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April 4, 2025 35 mins
ICYMI: Hour One of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – Thoughts on the Dow dropping to historic levels with US stocks leading a global “sell-off” as a result of President Trump’s tariffs…PLUS – A look at list of America’s “healthiest cities in 2025” 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 (00:22):
Man, what a dreary day. And I'm not just talking
about the weather outside. If I am six forty WeLive
everywhere the iHeartRadio app. MO Kelly here. I was driving
in and it started Hailey. It was sunny. Then all
of a sudden, it went from sunny to hale immediately,
no rain in between. It was just sunny, and then

(00:45):
little balls of ice were hitting my car just as
I was turning on to Barrom going over the hill.
Didn't understand it. Then it turned into a torrential downpour.
Strange weather we've been having here in southern California. And
then according to Mark Ronner, it might be even stranger
until we get to the weekend. Ah, thank you for that.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I'm concerned about you, Mo, but I think you're gonna
be okay. The rain's clearing up, and maybe by the
time you drive home tonight you can drive with the
top down or hang your head out the window.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Like a dog. I no longer have a convertible, I see. Okay,
those are the best years of my life, I tell
you when I had my convertible Honda S two thousand.
But no more. So I don't have to worry about
rain drops keep falling on my head.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
Well, I think by later tonight you're going to be
in the clear. All right, that's good news. We all
need some good news today because I got to tell you.
I gotta tell you, as someone who's studied the stock
market and finance for many, many years, today, I don't
care what anyone else tries to tell you to the contrary.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Today was a devastating day, like a Dario Argento movie
or stock market. And what did I say yesterday? Mark?
You may remember I said yesterday that the top story
today was going to be this. This was going to
be first the terriffs and how the markets responded to
the tariffs. What we're going to see in subsequent days

(02:21):
is how other countries respond to the tariffs. And you
gave the figures I think was the Dow was down
seventeen hundred.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
Oh massive, Yeah, one thousand, six hundred and seventy nine,
and the Nasdaq was down one thy fifty. Those are numbers.
I almost feel like I don't need to say this.
Those are numbers we don't see ever.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
Yeah. And beyond that, if you know anything about Dow futures,
you can see the closed off market trading down another
one hundred and sixty five. So it's trending in the
direction that this slide is going to continue tomorrow. The
markets are very very, very very unhappy right now, and

(03:04):
it has all sorts of intended and unintended consequences. And
I'm going to say save a lot of my remarks
for my final thought, and I'm actually going to have
some friends and luminaries help me out in that final segment.
But right now, I want people to really take notice
of what's happening financially. This is one of those moments

(03:25):
when I say we are living through history. We should
be able to take note and stock of what's happening
right here, right now, because the stories are going to
be talking about this for decades. In the way that
we talked about the Great Depression, in the way that
we talked about COVID, and the way that we talked
about nine to eleven, in the way that we talked
about the stock market crash of nineteen eighty seven. You

(03:46):
may not realize the magnitude while you're in it.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
That's no exaggeration either. And I've been reading as many
actual legit economists as I can because of this, because
it's going to affect all of us. I don't know
if you've had a look at your four oh one
k refuse, in fact, you don't want to. Yeah, we're
just barely starting to feel the effects, and when we do,
it's going to.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Be a wall up. It's interesting you say that because
we as individual Americans aren't feeling it yet. Now we
can look at our four one k and then realize
the loss of value of the four one k, but
we're not feeling it yet. It will start feeling it
when the prices on the shelves begin to change. We'll

(04:30):
start feeling it when manufacturers start laying off people, presumably,
which is going to happen. And I'm not saying this
because I'm trying to be hyperbolic. I'm not saying this
to scare people. I'm saying this, there is enough data
and historical parallels to give us a large indication of
what awaits us. But then I was talking to Tuala

