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July 9, 2024 32 mins
ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – A look at the 4th of July ‘Weekend Box Office’…PLUS – It’s ‘Dying Time’ with the unfortunate death of Daredevil Mike Hughes' who died trying to prove Earth is flat AND after 378 days in a simulated Mars environment NASA’s ‘CHAPEA’ has emerged - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kellyon demand from KFI AM six forty and
the box office had a not tooshabby weekend once again, a strong opening
for Despicable Me. For It camein with one hundred and twenty two million
domestically two hundred and thirty million worldwide. When you do a quarter of a

(00:24):
billion dollars your first weekend out,there's nothing to sneeze at. Let me
be honest, I personally have neverbeen a fan of the Despicable Me franchise.
It's just me. It doesn't appealto me. Also, I don't
have kids, and it doesn't seemlike it has a lot of adult humor.
It's just more like just for thekids. Am I wrong? Swallow?

(00:44):
Uh No, no, not really. I mean the first ones in
early on it did, but Ithink the creators of the franchise they leaned
more into the fact that the kidslike the it's a fluffy girl and the
mini and things like that, andthey made it more for kids as it
developed. So you saw Despicable Mefor what do you think? Uh?

(01:07):
Yes, I saw Despicable Despicable Mefor dot dot dot. Please don't make
it anymore. I saw Despicable Mefor Dot Dot Dot has Jumped the Shark.
I mean, man, this film, it was such a just a
drag to get through. This filmhas It's a nothing film. It's like,

(01:27):
hey, we have to keep kidsgoing to Universal Studios to ride the
ride and take pictures with the minionsor something. It's maybe it's a cash
grab. Maybe they have a newdoll coming out with this Christmas. I
have no idea, but this filmwas absolutely uninteresting. It is the It
is a far cry from the firstone, which was it was fun,

(01:49):
the music was good. This onewas tough. I mean it was me,
the kids, the gold Parent andwe all kind of walked out of
there like yeah, yeah, yeah, I really like the first one.
Yeah, I'm not running to seethat, that's for sure. Please don't.
Speaking of sequels, though, insideOut two is a smash hit.
It came in at number two thisweek. It's still gross another thirty million

(02:14):
domestically. Worldwide, it's crossed onepoint two billion dollars and still going strong.
It's gross more than a half billionhere in the US, and it's
even a bigger hit internationally, whichmeans that it will have some legs.
We haven't seen a movie do thiswell in a while, and I think
it'll probably do better than both Barbieand also Super Mario Brothers last year.

(02:40):
Yeah, I agree with that.This film it has a peal across generations
and it deserves every bit of thisbillion that has gotten so far. But
outside of that, we have somegenerally i'll say strong movies. A Quiet
Place Day one is not expected todo gay, but it came in third.

(03:02):
It's worldwide grosses one hundred and seventyseven million. It's been well received,
critically acclaimed. Lupita Niongo's performance hasbeen especially praised. There has been
some talk of maybe it may leadto some awards. I'm not gonna oversell
it. I've seen the movie andI can understand why, because she is

(03:23):
doing a lot of acting with nothingto respond to. You know, if
you know what the cgi and hercharacter journey is a it is a really
really good movie just for her performancealone, but overall the movie is very
good. That was Radar. Ohyeah, oh wow, Okay, so
let's do that and it's Radar allright? Mark coming in number four is

(03:45):
Maxine. Yeah, I kind ofwant to see that. I'm not a
huge fan of the first two,but they're very well made, and if
you like genre movies, especially seventieshorror films, you're gonna like that.
But I'm not so crazy about itthat I had to rush out to a
theater and see it. I justwatched Pearl a few days ago, which
is the second in the trilogy.Solid but not great. Give us some

(04:06):
backstory on the trilogy. What isit all about? Well, in the
first one, some people rent abarn to make a porno movie and the
people who own it are really angryabout it, and you could say they're
homicidally angry about it. And thesecond one, Pearl, it's the origin
of the Old Woman. And Idon't really want to spoil anything else by

