):
came out last couple of years, filmed.
Speaker 5 (13:56):
Almost entirely in London.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
TV show Why Master Chef, you know, the Gordon Ramsay
show that's going to be outside the United States for
the first time. It's going to be out of La
the Floor, the game show Beat Shazam, the game show
named that tune. They're all now shot in Ireland as
part of a production deal that was formed a couple
of years ago.
Speaker 5 (14:18):
So how do we get this? What exactly happened? They
said that.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
A time when Hollywood's working class has already seen its
financial reserves drained by the strikes from last year, a
bunch of these major production houses are setting up shops
in other states, even other countries, which generates frustration for
crew workers find it harder than ever to find employment
during COVID For example, I knew a guy who was
working set construction. He picked up and moved for two
(14:48):
full years because of the restrictions on productions here in
the state of California, specifically with COVID. If you look
at the Employment Development Department, the information sectors of the
largest monthly decline in jobs from July to August, largely
because of the motion picture and sound recording industries. Jobs
dropped by four thousand to under one hundred thousand. That's
(15:11):
about four and a half percent higher than the total
job count a year ago at the peak of the
writers and actors strikes. And then you had, of course
contract negotiations between IATZI and the teamsters that took place,
and everybody was mad because they didn't trust the workers
and studios to actually follow through on the promises that
they were supposedly asking for or making.
Speaker 5 (15:34):
Say.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
One of the major factors is the question of above
the line pay. California does not permit productions to include
the salaries of actors, directors, and other top talent towards
any tax credits, but places like Georgia and the UK
say that the above the line salaries can be deducted,
(15:54):
which is a major reason why major films are going there.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Yeah, that's real money.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Not just the actors, but the types of shows. Because
game shows, commercials, animated films, they're not eligible for those
tax credits for the moment.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
Is this why you haven't hosted a game show recently?
Speaker 5 (16:12):
That is exactly the reason.
Speaker 3 (16:13):
Yeah, they went fly you to Georgia to do that.
Speaker 5 (16:16):
They would not right now.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
The issue of how much in total tax credit the
state's the state allocates to eligible productions. Georgia does not
have a cap on its tax credit program, which is
why you're seeing some massive studios. Tyler Perry's billion dollar
studio that's going up is in Georgia.
Speaker 5 (16:36):
A lot of the Amazon productions that we've seen.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
I'm looking at Jack Reacher, the new series on Amazon
that was filmed entirely in Georgia. They said that Georgia
has no cap on its tax credit program. New York
increased its cap up to seven hundred million, and like
I said, our tax credit program, despite the fact that
we have a much larger industry, is still capped at
(17:00):
three hundred and thirty million. The teamster's goal is to
triple that amount, expand that to one billion, because if
nothing else. It at least fits the scale of the
production business here in the state of California. But that's
going to be a hard sell because the state of
California doesn't have any money. And I can't wait to
see Gavenowsom walking around.
Speaker 5 (17:19):
The hallways today. I'd ask him more about it.
Speaker 3 (17:21):
Yeah, but no pictures. Remember, Yeah, the it is beaten
down the door.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
The Tampa International Airport's going to close at two am
because of the hurricane.
Speaker 3 (17:30):
They're going to shut down the airport.
Speaker 5 (17:32):
I could see that.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
So that is going to snarl things if you're headed
to the East coast or through any sort of Yeah,
just check.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
I mean, airlines are already releasing different alerts for that.
North Carolina has declared a state of emergency at COORDA
ahead of Hurricane Helen touching down there. You've got Florida
A and M, University of Tampa, Florida, State, University of
Florida all have closed down.
Speaker 5 (18:00):
Yeah, and we're more than twenty four hours away from landfall.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
They said it could be a high end Category three
with one hundred and twenty five mile per hour wins
by the time it makes landfall tomorrow night.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
I guess that's good news, and that it's not a
four or a five.
Speaker 1 (18:16):
It might be a category four. They said during Landfall
last night at the end of the Dodgers Padres PA
such a better call. It's always such a better call. Well,
this was Joe Davis on KLA City.
Speaker 5 (18:37):
Smoke the third me Toronto steps on the back like
all the way around and turn a triple play ten
the game been impossible. I guess I would have been
on sports and at LA.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
But still, I mean the Padres a triple play to
end the games. But it's the first triple play in
Padres for the Padres since twenty ten, I believe, and
only the thirteenth or fourteenth in the history of the franchise.
Guarantees their spot in the postseason. Now they're two games
behind the Dodgers for the National League West title.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
Shout out to my buddies Adrian Garcia marquezcuse Me and
Francisco Pinto, who are the Chargers play by play guys
for the Espanol and they are outstanding. Sometimes I just
try to listen to their broadcast, going their studio next
door and just listen to the excitement and the emotion
and those guys are exhausted.
Speaker 3 (19:34):
When they are done.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Calling a game because of all, Yes, it's awesome to
see it.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
Dodgers will take on the Padres again tonight at Dodgers Stadium.
It is Clayton Kershaw Bobblehead Night tonight, First pitches, It's seven.
Listen every play on AM five to seventy LA Sports
Live from the Gallpin Motors Broadcast booth.