(04:52):
a little earlier today and some companies have already responded
and the consequences are already the mark. You know that.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
You know I'm a humongous collector. I collect action figures
and all the like, and there is one that I've
eagerly been waiting to get a hold of. And these
are the Legendary Action Figures by Legendary. This is a
Kickstarter campaign that I supported last year, and it's finally
come to pass that they were getting into production. Well,

(05:24):
I just received an important update from them letting us
know that because of the increase due to the tariffs,
production of the figures has come to a grinding halt.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
No what figure. I actually ordered a set of three?
This set of three.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
This is a brand new line of action figures where
the tariffs have taken their cost of manufacturing from fifteen
percent all said and done by the time it gets
back to the US to fifty four percent, which for
them is unattainable. They cannot deal with this and they
could not have expected this, and they are profusely apologizing

(06:07):
for something that's not even their fault.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
Okay, but which action figures? Mark, Mark, I think you're
missing the point. You can't.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
This is the first action figure based analysis of what I.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
Don't want people's eyes to glaze over. I want people
to exchange action figure for widget guns. Butter, whatever is
it you think you might be important to you? That's
a part of the manufacturing industry.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
No aspect of our lives is going to be spared
from action figures to coffee two cars.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Right, So what Twala is telling you is just one
particular company, a part of one particular industry, But it's
still a part of the larger body of manufacturers. Regardless
of what they're manufacturing. They still have supply chain issues
and concerns relative to these tariffs. And I know, usually

(06:58):
I start off on a lighter note and a funnier note,
but this is one of those times where we should
be aware of the moment in which we're in.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
This is the biggest news of the day, and it's
probably the biggest news in the world.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Everybody's watching America.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
You can't sugarcoat it self destruct for no reason that
economists seem to be able to figure out something else
that has been kind of causing me to wonder they
want to bring manufacturing here. Why did we send so
much manufacturing overseas to begin with? Mo What do you
think is the answer to Well, probably because it was
cheaper labor and what have you. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,

(07:33):
because US companies don't want to pay a living wage
with benefits to people what are they just going to
start doing that now?

Speaker 1 (07:41):
No, they're not. And I always like to use the
iPhone as an example. There's a reason why the iPhone
is made in China. There is a reason why Nike
does a lot of its manufacturing in China. There's a
reason why a lot of these other companies use Vietnam
and China and Taiwan because the cost of labor, the
cost of materials, the cost to shipping is a lot less.

(08:02):
Now we can be against child labor, we can be
against those types of practices and how those companies take
advantage of it, But it still comes down to the dollar.
And that's why they're over there in the first place.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Everything's connected and the loosening up after X number of
decades on child labor laws is no coinki dank, No.

Speaker 1 (08:21):
It's not, it's not.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
There's a direct correlation, now, Mark, to satisfy your curiosities. Yes,
I was getting legendaries, Epsilon, I was getting legendaries. Hold on,
I gotta increase the font on this cyberonious Caine of course,
and the crimson enforcer. I will show you pictures of

(08:47):
what I will not be getting anytime soon.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
How much at all. How much would they have cost normally.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
Normally they would have run I believe retail when they
were supposed to hit stores, there'd have been about twenty
four ninety nine a piece.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Okay, yeah, that's a moderately priced manufactured item here in America.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Ye sight fair to fair to say, yes, and this
is standard action figure fair for right now when it
comes to collector's items. But when you look at a
company that is just starting and just getting off the ground,
and they were already looking at a twenty percent tariff
as it stands, just from the ten percent from China

(09:27):
moving over to another ten percent coming to America. Now
this has gone up to thirty four percent from trying
to to fifty four bringing into America.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
This is impossible.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
This is about and they cannot in good conscious pass
this cost down to us who invested in this in
the beginning.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
They can, they're choosing not to. They're choosing not to.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
They're choosing to say, hey, we are we are truly,
truly hopeful that we can find some workarounds, some way
to make this right. But as it stands right now,
these are almost on an indefinite hole. Here's the thing
that I'm watching.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
This is just me. I'm watching how long President Trump
will remain firm on all these tariffs. Now, will he
come back in a week and say, I'm removing some
of these terrafts, declare victory and move on. Or is
he trying to inflict in his mind the maximum damage
on these other countries. The fact that we have to