(04:30):
telling you that. The third onejumps to the eighties and one of the
characters from the first film is inthe film industry, and there's murder,
lots of murder. Some people havecomplained that it's kind of so so average,
but then the deaths themselves are horrificallygory. That's not something that I
have a problem with, because ifyou know what kind of movie you're going

(04:50):
into, then that's what you're getting. Is it a horror movie or something
different there? I think intended asan homage to slasher films of the period,
like seventies eighties slasher films. Oneword for those is Jallo. Italians
popularizing ghiallo meant yellow, which wasan indication of kind of their low quality

(05:12):
tabloid nature. Okay, see thatsome new information coming in At number five,
Bad Boys Ride or Die. Thatmovie has some legs. It has
crossed three hundred and sixty million worldwide. I'd be interested to look up and
see how that stacks against the otherones. But I expected that this movie
was not going to perform as well, because you know, after a certain

(05:35):
point, people it's a different generationthey're talking to. The first one was
in the nineties, so you know, you don't know whether audiences are still
going to gravitate to it. Ihave a question, is there any scene
in the movie the Bad Boys moviewhere Will Smith and Martin Lawrence are in
a vehicle and they look at eachother and go ah eight or nine,

(05:57):
okay, good good, Yeah,I'm in. Number six was Horizon and
American Saga Chapter one. I haveno idea what that is. That is
the three hour Kevin Costner Westerner,which Westerner, which is meant to be
the first of four chapters, andgod, it is a horrifying failure.
And I've been trying to get tosee it, but it's hard to carve

(06:20):
out half a day because the movieitself is three hours. Then he got
twenty minutes of previews and you gota park and drave. He likes those
long ass movies. You think aboutit, Kevin like from water World and
Into Postman. Also, he justlikes those long, dragging movies. I
admired that he put up money ofhis own to get it made, and

(06:44):
I want to support it, butlike I said, it's just hard to
get to it. Well, let'ssee it is grossed two million. Yeah,
I don't know how Parts two throughfour seemed to be in trouble,
but I think they might have beenfinished filming already, So I don't know
what's going to happen. I'm surehopes so they're probably just gonna get dumped
straight to streaming. I would guessnumber seven is Sound of Hope, the

(07:04):
story of Possum Trot with three million. I don't know what that is.
Trot that sounds so racist, hopefullyit's a slasher movie or the two or
porn slasher's feature with the old Ralphbac she righting skin movie. Oh,
Ralph Bakshi. I grew up watchinghim and it wasn't until I got older

(07:27):
that I could see the messages thathe was imparting. One of my favorite
movies. So growing up was Wizards. Well, of course, you know,
and it was he was. Iwonder what Ralph Bakshi would do with
Pixar stite styled animation today because RalphBakshi, he would integrate live action rotoscoping.

(07:47):
Rotoscoping, That's what I'm looking for. Yeah, with with his classic
animation. He had some good characters, but Wizards was my favorite of his
movies. Oh, he was great, But that number seven was sound of
hope. This story of Possum Trot. Number eight is Kalki twenty eight ninety
eight. Ad what you're just Iwish? Yeah, E is a random

(08:09):
word generator. But that's the wholepoint. That's why the movie industry,
I should say, movie theaters havebeen struggling because this is what they're having
to feature to get people in thetheaters, and they are not coming out
for it. One movie I didwant to see, but I knew I
was going to wait for it tohit streaming was The Bike Riders. I
was interested in that because I'm aTom Hardy fan, but I didn't expect

(08:33):
it to do well. It's onlygross thirty million, obviously underperforming, so
it should be on streaming by tomorrow. Yeah, that's what I predicted when
we talked about it a couple ofweeks ago. It's worth seeing, though.
Okay, good, here's something elseMark you may appreciate before we go
to break coming in at number ten, The Fall Guy has jumped back up
from nineteen to ten for some reason, and there's no account there our taste.

