Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
From Hollywood to you.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Thank you for listening to us.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
On air with a Ryan Seacrest.
Speaker 4 (00:09):
On this Wednesday morning.
Speaker 3 (00:11):
Please please please Ryan Seacrest with you this morning as
we wake up and get at it one more time
and do it again on this Wednesday. Tany here this morning.
Good morn, Good morning, Tanya on vacation. Thank you very much.
The back room is here, the team has collected, and
I just want to start the show by some some
(00:32):
bad news that you may have heard about but certainly
hit home here and struck my heart in a big way.
It's really devastating news here in southern California and especially
close to me and the team and the family at
American Idol. Yeah, so that I've basically grown up on.
And there are very few people who have been a
(00:52):
part of this show for a long time. You know,
the judges we've rotated over the years. There are some
producers that have been there long time, but there are
only a couple of crew members and myself that have
been there from the beginning.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
And so as a show just means a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
You know, kids have been born and raised well, yeah,
parents have worked on the show. It's been on for
almost twenty five years. The news was made public yesterday.
Robin Ka, a long time producer music supervisor, is the
specific roll. I'll tell you what that is in a
second on our show American Idol. She did other things
(01:29):
as well, but was part of American Idol for a
long time, started in two thousand and nine and her husband,
Thomas de Luca. They were killed in there in Sino home.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
So tragic.
Speaker 3 (01:42):
In a neighborhood near you, in your neighborhood, next door
to you. If you live in the valley, it is you.
That's where you are southern California. You hear news like this.
It's been considered last I read a double homicide. It's
just it's scary, it's heartbreaking, and you just can't believe
it's happening. So I just I'm devastated and gut it
(02:08):
as is. I was talking to Megan, our executive producer,
and that was her word too, just gut it over
this news. Music supervisor. What that role, It's a it's
a huge role. It's an essential role to the show
and to understand what it is. You might not, but
when a contestant is singing a song of another artist
on our show, or any show for that matter, or
(02:30):
you hear a song by an artist on another show,
even a scripted show, you have to get permission by
writers or artists. You have to get permission to either
sing it, play the music, or play the track.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Oh, and that.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
That was her role to get permission from many artists.
Are all the artists that we were having the contestants
sing covers of or even to come on the show
and guest perform. She was very instrumental in some of
the bookings. I remember, you know, over the years, songs
or artists not being cleared for American Idol and we're
(03:06):
sort of, you know, oh, shoot, that's that's a bummer,
and then just go by and then they did get
cleared and you ask why And it was the relationships
that Robin k had as the music supervisor on American Idol. Yeah,
it's a team, it's an army, but that was her
specific role. For example, Led Zeppelin had never let their
music be used. Robin convinced them to let Adam Lambert
(03:30):
use one of their songs wow on American Idol.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
Yeah, that's relationships.
Speaker 3 (03:36):
This statement from Idol, we are devastated to hear of
Robin and her dear husband Tom's passing. Robin has been
at cornerstone of the Idol family since two thousand and
nine and was truly loved and respected by all who
came in contact with her.
Speaker 4 (03:48):
Is the American Idol statement that was put out.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
Robin will remain in our hearts forever, and we share
deepest sympathy with her family and friends during this difficult time.
That is the statement from the production. We think the
same about Thomas de Luca, who I did not know,
but her husband. Late yesterday afternoon, this all broke. The
suspect was identified, and the story goes on. But the
(04:15):
news is sad no matter whether you know them, you've
watched the show, you know the job, you know the
couple or not. It's really tragic.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
I saw the news and I thought of you immediately,
and it's just truly such a devastating story.
Speaker 5 (04:30):
It's so heartbreaking.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
My heart goes out to everybody that knew them and
works on American Idol because this is just such a tragedy.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
You know so many artists who knew her, artist managers, labels, songwriters.
She is a legend in our business and she and
Thomas will always be loved, remembered and missed. God bless you,
God bless your family. And I'm not going to come
right back with the cash. Just take a beat here
for ourselves this morning. We'll be back FM FM seacrest
(05:03):
waking you up. Tanya here filling in for some Sysney
business in a few with the headlines later. And Sysney's
on her summer camping vacation. We have not reached out
to actually, because we're respecting her vacation time.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
Yeah, because we respect boundaries over here.
Speaker 5 (05:18):
We yes, we.
Speaker 3 (05:21):
Are you and the Wii.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Yes.
Speaker 4 (05:23):
I feel like.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
I've gotten so much better about respecting boundaries you have.
Speaker 4 (05:28):
I've sent your group text the other day. What did
you send back?
Speaker 3 (05:30):
I didn't. Was it photo of something or a meme?
What did you send back? In that group text where
I was talking to all of you?
Speaker 1 (05:35):
I think Sydney said, yeah, what was the meme? Taylor Swift?
Speaker 3 (05:39):
What was it about the play the meme?
Speaker 1 (05:42):
You don't have to play a meme?
Speaker 3 (05:43):
They just didn't. I didn't. I didn't zoom in on
the meme that small when in the group text it
was small. When I tapped, it didn't blow up, So
I didn't really see it. What was it?
Speaker 1 (05:52):
It's a It was a picture of Taylor Swift, like
when she was watching one of the Chiefs games, you
know when she did that smile like.
Speaker 4 (06:00):
Okay, got it all right?
Speaker 3 (06:00):
Well, anyway, thanks for the meme and we're not bothering
you until next week, so oh before you do tell
me something good. Yesterdays show, we were talking about AI
and the top like three reasons why people use AI,
and the top three were step by step instructions. Number
two to get clarification on complex topics. Number one looking
for an answer to a question. I had have a
friend that told me that she's dating this new guy,
(06:22):
and well, actually her friend told me about her friend
who's dating a new guy, and the new guy like
texts her, and then before she responds to the text,
she puts a text into AI to get a clever
response to his text. So basically no, But then when
they're together, is she going to be the same person?
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Doesn't matter, you would, So she doesn't even.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
Respond until she runs it through AI.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
I didn't respond before I ran it past all my friends.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
Different chat GPT's writing her text and she's sending them
back that way, it's not different it is different and
she's not her like, that's not who she is, So
when will he catch on?
Speaker 1 (06:57):
And it's just to get you to the d like
some people do.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
You still have to be the same person that they're
attracted to to get into the date.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
Some people aren't good on text Some people are much
better in person. I'm somebody that's much better in person.
So you need a little help on the texting. AI
is that help?
Speaker 3 (07:16):
I found it to be not a great idea. Same
with this person who told me. I said, did you
tell your friend it's not a good idea? She said, no,
all right, tell me something good.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
I say, it's a good idea.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
I approve, all right.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
Tony says, yeah, give.
Speaker 4 (07:32):
Me some good news. Tell me something good.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
What's happening?
Speaker 1 (07:34):
Okay, my little dog, Sonny girl is becoming such a
mature young lady and I'm seeing it more and more
every day.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Now.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
She's sleeping in bed with us, which she never used
to do, and I'm just like proud of her because
she's just really maturing. She's like being more calm in
certain places, and it's just a beautiful thing.
Speaker 4 (07:56):
I love you, Sonny and Ruby. Tell me something good, okay?
Speaker 6 (07:59):
I go my nail fixed. So I don't know if
you know when you chip a nail, it's like the
worst feeling ever because you're just like walking.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
I get it fixed.
Speaker 6 (08:07):
Yes, I got it fixed last night with Builder jel.
So I'm back feeling brand new this morning.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
Have no idea what that it means?
Speaker 5 (08:15):
What kind of gel it's called builder gel.
