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September 12, 2024 31 mins
ICYMI: Hour Two of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – Wellness Wednesday with wife, mother, fitness expert, and masterful storyteller Claudine Cooper on KFI…PLUS – Thoughts on the first successful eye & face transplant - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Kfi'm mister mo Kelly live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app
as we continue our celebration and remembrance of now the
late Frankie Beverly, of Frankie Beverly and Mays and joining
me in studio right now is one of Frankie Beverly
super fans. That would be me, Claudine Cooper Claudinekooper dot com.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Claudine is good to see you.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
I know when you were posting on social media that
you were on your way up here in the music
bed of your post with none other than Frankie Beverly.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
And may so let me get out of the way.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Let me just talk about Frankie Beverly, or let you
talk about Frankie Beverly.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Why was his music? Why is his music special to you?

Speaker 4 (00:44):
Oh, this is a big question.

Speaker 5 (00:46):
Basically, Frankie Beverly and Mays they have the soundtrack to
my entire life. So my parents are music lovers and
raise me from a very young age with a great
appreciation for music from the best of the best. And
Frankie really is by far one of the best.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
When I saw you today, as I gently changed gears
I walk out, I didn't see you.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
I heard your voice, yes, and I walked out.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
To where Tualla was and I'm thinking, like, well, where's
the plaudine and and then you hobble out into the
hall and you were hurt.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
I was injured, Claudie. What's wrong? You're here to talk
about health and wellness and you're hobbling.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
Listen.

Speaker 5 (01:28):
Okay, so I missed a step and on my way in,
I tripped, and maybe I was looking down at my
phone at the time, just holding myself accountable, saying don't
walk and use your phone.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Kids. Okay, I did it.

Speaker 5 (01:49):
I tripped, I fell. I have like a scrape on
my leg. But one thing I did say was my
bounce back game is strong. And I do attribute that
to the fact that I work out. As we get older,
taking a fall takes on a whole nother meaning, right.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Correct, And that's part of the reason why we wanted
to talk about this, because I know, just with martial arts,
you're taught to fall, and.

Speaker 3 (02:11):
It has done me well over the years.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
As I get older and I fall like everyone else,
but I kind of know how to fall, and I
want to less than the likelihood of breaking a hip
or injuring myself in a way, because as you get older.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
It takes a long time to heal, if you do
at all.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
So keeping ourselves at a level of healthiness or well.

Speaker 5 (02:32):
Agility or agility, Yeah, that's really what it is, because
in order to break a fall right. And I use
this example all the time because you know, I had
three children within a five year time.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
Span, and so can I just say it, damn, damn.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
So there were toys because I had toddlers, and there
were toys all over the place, and there were steps
and obstacles all over. So I always say that I
train for life. I'm not sure for a competition. I'm
not training for a marathon. And one of the things
that kind of I always refer back to is how
my son used to play with like, you know, dumb trucks.

(03:11):
I mean, he's a boy, right, He's a boy's boy.
So I would find myself like stepping on a toy
and be like God, but.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
The pain is excruciating.

Speaker 5 (03:22):
But I wouldn't take any severe falls because I was
able to catch myself before I got too deep into
the fall. Now tonight, that's a whole other story. I
actually did fall, like I really did plant out on
my hand that.

Speaker 3 (03:40):
I'll talk about laughing at you.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
You are though, because when I came in you showed
me your leg.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
It was like a band aid on your leg.

Speaker 5 (03:46):
It's serious, it's serious. And the thing is, look, I'm
not ashamed to fall. Okay, I am almost fifty years old.
The fact that I could bounce back, get up, come
in here, do the show with you. It is uh
speaking too my agility and coordination at this age. However,
a fall of that magnitude for a person who may

(04:08):
not be fit or strong could potentially result in what
you say, should we call the paramedics?

Speaker 3 (04:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Yeah, And we talked about this now. Because you have
to develop that agility in advance of it. You can't
hope that it's going to be there when it happens. Because,
let's be honest, there are a few times where I've
almost busted my ass trying to get out of the shower.

Speaker 4 (04:29):
You look at.