(08:56):
They're promoting the heck out of thatfilm in every way they can,
social media, on the on thestreaming app. They're they're invested in this
seed in theaters thing, and Idon't know why. I don't know what
what the deal is, but thepromotion for it is back. They actually
showed a trailer for it when wewent to see what's called the whatever the

(09:20):
well. It grows eight hundred andseventy thousand, and from what you're telling,
Beach Wallet, sounds like they spentmore than a million, So I
don't know how much that is helping. Wa. So what's the total for
The Fall Guy? It is ninetytwo million domestically, one hundred and seventy
six million worldwide. Please no sequel, please? Yeah, you know,

(09:41):
we got to get the six milliondollar man. We got to do that
before we do anything. Well,there's been talking to that for a long
time. There has been still hasto happen. I don't know if I
want that. Definitely not with him. Well, you can't do six million
dollars nowadays unless the superior piece.It'd be well if they took it back
to the seventies, that could bekind of cool. Yeah, it would

(10:03):
have to be six million dollar man. Well, it would be a comedy
if it was a six million dollarman movie. Now. The only way
you do a six million dollar movienow is if it stars Will Ferrell.
Yeah, guys, that low rentcyborg U for six million, and he
would be the one to do thattype of treatment like he did with Land
of the Lost Knows. Yeah,he would turn it on its head.
I would love that that. I'dgo see in a heartbeat, I would.

(10:24):
I would. I'd like to seehim take a crack at it seriously
though, like a really cool cyborgsecret agent movie. Well, it won't
be happening anytime soon, that much, I do know. No, it's
Later with mo Kelly caf I AMsince forty Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Dying Time is here. When wecome back, I want to tell
you about this old bit we usedto do on the mo Kelly show called

(10:46):
Dying Time where the Darwin theory winsout. You're listening to Later with Moe
Kelly on demand from KFI AM sixforty Ladies and Gentlemen, Boys and News
Dying Times here can't Miami since fortyis Later with moke Kelly Alive everywhere on

(11:09):
the iHeartRadio app. And every oncein a while we miss a story.
And this story I'm going to tellyou about happened a while ago. But
this guy, a self styled engineerwho was called himself the world's greatest daredevil,
originally died when he tried to provethe Earth was flat using a homemade

(11:31):
rocket, and it was filmed fora TV series called Homemade Astronauts. Far
be it from me to tell anyonewhat to do in their garage or backyard.
But there's some things that are notsuited to be constructed in your garage
or backyard. Rockets one of them. According to the footage, in a

(11:54):
horrifying twist, the parachute of thesixty four year old's rocket appeared to malfunction
flight, causing it to crash backon earth. Mad Mike, as he
was called, tried to ascend upto five thousand feet, but instead the
audience below Washington horror as the rocketcrashed near Barstow. Hughes and his team

(12:15):
had built the homemade rocket, asI said, in his backyard, at
a cost of eighteen thousand dollars.There are certain things that you just don't
try to cut corners and save moneyon. Rockets would be one of them.
Well, CBS News has conferred daredevilMad Mike Hughes died after his homemade

(12:37):
rocket crashed shortly after takeoff. Ithappened at a private event in the desert
near Barstow. Sources say the sixtyfour year old was using the rocket in
an attempt to get as close tohis face as possible. His empty parachute
is seen falling to the earth.Hughes was ejected from the rocket after and
he fell to his death. Doyou guys remember I know Mark this,

(12:58):
but I don't think Stepan does,and I know Elmer has no memory of
this. Do you remember the movies, the VHS tapes Faces of Death.
I knew you were going to saythat, Yes, that's explicitly very well.
I remember them. Yes, theywere such a big deal back in
the day because the whole idea ofcapturing death on tape was so beyond it