Speaker 6 (08:18):
It's it's supposed to help strengthen your natural nails.
Speaker 3 (08:21):
Great, there's my takeaway today from the show. Already mind simple.
I beat my ways estimate by two minutes, and when
you do, it's like a massive personal victory.
Speaker 4 (08:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
I felt very good about it.
Speaker 4 (08:32):
Really carried me through my afternoon.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Tell me something good on our Riet radio app on
the talk back of Mike. Give us a ring eight
hundred and five to one to two seven Summer cash
is back.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
We got every hour.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
Also, I have a trip to go to our I
at Radio Music Festival to win seven o'clock get into
our seven o'clock portion of the show.
Speaker 4 (08:51):
I'll tell you more about that, but it's after seven
o'clock this morning.
Speaker 3 (08:54):
A chance to go to Vegas September nineteen twenty I
at Radio Music Festival. Go see jelly Roll and Edge sheeron,
Tate McRae and lots more both nights, Hotel Stay Gas.
All this stuff included after seven o'clock this morning. And
before we move on, let's check in on the personal
lives of someone here. Huh. Let's see. It was like,
it's Elsie's turn. What do you think, Elsie?
Speaker 4 (09:15):
I feel like you're ready to share, Elsie?
Speaker 3 (09:17):
How long have you been here now?
Speaker 1 (09:19):
Since January?
Speaker 3 (09:20):
And what's on your business card? If we actually made
business cards? What's your title?
Speaker 7 (09:24):
Producer, board, operator, phone screener.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
Wow, so long, it's a big business card. A lot
of slashes, knyphens.
Speaker 5 (09:31):
Yeah, all right.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
So this is something that your boyfriend is obsessed with doing,
and is it bothering you or you can't figure ou
why he's obsessed with it?
Speaker 4 (09:40):
What's the story?
Speaker 5 (09:41):
I have a concern.
Speaker 7 (09:43):
So basically, he broke the washing machine at the household
for like it was gone for like months, and then
basically everyone was upset about it. So we had to
start going to the laundry maat And it's so out
of the way to go do this because you have
to get like the coins and everything.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
And it was.
Speaker 7 (10:02):
Cute when he was like, oh, they have a claw
machine there. Let me try to win you a stuffed animal.
And I was like oh okay, yeah, sure, thank you.
And then he was like, oh, I want to get
you another one because it was a cute one there,
and I was like, oh, okay, yeah, that's fine. So
then he tried winning me another one, and then after
like ten dollars in, I was like, okay, maybe we
(10:23):
should stop, and then he was like he was like, yeah,
I think we should keep going. So then after that,
like after a few trips to the laundrymat I noticed
that he had a very compulsive addiction to trying to
win these animals. I said no, multiple times, please stop,
(10:43):
that's our laundry money, please stop.
Speaker 3 (10:46):
And he keeps going. So he's addicted to winning or
gaming or gambling or something here.
Speaker 7 (10:52):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (10:53):
I don't know what it is. I think it's a
winning mindset.
Speaker 8 (10:55):
Why.
Speaker 3 (10:56):
Okay, so he's competitive, wants to when he's doing it.
Quote for you for me, when he kept doing it
and you said don't do it and he kept doing it,
did you say to him there's a problem.
Speaker 5 (11:05):
Yeah, I started getting concerned. Ten dollars in, I was like.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Okay, this is does he gamble? Do you ever see
h in Vegas? Does he do the same thing?
Speaker 7 (11:13):
He did gamble one time and he got the opportunity
to win, and it was a beginner's luck situation, and
he thought the whole day that he was going to
win big. And now it's just not like that.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
So you need to keep a little file of the
things that are yellow flags or amber flags that could
cause concern, not necessarily the LAUNDREU dreamat. Why is it
you say laundry Matt, I say laundry Matt. Why is
it laundromat? What is a laundromat?
Speaker 7 (11:42):
I don't know it.
Speaker 3 (11:43):
Maybe what is technically correct? Laundry or landro? I say
laundry mat too? Tell me, what do you say landro? Laundro?
Speaker 1 (11:50):
Well, that's what it says on the signs laundro.
Speaker 3 (11:52):
I always think that that's they're wrong. It should be
a laundrymat. Why laundro, I say, I'm looking up says
the word laundromat is actually a trademark, a trademark turned
generic term like Kleenex or xerox.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Oh, so it was like the name of the actual
it's a brandy.
Speaker 3 (12:12):
I mean, it's a trademark term. So when you say
tissue tissue, laundry, Matt laundry, Matt, Kleenex laundromat, got it.
Thank you for bringing this dark attention, Elsie. I just
think this is one of those things where maybe you
flag the addicted to winning thing and see if that
becomes a greater issue as time goes by. Because when
(12:32):
you make he makes a little bit of money and
saves it and goes to Vegas and continues to gamble
it because it's gonna be lucky every time, and you say, no,
does he keep going?
Speaker 4 (12:40):
That's more of an issue for me than the laundre dreamat.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:44):
Yeah, how long you've been together?
Speaker 5 (12:46):
Where gonna hit three years?
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Actually coming up next to the number one best time
of the day to go to theme park? Yeah, I
got a quote of the daytonya here in just a
second for you. It's because I m got not Silk
City tickets all this week, right every hour. So when's
the best time to go to the theme park in
southern California? We have so many to choose from if
(13:13):
you plan a visit. One expert say the best time
to go to avoid crowds is two pm two pm.
Most people arrive early and try to tackle.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
Everything first in the morning. Like I was one of
those people.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
Let's get a jump on it and go and get
it all done first and early, so by two they're tired,
they have fatigued. You can play into their fatigue. The
strategy is to let them go early, get tired. Then
you come in and you come in full steam.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
When we were kids, my parents would take us and
we would go all morning and around two pm. My
parents have like a van. They would take all of
us in the van to take a nap around two
to three, three thirty and then they go us back
into the park.
Speaker 3 (13:51):
Yeah, gotta get your money's worth when you buy it.
Take Yeah, that's the idea. So your strategy should be
two pm if you can do it. And today's quote
on this Wednesday, July sixteenth, discipline is choosing what you
want most over what you want now.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Ooh good one.
Speaker 5 (14:07):
Nuh, that's a hard one.
Speaker 3 (14:09):
It's kiss Good morning, Billie Eilish here one of two
point seven.
Speaker 4 (14:12):
You're on Kiss FM this morning.
Speaker 3 (14:14):
It is a difficult Wednesday morning for some of us
here who have seen the news of an American idol
producer and her husband killed in Encino. The news came
out yesterday afternoon, and this strikes all of us on
the American Idolt family in a big way, in a
devastating and heartbreaking way. Just the incident alone is tragic,
but for it to be someone that you know or
(14:36):
you've worked with, or the team on Idol. The producers
worked with Robin Kay very directly on the music that
was clear to the music we got permission to sing.
The contestants could sing these songs thanks to the relationships
Robin Kay had as she and her husband Tom de
Luca were murdered and Encino, and there's just nothing but
(14:56):
heartbreak about this story.
Speaker 4 (14:58):
She's been on American.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
Eye, working behind the scenes and was not one of
those people who was in the spotlight or wanted to
be in the spotlight. She did her job, she worked hard,
she cared, She wanted the show to be the best
it could be every single season and get better and better.
That's how she approached her job. I spoke to our
executive producer last night, one of them, Megan, who would
(15:21):
work with her directly often, and you know her words were,
Robin was the heart of our show and played an
instrumental role in every one of the shows that we
did from two thousand and nine on. So we think
about our family, we send our love, our hugs, and
just the shift gears into the news of this.
