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October 14, 2025 • 35 mins
Final Hour Fun Fact. Number, Word and Song of the Day. Top Story of the Day on the Dodgers. Dead and Alive Guy Birthday of the Day
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
How's the stream stream commencing broadcasting on a M five
to seventy LA Sports and streaming on the iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
While it's the longest running afternoon sports show in the city.
No congratulations necessary.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
All traces of Fred Rogan have been removed. This is
petros in Money, Thank You, Thank You, hosted by Petros
Papadae Gas terrible person, He's the worst and Matt money Smith.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
The pipes, the pipes, the pipe. Don't miss an episode.
We're with you, Yeah, follow.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
The petros In Money Show wherever you get your podcasts.
Now Here's Petros Papadae Gus and Matt money.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Smith, two different minds. The same world is a hell
and a heaven.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
Commy US Metros Money five seventy LA Sports. This is
our two or on a flex alert.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
It is Dodger Baseball.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
From the Gallpin Motors Broadcast booth A five eight pm
First Pitch, yoshinob Youaamoto, Freddy Peralta. David Veasse already joined
us about a half hour ago.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
Kind of rockus first hour, good time.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
It's a good grab ass in time with some great
baseball information from David Vessey, who shared with us what
was on that little card that Blake Snell keeps looking at.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
I said it was The Wasteland by T. S. Eliott
and you were right, Yeah, who know? Absolutely the vast
eight confirmed it. Do you want to verify that? It's
the end of the podcast. It's you know, real surprise.
A lot of people think that it is like the
Paradise Lost as far as epic poetry of the twentieth century,
So why wouldn't Blake Snell have that. I know for

(01:42):
a fact that Don Larson had John Milton's Paradise Lost.
He had the Milton in his pocket, so it makes
a lot of sense.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
I heard it was Whirlwind Pyramid by the doc. Now
you know, don't you want to don't you.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
Try like a Whirlwind Pyramid. Well, we're lucky, thank you
to be together. We gave away some stuff from Hammer
and Nails. We talked about broadcasting, and we talked about baseball,
and we talked some highlights to David Vass and it's
been great. In the next segment, we will do a

(02:15):
top story of the Day, and just to keep the
continuity continue, we will do a dead and a live
guy Birthday of the Day. Tomorrows show starts at three
there's a Clipper pregame show, so it won't be a
five hours four hour show. It's very rarely a five
hour show. But we will do a three hour show
tomorrow from three to six.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
Going into Clippers Basket.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
Yeah, and then we will gurney Tim Kates out of here,
hang an Ivy and somehow get him ready again.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
Because Thursday, Friday games right.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Because of scam, starts at six am and goes to nine.
I know for a fact that Tim Kates also has
to record the Masters and Coaching podcast this week as well.
Episode eighty three Guys, Episode eight brought to you by
Concordia University Irvine, Masters and Coaching. Wow, Oh it's fun effect.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
Yeah, we're three fun fact.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
What are several Olympic athletes, former NFL players, and many
of the best college and high school coaches across the
nation have in common? There are graduates and current students
at Concordia University of Irvine's Masters and Coaching and Athletics
Administration program. Find out more at CUI dot edu slash coaching.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
You know that, And I think he's got a golf
coach on, so you're not gonna want to miss.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
This anomous that Yeah, you know what golf people need.
Lipbom carmex Wow if you're outside. Lipbom created on a
stovetop by Alfred Woolberg and Milwaukee in nineteen thirty seven
as a home remedy for his cold source. It took
until nineteen fifty seven before he stopped selling it out
of the trunk of his car and opened a proper facility.
And then it took until nineteen seventy three before they

(03:53):
had an actual assembly line and expanded beyond local markets
in Wisconsin and today being one of the most popular
brands of lipbumb still own and operated by that same
family about one hundred people.

Speaker 2 (04:05):
I heard that it was a Latino gentleman in his
automobile that invented car. I get it all right. Side
of his words the word of the day, and his
word of the day is flooded out. UCLA is cool

(04:25):
practice field that they just got finished. Its Spaulding fields underwater.