(10:27):
guess is alarming to me. We're not being told the
full strategy. We're not and I don't agree with the
strategy that we do know so far.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
Well as far as pieces of the puzzle go. The economy,
by you know, take off your partisan lenses on this.
Every single you know, like the Economist magazine, which is
not exactly a bastion of liberalism. Even they were talking
about how the economy was the envy of the entire globe.
So this is a cell phone that people are trying
to wrap their heads around right now.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
We could talk about Fortune Magazine, Wall Street Journal. None
of them have any type of liberal bona few days, okay, exactly,
Mother Jones. There no no if you just look at
it straight from the numbers, nothing like this has ever
happened in the history of our nation. I say, ever
in the history of our nation. At least with Smoot Hawley,

(11:19):
there was no precedent to warn people not to do it.
Now we have historical evidence why you don't do it,
why you shouldn't do it, and we're still here. Yeah,
we touched the stove with Smoot Holly. Right now, we're
just gonna set our fat ass on the burder pretty much. Yeah,
it's Later with Mo Kelly caf I AM six forty.

(11:41):
We live everywhere in the iHeartRadio app. I got a
little more on this. This is a big event in
the history of our country and a big event will
see even more so tomorrow in the world.

Speaker 4 (11:51):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty and.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
I started off the show talking about the terrorists, which
we're levied by the President on some one hundred and
eighty five countries officially yesterday. Now we're seeing some of
the responses today. And I said yesterday that this would
be the biggest story in the world, and it is that.
In fact, BBC was beaten down my door today to

(12:17):
make sure I was available so I could do multiple
interviews with them tonight. The understanding is this is an
international story which is going to change the world in
which we're living in right now, real time, And let
me take it out of the political realm and let
me put it in the personal realm. Depending on how
old you are, you're going to relate to this story differently.

(12:39):
If you're my eighty four year old mother who is
living off her investments and her fixed income as far
as social Security and so forth, this is going to
be viewed very differently than someone who's maybe forty forty
five years old and may have another twenty years or
so earning years in front of him or her. It's

(13:02):
nice to be able to say, no, this is all
temporary and it'll be fine at some point down the road.
But not everyone has a lot of road in front
of them financially or even physically personally. If you know
anything about terriffs, it doesn't matter if the president were
to remove them, let's say two or three weeks from now,

(13:27):
because the prices are not going to come down afterward.
The stock market lost two trillion dollars today that likely
is not ever coming back some approximation, maybe possibly, but
we've already lost four and forty five hundred points on

(13:49):
the Dow in the last seventy three days or so.
It's not going to happen anytime soon. And this is
all before the rest of the countries either match the
tariffs or do something reciprocal and punitive on top of
the tariffs that we have levied.

Speaker 3 (14:09):
And there's also this we are not looking at this
big picture. This goes beyond say what's going to happen
to us financially. Just take, for instance, this weekend. You
may want to go see this movie or that. I
want you to understand that most every single film studio

(14:33):
here in the US they outsource a lot of the
behind the scenes work overseas.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
It's called that the below the line stuff.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
Disney, DreamWorks, Sony Sky, Dance, Warner Brothers, they all outsource
their animation to animation studios and subdivisions in China and
India and Canada. Visual Effects, Marvel, Netflix, Illumination Universal, well,
every company that has a action film coming out that

(15:04):
has visual effects in it, they outsource to Canada. They
outsourced to France, they outsourced to India, to China, to
places that are then going to say, oh, yes, we
will still take the work, but now it is going
to cost you four times as much to get it done.
Who do you think is going to pay for that?