Speaker 5 (04:30):
It's never something where it's like, oh, I was doing
a backflip off of the you know, off of the
diving board.

Speaker 4 (04:39):
It's nothing like that.

Speaker 5 (04:40):
It's always something functional like getting out of the shower
or walking up the steps to meet up with MO.

Speaker 4 (04:49):
You know, I mean, it could be anything like that.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
So it's usually we take those falls doing stuff just haphazardly,
like I was looking at my phone, and I'm not
ashamed to say that looking down at my phone is
why I missed that step.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
Well, at least it wasn't in the car when you're
doing fifty five miles an hour, and then you know,
call the chain reaction of events.

Speaker 5 (05:08):
Right, it only impacts me, right, But even thinking about
a fall, right, I think being a person who's fit,
I could have easily brushed it off like I had
a fall and I'm just going to go in here
and pretend I didn't fall. But this is such a
deeper thing to talk about because here I am on
a platform with you MO and your listening audience, and

(05:32):
I am okay with talking about the fact that I
took a fall. There's nothing to be ashamed of with
being human. And just because I'm a fit person or
I'm a fitness professional, it doesn't mean that I don't
look down at my phone and take a fall like
an average person as well. So I like to make
sure that I'm being as human and transparent in all

(05:55):
that I do.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
I think my biggest issues, my ego, will get in
the way because like I have to remind myself put
your hand on the rail when you're going down the
steps in your house, because when you're in a familiar environment,
you'll take liberties. You'll run the stairs up and down
real fast. And it's not that I'm not agile enough.
I'm just not young enough to deal with the consequences

(06:18):
of tumbling down the stairs. And there's a difference, and
so I have to remind myself I'm not twenty two anymore.
But the point I'm making is I try to keep
myself still at a certain level where I can deal
with some of the unexpected moments of life. And you
have to be agile in advance of that moment, not

(06:39):
after the fact.

Speaker 4 (06:40):
I think sugar Free says it best. If you stay ready.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
You don't have to get to get ready.

Speaker 4 (06:45):
Yeah, I feel like I've fallen and I.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
Can get up.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
I know, you remember those commercials oh Man, Life Alert,
see Life Alert.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
You see it was funny. Then now it's like that
might be relevant my life.

Speaker 5 (07:04):
Well, actually, at this point in time, I feel like
it's actually like we can't say something like that is
funny because it's insensitive, you know.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Well, but not only that I think about it, I'm
only maybe five years away from life. Aloone just put
it around my neck so I could just push a
button and the paramedics will be on the way.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
Hey, sometimes when we're by ourselves, like you were saying,
walking down the steps, I mean, I don't know if
your wife is always home or if she works from home,
but if you're by yourself, I.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
Usually by myself with two dogs running up downstairs as well.

Speaker 4 (07:34):
Dogs can't call nine one one for you, no, but
they can't trip you up. Yes they can, and they
have so.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
You know they're well intentioned and they just want to
see me. But they'll run between my legs and everything.
And if I'm moving fast, you know, I've almost pulled
out the banister on more than one occasion.

Speaker 5 (07:51):
Well, I don't have a dog at home. I don't
have any pets at home, but I do know that
dogs are so very excited to see the person who
they call dad or mom when they walk in that
they do tend to maybe knock you over sometimes. Right,
So just another nod to stay in shape when we

(08:12):
come back.

Speaker 2 (08:12):
I'm curious because earlier in the week we talked about
the passing of James Earl Jones, and I know that
you're someone who was a fan of James Earl Jones.
I have a question for you, and I don't want
to reveal it yet, but I want to get your
thoughts and see if there's any connection between James Earl
Jones and you, Claudie Cooper when we come back in

(08:33):
just a moment.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Forty as we continue our musical tribute to the legacy
of the now late Frankie Beverly of Frankie Beverly and Mays.
And I was right in the middle of a conversation
with a Frankie Beverly superfan, Claudine Cooper.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
Love me some Frankie Beverly and Mays.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
This name Claudine Cooper obviously can find out more about
her at Claudinecooper dot com.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
But there's something that I want to know.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
Recently, we also marked the passing of James Earl Jones, Yes,
who passed away at the age of ninety three, and
those who know his early not early, but at least
the nineteen seventy cinematic history of James Earl Jones know
that he co starred with Diane Carroll in this movie

(09:21):
called Claudine. Yes, Claudine is not a common name. Nora
Is Morris. But when I see Claudeine your name, I
think about the movie Claudine, which came out in nineteen
seventy four. So let me ask you, because I don't know,
is there any connection to that movie?