Speaker 4 (15:43):
Assistany's out this week, So Tanya is handling the headlines.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
What is new on this story out of Ncino this
morning Tanya Becus FM Headlines with Tanya rad Well.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
An arrest has been made in the deadly shooting of
longtime award winning American Idol music supervisor Robin k and
her husband Tom de Luca. The twenty two year old
male was allegedly robbing the house when the couple arrived home.
The Pentagon announced that half the four thousand National Guard
troops that were sent to la in response to protests
(16:13):
will be released from duty. The nominations for the seventy
seventh Emmy Awards were announced. Severance led all shows with
twenty seven nominations, followed by HBO's The Penguin with twenty four.
The Studio and The White Lotus each got twenty three,
and Ariana Grande and Josh Gadd are joining the voice
cast of the upcoming animated adaptation of Doctor Seuss's Oh
(16:35):
the Places You'll go.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
Drick Gamar, good morning, Kiss FM. This hour chance to
go to our Iet Radio Music Festival, gonna give away
that trip. And then next hour Miley Cyrus is here, major, major,
Get ready. Now, Fonsie from the back room has come
in with some news. Obviously southern California being July sixteenth,
(16:59):
our day are going to go fast the summer days.
I think you're gonna go fast from here on out,
and you might want to squeeze in a theme park
or two or the not Silk City tickets I got
later this hour Disneyland. But one of the things you
should know about Disneyland fansee, I think you have the
details on this. And your fresh haircut with the tight
fade looks great. Oh thank you man?
Speaker 4 (17:17):
Did you ask for tight fay? What was a fade measurement?
Speaker 9 (17:20):
I think it's a mid fade to skin and then
I think I get like about a four or five
on top with like a little.
Speaker 4 (17:28):
Bit cost fifty bucks.
Speaker 3 (17:31):
Looks good.
Speaker 4 (17:32):
We're fifty.
Speaker 9 (17:34):
I mean, I love, I love my barber. Shout out
to me Sile over at sixty six Lounge and La Pente. Yeah,
the homie always hooks it up. So I love that
dude look.
Speaker 4 (17:44):
Looking slick, looking good for fresh fresh cut for summer.
Speaker 3 (17:47):
So Fanzi also loves it going to Disney or Disney
Adult resident Disney Adult here did his research and wants
to warn the old public service announcement about certain rides
that will be shut down, probably for repair or reasons
like that this summer.
Speaker 9 (18:00):
Right, Yeah, so the first one's gonna be the matterhorn
Bob's LEDs that one's unfortunately going to be closed. I
think it's closed at the moment. I was there the
other day and it's going to reopen July twenty fourth,
so it's gonna be a week from tomorrow. And yeah,
it feels colder in here already with the old link.
Speaker 3 (18:22):
Oh, the old link.
Speaker 4 (18:23):
Never gets sold.
Speaker 3 (18:24):
Okay, these are our closures at disney Land over the summer.
What's next?
Speaker 9 (18:27):
Yeah, So then we also have for our Star Wars
fans out there, if you're going to be in tomorrow Land,
just so you know, Star Tours will not be open,
and it's at least gonna be closed according to a source,
at least till September. So it's a bit of a bummer,
you know, but you know, we have all of Galaxy's
Edge to enjoy, so you'll be fine, okay.
Speaker 3 (18:48):
And the Haunted Mansion is one too, right, my favorite
ever since I was the Tiny, Tiny, Tiny Little Boy.
Love it Buzzy? Why is it closed? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (18:57):
So that one.
Speaker 9 (18:58):
It's getting prepped because Jack Skellington is making a comeback
for Halloween. The Nightmare before Christmas version of the Haunted
Mansion attraction is going to be closed, So it's going
to reopen around August twenty second. It's gonna be closed
from the ninth to the twenty second, just for that
update for the holiday season.
Speaker 4 (19:16):
And I was looking that's easily.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
I was looking at Notts just to see the schedule
of Not Scary Farm because it's always something we get
into and give await a lot of tickets to tickets
for this year's event as well as access to the
exclusive Nightmares Revealed preview night. We're going sale July twenty
fifteen am. Not Scary Farm officially opens in September. September eighteenth,
Not Scary Farm. It's gonna have ten mazes. I love that.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
That is so wild.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
You won't see there.
Speaker 4 (19:41):
You don't like the scary stuff for mazes.
Speaker 9 (19:43):
I the most I'll do is Ogi Boogie Bash and
Mickey's not so scary Halloween because I will freak out
and I will have a panic attention.
Speaker 4 (19:51):
So you're not a horror movie guy, I'm not scary.
Speaker 9 (19:54):
I hate him because, like I just get I can't sleep,
like I already like have a hard time sleep.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
I've got to a point, Tony where I will put
my hand up over gory scenes or medical scenes in
series that I watch on TV.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Yeah, I understand, I'm the same.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
I'm like I can't unsee it. Sometimes too, it can
be very like the streamers can get graphic too.
Speaker 1 (20:14):
Especially you were watching weren't you watching the Pit?
Speaker 3 (20:17):
I was watching the Pit, but I low I didn't
keep up with it.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
That's shocker.
Speaker 3 (20:24):
Next, but I have to deal with five bucks in
the summer cash here thanks to for It's.
Speaker 4 (20:28):
Dim Morning, It's Kiss FM. So check this out. I
actually had to read this twice.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
This guy in San Francisco, he started something called looksmapping
dot com. Okay, so he used AI to determine restaurants
in LA that have the hottest or most attractive customers.
Now interesting, funny, good news, bad news, tiny where are
you on it.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
I think it's all good news. I find it fascinating
and a public service.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
But what's attractive, Like, it's in the eye of the beholder,
now you find attracted.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
But I think that like, there are certain places like
I went to a restaurant over the weekend for Becca's
surprise dinner, and there were tables of dudes around them,
and I was like, this is a good place for
my single girlfriends to go because there was lots of
dudes at tables.
Speaker 3 (21:14):
Maybe he should do dudes at tables. This is next,
that next, Well, here's what he found. So we used
artificial intelligence to search millions of Google Maps reviews and
evaluate the profile photos of the users, giving each restaurant
a hotness score. The hotness score one to ten for La.
(21:34):
These are the top three he posted. One It's called
Chinese Trendy Food. That's the restaurant. It's on Hoover, just
off Jefferson on the USC campus. Actually right there gets
a ten out of ten. Whooa ten out of ten
evenly split with men and women, females, males, Dounia inz
Doniaz Downtown Fashion District restaurant and so looks mapping This
(21:57):
is what this guy did put together, you know, the
research on who the most attractive customers are based on
his AI surge. This one is Mexican food and it
also got a ten out of ten. Whoa menas And
another most popular for attractive clientele customers is La Crazy
Crab Cajun seafood Balls, Bowls seafood Balls, or we say
(22:21):
bowls in the South. It's in South LA and it
got a ten out of ten and it's almost all female.
Speaker 5 (22:26):
Amen to that.
Speaker 3 (22:28):
Do you MICHAELA? Let me ask you, is this something
that you find useful? Would it navigate you to use
these places? Do you care? Is just funny?
Speaker 1 (22:37):
I mean I think it's interesting, Like why not going
like scope it out?
Speaker 3 (22:41):
You know?
Speaker 1 (22:41):
But would you go to either any of these that
have the ten out of ten rating for hotness?
Speaker 3 (22:46):
I think if I were in the mood to be
into one of these foods, like one of the flavors
of the foods, and that we're in the area, then
maybe it would swing me just to see I agree.