(15:25):
How are theater is going to stay alive when they
now are going to have to pay four times as
much to show films? The cost has to come back
to us some way, or or we don't get anything
at all.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
Well, you got to think about even on extremely level,
when they license these titles to Netflix or Amazon Prime
and so forth, that's going to come at a higher cost.
So don't think just because something may not be a
physical manufactured item that there isn't also an associated cost
increase with it. If you're going to increase the cost

(15:59):
of distribution of these films, well that's going to be
passed along to us as well. And that goes back
to what I was saying about the personal impact of
all of this. It's nice to be able to talk
about this in an abstract from the distance, you know,
from thirty thousand feet as they say, and you're not
talking about the real human impact of all of this.

(16:19):
If you are near the end of your working career,
you're not going to get any of this back.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
It's going to get less and less abstract. And I
can tell you that having grown up with my grandparents
who were depression people. I've been very sensitized to this,
and I've been keeping an eye on it, and it's
been on my radar maybe longer than some people's. You know,
if you're not ancient or have connections with people who are,
or we're ancient, maybe you don't know or understand that

(16:46):
there's some things that you're just not going to be
able to have anymore, and when you don't have enough,
there's not going to be a source to get enough.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
I was thinking about this last night and I realized
we have a measurable portion of our society who who
do not have first hand memory of a recession, just
a recession. Yeah, they don't even remember the Great Recession.
So there is no reference point for what economic pain
may feel like. And I don't wish that on anyone.

(17:16):
And we have been lowed, I think, into this false
sense of security where we want to equate a bad
economy with a little bit of inflation, not like actually
two whole quarters of negative growth and what that feels
like mass unemployment. We've had full employment by definition is
five percent or lower for almost like a decade at

(17:36):
this point, which is unheard of in our economic history.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
Well, and unemployment was at a fifty year loaf for
close to the last year of the Biden administration. And
I liken this a lot to the anti vaxxer movement.
It's easy to take things for granted if you never
had to suffer from the right worse that things can
get now. Mark, you and I are similar in age,
so when I talk are much older. Okay, well, let

(18:01):
me tell you this, youngster. Yes, back in nineteen eighty seven,
I was a senior in high school. They had the
big stock market crash of nineteen eighty seven, which pales
in comparison to what happened today. But back then, because
of the nineteen eighty seven stock market crash, a couple
things are happening. They put some circuit breakers, what they
call circuit breakers in the stock market, so it can't
like go from forty thousand where it is right now

(18:24):
to twenty thousand.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
They will shut down trading along the way. I'm a
senior in high school, so the whole idea of a
stock market crash did not register for me one because
I didn't have any investments. To the economic pain that
people felt at that time, was not being felt by me,
and I believe that a lot of people now are
since they are pain deficient, they haven't experienced in this pain.

(18:47):
They think that they're not going to It's almost like
when you're twenty one, you think you're invincible. You do
a lot of crazy things because you haven't dealt with
the consequences of your bad decisions at that point. I
think we're in a similar time. We've had so much
time of economic I'll say decency. Yes, during the pandemic
was bad, but not bad like the Great Recession, not

(19:09):
bad like the recession in like nineteen ninety one, nineteen
ninety two. Crossing over from George HW. Bush to Bill Clinton,
I remember what that was like when I couldn't find
the job coming out of college. Yeah, we're making the
same point, which always makes me nervous. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
I think when you see real legacy institutions like the
Economist or the Wall Street Journal bump up their estimates
of a recession to what are we at like forty
five percent now something like that within the space of
several days, you better pay attention.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
Even if they don't pay attention, because eventually they're going
to feel it and let me just close with this.
I always root for America. It's not like I'm rooting
for a recession. I'm not rooting for economic pain for anyone.
I always root for a make America. And if you're
a parent, you may understand this. If you have a child,
you're always rooting for your child. You want your child

(20:03):
to do well. You try to instruct your child and
direct him or her or them in the right direction.
But after a certain point you have to let the
child understand that because of certain decisions that the child makes,
there may be pain and hardship and you can't protect
them from everything. And I would like in this moment
to that even though I want the best for America,

(20:25):
America is making some decisions which you're going to be
harmful to it. And I can't stop it. I can't.
I've advised against it, and people are going to feel
it and like, America is not my child. But I
love America and all that it means, but I can't
prevent I can't save America.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
I think one thing that we can do, and it's
our responsibility to do, is get the most accurate and
reliable information out to people as possible so that people
aren't isolated in their ideological bubbles.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
It's Later with mo Kelly. When we come back, we're
going to talk about the healthiest cities in America. The
healthiest cities. You might be surprised who's at the top
of the list. I'm not so sure I even agree
with it myself.