Speaker 4 (09:38):
There is there is.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
My parents actually had the name kind of in the
arsenal from seeing the movie. And when I was born,
my mom said that I had an old soul. She
felt that I had an old soul. Claudine is an
older name, and as I was telling you earlier, it
is some thing that I've grown into. But being you know,

(10:02):
like in fifth grade with the name Claudine was kind
of you know.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
I can say, I can imagine, but I don't imagine.

Speaker 3 (10:10):
I kind of went through it.

Speaker 5 (10:11):
So yeah, yeah, yeah, having these older names, although now
I like having a classic name, but it definitely was
inspired by the movie. And now Diane Carroll and James
Earl Jones are both resting peacefully.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
Now, if you weren't named Claudine, what do you think
your parents would have named you.

Speaker 5 (10:30):
Well, my dad liked Claudia, and people still call me
Claudia because they can't figure out Claudine. Well, it goes
between like Claudia, Claudine, Claudette, and.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
I know all three, okay, in my life, a professional life.

Speaker 5 (10:45):
Especially, And look, I don't split hairs about it. I'm
just like, if somebody keeps saying, oh.

Speaker 3 (10:50):
No, no, no, I split hairs. Oh yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
Still people come up to me and say, hey, Maurice,
it's not my damn name.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
It's not my name.

Speaker 6 (10:59):
See me.

Speaker 5 (10:59):
I'm not gonna continue to correct people. I just let them.
And then eventually when they realized that they had been
calling me Claudia and my name is Claudine, they'll be.

Speaker 4 (11:09):
Like, oh, I'm so sorry.

Speaker 5 (11:11):
I just you know, it's all good, it's okay.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
Well, let's relate this to our general conversation. I just
know that I had some emotionally unhealthy days when people
would make fun.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
Of my name or couldn't get my name right, you know.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
And there are people like Morris Gibb of the begis
who made things more complicated because it was pronounced Morris.
I do know this for a fact, but it was
spelled m au r Ic.

Speaker 6 (11:37):
No.

Speaker 5 (11:38):
Yeah, oh well, you know, I don't have any big
stories like that about my name, aside from the fact
that people mix it up all the time. But one
thing I have been doing is helping people to remember
other people's names. So, as you know, because I'm in
the group fitness space, it's important for people to kind
of get to know one another. And this is a
muscle that we have not been working. It's the social muscle.

(12:01):
So recently I taught a class and at the end
of the class, I said, hey, everyone, now ask the
person to the left of you and the right of
you what is their name, And then I'm going to
call on a couple of people and see if you
can actually remember us.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
I am so bad with things.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
I would have felt so embarrassed because I'm that person
already interrupt you. Let's I will go to a party
and someone will introduce themselves to me.

Speaker 3 (12:25):
Hi, I'm John Robert.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Before I even leave the conversation, I have forgotten.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
It's like wah wah wah, wah wah, wah.

Speaker 5 (12:32):
Literally in one ear and out the other God right.
And so one of the exercises that I try to
have people do is knowing that they might get called
on seeing if they have a better recollection of the name.
That's one thing. The other thing, too, is I like association.
So association helps our brain exercise itself. In other words, if,

(12:55):
like you just said, if I know that the Beg's
guy's name was Morris as well, I'll kind of relate
that to you so that now when I see you,
I'm kind of thinking like b G guy Morris Morris, right,
And that helps. But then the other thing I do,
which is unique to the way I remember things, I
ask people to spell it.

Speaker 3 (13:16):
Yes, yes, it does help.