Speaker 1 (22:55):
Yeah, like I'm not into like crab or seafood oiales
really but the other two.
Speaker 3 (22:59):
Yeah, like when you could probably.
Speaker 4 (23:00):
Order something off menu there at this place and still
see what the fib is like.
Speaker 5 (23:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (23:04):
Now, the question I have for us is, Tanya, if
you were going to Donez Downtown, would you knowingly it's
ten out of ten for the ranking of the attractiveness
of their clientele.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
Would you change what you wear?
Speaker 9 (23:17):
Like?
Speaker 4 (23:17):
Would you think about what you wear more so than normal?
Speaker 5 (23:20):
Me?
Speaker 1 (23:21):
Personally?
Speaker 2 (23:22):
No?
Speaker 1 (23:23):
But if I were single, yes?
Speaker 3 (23:24):
Okay, so you personally as a single person, yes, I
would for sure. I think you'd want to be at
your best with your best look. But would you take
a date there?
Speaker 9 (23:33):
No?
Speaker 3 (23:34):
I would.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
Don't bring sand to the beach.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
Not that you don't want them to see more attractive people. Oh,
sand and beach.
Speaker 4 (23:41):
You don't want to.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
It's like, no, you don't want to bring them to
where the people are all tens right right, right, right right.
You want to look in the sixes, bro Yeah, so
if you could do that search Riley Walls, if you
could do the sixes, that would be great. I'd like
to know the sixes, the clientaeil they are all the sixes.
Come on next, we got the match game for Soak
City tickets on Kiss. Thank you, Arid. Miley Cyrus is
(24:04):
here coming in a few minutes. First, I want to
give away this hour is not Silk City tickets. We're
gonna go to Jen a month to Bello contested number one.
Speaker 4 (24:11):
Hi, Jen, how are you?
Speaker 8 (24:13):
I'm good?
Speaker 3 (24:14):
Thank you, good Happy summer. Let's get to Kim and Corona. Kim,
you're contested number two. Good morning, Hi, Good morning, so
Jen and Kim. Here's how it's gonna work. We're gonna
give you a phrase with a blank in it. Whoever
gets the most matches with our panel, It's gonna go
to Soilk City with this four pack. We'll play with
you one at a time. Jen, your first and yours
(24:36):
is day blank, day blank. Don't say it out loud, Jen,
just think about what goes in the blank. What do
you think the most common word next to day in
the blank is gonna be? That's what our panel is
thinking about. We'll see if you can match up with
the panel a few times for the win. Jen, Day what.
Speaker 8 (24:56):
Daytime?
Speaker 4 (24:57):
Daytime?
Speaker 3 (24:59):
Yes, obviously, of course, but everybody gets that.
Speaker 4 (25:03):
Let's go to the panel. Here we go, But so
are you Tanya.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
Day daylights, night daylights?
Speaker 3 (25:12):
All right?
Speaker 10 (25:12):
Ruby day I said, day bed, Mikayla day day dream, Oh,
all right.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
Comes down now to our engineer jeff Tubbs. Tubs day trip,
day trip.
Speaker 5 (25:26):
No one said daytime, no one daytime.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
I mean, I know, I know, but I'm just saying
that's crazy. All right, Jen, hold on one second, Kim, Yes,
you just got to get one to win. Here we go.
Yours is don't stay it out loud, just think yours
is west blank west blank answers wes w e s
t blank. So let's see the panel's working on theirs.
(25:52):
And let me know, good, good, okay, Kim West what.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
West ward?
Speaker 4 (26:00):
Westward?
Speaker 5 (26:02):
Again?
Speaker 3 (26:02):
Why not west? I don't know. I can't even think
of anything that will go to west. Well, let's see
maybe the panel couldn't either. They thought of that too.
Speaker 10 (26:10):
Westward Chana West, Hollywood, Yeah, Ruby westward west side that
michaela West west La.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
West l comes down to our engineer, Jeffrey Tubbs says
it often does. And Jeffrey Tubbs, did you say westward
for the wind? I did say west Wood, west, World
west or west? I mean so good, you got it, Tubbs.
You came through for Kim west Covina, Kim, we appreciate
(26:52):
you listening and enjoy the not silk city.
Speaker 4 (26:54):
Take us, Jen, thank you have a great summer.
Speaker 8 (26:57):
Thank you, thank you.
Speaker 3 (27:00):
All right, hold on, Kim one second, you got it?
Speaker 4 (27:03):
West ward like westerly direction.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
I guess.
Speaker 4 (27:08):
Donnie's asking us about it.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
Yeah, I'm just like, what does that even mean?
Speaker 4 (27:12):
WESSO? You know west bound is a great one.
Speaker 3 (27:16):
Speaking of west presso here it is Kiss Katie Perry
teenage dream one of two point seven. It's Kiss FM,
Los Angeles. We've been talking about this this morning and
started out with the news and early this morning and
the role that this music supervisor who was killed and Encino.
The news came out yesterday afternoon. She and her husband
(27:36):
were killed in Encino in their home. And her role
was music supervisor on American Idol. And that's a big job.
That's a job where if you don't know, maybe you do,
but if you don't, it's the person who's in charge
of the relationships with the artists and the writers and
the producers and the labels to get permission for contestants
to sing their songs covers of their real songs on
(27:57):
our show. And that's important. Song selection so important in
these competitions, and so we were just heartbroken, gutted and
devastated to learn of this news in Encino, and then
to know it was somebody that was in the American
Idol family for a long time. Very few people have
worked on American Idol for a long time. I started
in two Robin started in two thousand and nine. That
(28:19):
is a is a lifetime of being on American Idol
two thousand and nine. And so it is a sad
and tragic story. And we send love and we send
thoughts and hugs to Robin, to Thomas de Luca's family,
the friends, the neighborhood, all in southern California. When you
see this news and Tanya is in for Sistani with
(28:41):
the headlines, what is the latest on the story?
Speaker 2 (28:43):
Tanyam Headlines with Tanya rad Well.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
An arrest has been made in the deadly shooting of
longtime award winning American Idol music supervisor Robin Kay and
her husband Tom de Luca. The twenty two year old
male was allegedly robbing the house when a couple arrived home.
The ACLU and others have filed legal action against the
White House over a new policy that bans undocumented children
(29:09):
from attending head start programs. The La County Board of
Supervisors voted unanimously to try to save an LGBTQ plus
crisis hotline after federal funding for the service was cut.
And the legendary Mexican band Los Bookies will get its
star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame next Wednesday at
eleven thirty am on air.
Speaker 3 (29:33):
With Ryan Seacrest. Ah Kiss FM LA is number one
at music station. Ryan Seacrest with you. Thanks for streaming
on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you listen to us
on the radio, in the car, your smart device. And
summertime is so many concerts, so many tours. Olivia Rodrigo
is getting a little price or something she did for
(29:54):
her team. In the Trending Report, Yes.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
So, Olivia Rodrigo's touring guitarist, Daisy Spencer, she actually revealed
that the singer pays for her band and crew to
have access to free therapy both on and off tour.
So Daisy was talking on a podcast and she said,
on the Guts World tour, Olivia and our tour manager
(30:17):
made accessible and free therapy for all of the touring personnel.