Speaker 4 (21:13):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
And Urban Wellness has ranked the top one hundred or
so cities in America as to the least and to
the healthiest cities. Now this is not my list, but
it's Urban Wellness list, and the study examines factors ranging
from health care access, to green space availability to obesity rates.

(21:39):
So this is not about crime, this is not about
all those other things that we usually talk about. This
is just wellness. You know, access to grocery stores that
type of thing, pollution, fresh food, maintain sidewalks, parks, that
kind of stuff. Let's start with well. Let me just
give you some other cities which are on the list

(21:59):
but not in the top ten. Sacramento. Let me start
with Santa Ana. Santa Anna came in at number fifty seven.
Anaheim was sixty Santa Rosa was fifty two, Santa Clarita
fifty one, Sacramento forty two, Oceanside thirty nine, Garden Grove

(22:23):
twenty nine, Long Beach twenty six, Oakland twenty four, San
Jose twenty two, number thirteen Los Angeles, and number twelve Glendale.
And that's where we'll pick up this list now with

(22:44):
the top ten healthiest cities in America according to Urban Wellness.
Number ten Irvine, Yeah, I can see that, yep, yep.
Nine Washington, d C. I can absolutely see that. I'm

(23:09):
there enough to see how that city has changed. It
is like a big whole foods market, especially when you're downtown.
It's very clean, a lot of good food options, walk ability,
walk your pets, all that kind of stuff. Number eight Minneapolis, Minnesota.

(23:33):
I could see that, but I just wouldn't want to
live there. It ranks seventeenth in food, fitness rank twenty seventh,
and green space rank ten. Number seven Denver, Colorado. I'll
allow it. Yeah, thirteenth in food twenty first and fitness,

(23:56):
and twelfth in green space rank. Especially with their marriage,
a lot of green space. I'm still lots of green
Number six Portland, Oregon. That's a beautiful city. I could
see that, Yeah, I could. I'm allowed top ten total Mark.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
Yeah, they have access to one of the best bookstores
in the world. That will increase your lifespan.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
Number nine in food, twenty six in fitness, and number
seven in green Space number five. San Diego fifth in food,
forty fifth and fitness rank and green Space six. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (24:40):
Every time I San Diego clean. Yeah, looks good, looks
like the place you want to live. It reminds me
of a cleaner downtown away.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Yeah. I mean like a much much much, much much
much much money clean.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
Is there a correlation with income, because it's not an
accident that rich people live longer than poor people.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Looking for the list, there's some correlation. There's some correlation,
but I don't know about causality. I'm just looking at
the cities on the list. You'll see number four, Salt
Lake City. I don't know if you know. Yeah, see,

(25:19):
that's something correlation maybe, but not causality. Salt Lake City
is thirty eighth in food, third in fitness rank, and
third in green Space rank. Number three. Hey, Mark, Yes,
seedyl Seedel, Washington. So I should have stayed there, I'd

(25:42):
lived longer. Yes, I didn't have to start going on
blood pressure image until I moved here. Number seven in food,
eighteen in fitness, and nine in green space. It is
a nice looking city. Number two of the healthiest cities
in America according to Urban Wellness Honolulu. That totally makes sense. Yeah, yeah,

(26:10):
I don't know if you can beat not cheap but
food rank eight, fitness rank forty eight. People ain't working out,
they're just laying out. And number two in green space
all that surfer though, it's a lot of working out.
It can be, but I don't know how much surfing
I would do if I move to Honolulu and the
number one city. And let me just say, I'm not

(26:31):
so sure I agree with this. The healthiest city in
America according to Urban Wellness. Now, there's an argument here
to say that, oh, okay, it must correlate to income,

(26:54):
but I don't know if it's causality. Because the number
one city, the healthiest city in America according to this
list is San Francisco. Yes no, no, yes no.