Speaker 3 (04:30):
WHOA see, that's why Tim didn't want you on the
UCLA games because you think this is funny. That's your
true I'm.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
Listen to your tone.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Man.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
Gosh.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Ben Bolt is the beat rider and he's literally in
like a public war with the athletic director, and I'm
the bad guy. I'm bad guy.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
I am.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
Hey Ben, look what I did. Look at the hires
that man we are. Look we've only had two hour
shows today and yesterday. Tomorrow, when we have three hours
and the Dodgers won't play, I'll get into the great
victory that us. He had the walk on tailback, oothball,
Notre Dame, we ethballo ball, the fear of Lincoln Riley,
and the playing of the Notre Dame rivalry.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
Oh what a state that he can make with a
win change everything. Man really kind of was not afraid
of Notre Dame eight and a half point dog.

Speaker 2 (05:21):
You kidding me? You know, fifteen days ago Penn State
was one of the best teams in the country, and
now their coach has been fired and paid fifty million dollars.
So that's it. Things can change quite quickly. Just like
Ben Boltch came on our show the other day and
said he didn't think you see, he's gonna win another game.
They beat Penn.

Speaker 3 (05:36):
State, humiliated Michigan State, and went out.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
And humiliated Michigan State. But guys, Tim Skippers, the coach
I love Jerry neweisl love what he's doing, Love that
nol Mazoni's there helping him now. But Tim Skipper is
the head coach. Tim Skipper's the guy that got rid
of Tinosincei. He's the guy that pushed out the decoordinator.
He's the guy that's got a great attitude that's changed
the attitude of the team. Jerry's a big part of it.

(06:00):
But let's not looks like a real quarterback. Now, let's
not say like the Cherry Newheusel arrow has begun. It's like, okay,
he not the head coach. Well, it is a great
day to be alive and be a bruin. Well, that
goes without saying it's a great day to.

Speaker 4 (06:12):
Live to be a broad.

Speaker 2 (06:13):
That's a great day to be alive and to be
a broad. Not if you're on Spaulding Field, because even
though they just got it fixed, it is completely underwater.

Speaker 3 (06:21):
Yeah, we forgot about the drainage.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
And Ben Boltch is like, oh, you practice on this
and then people are like, well, what I thought football
was all weather. It's like, yeah, this is our practice
field and we're trying to get ready for a game,
you idiot.

Speaker 3 (06:33):
Well, maybe they'll be playing in a rain soaked environment.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
It's possible.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
And then who's laughing out we were ready because that
field got flooded.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
If that field was that way and they were expected
to play a game on it, the game might be delayed.
It is really not playable either way. It's still a
great day to be He's gonna be ankle deep in water,
broad with a bunch of mosquitoes around his legs. It's
not a great day to be alive and be a
bruin if you've got to practice on on Spaulding. I
think they're moving back to the drake.

Speaker 3 (07:01):
I know it's not beer and it's just water, but
you know, get carpet to absorb a lot of water
over and over again and probably gonna get kind of
musty and moldy and mildwy our teams just.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Okayt drainage they do. They all supposed to have drained
and it's plastic. They're good. So it's plastic, you know,
and you could get sand to try to absorb it.
They might call the same.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
I mean the fact that they keep celebrating in their
locker room with dumping water, like hundreds of bottles of
water on jare wouldn't the folks at East Lance and
be like, hey, guys, well I would say that.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
But I remember when my USC football team won at
Notre Dame in ninety seven and we used our helmets
to collapse the ceiling and do about fifty thousand dollars
in damage to the Notre Dame visiting locker room. So whatever,
man who paid for that chess team, John Robbins, thanks
a lot, Matt, you forgot you. Ceiling's got so much
money they don't even get at the point. Yeah, chance

(07:57):
they're gonna chip them off. It's time of the.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
Number of the names. Remember the names too. Two item
combo Whole Foods today. I was going to do the
sandwich line, but it was unmanned.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
He went to the sandwich Yeah, I had.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
To leave the house because the power went out and
the internet went down. The Queen of the Queen of
sandwiches there, it was too early. I got over there
about eleven am.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
And so I am the Queen of sandwiches.