I have never had anything like that. It reignited the
importance of therapy to me. Because I had just kind
of fallen off for so long and then suddenly I
had this free resource of incredible therapists and I utilized
the heck out of that. And she kind of went
on to talk about it being the best gift that
(30:37):
she ever received. But I think it's so cool because
Olivia talks a lot about mental health and the importance
of it, and so the fact that she kind of
went that extra step to give her entire crew this,
you know, free access to therapy, I think is just
really really cool.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
And people are I agree, what a useful thing to
be able to offer people, and the intent city of
those jobs and being away and the mind of traveling
and touring it can be it can wear on you
for sure. And also, if I'm reading between the lines,
I'm also guessing you presented this at this moment to
me as well as an opportunity for me to say, hey,
(31:16):
after working with me for two decades, I get it
if you need some therapy, and I'm happy to set
up an account this therapy if you think that I have,
you know, been a part of why you need it.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
This job is kind of like free therapy in a
way because I can come and just like share everything
that I needn't get in different opinions. But I do
think people that tour, like you said, it does being away,
Like I know when Becca Becca dates a touring artist
and when she's gone, like she has to go into
therapy just you know, learning the relationships and how to
(31:53):
kind of navigate being away and all of that stuff.
So I just thought it was really cool and a
lot of people were like praising Olivia.
Speaker 3 (31:59):
Rodrigo agreed, thank you for that story and what's up Olivia.
Miley Stars, who's been in that seat so many times?
I feel like you've sat in that seat over the generation.
Speaker 5 (32:08):
I definitely have. I think I've been here with no teeth,
with braces on my teeth, probably in a Hannah wig
at some point. My grandmother, who now has passed. You know,
who was your girlfriend? Is what she told us all this, Yeah,
that my grandma came here. My grandma's had the same
glasses since nineteen sixty. Literally they're hot pink with diamonds everywhere.
(32:32):
And my grandma walked in and Ryan said, who's the
haughty with Miley? And she took that to the very
last day that she was the Ryan's girlfriend. So that
really was a nice family moment. I know my lane,
I know my day exactly.
Speaker 3 (32:47):
So, by the way, what does it just making of
different generations, your grandma, yourself being here over the years,
What does it mean to you to have fans of
so many different generations? Now, my knee six, like she
knew you were coming on, she was excited. My mom
knows you're here. She's excited.
Speaker 5 (33:01):
Well, I was that light. I was just talking actually
to Dolly this morning about that, because dollars she called me.
She's got a you know, her new Broadway play that's
premiering in Nashville and then going to New York. And
she just shows you that you can never stop evolving
and changing and exploring your lanes. And I think that's
how you really keep a relevant career, is that you
(33:21):
just are always growing with the audience. And when I
see young people that weren't even around when Hannah Montana
was on air, it's, you know, very meaningful because they
don't know me just from the show. They know me
as Miley, they actually don't know me as Hannah. But
there's a longevity and a loyalty with my fan base
that's definitely you know, reminiscent of how Dolly has been
with her fans.
Speaker 4 (33:42):
Dolly Parton.
Speaker 3 (33:42):
I mean, this is like royalty, not just music royalty,
all entertaining, like planet's royalty.
Speaker 5 (33:48):
And she's you know, loved for her And even though
there's a characterization of Dolly Parton, she is loved as
you know, as a real human gets underneath all of
the drag, which you know, that's all what it is.
We you know, we all have our own sense of
an alter ego or a drag queen or our own
Hannah Montana that makes us feel powerful.
Speaker 3 (34:07):
Miley Cyrus here, I was thinking back because we have
not talked in a while here on the show. I
was thinking back to when you won your first Grammy. Right,
it was twenty twenty four, you won your first Grammy.
You sang, you dropped the mic. I remember Oprah singing
along John Legend was iconic feet right to me, that
was like a moment. If I'm you thinking, holy that
(34:28):
just happened.
Speaker 5 (34:29):
Well, no one can tell me anything now because Oprah
sang along to myself, she sing flowers. Now I'm done.
So now anyone tries to tell me anything, you know
past the salad, Well, Oprah sang to flowers, so yeah,
maybe not you know?
Speaker 4 (34:42):
So she did you know her before?
Speaker 5 (34:44):
I was on Oprah when I was younger, we did
an episode where I got to perform with Joan Jet
for the first time because it was idols meeting their idols.
So I've known her from then, but she wasn't you
know someone that I can't say that I know Oprah,
But I don't know if any of us ever will,
which is the allure.
Speaker 3 (35:01):
I don't really want to know.
Speaker 5 (35:02):
I don't want to know totally. I don't want to
know share like I don't want to know my queens.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
No, But watching the cutaway it stuck with me to
this day. A cutaway of you singing your first Grammy.
She's singing along and John legends on his feet at.
Speaker 5 (35:15):
The end of it was like, honestly, Christy and John
were keeping me going because they were singing along such
good energy. I was so nervous, you know, I still
get anxious in situations like that and sing oh yeah,
I mean the Grammys.
Speaker 4 (35:26):
Is that makes me happy?
Speaker 5 (35:27):
And a while, yeah, that's top tier, that's you know,
everyone in the audience is the best of the best,
so you're not just performing. For like, if you have
bad pitch and you're just playing a show in Kansas,
ninety percent of the audience will have no idea that
you have bad pitch. But if you're sitting at the Grammys,
you know, damn well that Beyonce's like that was good,
but it was pitchy, and you know, you don't think
(35:48):
I'm doing it. I I do have an ear where
I'm enjoying someone's show, but I'm also kind of like
you know, I'm just listening. And so a regular audience
doesn't do that in the way that these professional best,
the best singers do.
Speaker 3 (36:01):
Well, I'm curious, and what do you do to overcome it?
Like when you get nervous like that in a pressure moment,
what do you do do it?
Speaker 5 (36:07):
Anyway, the things that you do that you're afraid of
are you know, they're the things that really change. The
challenges really do change you. And I have something in
my mind that is really my mantra, and it's don't
run away. And even in this moment, you know, talking
with you all, I always have a moment before of
because this is not as much as this is a
(36:27):
part of my life and it's been a part of
my life for a long time. My day to day
is kind of much more regular and kind of, you know,
just humble, and it's in its own kind of normalcy
of my life. And I've designed it that way. And
so when you're in these kind of situations that your everyone,
like I said, has a version of themselves, that's a
performance and you want to be honest, but you also
(36:50):
all of us perform in a way of protection. So
I tell myself, don't run away, and usually it all settles.
And to feel really nervous or to feel butterflies or
anxiety is completely normal when you're performing for Oprah and Beyonce,
So you just go. It would be weird if I
wasn't nervous and.
Speaker 3 (37:07):
Be human, and you settle in congratulate and the Grammy
with Beyonce too. So Miley and Beyonce obviously want a
Grammy after her first one. And she's in Paris, Beyonce's
on your Paris, She's doing a show in Paris. Beyonce's
on stage and she brings out Miley as a surprise.
I invited myself, how did it happen?
Speaker 5 (37:26):
So I was in Paris already, and you know, me
and everybody else wanted to go to the Beyonce show
in Paris. But again, I'm just, you know, because I
am Dolly's god daughter. I can't do anything for fun.
I have to turn it into.
Speaker 4 (37:38):
It's got to be projects.
Speaker 5 (37:39):
It's got to be a project. So yes, I want
to go to the Beyonce concert, but I don't want
to watch. I want to be a part of it.
So I get to do both. I got to be
a part of it. And she's everything that you would
want her to be up close personally, you know, rehearsals,
she is, you know, meet your heroes when it comes
to Beyonce because she she puts the work in. It's
(37:59):
the work. She's super, you know, kind of warm with everybody,
makes everybody on the crew, you know, feel as valuable
as they are. And then the show after that is
one of the best shows, if not the best I've
ever gotten to see live. I mean, of our generation.