Speaker 3 (27:06):
San Francisco is literally like living in a nature bar
granola bar factory. Every restaurant has some angle on health.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Let me tell you in Spanish. No, I'm trying to look.

Speaker 3 (27:18):
I look, having been there quite a few times.

Speaker 1 (27:21):
It is super healthy. Everywhere you go.

Speaker 3 (27:24):
There's health food, health options, health shops there. There are
so few fast food places there, and there are so
many you know, pop up vegetable in Banada spots. It's
ridiculous that you have to be able to afford to
live there. It is correlated with income.

Speaker 1 (27:42):
It's number one in food, thirty fifth in fitness, and
number one in green space rank. I don't remember a
lot of green space in San Francisco. Talk about living
in a Whole Foods.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
Yeah, like literally, like you're you're right there in Whole Foodsville.
It is super healthy, all the walking and San Francisco there,
which once you get outside of just Sir Francisco proper
and you're getting into the hills and the valleys in
all the green there's a lot of green out there.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
And then even when people say like they're in a
granola phase, they compare it to that. Yeah, okay, I'm
just saying, oh that that makes perfect sense. Mark your thoughts.
We're agreeing on a lot of stuff tonight. That's why.

Speaker 2 (28:18):
Yeah, I don't like that at all, do you you?
I I could never afford to live in San Francisco.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
My days are numbered. Let's just face facts here.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
Oh well, if we're talking about finances, none of us
here can live there.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
No, not me. I can't live in San Jose. And
San Jose was on a list of what like number
I don't know, twenty something.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
There was a twenty time when I was looking at
work in Fresno. Couldn't even afford work to live in Fresno.
They're like, if you live in Fresno, you may want
to like or work in Fresno, you may want to
live closer, like maybe Barstow, I don't know, La, and
then maybe just.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
Coming Ben Barstow, San Bernardino. Don't you know that sixty six?
Oh yeah, that show ye, I'm talking about the song
when you tay that California trip. You don't know that. Well,
I'm not gonna sing Saint Louis, Missouri, Oklahoma looks mightey pretty.

(29:16):
You'll see Ammillo, Gallup, New Mexico, flax stuff, Arizona, don't
forget Winona, Kingman, Barstow, San Bernardino, nothing, nothing, I guess
you singing, But okay, I'm not going How about this, Stephan,
can you find Route sixty six, please Manhattan transfer.

Speaker 4 (29:34):
The cod.

Speaker 5 (29:37):
Oh I know the song, I just weave, I said
find it.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
It's a Lady with mo Kelly, IM six forty Live
everywhere now Heart Radio app.

Speaker 4 (29:48):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
If I am six forty, we're live everywhere on the
iHeartRadio App. And we have a show announcement. You know
how we say, Okay, if I am six forty, we're
live everywhere on the iHeartRadio App. This is Thursday, so Monday.
Let me check my calendar and you can put it
in your calendar on Monday, the seventh of April, whereas

(30:17):
you can you know here tofore, just listen to us
on the iHeartRadio app or in your car on April seventh,
we'll be doing basically a dry run, but it will
be a live run of a video portion to the
show A word word word. You'll be able to see

(30:38):
all the cast and crew Later with Mo Kelly. Some
people might call it a simulcast even and you'll be
able to see uh, you know, for our friend Kimberly
and Georgia. She'll be able to see Mark runner. Do
I need to start wearing a tie? You gotta wear pants.
Gotta wear pants, or at least don't get up. That's

(30:59):
all steps, okay. You'll be able to see Stefan in
what we call air mix, which is the studio next
to the main studio. You'll be able to see Tualla Sharp,
You'll be able to see me. It'll be like a
cable news show. They'll have us in four different boxes
or three different boxes. And not only will you be
able to hear our interaction. As a matter of fact,

(31:22):
you can't even see right now, of course, but we're
doing test runs right now, so we get a good
sense of what it will look like for you. So
you might as well just go ahead and start following
me on YouTube at mister bo Kelly. Make it real simple.
Haven't done much of my YouTube channel until now. So
we're gonna give you audio content. We'd have a reason before.

