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October 9, 2024 29 mins
ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – Thoughts of a new report that lists the top celebrities used by cybercriminals in online scams AND a new survey that reveals the dangers behind a very popular sex trend among young people…PLUS – A look at the “The Pervasiveness of Sex Among Young People in Today’s Society” and MORE - 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.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Forty McAfee has a list for twenty twenty four of
celebrity hacker hot List to be exact, and it runs
down the actors or actresses whose identities are the most
often exploited by cyber criminals for online scams. The actors
likenesses are being used without permission on fraudulent schemes that

(00:27):
pedal movie or song downloads, deals on celebrity backed products,
cryptocurrency investments, or tickets to high demand concerts. The scammers
also sometimes used convincing looking deep fake videos of the
actors to get a fans bank account information, or to
install malware on their devices that could obviously result in

(00:50):
identity theft.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
Now you're probably listening saying, oh, that would never happen
to me.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
I would never fall for that, but a lot of
people do, and with the use of AI, it makes
it more and more difficult for people to discern. You
may think that you wouldn't be had, but more and
more people are being had. Here's a list of the
top ten celebrities whose names, images, and likenesses are used

(01:16):
to dupe you and separate you from your money, Coming
in at number ten, Addison Ray.

Speaker 3 (01:30):
Who the hell is that? TikToker? Oh so not a
real celebrity.

Speaker 4 (01:35):
No, but she's yeah, but she's done movies too, Like
she's got a Netflix movies.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
She's yeah, okay, so for the youngsters, all right, she
probably wears pajamas all the time. Coming in at number nine.
Johnny Depp. His likeness has been used without permission and
giveaway crypto and fundraising scams. Number eight eight Blake Lively.

(02:07):
Her name was used in a weight loss gummy scam.
Number seven. Actress Sidney Sweeney. Her name and likeness have
been used for crypto scams.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Number six.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
Not just actors and actresses, but singers. Sabrina Carpenter. Her
name and likeness have been used in fake ticketing scams
and to advertise an app for creating sexually explicit images.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
Let me just say both of those have shown up
on my feed lately. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa whoa. That's
so there's something in an algorithm that you're looking for.
We're just taking this show up for CARPENTR. Yeah, I
actually do like her music. I don't know why. Sidney
Sweety's coming in well, maybe because they look Oh.

Speaker 2 (02:57):
Sidney Sweeney can show up on my timeline exactly, City's
far Number five.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
Tom Hanks.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
His name and likeness have been used to promote supposed
miracle cures and wonder drugs.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
Number four actress Anya Taylor Joy.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Her name and likeness have been used for a giveaway scam,
and her Twitter slash x account was hacked to spread
fake Queen's Gambit Sequel news.

Speaker 3 (03:37):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
Number three Sorry Swifteries Swifties. Taylor Swift The Megastars singer's
name and likeness were used for celebrity endorsements, presidential endorsements,
ticket scams, and product giveaway scams, and of course we

(04:00):
know the AI was used for the fake presidential endorsement,
coming in at number two. Of celebrities whose name, image,
or likeness have been used by cyber criminals to dupe
people to insteal their identities or money.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
Number two is Kylie Jimmer Jenner.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Her name and likeness were used for social media giveaway
scams and fake Kylie Cosmetics products and websites, and coming
in at number one as far as the celebrity most
misused by cyber criminals to take people's money or identities?

Speaker 3 (04:43):
Is oh the right music? Any guess anyone? Uh? Beyonce?

Speaker 2 (05:04):
That's a good guess because with Taylor Swift.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
Yeah, Mark, any guests.

Speaker 5 (05:11):
Now you're kind of out of my range of expertise
on this one.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
Okay. Number one is Scarlett Johansen.

Speaker 5 (05:17):
Hey now really yeah?

Speaker 3 (05:19):
Really yeah?

Speaker 2 (05:19):
I wouldn't think that she would be top ten. That
surprises me. Well, not definitely, not one. Yeah, yeah, not
number one, but she is. Her name and likeness were
used for advertisements and endorsements, and Scarlett Johansson has also
spoken out, as we all know, against non consensual AI
generated content, and also has threatened legal action against Open

(05:41):
AI for using I'll say a fac simile of her voice.
And there you haven't. There are scammers everywhere. You have
to be careful and if it looks strange, it probably
is fake. It's later with Mo Kelly caf I am
six forty. We are live everywhere on the I Heart
radio app. And when we come back, well, we have

(06:02):
to tell you about a popular sex trend. You could
end up dead if you're not careful. It's popular, but dangerous.
I'm told it's popular. I don't know I'm saying neverby.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM sixty.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
Uh, let me just let you know right now. Send
the kids to bed, send them out of the room.
This next segment is not for the younger crowd. I'll
let you decide whether this is PG thirteen or rated R,
but it's definitely not rated G.