Speaker 3 (08:21):
So I got a two item combo ready to be
reheated at the at the Whole Foods. Yeah, I committed
a mortal office sin, and I want to apologize and
publicly take responsibility for it, because we love Michelle Cube
over there at KFI and she deserves better. Guy the
sales guy, his name is Guy sales Guy Oscar, also

(08:42):
at KFI. My apologies, I wasn't thinking when I purchased
the Rosemary chicken breast Brussels sprout combo that needed to
be reheated in microwave.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
You cause the STINKAKI did yesterday? I did.

Speaker 3 (08:56):
It was a real stink and everybody was upset, and
I immediately took responsibility for it, and I'm sorry. I'm
terribly sorry I did this, and I'm sorry it was
It wasn't burnt popcorn, it wasn't fish, but it was
probably a close third with the Brussels sproute would have
got on the sandwich line, I know. But there was

(09:17):
no one at the sandwich stand, and I was like,
I stood there for about a minute and there was
nobody coming around. Since, all right, the queen would have
told you to be paid two out of combo.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
Here.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
I come and I ruined everything here. So I'm sorry,
Michelle Cube. You deserve better than that.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
Michelle Cube was like, come see what's brewing? Come see
what's I saw Michelle Cube literally earlier today unload like
eight boxes a ding day, there was a nineteen There
was a hostess drop Man and you know she is
the biggest Bonovie fan in the world, and no one
told her about the iHeart event, no way, and she

(09:49):
is livid. I would be two. It's just sad, and
it's not cool. My favorite that's not cool. My two
favorite bands, like contemporary bands are playing a night at
the Greek.

Speaker 5 (10:00):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
I thought you're gonna say bon Jovi, no, well and
Rat but they're not. They're not. But the other two,
uh my two faces is so sad at what I'm
an emotional cripple. I am. My two favorite bands are
playing tonight at the Greek and you got I can't
even consider going pod at who else? Kid rock Good

(10:22):
Charlotte Kid Rock Pod. I'm gonna shoot a bunch of twelves,
of course, be awesome. Come see what's book. This is
the song of the day. A little hot there, Katie,
A little hot, yeah, just a little bit. O's a day.

Speaker 5 (10:39):
I like to use my voice junkle drum my, Emeliana Torrini.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Beautiful, well done, Katie, you you're doing a great job.
No you're doing great. Fine, Hey, sometimes it comes out hot.
What are gonna do? At least you don't make your
voice louder than all of ours, even though you speak
the least microphone. I rehearsed this before I go in
the year Katie.

Speaker 3 (10:59):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
No, he's a storyteller. What can I say?

Speaker 1 (11:02):
We'll be right back with the Top Story of the Day.
Spirit of Stories. MAT's gonna tell a story. We've made
it even easier to take LA Sports with you this summer.
Make AM five to seventy or your favorite AM five
seventy LA Sports podcast, a preset on the iHeartRadio app

(11:24):
using Apple CarPlay or Android Auto road Trip all summer
with LA Sports.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
Welcome back, everybody. It's a two ed mono Tuesday and
at Tired of the Lies Tuesday on the Petrosen Money Show.
We are happy to be with you on AM II
seventy LA Sports Day. We'll have Max Munci on Tim
Katz's Morongo Casino Resort and SPA pregame show coming up
in a matter of moments, and we'll have the NLCS
first pitch at five oh eight. But right now it's

(11:51):
time for the Top Story of Today, Top Story of
this day, I should have listened. I won't put it
on you. We typically do these things where we say
we should have yes, Yeah, you just said that again.
We typically do these things where we say no you,
we say we. That's the way it works.

Speaker 4 (12:08):
It's a show. Yeah, I left it and we put
it on ourselves. Yeah, I say it's the way it was.
I say we when I'm giving us credit right here,
I say it both ways. You just let's argue about this.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
For I was out there.

Speaker 3 (12:24):
I was out there busy with my what are we
to make of the state of Blake? The opposing batting
average and credible, but the walks, the limited innings, the record, none.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Of which was information that I was even aware.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
I wanted to feel like he's the ace of the staff,
or why am I supposed to feel like he's the
ace of the staff with all these postseason numbers presenting themselves.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
That's all I wanted to.