(31:42):
That's right. We're gonna give you video content, and you'll
be able to see when Mark Ronner says something really
really insane, you get to see our facial expressions. In
the moment when he starts talking about black olives, you
can see hour distain. You'll be able to see Stepan

(32:06):
as he starts ignoring the show and he starts drifting
off and does something else.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
You'll be able to see Stephan and me snacking throughout
the evening. No, I'm snacking as well. We're all snacking
throughout the eve. You don't see people on TV snacking
throughout a news know.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
It's like, aren't you supposed to be on the air. Yeah,
well we are, but I'm hungry.

Speaker 3 (32:25):
But just seeing all the things that we're doing behind
the scenes is almost like when we say stuff like
you can't see this, but this this is what this
looks like. Yes, you'll be able to see it. Now,
are you about to post it?

Speaker 1 (32:37):
No, I'm gonna take a I'm gonna take a picture
of just want to, Hey, Daniel, give me the three
shot of all the boxes of all the people real
quick so I could take a picture. Yeah, here's a
four box. Yeah, person, there you go. So I'm gonna
take a picture of this. So I'm gonna post it
right now at mister mo' kelly, so you get to
see what you will be seeing starting money. It may
not be an everyday thing. It might be a semi

(32:58):
frequent thing. It maybe just for special days on the show.
I don't know, I don't know. We haven't quite figured
it out yet, but it's gonna be hot, how much
I do know.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
Hey, shout out to Daniel Ferguson for coming through and
making this happen. This is something that we actually talked
about some twelve years ago, the idea of doing this.
Twelve years ago. We're on the weekend. We had this
idea and it didn't work out, and Daniel reached out
and said, hey, t I think the time is right

(33:29):
right now and here we are. Do you have blackmail
on him for anything? What's going on with that?

Speaker 1 (33:35):
No, this is something he envisioned a long time ago.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
He is literally the first person to put a radio
program on us, right, Yeah, tell him, Tell Daniel come
in here real quick, come in here, right, hurry up,
real quick.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
So we got hurt a right, put down the camera,
just come back come here. Okay, all right, you've done
this radio thing before, all right, thing before. So Daniel,
what was the first show that you put a video
component to? It was Steve Harvey Morning Show, Steve Harvey's
I've never heard of them. We did that back in
twenty ten. So this is twenty twenty five, so you

(34:12):
know a little bit about what you know about yeah, okay, okay,
So we're gonna try to do this.

Speaker 5 (34:17):
On Monday, right, We're gonna do this on Monday, making
it live and it's gonna make it as much TV
radio as possible, you know, TV for radio, and so
we can see and hear the moll Kelly show.

Speaker 2 (34:29):
All right, can you do that thing where there's like
a cartoon character face over ours, like the guy in
the news who accidentally did it and couldn't get rid
of it.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
Yeah, he can, he can do that. He can like that.
He can put all sorts of stuff on the screen
to embarrass us.

Speaker 5 (34:42):
Well, from Mark, We're gonna from Mark, we again as
many filters as we could.

Speaker 1 (34:46):
I like the cat one. We'll go with the cat filter.
It's later with mo Kelly caf I AM six forty
oh yeah, and go to my YouTube right now at
mister m kelly so you can see what the show
is going to look like come Monday. We're live everywhere
in the I heeartradio app. We're not here to tell
you what to think. We're here to give you the
latest k F I M K O S t h
D two Los Angeles, Orange County, live everywhere on the

(35:10):
art radio s

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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