Speaker 5 (13:18):
It helps because my name is Claudeine, and maybe there
are people who spell Claudeine with an ee n at
the end, right, but I spell my name with Anne
at the end. Your name is Morris, But as you
just said, the other guy said his name was Morris
but spelled it as Maurice, right, And so something like

(13:39):
that would be easy for me to remember because it
would be like Morris spelled like Morris, right.

Speaker 4 (13:46):
And in those.

Speaker 5 (13:47):
Cases I kind of give people these tools. The same
way I give people tools to get the best out
of their pushups or get the most out of their plane,
I give them tools to get the most out of
their social and emotional connections because that is a muscle
we have not been working well.

Speaker 2 (14:06):
Make sure you work out those hips so you don't
fall next time.

Speaker 5 (14:10):
Listen, we're not going to talk about my falling today. Okay,
I've had a couple of freak accidents over the last
week or so, but I have been doing more than usual.
I've taken on a couple more projects, and so I
think part of it is that my mind is in
different places right now, and when you're not focused, it's
easy for you to do little stupid stuff like take

(14:31):
a fall because you're looking down at your phone trying
to answer an email or whatever.

Speaker 4 (14:35):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Since you are back on track, I know you have
your Friday online workout.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
How can someone be part of that?

Speaker 5 (14:43):
The virtual workout is through Zoom and they can send
me a request for the link, and that's through my
website at Claudinecooper dot com. But the free workout that's
in person is on Saturday mornings in Inglewood at the
Hollywood Park retail district.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
I've been to one. Hundreds of people show up. It's
work out at your own pace. They're varying levels that
you're taking people to. The paces you know, just like beginner,
intermediate and Clauding level. Don't try to start out at
Clauding level because you'll pass out and you know you
don't want that.

Speaker 5 (15:16):
Well, last week, I was surprised to see so many people.
It was our kickoff session for the fall season, and
there were a lot of people there, even though it
was eighty five degrees at nine o'clock in the morning.
Oh wow, it had gotten up to about ninety eight
that day. But I didn't expect that many people to
come out on a warm morning. We've talked about climate,

(15:38):
We've talked about how that affects your exercise, especially in
the outdoor space. But this weekend, MO we're expecting those
perfect so cal temperatures and I cannot wait to put
it on them.

Speaker 3 (15:50):
You're going to run them in the ground. I sure.

Speaker 4 (15:53):
Can't wait.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
Well, I highly recommend as someone who has done the
Saturday morning free Community workout, I recommend it to you
to get a complete full body workout, head to toe, arms, feet, legs,
all the extremity.

Speaker 4 (16:09):
Cardio strength, balance, stability.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
Yeah, the balance and stability very important.

Speaker 5 (16:15):
We work on most of the modalities just so that
I can leave people with something that they can do
on their own and even while the listeners are here
with us right now. One of the things that I
encourage people to do is use the opposite hand to
pick up your groceries. So naturally I grab everything with
my right because I'm right handed. So when I give

(16:38):
this advice, I also kind of tell myself to take
my own advice. So instead of picking up my laptop bag,
or instead of picking up my backpack or my groceries
with my right, in doing it with my left, I
increase the strength in my less dominant side.

Speaker 4 (16:54):
So that's just one trick.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
That's one of the pieces of information and jewels and
pearls of wisdom that you can get via Claudingcooper again
as Claudincooper dot com, clouding has always good to see you,
be safe, Good to be on your way home.

Speaker 4 (17:08):
I'll make sure not to fall on the way down
the stairs.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
Don't make any promises you can't keep us.

Speaker 4 (17:14):
We'll see you again soon, Yes, you will. See you soon.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
In other news, in medical news, you know, on this
show we've talked about head transplants and how that is transforming.
I would say the medical profession science moving forward as
far as exchanging different body parts here and there. Well,
I would say adjacent to that, surgeons have now performed

(17:45):
the first combined I and face transplant. And if you
say I transplant, I think of movies like Minority Report.
If you say face transplant, I think of a movie
like Face Off. So it seems like movies are let's
say art is now life is imitating art, and science

(18:09):
fiction is paving the way for medical advances. I don't
know if it is as seamless as you know, Face
Off or Minority Report. But we're almost there. Wait, they
took the face. Oh Mark didn't get it. No Mark,
face crickets. Well, let's have the crickets sound effect. Man Mark,

(18:31):
All right, let's go to the audio.