Speaker 3 (12:53):
Say to Dave Assay at the start of the playoffs,
when we were in our suite prior to the first
pitch against the he started through twenty one innings. Now
it is apparent, it is obvious, like, how could you
be so stupid?

Speaker 2 (13:06):
I did think obvious. I did think about that, but
I was watching Snell just like fucking act like it
wasn't even like it wasn't even a big deal that
he he faced the minimum. And and then I thought
back to being in this suite, and you're like, I'm
want to push back. Dave pushed back. The biggest bargain

(13:27):
on the free agent market was the check they wrote.
That's pretty good, it's incredible, uh, fifty two million dollars.
They wrote a check the day they signed Blake Snell.
They handed him that in a signing bonus to help
lure him here on that five year, one eighty two
million dollar deal thirty six and a half per You
could have handed me a prep sheet before you did
that story and said, here's the numbers, look at his whip,

(13:49):
look at this, look at that, and I still would
have known what you were talking like, I still would
have had no idea what you meant. I can't well,
I can't take this cross like's it. Baseball is a
sport of numbers. Can't walk this up to the bloody
Hill of Calvary Matt he is up there. He's one
of the highest paid pitchers in the game. And he
was hurt for most of the season. But when you're
the Dodgers, and this is where the Dodgers separate from

(14:11):
pretty much every other team in baseball, you can afford
to pay a guy that much money have him miss
four fifths of the season as the ace of damn
near any other team staff in baseball, and the guys
behind him aren't giving you close to what Snell is.
But on the Dodgers, if at least some of them
are healthy, it doesn't matter. Yamamoto, Glass, now Otani, this season, Kershaw.

(14:34):
They were all there to pick up the slack at
different times, allowing Snell to sit on the sidelines and wait,
resting his arm. The shine on the game's biggest stage,
something the only thing that has eluded him for different
reasons in his career, some out of his control, as
David vest say, walking in like a rooster. Let us

(14:56):
let me walk in like a rooster. Yeah, Szila seven inning,
Uh it is wild.

Speaker 3 (15:04):
That's Snell, who is now thirty two. This is not
like a twenty eight year old who just figured it
out in his fourth year, but thirty two. At thirty two,
two cy youngs on his resume, he is going to
pitch his greatest game ever and not walk a guy.
Snell has a ten point two percent walk rate this
season that is bottom quarter in baseball, and he faces

(15:28):
the minimum through eight not a single walk, only one hit.
Blake Snell had a one two six whip. As you
just said, Pete, I could put that in front of you.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Yeah, but I don't didn't even know what I mean
over one walker hit like archaeologists like Indiana Jones.

Speaker 3 (15:46):
And he does that again for the third time in
a museum. He has now allowed two hits in his
last two starts, and again they needed every last one
of those outs in those innings to get the win.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
The only curious thing about it was why not send
him out for the ninth I'm not saying it was
the wrong.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
They didn't even ask No Roberts. They didn't even ask
him in the media. Why they didn't say it.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
They just said, what's wrong with Roki? I think that's
because everybody was like, oh, yeah, well, Roki Susaki's been
unhittable three innings in Game four clincher, as good at
pitching performance as we've seen anyone this season.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
Now his confidence is destroyed way to go. So why
push Snell? Somebody gonna feed him some plankton and krill
to get him going again. They're playing the long game
with Snell. Zillah.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
Yes, he's got to make another start this series, and
he'll ask to be making two in the World Series
if they make it there, which after last night's I guess,
feels pretty realistic. But again, and this is where the
old man in me comes out.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Oh you're gonna You're gonna defend. It's just you're gonna
do it. It's just like see you where you weren't
really gonna apologize, were you?

Speaker 1 (16:45):
No?

Speaker 3 (16:45):
No, no, no, I'm saying Don Larson did it in
nineteen fifty six. Nineteen fifty six, seventy years ago, was
the last time someone did what Snell did last night,
face the minimum through eight in and you don't want
to send him back out there to try to get
twenty seven guys up, twenty seven guys down.