I think she's probably is the top tier best performer that.
Speaker 3 (38:15):
We have totally Well to your right, who works for us,
who's one of our favorite people? Here is Ronnie Ryne
fell Off fell Off from that show. He was there, Yeah, here,
I was. He saw you come out and Ronnie take
us into your head in that moment.
Speaker 11 (38:33):
It was the craziest thing ever. Like even when she
started the show, she was like, we have a very
special show for you, and I was like, something's happening
because that's like she I've seen the show at that point,
was my third time seeing it, so I was like,
something special is happening. And I saw you did an
interview saying, Hey, if I do come out with Beiance,
I want to come out in Paris. So I was like, okay,
(38:53):
you know my lee, yes, and you planted the siege,
so You're like, okay, I want to come out in Paris.
So I was like, okay, three nights in Paris. I'm
at night one. What are the chances Mley's coming out?
I saw all over twit are there like Miley's coming,
Miley's coming. I was like, I don't want to get
my hopes up just in case. And then literally I'm
there on the floor and you appeared.
Speaker 5 (39:16):
You appeared out of fin air truly by that riser
the like yes, and I love because I think that's
a real testament to her and you know her support.
You know, she confident women don't compete, and so that's
why I both of get to stand there in our
own lane and just celebrate each other. I'm not insecure,
(39:37):
she's on insecure. So together we can be really powerful.
And I thought that it was, you know, kind of
metaphorical that she gave me her riser, because that's the
way that women that support others, that's what you do,
is you go, how can I make your entrance something
that is really special and gives you all the power?
And that wasn't you know, something that I was always given,
(39:59):
you know, and that I could chill in the past,
and so.
Speaker 4 (40:01):
That just you know, it always that's interesting someone or
people did not do that for you.
Speaker 5 (40:06):
Well, I think too, it's when you're a guest. You know,
they always everyone you're the guest on the guests and
they kind of give you this like guest entrance and
just to remind you, this is not your shape exactly
as if I didn't know, as if I'm riding a
horseshoe around ninety like I got it. But it just
shows I really thought that was just a true kind
(40:27):
of testament to the kind of woman that she is.
Speaker 3 (40:29):
Here is a little clip of that and then we'll
come back with Miley Cyrus and talk about the visual
album streaming on Hulu and Disney Plus today.
Speaker 4 (40:44):
I think you hear Rodney scream here at the start,
I was also praying, oh.
Speaker 3 (41:04):
Cyrus, Beyonce, that was in Paris a while ago, not
too long ago. Actually, well come.
Speaker 4 (41:09):
Back here, kiss I with my see christ with you.
Speaker 3 (41:12):
Tanya here Sisty on vacation this week, Miley Cyrus spending
some time, very important day, very big day. The visual
album from Miley Miley Sarrus, Something Beautiful is out on
Hulu and Disney Plus. Exciting there, all right, So approaching
a visual album versus making an album, what's the difference.
Speaker 5 (41:31):
Well, I've always been inspired visually when I'm making a record,
but you don't always make, you know, a piece like this,
and for many reasons of which I learned the hard
way on this one. Not only is it a lot
of well a lot of work, but to make everything
interesting and tell the stories within a reasonable budget is
(41:54):
a new challenge that you know, because I'm a big dreamer,
which means you need deep pockets for that. And when
I really actually kind of started to minimalize the idea
and the concept it became more pure because I think sometimes,
especially in my past, I've allowed the concepts or maybe
even it's you know, the kind of the controversy that
(42:18):
surrounded an album or something kind of eclipsed the music itself.
And so by creating something that is extravagant and we
hope to be really beautiful, it's also really simple and
kind of minimal, and I think that gave the platform
and the stage to the music, which doesn't always come first.
So that was kind of an important pillar that we kept,
(42:38):
you know, structurally integral that the music comes first.
Speaker 3 (42:43):
In starting the visual album, you've got the prelude from
her album as well, and the metaphors that are in
that prelude, and you know, one of which starts with
like when following an image from a train, your eyes
can't keep the passing landscapes and it goes on so curiously.
How did you distill down to those metaphors in that
direction from the top From the beginning.
Speaker 5 (43:03):
Well, I knew I wanted to open the movie with
a prayer because I think no matter what you believe
in or you know, separate from spirituality or religion, I
think you know, anytime the world you know, we come
together and we say a piece or a prayer together.
I think that's really the most powerful changes and movements
(43:25):
that we make. And so I knew that I wanted
to open my film with a prayer, and as I kept,
you know, writing that, and I felt it's really what
the world needed at that time. The final line, the
beauty one finds alone as a prayer that longs to
be shared is I've I mean, this is kind of
a silly story, but I went to I did some
(43:45):
meditation at a monastery and I noticed that it was
a very kind of individualized and isolated experience that everyone
was praying obviously quietly to not disturb the rest. And
I kind of thought, if you're so, you know, if
you've got this wisdom and this enlightenment. To me, I'm
the person that wants a whisper to the person next
(44:06):
to me and communicate and connect. And so I thought,
you know, I like what they've got going on here.
But if I was to have my own monastery, I
would make it not silent, because I feel that's very
me that I think it's important, you know, to be able,
and I get that you don't want to disrupt or
interrupt someone else's kind of like, you know, personal journey
(44:26):
that they're on, but I'm the one that wants to
tell you about my journey immediately.
Speaker 4 (44:29):
Would you interrupt anyone on this meditation or you held
it to yourself?
Speaker 5 (44:32):
I did hold it to myself. I did not want to.
Everything in me was already jumping ahead, which is also
what you're supposed to not be doing into meditation. You're
not supposed to be writing your next movie or album. Yeah,
you're not supposed to be doing that. But so I
did not disrupt. But I thought, you know, if I
ever had the Miley Monastery, this would be the house
rules would be a little different.
Speaker 4 (44:51):
Would you ever do a silent retreat?
Speaker 5 (44:53):
I actually have that on my list of to dos
because I've I've learned too that sometimes things don't have
to be so so drastic. You know that you can
do something. Usually these retreats are three, five, seven, ten days.
You can really make these really big powerful shifts in
your life over these times that they're kind of more condensed.
Speaker 4 (45:11):
Than what's a reasonable amount of time.
Speaker 5 (45:13):
I think ten, yeah, ten days of silence is good.
I mean, you don't know this part of me, but
I actually do really enjoy my alone time, and I
think I spend so much of my time performing and
entertaining and projecting that actually I really crave like kind
of silence and alone time. I get I can do
(45:33):
after this till I could do because I'd be with
my favorite person, having my favorite conversations with myself, which
then I'm all good because no one says nothing about it.
You know, you talk to yourself. I do, and I'm
meant to me like I think I've made that pretty clear.
Speaker 3 (45:46):
I like it.
Speaker 5 (45:46):
I'm indoor, I'm picking up what she's putting down. I'm
down to spend time with me. But I think that's
that's maybe the part of the isolation that they want
you to question is how okay are you with you?
And I'm good with it. I like it.
Speaker 3 (46:01):
I'm starting with ten hours these voices Miley Cyrus here
the visual album. So what was your when you when
you watch what you saw it? When when'd you see
the whole thing edited together? I'm sure you saw it
along the way piece my.
Speaker 5 (46:12):
Piece, you know, I was in the editing room and
I did every minute, you know, sitting creating this together.