(13:18):
was incredible, it was. Butyou know, some of those were phony.
Some of them were, but notall of them. Not all of
them were phony. Some of thosecar accidents, from what I remember,
were real. Yeah, if youwanted to see a snuff film, there
was a little real snuff in there. But some of it was really obviously
laugh out loud faith. But theywere banned and from a lot of video

(13:39):
stores. I don't know if theywere formally banned, but a lot of
video stores wouldn't carry them. Butnow this is just like Tuesday on the
internet. Have you seen those likeparkour videos, the fails of people parkouring?
Those are tough to watch. Thosegive you a little whatever, they
make it clench out. Yeah,they deserve everything that happens to them.
But my point is I want tosee the footage of this guy who he

(14:01):
was trying to prove everyone else wrongby demonstrating in his homemade rocket that the
Earth was flat. I don't knowif he had like a Fisher Price camera
he was trying to take up therewith him because he was trying to cut
corners as well, I don't know, but it all ended badly. And
since it's going to be a partof the series Homemade Astronauts, it's only
appropriate that you know he died.Well, I mean you said it when

(14:26):
you said homemade rocket. Therein liesthe deserving of death when you go up
in a homemade rocket. I mean, there's nothing wrong with the homemade rocket,
as long as it's not meant forpeople it is. I've done a
rocket Mike Garage, you know,shoot it off like the fourth of July.
That's something like that science project.Absolutely, you getting in something as

(14:48):
if you know better than the engineersat NASA or anything. And no,
I'm sorry, no, can't putwings of the car. Think you're about
to go to space. Now,since you mentioned faces of death, I
should just point out that pretty muchthat's what Reddit's for now, I know,
because they post everything there. Yeah, and some things. You're right
in the middle of watching him whenyou realize, oh, I didn't need

(15:09):
to see this. I'm barely willingto get in a car which is made
for eighteen thousand dollars. Okay,but you're not going to like put helium
balloons attached to a lawn share andsee how far you can get. Look,
eighteen thousand dollars in today's money isnothing. Nothing. We're talking like

(15:30):
rivets, you know, we're likenineteen forties technology for eighteen thousand dollars and
you put your life in eventual deathin that thing. Now, I of
course I had got that idea.He had to have watched Fast and the
Furious. I believe it was sevenwhen they put a rocket on the pond

(15:50):
Yac the Fierro Fierro, and theytook it to space, So that has
to be where this idea came from. But that's still a stupid idea.
I'm trying to think, if youare knowledgeable enough to fabricate some sort of
rocket device somewhat knowledgeable, shouldn't thequestion in your mind be settled as to

(16:11):
the spherical nature of the Earth ifyou have a modicum of engineering capability,
you would think through all the sciencethat you studied on some level that it
would be a foregone conclusion that theEarth is actually spherical. But no,

(16:32):
you're going to put together an eighteenthousand dollars rocket try to fly it.
Oh my goodness, it failed.Imagine that, and then you died,
all for the purpose of the TVshow which is going to be shown around
the world. Irony, this wouldbe shown across the world according to flat
earthers, all this technology and wecan't even agree on the simple stuff.

(16:56):
I'm not even talking about the moonlighting. That's a different discussion for a different
day. But the spherical nature ofthe Earth. People are willing to die
trying to prove that the Earth isflat. You deserve everything bad which happens
to you. Just think about howmany problems just a little more education would
solve. Especially in the United States, we don't appreciate education. No,

(17:21):
No, we denigrated and ridiculed.Yes, yes education, who wants that?
Who wants to be smart? Wholikes science? Look when you have
individuals that are actually running on apresidency which which is saying that they want

(17:44):
to do away with the Department ofEducation. Education, What do we need
that for you? You know,I mean that lets us know where we're
at. Well, we're an unseeriousnation. Yeah, that's all. And
I can't take you seriously if you'rerunning on a platform which includes eradication of
the Department of Education talking about Americanexceptionalism. We don't believe in school stuff