Speaker 3 (06:38):
There's a new I shouldn't say new.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
It is newly discovered that there is a popular sex
trend and it's a dangerous one. And of course it's
predominantly from research being done by young folks. Oh, I
know what it is. You know you're guessing leaving without

(07:01):
paying sex trend leaving without paying? Okay, yeah, you earned
that way. No, it's far more dangerous than that. You
don't have to worry about being killed by a pimp.
It's called sexual choking, and it's now considered mainstream. Being

(07:23):
strangled for sexual gratification. It is no longer taboo. But
young people are doing it far more often than any
age demographic. And it is theorized that sexual choking initially
came into prominence today through pornography, because, let's be honest,

(07:47):
pornography is much more accessible and available and affordable because
you can find it for free now everywhere.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Don't ask me how I know that.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
More so than ever before, and young people they have
gravitated to this. In college student surveys over the past
four years, researchers have found that around sixty five percent
of young adult women and around forty five percent of
transgender and gender non binary have been choked during.

Speaker 3 (08:16):
Sexual activity of some kind.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
In sex between women and men, it's almost always the
women being choked and the men doing the choking, and
about twenty five to thirty percent of male college students
also say that they've been choked during sex. The researchers
also found that the numbers for college students are consistent
with the US population at large. It's not just college students,

(08:42):
but other young adults. Also found in this research, almost
nobody over fifty reports having ever engaged in choking. It says,
reports not actually go ahead, twallaw safe.

Speaker 5 (09:00):
May now look, I am just now over fifty, and
I you bet not put your hands on my throat.

Speaker 3 (09:10):
Best not choke me. We have a problem in the restaurant,
or no, we have a problem. What what did you
say you hurt that right.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
Bedroom, he said, problem to what we're gonna say restaurant.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
Look I didn't say forget that last part. And where
are they choking me? Please explain yourself.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
It's not going down. Clearly, it's not your honor.

Speaker 5 (09:37):
I'd like to treat the witness as hostile proceed Look, look,
this is what we're talking about. Now, we're talking about
the fact we don't know what you're talking about. This
is a dangerous trend. Yes, it is very scary. Well
what were you talking about. I'm talked about different places
where you may end up, uh evolved in a situation
where it can get hot and passionate and you don't

(09:59):
want some his hands around your throat.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
I heard rest So that's restroom or restaurant. Definitely a
public restaurant.

Speaker 5 (10:05):
In a restaurant that is sometimes where it can get
hot and heavy and just look just no, okay, just
know that you don't want to be choked there.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
There is a hashtag will they called Choke Me Daddy
where they were researching this Choke Me Daddy?

Speaker 3 (10:25):
Is that that.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
Podcast that the vice president was on a couple of
days ago. No, that was call Me Call Her daddy
call her daddy quite similar. You want to be careful
which one, which one you pick? You don't google that
at work? No, no, no, no, Well, researchers, the serious point
is they say there's no risk free way to engage

(10:47):
in choking or strangulation for those who indulge themselves. To me,
the scariest part about this is, and you know, Mo,
your your sons are are young enough where they may
be experimented with, like, hey, I'm into choking. I'm looking
at my eighteen year old son and I'm like, hey, man,
how do I have this? Hey, so they don't try

(11:08):
to choke you, you tell her no, you say no, no choking.

Speaker 2 (11:13):
I don't know, And this kind of highlights my larger point.
I don't know if my world even makes any sense
to them in their world. I don't know their views
about sex, their views about just dressing up and going
to the mall, their views about dating. You know, they

(11:35):
don't date the same way that you and I did.
We actually talked to him and it was a game
to be able to get a woman interested in You
just buy the verbal game that you had.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
They don't talk when they don't exchange numbers. Anymore. They
ask each other for their IG page.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
Because they're not going to actually have a phone conversation.

Speaker 5 (11:58):
The choking is it men to be with somebody, you know,
I mean I was dang, yeah, I mean, you don't
want to just meet someone at the.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Top, courage him.

Speaker 5 (12:08):
No, just saying, look, Mark, look, this isn't you meet
someone at the club and you know you have a
couple of beverages and you know you're in a restroom
and you're choking.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
You don't want that?