But to actually see it at Tribeca. I think was
the moment that it felt the most real sharing that
with you know, the audience, and the album had been out,
so the audience was singing along, and uh, I was
kind of inspired by Wicked because I remember that everyone
(46:33):
was really annoyed when everyone was singing along in the theaters,
and I thought, I want that. I want I want
the annoyance of the person you know sitting next to
you to be singing louder than I am, because I
love the communal part of music, and I think with
our isolated experiences like streaming and you know, so much
music as being taken in on headphones, it's so isolating.
(46:54):
It's so personal that, you know, growing up going to
a record store with my brothers and sisters and my
friend and buying an album and going back in the
car and listening to it together, we really had this
time that we all heard I heard Hit Me Baby
one more time for the first time with a car
full of people, and all of us knew that it
was special. And when you have a moment like that
in music, it's really really special, which is why I
(47:16):
think still being a part of the radio, it's just
so important because I remember so much music that I've
heard for the first time by just I remember Rihanna
didn't even exist. I didn't even know what it was
until I was on my way. I'll never forget. I
was on my way to school and Rihanna came on
the radio. It was the first time I had ever
heard her before. And that changed me. Period.
Speaker 4 (47:35):
If you're in school when we were here as probably it.
Speaker 5 (47:37):
Was the first song, the ballad murder Oh Yeah. First
I was like, I don't want to do this anymore.
The reason why that was playing. I was in my nannies,
my babysitters little buick and I was on the way
the Champagne buick pulling up to school listen to rere
and it was everything and I was got unfaithful that's
(47:59):
the song. And now and now when I see her
like today, I remember that moment. And you know, the
young kids today, they won't they won't get some of
the experiences that I got to get with the radio
because I even called and requested. I might have even
called even before.
Speaker 4 (48:14):
You really recalled Rick D's then I did.
Speaker 3 (48:17):
I did.
Speaker 5 (48:18):
I was a nationale and I kept calling, calling, calling, calling,
until someone answered the phone and then I got to
freaked out and I made uh by the.
Speaker 3 (48:23):
Way I called him as well, and I got freaked
out because I wanted to come be a DJ after him.
Speaker 5 (48:27):
I hear my voice on the RADIOH No, well.
Speaker 4 (48:31):
You overcame that.
Speaker 5 (48:32):
Yeah, that was fine.
Speaker 4 (48:34):
Do you tell me about your being? You're good with yourself?
Speaker 3 (48:36):
You do you like? Do you hear a lyric that
you wrote? And when you hear it every time you go,
I am a genius.
Speaker 5 (48:43):
I really like the more to lose lyric are My
tears are streaming? Like our favorite show Tonight, which I
thought was maybe going to be very cringe. But the
reason that I wrote is well, I thought it was
either so modern that it was going to be cringey
or it was going to be like calling me by Blondie.
Because when I think about, you know what call me
means now historically, and you imagine telephone booths, and you
(49:07):
know that what call me meant at that time. It
that's what streaming is today, us calling each other streaming.
It kind of puts it in a in a nice
time capital.
Speaker 4 (49:16):
I think, yeah, do you listen to you when you exercise?
Speaker 5 (49:20):
When I exercise? No, I don't listen to me necessarily
when I exercise, but I do shamelessly listen to myself
sometimes when I'm driving.
Speaker 3 (49:28):
To Malibu, just Malibi.
Speaker 5 (49:30):
Yeah, that's because it's like an hour drive. Because I
make bodies of work. Okay, I don't make singles, so
the l okay, this is this is an I'm not
looking at my phone. I'm driving, I'm not skipping around.
So I put on one album top to bottom. I
listened to ESP I listen to dead Pad something beautiful,
but you know I don't have time to thumb through
(49:51):
my faves. I listened to the Body of Art.
Speaker 4 (49:53):
Do you listen to Malibu while driving a Malibu?
Speaker 5 (49:55):
I listened to Malibu sometimes, but see, I have too
many production notes. That's some times I can't listen to
my own music because I can't enjoy it without making notes.
Speaker 3 (50:03):
It is perfect.
Speaker 4 (50:04):
Do you have Do they have to tell you stop
working on it? We got to release?
Speaker 6 (50:07):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (50:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (50:09):
That's what I love most about streaming is that you
can actually take songs down and replace them with new mixes,
which I have done before. On Plastic Hearts, there's a
song called hate Me and I despised the mix and
I have swapped it out. So if you have the
CD and you listen on streaming, they're completely She's the
same thing as wild Card on ESB CDs. Streaming is different.
There's a synth missing on the on the streaming at first,
(50:30):
and then I replaced it, so I can't quite working
on it.
Speaker 3 (50:33):
I don't this. Maybe this is like a term people
don't like. But is it perfectionism? Is it wanting to
just do the best you can't like? What is that
for you?
Speaker 5 (50:42):
I wouldn't say that I'm necessarily a perfectionist, because I
do think that that's sometimes more the beautiful things like
I love a good distortion in the mix or something
that you get to feel. But probably a sense of
maybe obsessiveness. I'm a bit, you know, a bit obsessive.
Speaker 4 (50:57):
Quickly, before you go, what's the lens you look through
when you make a decision in your world?
Speaker 1 (51:03):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (51:04):
In your I think, in your creative world and in
your in your work, I.
Speaker 5 (51:08):
Would say, uh, meaning and time to look at time
from an overhead view and don't get too lost in
today because today is yesterday and it all moves forward.
And to me, I think you know something about quality work.
It's timeless, It's never going to go out of style.
(51:29):
Dolly actually said today, she said, some call it old school.
I call it old cool, and you you keep it classic,
and I don't. I don't think that quality and uh,
you know, devotion is ever going to go out of style.
Speaker 1 (51:42):
Miley with the quotes today.
Speaker 4 (51:44):
We're gonna go back.
Speaker 3 (51:46):
We're gonna listen to ourselves of you after this show,
just to hear all of these stuffs again. All right,
Miley Cyrus, thanks for being here. Thank you so much,
Usual Beautiful Disney Plus today I'll see you. Thanks, thank you.
With a Ryan Seacrets two point seven Guess FM, thanks
(52:07):
for rolling through it with us. We have a call
I wanted to take right away. Aaron been on hold
for a minute. Let me pop her on, she said.
Listen to this scenario. So Aaron is on the phone.
She is telling us that a woman applied to her
company who used to bully her in high school.
Speaker 4 (52:23):
Eron good morning, thanks.
Speaker 3 (52:24):
For coming on.
Speaker 8 (52:26):
Hi, good morning.
Speaker 3 (52:27):
Well, first of all, good morning, and I'm sorry that
you got bullied in high school. And the fact that
you know exactly who this person is, I'm sure you
don't forget when something like that happens. To you, is
interesting that the world has gotten small enough to where
she's applied to work where you work.
Speaker 4 (52:44):
Has what has happened so far? Has she gotten a job?
Speaker 3 (52:46):
Has she come in?
Speaker 4 (52:47):
Have you seen or spoken to her? How do you
know about it? Give me some background.
Speaker 8 (52:51):
Well, I recently got promoted at my job, so I'm
in a hiring position now, which is sometimes hard to believe,
but basically I'm helping go through applications and this new
role opened up on our team. And one of the
resumes that came in is from this person who bullied me.
Speaker 4 (53:14):
And you read the resume, Yeah, I saw her name
and just.
Speaker 8 (53:21):
Knew it, knew it.
Speaker 3 (53:23):
Just get to the heart of the matter and the
big question, do you get revenge now on this bullying?
Because you're in control, you have the power to bring
her in or reject her. How are you thinking about it?