(18:04):
like that. Well, I don'tknow about you, but I always kind
of look at scance at somebody who'snot very well educated telling us that education's
overrated. You know, Irony,it's Later with mo Kelly if I AM
six forty we're live everywhere on theiHeartRadio app. You're listening to Later with
Moe Kelly on demand from KFI AMsix forty. And as we continue this

(18:29):
science exploration theme discussion, the crew, and I'll put that in air quotes.
I don't know if they're actually acrew, but the crew of the
NASA mission to Mars, the crewHealth and Performance Exploration Analog crew. I
guess they call it Chapia. Thosefolks are merged from their craft air quotes

(18:52):
after a year long voyage that neverleft the planet. The four volunteer crew
members spent more than twelve months insideNASA's first simulated Mars environment at Johnson Space
Center in Houston. Coming out ofthe artificial alien environment this past Saturday at
five pm, they spent a yearthere. Pop quiz, hot quiz.

(19:15):
Anyone want to take a guest athow much they got paid for staying in
solitary confinement of a different kind fora year uninterrupted. This sounds like a
Twilight Zone, Remember the one wherethe guy couldn't talk for a year.
Yeah, I do remember it.Eight hundred thousand, eight hundred thousand dollars
for each person. Each person,they just got thousand stefan. Do you

(19:40):
have an idea how much people werepaid individually to play Martian astronaut so they
could monitor the health and performance ofthis would be crew on Mars for one
year. I'll say two hundred andfifty thousand. Mark RONNERD. Do you
have a guest hundred bucks, fivehundred dollars. The person who's closest is

(20:03):
Mark Runner. They will pay individuallyten dollars per waking hour. That's not
even fast food minimum wage. That'sbelow minimum wage of most states. And
it comes to a total of aboutsixty thousand dollars for the year sixty thousand.
Y'all are idiots, sixty thousand dollarsto isolate in that box in Houston,

(20:30):
sixty thousand dollars. No, No, And you have to stay within
a very small, confined area ofthis habitat that they're creating. I mean,
yes, Jesus man, they're simulatingMars, right, so the conditions
had to be really rough, hadto be cramped. Right here we go

(20:51):
a major step forward for NASA's missionto send astronauts to Mars. Last night,
four volunteers emerged from more than ayear in isolation here on Earth.
Can you imagine that three hundred andseventy eight days to be exact, It
was all to simulate and study whatit would be like for humans to then
live on Mars. So this meantliving in a seventeen hundred square foot enclosure

(21:18):
with communication delays and limited resources.During the time, the team also conducted
mock spacewalks and even grew and harvestedsome crops on practice Martian habitats. I
am so proud an honor to bepart of this crew and project, and
to be a part of a smallincremental part of the work being done here

(21:38):
on Earth that will one day enablehumans to explore and live on Mars.
NASA says that it's hoping to sendastronauts to the Red planet in the late
twenty thirties. NASA, you areso cheap, so cheap, a year
in a habitat, and you barelygave them. Look, they're already sacrificing,

(22:00):
and you're not even rewarding the sacrifice. And I know these folks,
they were like chosen out of onehundreds of thousands of applicants. People wanted
to do this. I don't getit. See, I blame this on
the lack of funding to our spaceprogram. I know that one thing,
and all credit due to former PresidentTrump in his quest to get funding and

(22:26):
get America at the front of thespace race again. That was the whole
emphasis behind creating Space Force. Anda lot of us laughed at it because
on the surface it sounded like ajoke. But when you look at all
the money that came into NASAU andresearch and all that it it, it's
to me it's not a surprise becauseNASAU is hurting from money. There's several

(22:48):
programs that are being shut down inNASAU because of a lack of funding.
So it's you know, but wehave to go forward. Well, two
additional NASA Chapia missions or plan andcrews will continue conducting simulated spacewalks. I
don't know what the hell that is. Are they like in a pool or
something and gathering data on factors relatedto physical and behavioral health and performance.