Speaker 5 (12:21):
Well it sounds impolite, honestly. Now we're back to the restroom.
What's with the restaurant?

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Well, what's what these public displays of of, you know,
sexual gratification.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
Sometimes you've got to get it where you can get it.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
But I'm sorry, y'all choked up? Okay, spit it out.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
Here we go.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
No, But I was just going to say to your point, MO,
because I well, I almost got this job at another
radio station and it was like about sex health. And
that's true because it's like one of the reasons I
actually almost got the job was because we had to
make like the thesis of like what you would bring
to the table as a producer and That's what I

(13:14):
was thought too. It's like, what if all of that
was available, like in your time, let's just use your timeline.
Would that open up that sexual experience or at least
make it something you would think about versus maybe would
look down upon today. You know something I have noticed,
and this is something which I think we all could
agree upon.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
There is no age of innocence. And when I say kids,
I mean actual children. They know everything about everything before
they even start school. You know, they're doing things at
school that my generation we just didn't even think of,
not before high school. At least, they have a sexual

(13:55):
self awareness that our generation just did not have. Now,
I remember being twelve and thirteen years old and couldn't
think about anything but girls. I really wasn't doing anything.
And by and large, by and large, my fellow twelve
and thirteen year old friends were not doing anything, not
much other than looking for playboys and VHS pornos.

Speaker 5 (14:18):
That's because we didn't have the darkest sexual material available
to humanity. That's right, smartphones, right, all those things are connected.
That's got to rewire your brain at that age. Now,
twall grew up a little different than me. I did
a lot of my friends were older. A lot of
my quote unquote homies in the neighboro were a lot
older and were more advanced, and they were not going

(14:39):
to allow me at thirteen just hanging around and being unexperienced.
They're like, oh no, sir, Oh no, sir, We're going
to find a can I say restroom?

Speaker 3 (14:52):
No no, no, no, no.

Speaker 5 (14:54):
No, there's a fruit. There's a fruit that you would call.
It was a colloque for a neighborhood lady of the night.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
Yeah, there was one in my neighborhood as well, and
helped bring me along, but I was a little bit older.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
Yeah, so yeah, yes, at thirteen, I was introduced to
this veritable fruit lady and uh yeah, and then that
and after that, unfortunately it was it was on the
pop and it was literally like all of the time,
that's all we did.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
It was.

Speaker 5 (15:26):
It was the conquest of what we called getting into
dirt but what it was.

Speaker 2 (15:30):
But still, the attitudes about sex, and I will say
the availability was different.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
I get the sense now that most people, by the
time they get to high school, most people have had
some degree of sexual experience.

Speaker 5 (15:46):
You too, are just going to drop that and move on.
You think push and I are going to let you
move on from what you both just admitted. What that
some we were taking advantage of We were younger, who
took advantage of who?

Speaker 3 (15:57):
And because she was older?

Speaker 5 (15:59):
Okay, so that makes it taking advantage of And what
was the fruit exactly?

Speaker 3 (16:04):
Strawberries? Okay? Was pomegranate? What difference does it make?

Speaker 5 (16:09):
Well?

Speaker 3 (16:10):
Because this is extraordinarily lurid?

Speaker 5 (16:12):
And that that was that was what you called the
Ladies of the night strawberries.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
But we weren't in the choking. That's something that's all
know different. That was no, that was a no.

Speaker 5 (16:23):
Yeah, this this you know, My experience was one of
those when you end up at Jackie Robinson Health Center
the next day and your friends come in as well.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
You're like, wait, what are you doing here? What are
you doing here?

Speaker 5 (16:36):
And it's like you tak way too much to.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
It was it was about the walk of shade.

Speaker 5 (16:43):
It was walk of shame? Was it a burning walk?
It was very very uncomfortable, uh screaming bloody nerve.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
There was just a song created by cool Mod which
highlights this experience.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
Thirty days later, go see the doctor. It's a real song.

Speaker 5 (17:05):
It is I love finding out new things about Okay,
friends like this.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
It's a letter with bo Kelly KFIM six forty. We're
live everywhere in the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
There was a song created by Cool Mod thirty days later,
Go see the Doctor.