Speaker 6 (18:33):
Most individuals and experts did not think we would even
be here.

Speaker 7 (18:36):
This is the first successful eye transplant ever. It's the
first time that an eyeball has been taken out of
one person's body and transplanted into another's and it's continued
to survive for as long as it has from there.

Speaker 8 (18:48):
Jane from Launch Green screol with Druck.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
Okay, wait, can anyone translate this? I don't do that.
I'm saying. I cannot understand what he's saying without the
banjo music.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
No, and I'm quite sure it has something to do
with the face transplant, which is impacting to talking again, right,
I just can't understand him.

Speaker 8 (19:08):
And Eric James, I'm from watch Grange, Gila Yar Control
and twenty twenty one, I was in a work accident
or I'm coming into contact with a second thousand, well
to my fighters. And twenty twenty three I received a
phrase strange plant and a whole strange plant.

Speaker 9 (19:25):
Okay, a whole eye, so whole lie? Oh not a
whole lot. I misunderstood my strength.

Speaker 8 (19:34):
Whole eyes, a whole strange plant, and why you like?

Speaker 6 (19:38):
Don't All the functional deficits that he initially presented prior
to the operation and ability to eat depending on a
feeding to trachyostomy for breathing, all that has been resolved.
The quality of his aesthetic result is phenomenal. Arion's recovery
has been remarkably accelerated. If we just measured what we
look at is the hospitals.

Speaker 2 (19:57):
Why is that instrument playing in the background because where
he's from, Because they couldn't license the music from silence
of the lamps.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
That's why. Go ahead, Stephan, go ahead. We'll wait for that.

Speaker 2 (20:13):
But my point is like they could have chosen a
different instrument. It just it's distracting because it's like, are
you trying to be funny with this quasi guitar banjo.

Speaker 3 (20:24):
In the background.

Speaker 6 (20:25):
Recovery has been remarkably accelerated if we just measured what
we look at is the hospital stay following the transplant.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
It was the shortest of.

Speaker 6 (20:34):
All our patients.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
It's a good predictor of.

Speaker 6 (20:36):
How he will function, how he will come to less
following the procedure.

Speaker 7 (20:41):
Aaron's eye is viable, and what that means is, first
and foremost, it has not been rejected. We talk about
when patients have transplantations done.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
Can I just tell us whether he can see him?
It's viable, It hasn't been rejected. Can the guy see?

Speaker 7 (20:56):
Aaron's eye is viable, And what that means is first
and foremost, it has not been rejected. We talk about
when patients have transplantations done that they can reject the
organ or the tissue that's being transplanted.

Speaker 6 (21:08):
Were a little bit over a year after the initial transplant,
and the eyeball is beautifully round the retin p.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Can he see? That's what you look for him? An eyeball,
by the way.

Speaker 10 (21:20):
Tell me?

Speaker 3 (21:21):
Can he see? That's all I want to know?

Speaker 6 (21:23):
Round the retina is perfectly vascularized.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
The fact is that.

Speaker 6 (21:28):
Aaron needed a face transplant, and respect it.

Speaker 8 (21:31):
I mean I didn't there anyway.

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Oh, is this just a cosmetic thing where there's an
eye as opposed to Sammy Davis glass one mo.

Speaker 9 (21:39):
They need the eye to look natural. He just said
he did not have an eye there. Nobody's can tell
me whether he can see mo. Yeah, the eye is beautiful.
The eyes beautiful, many beautiful eyes. The best beautiful eye
ever ever. It is there.

Speaker 3 (21:57):
Okay, let's see exact.

Speaker 8 (21:59):
I mean, I don't find a tent out there anyway.
I'm not losing anything. If we can get trumped and going,
that would help a million vally.

Speaker 7 (22:07):
Although Errant can't see out of the eye.