(23:11):
Yes, all right, what wouldbe your amount? In other words,
let's say NASA came to each oneof us and said, Moe, Mark
Twala, Stephan, we really wantyou to be a part of this.
We want KFI to cover this everystep of the way. It'll be great
for NASA, it'd be great forKFI. But we want you to commit

(23:33):
to three hundred and seventy eight dayswhere you'll be separated, with the exception
of that long rage so called communication, separated from the rest of the world.
What would be your asking price,I'd say, haven't the last four
years of COVID isolation been enough?You swine? There's no price, Stephen?

(23:53):
Can you be bought? Yeah?I actually like to walls and I
think I would take it for likenine hundred grand yea, you know,
I was like, you know,eight hundred fifty foosh is like you're raising
the bar if I'm going to giveyou a year allah being in solitary confinement
in prison, I need to beduly compensated on the other side, and

(24:15):
I wouldn't do it for less thanfive million. Like I was wrongly imprisoned
and I lost a year of mylife, I would need something back and
some on the other side. Ithave to be an investment of some kind.
Look, I want my name tobe etched onto the Mars ship when
it actually goes, and I wantto go into the annuals of history as

(24:36):
a marble exploit. We probably won'tlive that long, and that's why I
want my name to live on.I want it to be you know,
if you have a room on theship, you call it the sharp Room
or something like that. I wantforever my name to be included in the
annuals of space exploration and history.And I want my ashes to be taken
up when the when the Maiden voyagegoes. I'd have to have stipulations like

(24:59):
that. I want to building atJohnson Space Center named after me, the
mo and Tuala Latrines, I said, building Johnson Space Center, I didn't
say on the ship. I said, building building structures, with having buildings
named after you. This is thesecond time you've brought this up. I'm
consistent. That's what I want.That's what I don't even need an honorary

(25:19):
degree. I just want my nameon a building. Can it be any
kind of building? Well, ithas to be a reputable one. Johnson
Space Center will qualify. Okay,I want to statue over at JPO.
Well, now, statue, I'msaying, Look, look, if I'm
only taking eight hundred thousand, definitelymy name included in the annuals of space

(25:41):
expiration history and a statue of somesort, even a bust with a plaque
at JPO. Well, when youput it that way, it seems entirely
reasonable. A huge statue like ohno, no, like the like the
rocky statue that stallone had. No, I don't need that. Just like
when you're when you're on the tour, you pass by my bus and it

(26:02):
has a light behind it, andit has like a little video montage or
something of me, like on theship doing cranks, you know, all
the ship. Where does the flushhandle go on the statue? You walked
into that one too, well you'rereally did suck. See you know that's
why I'm Trustmark Runner. He's alwayslooking to break us down. Well,

(26:22):
I hate to deflate the two massiveegos on you guys. I mean,
I don't want to get in theway of anything Mark. I'm doing this
for sion. No, that's notmassive ego, just greed. There's a
difference. I want something in return, and if I'm going to give up
a year of my life something Ican't get back, it's not going to
be for sixty thousand dollars. Well, the way I figure it is,
I'm going to have an ankle braceletbecause I'm going to be in trouble for

(26:45):
something and I'm not going anywhere anyway. That's the only way I'd submit to
anything like this. I would ratherwork fast food than stay locked in some
room for a year. I thinkyou'd be good at that. I think
you have the perfect person for somebodyat the window. No, No,
I'm gonna be on fries. Yeah, pump that because people will leave me
alone. See, I have towork the window. I have to talk

(27:07):
to people and have to put upwith a lot of stupid stuff. Well,
mister gift of gab, I thinkthat's not And that's when I start
cussing out people. That doesn't goover well because then they and you know,
and Tuala. You know, I'mcloser to Tuala than a nice employee.
I'd start giving people specials the first, the first, the first guy
who I'm giving him a special orderwith some secret sauce. Hey, but

(27:32):
no, no, I think yougot my order wrong on that day.
Might as well, might as well, pump dude, you're listening to Later
with Moe Kelly on demand from KFIA M six forty and before we go,
and I'm gonna get onto mic.You're relatively new here to KFI.