Speaker 3 (17:29):
It's a real song, it is.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
I want to think that was maybe nineteen eighty six
or so, but it was a huge hip hop hit
because it talked about the realities of sex in a
way that we could relate and understand for that time
in our lives. Now it wouldn't mean anything because the
kids are doing everything already before they even get to

(17:53):
high school. And that was the censored version, the nonsensor version,
which they were playing on the radio back then. I
don't know how or why, but like on fifteen to
eighty KD they played the original version uncensored so you
could hear all of those words which were spun backwards there.

Speaker 5 (18:13):
Yes, ah, that song was a life lesson record right there.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
But it's just different now the way that kids, When
I say kids, those who are under eighteen are socialized,
how they date, how they court.

Speaker 3 (18:29):
I can't even call it courtine.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
I look at them, the prom pictures, and yes, I
am old man, get off my lawn.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
It's it's very foreign to me.

Speaker 5 (18:38):
You don't see prom dresses and suits and tuxes anymore.
Now you see who you dress is, yes, and you
know regular looking dudes just looking regular.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
It's like, what's happening.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Here's where it all ties together. I still think it's
connected to the culture of permissiveness. And if you don't
have standards, you don't have expectations then and there's nothing
for people when they grow up to hold themselves too,
to find that, Okay, this is unacceptable, or this is
too far, that is too much, or I'm embarrassing my parents,

(19:12):
or this is not appropriate for a person of a
certain age to do. That was instilled in me, and
that was, honestly, that was beaten in me. And I
don't care what people say, like, ah, you shouldn't hit
your kids corporal punishment, you shouldn't be spanking your kids.
I'm a firm believer. I'm a living witness. A lot
of times you can't reason with kids. They don't understand

(19:33):
the dangers of the world, and there has to be
some sort of consequences for behavior which can be inherently
dangerous they don't understand. Like, for example, one of the
times I got my butt beat was walking in the street.
I want to say, maybe I was six or seven
years old and my mother had told me, don't you
ever walk in the street. Could I intellectually understand the

(19:56):
dangers of a car running me down? Probably not, But
I understood how she took a belt to my backside,
and I didn't walk in the street again because I
understood what a belt meant.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
Oh I'm saying is there need to be parameters.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
There need to be standards, There need to be expectations,
and I think the lack of all of them contributes
to where we are now.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
There's a relationship. Look if there's a study out now
going into the new trend of sexual choking among young people,
and this report isn't just talking about young and they're
twenty somethings. This is going into young people.

Speaker 5 (20:39):
Yeah, and that is the problem because, like you said,
there is no age of innocence, because if they've got
a phone, if they hear anything happening in any record.
There's a record that I heard today and I'm like, Wow,
this is where we're at in music, where it's just
no that this sex is not a thing that we
care about anymore.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
Here and here's a different thing.

Speaker 2 (21:00):
Since you and I both came from the music industry,
we know this firsthand.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
There was a time.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Even though there were sexually explicit records in music, they
weren't being played on the radio. You still had the
parental advisory, and they had the radio version where they
took out.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
Just about all the references.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
And so unless you heard the what we call the
dirty version, you wouldn't have any real whereith all.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
But the songs.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
Now, there is no mistaking what they're talking about. And
one thing like for example, Marvin Gay, it used to
be where he would sing about let's get it on
or sexual healing, but it wasn't explicit and it wasn't sexual.
It was more sensual, he said. He sang about let's
get it on. He also sang what's going on. They

(21:43):
don't have that diversity of thought or ideas in music anymore.
It's just all of it is sexual. All of it.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
All of it is sex.

Speaker 5 (21:52):
It's not even really like drugs and vius a record world.
It's just straight up sex. It's not even romantic anymore.
It's like, Hey, seen her at a club, We got
it on in the bathroom, no call back. I'm just
saying that again with just are you That's what's in

(22:12):
the records. That's what's in the records nowadays, that's what
they're talking about. I think you're underestimating how many oldies
consistent of guys begging for sex.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
Please Boston, I said, sensual versus sexual, overtly sexual begging
and you know, pleading and trying.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
To get it on with someone.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
That's I think that's very different from a song where
you're listing your favorite sexual positions like Pete Pablo did
with frequently for example, off the top of my head.

Speaker 4 (22:46):
Cool, I mean, look that ball I had in my
head as you guys are talking about this.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
But yeah, go ahead right and naming women by name,
I mean right now.

Speaker 5 (22:56):
You heard on Conway promoting Ying Yang Twins being at
the casino coming up. One of their was salt shaker.
Shake it like a salt sacker, Shake it like a
salt sacker.

Speaker 3 (23:09):
And then from the window to the.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Walls to the moisture comes down my sexual genital parts.