Speaker 8 (53:38):
I mean, they literally made my life miserable. I haven't
spoken to this person since graduation in almost ten years,
and I feel like I have their resume here. What
do I do, like professionally, do I separate it? And
you know I reviewed their experience, They're actually qualified.
Speaker 3 (53:57):
I would look at two deliberate ways, two very clear ways.
Number one, Karma, she's out. Okay, number one, that would
be a number one car. I'm not saying in an
order of priority. That's example number one path number one. Okay, Karma,
you know what you did this to me. It bothered me.
It wasn't right. I don't give you a second chance.
You're out. It's karma.
Speaker 4 (54:15):
So the way the world works.
Speaker 3 (54:16):
Number two, you give her the opportunity to interview for
the job. And I think it's okay to. I mean,
you're obviously gonna know who you are, You're gonna know
who she is, so you're gonna talk about the fact
you went to the same high school. I think it's
okay to reveal how she made an impact on you
(54:36):
in such a bad, negative, bullying way, and let her
respond to that before you get into the interview. Wow,
let her apologize, Let her tell you something that might
make you feel better.
Speaker 4 (54:50):
You could close the loop on it.
Speaker 3 (54:51):
In other words, you could have closure on this bullying story,
but in person and move on to the interview. You
don't have to give her the job. But I don't
know that I could. We're going to know you're from
the same place. I don't know that I could not say, Hey,
obviously we're from the same high school. This is what
you did to me, and it still bothered me personally.
I know.
Speaker 1 (55:09):
But don't you think that this person knows, like they
know that they know.
Speaker 4 (55:14):
You're in the role you're in hiring.
Speaker 8 (55:17):
No, I don't think so.
Speaker 3 (55:19):
I'm not yet.
Speaker 1 (55:20):
No, they know this bully knows that they had an
impact on you when they were bullying you, and I
want to give this person the benefit of the doubt
that they're not the same person.
Speaker 4 (55:30):
I just feel like people can change.
Speaker 1 (55:31):
People can change, and maybe they did have some karma
thrown their way before this and they're a totally different person.
I feel like somebody that you are in high school
doesn't necessarily mean that's the person that you are today.
Speaker 8 (55:45):
That's true.
Speaker 3 (55:47):
I can't go unanswered. It can't go unanswered for me.
It's either no shot or a shot. But I want
you to know what you did to me.
Speaker 8 (55:56):
I mean, part of me would like to do that
and see what this person has to say, but I'm
not sure if that's professional for me to do that.
Speaker 2 (56:05):
It's not.
Speaker 3 (56:05):
It's not, it's not it's just it's not professional. It's
just real life. And you could feel it out, you
could just see how there the conversation.
Speaker 1 (56:15):
I feel like it would be very healing of you
to like to close that chapter and really just if
this person is qualified and not base it off of
your experience with them, and then if you do end
up hiring them, like what a healing three sixty life moment.
Speaker 3 (56:29):
You know, in this last moment here and before we go,
you won, like during your job threw you to win,
like lost, like maybe there's no comment needed because Hi,
I'm your.
Speaker 4 (56:42):
Boss and with that, I like it.
Speaker 5 (56:46):
I like it.
Speaker 3 (56:46):
I like it.
Speaker 8 (56:48):
Good luck, ar, thank you so much.
Speaker 4 (56:51):
We'd love to kind of hear what happens somehow, so
let us know.
Speaker 8 (56:56):
K T I will, I definitely will.
Speaker 3 (56:59):
Okay, bye, I think like heart wants to do both
the first two things I said professionally, just be the
you win, be above it.
Speaker 5 (57:07):
You're are even something.
Speaker 1 (57:08):
If you mention it, like saying, tell them how much
they affected you, then they win.
Speaker 3 (57:13):
They have power. This is kiss. I saw Eat Pray,
Love and they went on a silent retreat and I
was like, no, I couldn't do it. No, I love
the movie and love. I could not do it. I
could I can be silent for a day part like
for the link of JoJo's show, I could be silent,
No way, for sure, not one word. Yeah, I do
(57:34):
it at night, Well, when you're sleeping doesn't count. No,
when I'm laying in bed, I do it at night.
Speaker 5 (57:41):
Minutes, No, three or four episodes.
Speaker 4 (57:43):
Of a show, not a word silent.
Speaker 3 (57:46):
So Ruby has this trend here to tell us about,
called silent summers go on.
Speaker 6 (57:52):
Yeah, So, you know, in a world that feels louder
than ever, with NonStop news alerts, doom scrolling on social media,
and just the everyday chaos, some people are actually choosing
to unplug in a really big way via silent summers. So,
like you said, they're silent retreats which are going mainstream
now with people intentionally stepping away from their phone screens,
(58:13):
from conversations for days and even weeks just to reset weeks.
Speaker 5 (58:18):
Yeah, weeks.
Speaker 6 (58:20):
So some people do it, you know, like in a
remote cabin, a digital detox retreat, or an actual structured
silent retreat program. And the goal is always the same.
It's to tune out of the world and to tune
back in. So I feel like silence is essentially becoming
the ultimate luxury for a lot of people with everything
going on in the world.
Speaker 5 (58:42):
But yeah, I know it would.
Speaker 1 (58:42):
It would be a little hard for us because for work.
Speaker 3 (58:45):
We talk, right, this is what we do. But I
love the idea of the screen silence. I mean, I'm
down for that for weeks. That'd be great. Oh yeah,
I'd be down to do that. And I'm okay silent
for a day. It's twenty four hours overnight in a
full day. Then I think too much. Maybe you have
to break through the thinking too much. Maybe that's the point,
(59:06):
like there's a breakthrough. You overthink, you overanalyze your self, doubt,
you talk to yourself in your own head, and maybe
there's a breakthrough on the other side.
Speaker 4 (59:12):
You should try it, ruld be.
Speaker 5 (59:13):
I would be down to try it.
Speaker 6 (59:15):
I had a friend who did this and she said
it was really really good for her, and she did it.
She committed for one week of silence, so you speak
to no one, you say nothing to no one.
Speaker 4 (59:25):
No interactions.
Speaker 6 (59:28):
But she said it was really really good for her
mental health.
Speaker 5 (59:30):
So I would be.
Speaker 6 (59:31):
I would be down to try it.
Speaker 1 (59:32):
It would be hard, but I would be willing to.
Speaker 3 (59:34):
Try that everything worth it. Is a little difficult, so
silent summers. Let us know if you're in on that
eight hundred and five two one to two seven, And
just like that, it is Wednesday wrapped for the morning
show here at one of two point seven at kids FM.
Speaker 4 (59:46):
Thank you so much for listening to us.
Speaker 3 (59:48):
Tanya been in for Siciny all week, Systney on vacation
on the family summer vacation camping trip, and tomorrow, just
looking ahead, We've got Ryan's roses tomorrow. Also we have
got Janna for love Hewitt from I Know What You
Did Last Summer? Looking forward to that. I was on
the set for that one or the other one, the
sequel maybe as I still or I did or I
(01:00:09):
do Know what you did last summer. I was on
the set interviewing her when I was just a baby DJ.
That is so cool.
Speaker 4 (01:00:15):
So that's tomorrow too.
Speaker 3 (01:00:16):
If you missed today's show, podcasted on your Thrine Secrets,
Miley Cyrus is here. Check it out on the podcast
at noon. Talk to you tomorrow, have a goo one
kiss a step.
Speaker 4 (01:00:23):
Thanks for listening to on air with Ryan Seacrest.
Speaker 3 (01:00:25):
Make sure to subscribe and we'll talk to you again
tomorrow