(27:52):
You'd be working in a technical directorof capacity. So tell us about yourself.
Where you're from. Uh, I'mfrom the Bronx, New York.
My family comes from the Dominican Republic, and I've been out here in LA
for five years. Before that,i was in Georgia, North Carolina.
I was in the Air Force,and uh I like working on films as

(28:15):
a post sound production sound designer.All right, now, do you speak
any Spanish? See fluently? Fluently? Wow? Yeah, you'll think okay,
practic eloy, yes, mule.It was perfect, No all that.
But when did you come to LAtwenty nineteen? Okay, so right

(28:38):
before the pandemic? How did thatwork out? So? I had like
the best year ever, and thenthe pandemic hit. I was like so
excited to be here, and thenI was sequested to my room for like
two years. Oh yeah, butlike I knew how awesome it could be
once like we got out of it, so like I had no reason to
move. Okay, so you saidwe were thirty two. Any special person

(29:02):
in your life? Uh? Nosingle? Yeah, you know, well,
you know everybody's fake out here andeverything. So where are you in
your tour of shows here at KFI. Who have you been able to work
with so far? Uh? Garyand Shannon John Colbo? Uh, Dean

(29:22):
Sharp? Have you worked with Billyet? Yeah? I have worked with
Bill. Yeah, Twala as well. I worked on your show. Good
job, doctor, Thank you somuch. Doctor Wendy. I just worked
with her. And this is thisother show on the weekend that's really fun.

(29:47):
Forgot the individual's name though, That'sokay, that's okay. You can't
can't do it all. You can'tremember it all. Whenever we have someone
who may be new working with usor training with us. Always like to
know something of about him, hurtthem, just to get a sense of
what they're trying to do in life, where they're going, where they've come
from. It sounds like you havea thousand different stories, given the different

(30:10):
places that you've lived, military service, all of those things. So you
know when you start working with usin Ernest will have plenty questions for you.
Go ahead, Mark, you've gota terrific voice. Elmer, can
you do a bane? You weremerely born into darkness? I forgot the

(30:33):
first. I used to do itso many times that exceeded expectations. The
okay, okay, all right,well, welcome to KF I belated,
welcome to l A and they sometimesyou'll let me practice my Spanish with you,
of course. Yeah, I'm gladto be here. This show is

(30:53):
awesome. I can't wait to tellyou tell all the girls that stop.
All right, any other questions beforewe get out of here, Mark,
you had a bang question. Noyou can't. You can't listen to him
and not hear it now, Ohno, no, no you can't.
No, yeah great now I havenever he did it all call, so

(31:14):
that's even better. Yeah, evengot a great gift. Don't take it
for granted. Oh I had thesqueakiest voice, and then puberty hit at
like seventeen and it just disappeared.Wait wait, puberty is seventeen. Yeah,
I hit I hit it late.I was like hello everyone, and
then like at seventeen, I waslike, how does that happen? Puberty
hit it seventeen. I don't know, but like I had a groat spur.
I was like five four and thenout of nowhere, I was like

(31:37):
six foot, don't rub it in. I don't like you to give me
suffered. I had late puberty,but when it came, oh maybe,
oh yeah, I suffered enough itwas horrible like prior to that, so
I mean, thankfully, well,congratulations, welcome, We are glad to
have you, and we have totalk some nerd stuff. Sometimes it's the

(32:01):
later. With Mokela caf I AIMsince forty Live everywhere, the iHeartRadio app
The more you know, the easierit is to avoid the idiots around k
f I and the kost HD twoLos Angeles, Orange County Live Everywhere on
the radio.

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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