Speaker 5 (19:49):
Stream all of.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
The games NHD on the iHeartRadio app and use that
keyword AM five seventy LA Sports. Well, we got a
report from the Senate investigations into the attempt to say
fascination of Donald Trump have revealed some pretty big security lapses,
as if we didn't see them coming. The only questions
of the questions, I should say, have only grown since
then as we deal with this. The Secret Service was
(20:11):
one of the last nine, one of at least nine
federal and local security divisions that were supposed to be
working together that day in Butler, Pennsylvania in July. But
at that rally, young guy with a rifle borrowed from
dad was able to outthink, out, smart, outmaneuver the cops
for more than an hour and a half before he
eventually fired the shots that came within millimeters of killing him.
(20:34):
Forecasters warning that Hurricane Helene will intensify as it crosses
the Gulf of Mexico on a path to Florida. National
Hurricane Center said it's about five hundred miles southwest of
Tampa right now. Sustained winds have reached eighty miles an hour.
They said it's expected to become at least a Category three,
with its center making landfall in the Big Bend area
(20:56):
of the Panhandle as soon as late tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
Oakland won a title in five straight years in the
seventies baseball's athletics in seventy two, seventy three, seventy.
Speaker 5 (21:11):
Four, Wind Is a Pirate, the.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
Raiders in seventy six, the Warriors in seventy five. All
three teams played just steps apart at two venues surrounded
by parking lots and a bart station.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
Now, I can't say they were the greatest venues for sports,
but they were also built in the sixties and seventies.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
I loved the coliseum just because of the memories of
going and seeing you know, Dennis Eckersley with his socks
up to his knees and the easy going nature of
going to an a's game where the players would sign
autographs after.
Speaker 3 (21:45):
It was so much more user friendly.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
It's like a JV team kind of with the city,
you know, being the forty nine Ers and the Giants,
those were always It's like the Lakers and the Clippers
kind of.
Speaker 3 (21:58):
But I loved going to the call.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
I love going to the Coliseum, even when I was
working with the Chargers and the station was in complete shambles.
I mean it would flood, they had rodents, the toilets
backed up, all the wires were exposed in the belly
of the stadium. I mean it was a total shole,
but it was something that stood.
Speaker 3 (22:18):
From my childhood.
Speaker 5 (22:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
But anyway, how.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
Much time you spent at the Coliseum the arena, sorry,
the Coliseum arena, which was the basketball arena.
Speaker 3 (22:27):
Ye had a couple games throughout my whole life.
Speaker 5 (22:30):
I saw a couple of concerts there, but I never
saw games.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
I spent much more time in the coliseum.
Speaker 2 (22:35):
Yeah, I saw plenty of baseball these baseball games, which
is weird because I mean it's a town of just
over four hundred thousand people. Now that's just that's not
to say that a town of four hundred thousand people
can't support a couple of Major League or few big
League teams because obviously they're drawing from the entire Bay Area.
But if you think about what has happened, obviously the
Raiders moved to la for a while and then back
(22:57):
to Oakland, and then a couple of years ago they
get lured to Vegas in this beautiful arena that's just
off the strip in Vegas.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
I think it's the best branded stadium for a team.
You walk into that place, you know exactly who plays it.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
And then the Warriors get drawn out of the Coliseum
Arena over to San Francisco, or I should say, back
to San Francisco from whence they came. And now the A's,
the Oakland A's are playing their final game in Oakland tomorrow, wow,
against the Texas Rangers. And I mentioned this to you
yesterday that apparently the A's team, the players and the
(23:35):
coaches and managers have been told it's probably not a
great idea to stick around after the game because we
don't know what the fans are going to do, Like,
I don't know what that The assumption is that they're
gonna what storm the field fans love, you're gonna ask.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
I mean, the fans love the players, they love the team.
They've fought so hard it would spend such an inspiring
thing to watch the A's fans fight for their team
to have it be sold in everything. They are going
to crash for a while in West Sacramento at a
minor league venue. Is that the River Cat Stadium, Yes,
And then they're going to try to turn their dreams
(24:11):
of moving to Vegas into a reality.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
And that's still That's the thing is that's still not
a given that they that they play in Vegas. I mean,
there's there's other cities that may be more ready or
would be more willing to have them. So one of
the problems with sports ownership a lot of times is
that the people who buy these teams suck, they're awful people,
(24:36):
and that they just look at it. They're not sports fans,
which you don't have to necessarily be, but it makes
a difference in the way that you deal with your franchise.
And in this case, on Monday, the owner of the A's,
a guy named John Fisher, released the letter to fans
and he said staying was in Oakland was our goal.
It was our mission and we failed to achieve it.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
And then this part highlights what we're saying. Yes, in
the letter, Loma Prieta, the namesake mountain of that six
point nine magnitude earthquake that disrupted Game three of the
World Series between the A's and the Giants, Loma Prieta
was misspelled. How do you misspell that in a letter
to A's fans when it meant so very much, not
(25:16):
just to the World Series and to the A's being
in the World Series, but to the city that it leveled.
Speaker 3 (25:22):
Yeah, my goodness.
Speaker 5 (25:24):
Now there will be sports teams.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
The Oakland Roots are like a second tier soccer team
that are playing.
Speaker 5 (25:31):
They're trying to build that up.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
I guess they're going to try to lure some minor
league baseball into town, which is fine.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
Sad, very sad.
Speaker 5 (25:39):
It's very sad what has happened to that city.
Speaker 2 (25:42):
You've been listening to The Gary and Shannon Show. You
can always hear us live on KFI AM six forty
nine am to one pm every Monday through Friday, and
anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.