Speaker 2 (17:06):
I'm not a baseball manager. I am a radio host.
And what I would have done is ask Dave Roberts,
like if we're gonna ask Blake Snell, like, hey, do
you want to go back in? Why didn't anybody ask
Dave Roberts, why you know I always want more for you?
Did you want more for yourself? Did you ever think
about pushing him back? On Dave taking you out there?
Not trust him? He knows how bad I want it,

(17:28):
but he's the manager of that his team, so we're
gonna trust him and keep going.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
Class It's a classy move there, Blake Snell, because especially
after the second run came through the first pitcher in
postseason baseball history with ten or more strikeouts.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
Well, there was some one or no hits and no walks.
There was some confusion about the rules. I think Dave
Roberts thought he could put Snell back in after Sasaki
was like, it's like, you don't.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
You don't really, we don't want to go twenty seven
for twenty seven in this We're not gonna chase that.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
With a two nothing lead, he was pretty comfortable out there.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
He is the first pitcher in postseason history with multiple
outings of six plus innings and one or no hits
allowed in a single postseason. The start was sublime. In
this current era of pitching, where guys are chasing v
low one hundred miles an hour high nineties, Snell is
out there doing it with a change up over and

(18:26):
over and over. That's clocking in between eighty two and
eighty six miles an hours. A matter of fact, he
threw all of four fastballs four in the sixth, seventh,
and eighth inning. So again, selfishly, we can't get twenty
seven outs by the same guy. And judging on how

(18:46):
that ninth inning went, I think that was those proverbial
baseball gods sae season high pitch count one hundred and twelve,
he's only at one hundred and three, still got nine
to get there, and you would assume in the postseason
with all those changes up and curves, probably going to
be able to get there. Last night the other big story,
and by the way, I guess, if you want a positive,

(19:07):
how about Blake trying and I guess getting back on track,
getting a guy to chase some high heat. We saw
he didn't lose, he didn't lose, Dodgers won.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Rokie.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
Not sure what happened to one hundred and one and
one hundred and two, but it became ninety six and
ninety seven again with some control issues. They'll need a
good one from Yamamoto tonight. I told you the lack
of Plankton and krilled in Milwaukee couldn't find it last night, though,
perhaps the bigger story. The biggest story is now, I

(19:39):
think from the baseball side of things, but the talking
head shows in the morning, the biggest story is one
of the craziest plays we've seen in a long time
in any sport, the double play, the most unlikely double
play via force out. And some say, oh, maybe this
is the karma for the way they won Game four,
the fact that a wacky play after extra innings is

(20:01):
what punched their ticket to the NLCS. Had the Brewers won,
would it be a fluke play that would derail a
win after Blake Snell pitched an absolute gem. So a
lot of people are pointing the finger at Tao and
saying he's got to know better.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
Well, every game he seems to do something.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
Yeah, and so I guess the one side of that
is okay, Well, none of us knew the rule, but
he is a professional baseball player and he should probably
know the rules of the game that he plays.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
I yeah, I mean football is different, but you'd be
shocked at the lack of people that actually know the rules,
the actual rules of football in the broadcast booth too.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
I mean snapped up Donovan mc dad pretty bad back
in the day when he was not aware, didn't know,
didn't know, I had no idea could end the time,
So why should he.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
Just call the play that they could, you know, run
the play they call whatever.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
So last night after the force out, you know Tao
and I believe Dave Roberts called it a brain fart
or a brain c MP bray, he did call it
a brain fart. Okay, so Dave Roberts called it a
brain fart that Tao knows the rules the fought. But
then on the morning talk shows, you got part of
the Dodgers' broadcast team through the regular season, also has

(21:16):
a job over there at the Evil four Letter.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
She gets a she gets a ring World Series rang
if they win.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Regardless of what her projection is of how the Dodgers
are gonna fare in the postseason, We're gonna withhold this
ring because of what you said. You picked the pot
race to win the divisional round. Here is Jessica Mendoza.
I wouldn't say castigating. I would say calling out Taoe
for his lack of knowledge of the rules. Not knowing
the rules down granted you had to see that it

(21:44):
hit the wall.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
The wall was the key here, but let's be.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
Real, Tail, what's happening getting down at home in.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
A zero zero game at this point? Yeah, the wall
was not the key. Is the key to her saying
what's wrong, Tao? Why don't you know the rules?