Speaker 9 (22:10):
Oh, come on, they want you into the eye is viable.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
It's not rejecting. Wait wait, wait beautifully, you vacillate. You're
you are a double transplant recipient. Yes, okay, pancreas and kidney. Yes, okay,
you have a kidney that works.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
It works. Okay, you have a pancreas that works. Both work.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
This guy has an eye transplant and it doesn't work.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
What's the point. You might as well just get a
cosmetic one.

Speaker 11 (22:37):
No?

Speaker 3 (22:37):
Oh no, those those look weird because you know what
is look like that.

Speaker 8 (22:41):
But if we can get trumped and going, that would
help a million.

Speaker 7 (22:47):
Although errant can't see out of this eye, this research
is really important to one day bring site patients who
were previously told they'd never be able to see.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
So basically they just took someone else's eye, put it
in the socket and pitched it up.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
But it has no real purpose other than.

Speaker 7 (23:06):
Told to never be able to see It feels good,
you know.

Speaker 8 (23:08):
To Shay, Hey, you know, I'm I was a part
of that going to make you?

Speaker 3 (23:13):
What do you say?

Speaker 6 (23:14):
Huh?

Speaker 11 (23:15):
Who was that?

Speaker 7 (23:16):
This research is really important to one patients who were
previously told to never be.

Speaker 8 (23:21):
Able see good, you know to Shay, Hey, you know,
I'm I was a card of that gonna make you
You know I'm I was a card of that going
to make you stand Nike a little taller.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
You just prankticed with clip from Mitch mcconnells. That didn't you.
That was.

Speaker 4 (23:42):
I think the subtitle sudden part.

Speaker 8 (23:44):
Of that A a card that gonna make you stand
Nike a little taller and quality A lot of it
don't complete one age.

Speaker 3 (23:53):
You know, after my.

Speaker 8 (23:54):
Accident, I couldn't cage food or anything because I didn't
have to know and not sing like a good deal.
But when you go for a couple of years and
when you finally smell everything, case everything is, that's probably
what sticks out most of all.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
Mode is your face hurt? I'm still just trying to
figure out the.

Speaker 12 (24:20):
Whole answer the question. Answer the question does your face hurt?
Answer the question. It's a yes or no question.

Speaker 3 (24:28):
I was just saying.

Speaker 11 (24:32):
I did not have sex with that woman. My eyeball
doesn't see Yeah, but I'm appreciative for Hillary.

Speaker 12 (24:42):
The answer to the question does your face hurt? Is well,
it's killing me. Well Hillary is killing me.

Speaker 3 (24:49):
I tell you.

Speaker 11 (24:49):
She was watching that debate last night and he said,
should have been me on that stage, but I lost,
and I kept hearing from her all night. I wish
she could a face transplant.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
Was that who said that? Oh man, damn.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Yeah, I think it's time to go to break if
I am six forty WeLive everywhere in the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 3 (25:13):
Now over to Mark Runner.

Speaker 13 (25:14):
Okay, composure, compose yourself.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
kf I Am six forty.

Speaker 2 (25:33):
Look, if you didn't hear the beginning of the show,
I was telling you how I got a chance to
run into former La County Sheriff Jim McDonald, and he
was very very kind to let me know unsolicited that
he listens frequently to the show when he's usually driving
in the car in the evening and said that, you know,
we're pretty pretty funny. I took it to mean that

(25:54):
I was funny, but I thought it would have been
magnanimous of me to let everyone else know that they
were kind of fun and contributed to the overall some
total quotient of the funniness. But it was mainly you,
of course, it was mainly me. Yeah, of course, Well
thank you, thank you. Okay, I just want to spread
the love. No, it's appreciate it. It's generous of you. Honestly,

(26:14):
we appreciate it. Yeah, but I say that to say,
if you missed any part of today's show or any
other show, make sure you check out the podcast. It'll
be up at KFI AM six forty dot com. Of
course it's at iHeartRadio app. If you listened to your
podcast there speaker YouTube with We're on Spotify now anywhere

(26:36):
that you listen to podcasts, you can find later with
Mold Kelly. And we appreciate it because we see the
numbers growing each and every week. And let me just
say thank you to Twala because he puts a lot
of work and effort into the podcast to it's a
streamline experience because you're you're taking out, uh, the unnecessary

(26:57):
Mark Ronner parts, like we's doing the news.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
We don't want to hear from him. It just weights
it down. You want to just leave everything that's fun.