Speaker 5 (23:18):
Okay, that does lack subtlety. However, I will say the
old bread song, I want to make it with you,
not real subtlety.

Speaker 3 (23:27):
No, I want to make it with you. But that.
But again it wasn't what do you think they.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
But see it was still metaphorical or yes, you knew
what they were talking about, but they didn't say, I
want to stick this here and I want to do
that there. The point is it signified a change of
what was being played on the radio. A lot of
the music started into strip clubs. Definitely, that song started
into strip clubs, but the strip club culture then became

(23:55):
radio airplay culture.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
That's the difference. That was one of my biggest records.

Speaker 5 (24:01):
Like we played that record, huge hit, like you would
have thought we were making the record of the back
or something.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Yeah in the restroom perhaps, Yeah, six forty Life Everywhere,
that Heart radio app.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
You're listening to later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
And before we get out of here, we're going to
finish up this conversation talking about how I think my
thesis is music and it's change becoming more explicit. Is
I don't know a symptom or I don't know if
there's a cause of relationship. But there's a correlation between
how explicit music has become how pervasive sex among young

(24:44):
people has become, And that really goes back to this
study we were talking about earlier in the hour about
how certain practices, including choking during sex, has become a
thing on college campuses, and I'm thinking, like, yeah, because
the availability of information about sex has been demystified. For

(25:05):
me growing up, it was like a big wonder. It's like,
oh my gosh, it's got to be a big deal
because all the guys are talking about it, and you
hit puberty, it's like, I don't know what to do
with myself. But now you can be eight years old,
get a phone, any question, you have, anything you want
to see, it's there. And I think when you couple
that with the explicit aspect of music today, which has

(25:29):
been like twenty years in the making, then yeah, I
can see why we are where we are, why we
don't respect the things that we used to respect, why
we do the things that we do, And what are
the other examples that I was going to use and
we'll use it on the way out is Yin Yang
Twins and which was oh, this is the point I
was making, and I said last segment, A lot of

(25:50):
music we talked about would start in the strip clubs.

Speaker 3 (25:53):
The music that you hear at the.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
Dance clubs oftentimes started in the strip clubs.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
And one of my jobs was to go to.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Strip clubs, gay clubs, straight clubs, lesbian clubs, strip clubs
in addition, and then give the DJs to music and
I'd ask them to play it there because remember this
is a pre text environment. You had to be there.
It wasn't like they could send you a video. You
had to be there. So we would be there and

(26:25):
they put on the record, especially if it was a
strip club, and then you would see the reaction, whether
the dancers were into it, whether the crowd was into it,
and if it did well there, then it would go
to what we would say. We put it in the
mix the mix shows at radio stations where they play
it like Saturday nights, and the DJs would mix it
in here and there and get a feel for it,

(26:47):
and so people got used to hearing it and then
eventually they get in regular rotation.

Speaker 3 (26:51):
That's one reason why a lot of music now is
so overtly sexual.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
So with that One of the songs to that which
came out of the Strip Club was the Yin Yang
Twins Salt Shaker, and it's talking about a woman, presumably
a dancer on stage, an exotic dancer who was doing
sexualized moves on the stage and they would say shake

(27:18):
it it being obviously everything like a salt shaker.

Speaker 3 (27:23):
It was a huge hit, but it highlights the point.
That's all I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
It slaps, it does, among other things, yes.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
Slaps and chokes it.

Speaker 6 (27:33):
It made a lot of women a lot of money.
How am I going to make this transition? I figured
you had to do that. Okay, We're all going to.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
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The VIP package includes two VIP tickets to the opening
night on Friday, October eleventh, two VIP tickets to the
Grand tasting on Saturday the twelfth, two nights hotel accommodations
at West Drift, Manhattan Beach, Friday and Saturday, golf cart
courtesy of E three Vehicles, five hundred dollars spinnings free
at Manhattan Village, and a private tasting with our own

(28:30):
Neils of Vaga Folk Reporter. So don't miss Southern California's
newest and most notable, world class culinary festival featuring unlimited
tastings from top chefs, wine spirits, cocktails, beer, not alcoholic options,
and more. Tickets are on sale now and includes unlimited
food and drinks. Buy your tickets today at Mbfoodanwine dot com.

(28:53):
Who that was a very difficult transition to go from
salt sugar to this.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Mood enhancing pharmacy grade stimulating talk.

Speaker 3 (29:03):
K f I and the k ost HD two Los Angeles,
Orange County Live everywhere on the radio

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