Speaker 1 (22:01):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (22:01):
Because it's something that if you watch Dodger Baseball or
listen to Dodger Baseball with Rick Monday, who knows the
rules better than anybody in the history of the world,
you would have remembered a contest against the Mets in
which a tag was made the moment a ball was
bobbled but hit the mit, and you learned that as
soon as a ball hits a player's mit, you can
then tag up, regardless of how long it takes them

(22:22):
to secure that catch. So, standing on third, Munsey shoots
a freaking rocket four hundred feet into center field. The
moment he saw it hit his mit is when he
should have taken off for home. Forced player tag out,
be damned, which is why you probably shouldn't call him
out by insisting that the wall was the key on

(22:43):
not knowing the rules out.

Speaker 2 (22:44):
Granted, you had to see that it hit the wall.

Speaker 5 (22:46):
The wall was the key here.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
But let's be real, Tail, what's happening?

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Gets down a zero.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Zero game at this point. It's not like you know,
she was right in the moment though, just like the
broadcast that this morning. Oh so she already news. So
she had like a good twelve to fifteen hours to
figure it out.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
Yeah, that it turned into a hit the moment, good
take bounced off his mit and hit the wall. It
then becomes a live ball. He cannot secure it for
an out. It's essentially like a ground ball. And Tail
not at fault for not knowing that it hit the wall.
He is at fault for not realizing he should have
just tagged up the moment he saw it hit the

(23:24):
guy's mit.

Speaker 5 (23:25):
And bad base running at third. You've got to tag
and for some reason to ask her her Nanez was
not tagging on the ball. The ball went off the glove,
then it hit the fence and came down.

Speaker 3 (23:39):
After you the call on the field, the force out
at home plate is confirmed, the runner is out.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
The confirmed on.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
The runner a third base when the force out is out.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Exactly what I said. It's exactly right, Rick, he had
it TBS didn't have it. Hell, Mendoza didn't have it
twelve hours later, but Rick had it in the moment.
And that's why you should be listening to these games
on the radio with Nelly and Moe and Tim Kits
and David Vassay because of access to Blake Snell showing class.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
I mean, last night, Blake Snell said to David Vassay
that he was up all night thinking about how to
approach these hitters. And then Vassay went to the wife,
missus Snell Zilla, and she said, the guy was asleep
snoring all night, exactly what I said.

Speaker 3 (24:29):
Exactly what I said. Congratulations to Blake Snell on making
playoff history. Would have just been nice had he been
able to add those three more outs and gone twenty
seven up, twenty seven down. And I guess the other
lesson to take away is maybe if you're going to
talk about something twelve hours later, I'm gonna call somebody
out for not knowing the rules.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Hey, maybe know the rules, but let's be real tow Hello,
PMS listener, did you know AM five seventy LA Sports
has a wide range of LA Sports podcasts. There's Rogan

(25:12):
and Rodney. That one is my favorite Dodger Talk with
David Vasse, the Dodger Podcast of Record, Clipper Talk Without
a Muscle, follow us all and many more. Just go
to AM five seventy LA Sports on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
While we're getting the Game two mercifully coming to an
and is the one and only Petro sand Money Show
tonight the NLCS here on AM five seventy LA Sports, Yobo.
I'm a mooto versus Freddy Peralta. That's the pitching matchup.
We've discussed it last night. Is a memory. People still

(25:51):
figuring out the rules. I knew it. I knew it
all along. Can't do that. I saw it. When I
saw rules, I was like, Oh, you can't triple stamp
a double stamp, Lloyd, you can't do that. And then
I was like, oh, that's right. And I was like,
that's not part of the rule book right there. That's
just bad base running bbd b b BBB. So I
knew what was the house. I didn't say it to him.