Speaker 9 (27:09):
But it is a great, great joy at the end
of the day to listen back to because, as you
always say, in the moment, you don't know and a
lot of people may think that this is all screendrift
were planning, and I had no idea where that I
Face transplanted story is going to go. And props to

(27:29):
Lindsay for grabbing us that choice audio. When you don't
know it's it's hard and I'm in here almost about
to pass out because it's so damn funny.

Speaker 3 (27:39):
What's happening? I got to go back and listen to
the podcast to catch it.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
What's funny is I listened to just about all the
podcasts from a professional standpoint.

Speaker 3 (27:47):
They call it air checking yourself.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
I want to listen to what I do because in
my head, the way I think a show comes out
is not necessarily how it actually comes out. And I
may hear it in my head one way, but when
I go back and listen to the podcast is like, oh,
it sounds completely different.

Speaker 3 (28:02):
And the things that I thought were.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Just horrible, I mean listen to us like, oh that
was all right, or the things that I thought were
very funn It's like that was only kind of funny,
but that was damn funny.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
Last segment that was that was hilarious. Yeah, it was hilarious.
My eyes are still sore from from the tears that
were rolling out of them.

Speaker 2 (28:16):
And Marcus trying to do the news, and I'm like
messing him up, and I'd like always messing him up.

Speaker 12 (28:21):
But yeah, I've got serious business to do in here,
and I don't appreciate that tom foolery.

Speaker 3 (28:25):
I know what's okay.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
I know you don't have to appreciate it. You just
have to deal with it. You get ready to come for.

Speaker 3 (28:35):
I would never.

Speaker 12 (28:37):
I want to know who approached you and asked if
this stuff was scripted? What kind of psycho with script
what we've been doing.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Seriously over the years, people say, is that like a
scripted bid or is a pre recorded and.

Speaker 3 (28:52):
It is all off the top of the head.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Now I look at the story and I think, like, okay,
I kind of know where they're going with this because
we do the head transplant stories, so I kind of know.

Speaker 3 (29:01):
But how it's going to play out.

Speaker 2 (29:03):
For example, I didn't listen to that audio until the
show started, so I am completely just riffing in the moment.
And then I tell Stefan, you can't hear me, but
I'm giving you some of the you know, behind the
curtain at OZ. I tell Stefan, hey find a deliverance
of music, right, Stefan, you can't mounch your head.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
It's radio and then and it just.

Speaker 2 (29:26):
Kind of comes together at the end, and so that
will definitely be replayed at some other time in the future.

Speaker 8 (29:32):
Call the card that it's going to make you stand
up a little taller and I'm want calls you alive.
It's just it's a complete one eighty.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
After mind, I understood that part, a complete one eighty.
I understood that part.

Speaker 8 (29:45):
Definitely, not saying like a big deal, but when you're
doing it for a couple of years and then when
you finally smell everything and taste everything is just that's
probably what sticks out most of all from eight.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
Anyway, why did they get Bill Clinton to do this?

Speaker 12 (30:02):
Are you sure it's not Mitch McConnell, He's it's Bill
or Mitch announcing that they've done a one eighty on
on some vote, Well froze.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
It would have been silence for about twenty second.

Speaker 12 (30:11):
Yeah, not long enough.

Speaker 9 (30:13):
Yeah, so I got to go out one.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
Blows are coming low. I'm sure most of you are off.
You've seen Napoleon Dynamite, yep. So Mitch McConnell was funny,
But this is who I thought of when I heard it.

Speaker 8 (30:30):
Over there, man I found a couple.

Speaker 10 (30:46):
Immediately went to that guy. Oh deep cut, deep cut, terrible.
Just go to break K.

Speaker 4 (31:00):
S I and k O S t h D two
Los Angeles, Orange Steine

Speaker 1 (31:05):
Live Everywhere on the Young Art Radio ap

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