(26:15):
There's no witnesses, Matt, but you just have to take
my word for it, Okay, I just didn't know you
you had some witnesses, and albeit not very reliable one, definitely,
you know. But me, on the other hand, you're just
gonna have to take my word for it.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
Knowing the rules.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
Now, granted you had to see that it hit the
wall the way here. What that's not the key? Wall
is not the key? What is the key? The key? Master?
Freaking maranas? All right, we're gonna get to the game.
Tookate's got marongo casino, Dodgers on deck. The Dodgers are
up one game, feeling confident, feeling tough despite continuing bullpen issues.

(26:54):
It is time for the dead guy. Birthday of the day,
Oh kids happy?

Speaker 3 (26:58):
Would have been one nine to the greatest surgeon general
to ever hold the post, My Surgeon General, Doctor Charles
Everett Coop.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
Is there any other surgeon General that anybody remembers other
than Coop?

Speaker 1 (27:15):
No?

Speaker 2 (27:15):
Oh, he would make appearance was a stuf. He would
make appearances on the Sunday morning comics in Bloom County.

Speaker 3 (27:22):
Look at all Rabbinical Shock white Beard like the pediatrician
sad back at the nick.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
The Return of the Century of Vinical Beard. Yes, love it.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
He was the surgeon General under Reagan eighty two to
eighty nine. And as you said, you can see him
in your mind's high you can visualize Coop. Probably can't
name any other surgeon general.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
Also, he dressed like a navy ad right, which was fun.
He was a stunt. I'm gonna wear this white coat
so everybody knows, Hey, we're gonna bring doctor La Trash
onto the show today. A good thing. Get a coat
and a stethoscope on him. Right, even though he's at
a TV studio, just everybody knows he's a doc.

Speaker 3 (27:59):
He's with unflinching public health messaging. He was America's doctor.
He was not Reagan's. He reshaped the role of surgeon
general into one that became a prominent voice and national
health policy. Born in the big town Brooklyn, smart Nay
Dartmouth undergrad Cornell, MD, Doctor of Medicine, pen Public Health degree, Harvard.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
I'm just going to hit them all.

Speaker 3 (28:25):
He was a trailblazer in medicine, actually, believe it or not,
for the greatest cause, something that up to that point
had been ignored, mostly until he showed up. Coop's medical
career focused on pediatric surgery. He built the surgery center
at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Chop and he pioneered
a number of life saving sature surgical techniques for infants,

(28:48):
and prior to that, he said, nobody really wrote about them,
and he wanted to write about what worked, what didn't work,
so other doctors could learn, because he said, we were
losing way too many kids from childbirth and early things
that could be corrected. So a true hero of heroes,
dauntless surgeries to correct and save the lives of children
as well, and he established the first neonatal surgical intensive

(29:12):
care unit in the United States. He was a surgeon surgeon,
and how about this, He was the world.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
He was your surgeon's very surgeon.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
He was the world's foremost authority on separating conjoined twins.
Ten pairs he separated that survived. His commitment was to science,
to public education over ideology. Appointment initially controversial because he
was outspoken as an opponent of abortion. Critics feared he

(29:42):
would allow his personal beliefs to influence policy.

Speaker 2 (29:45):
They did not.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
He advocated for evidence based approaches to public health, even
if they clashed with the views of the administration that
appointed him. He is best known, of course, because he
was a surgeon general during the HIV AIDS epidemic, provided
the public with accurate, science based information in the face
of madness. In eighty six, the author the Surgeon General's

(30:07):
Report on Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome and insisted that it
be distributed to all of America over one hundred million households.
It was the largest public health mailing in US history.
And probably his biggest thing was when all the all
of the legislature, pretty much anybody in politics was still

(30:28):
cashing big checks from tobacco.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
He took them on.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
He said strong warnings, health risks of smoking, said addiction
to cigarettes was a disease.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
He advocated forty public spaces. He loved Menthols. Well, who doesn't. Yeah,
he lived here, was on the right you know you
look back, He's on the right side of history when
it comes to the Menthol.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
Awesome freaking doc. He died in twenty thirteen at ninety
six years old. We celebrate his model for public health
leadership today on what would have been his one hundred
ninth birthday. All right, Matt, while listening to the Tomson twist,
we have a more.

Speaker 2 (31:05):
Well, quite heady, but we'll make it short. Uh, maybe
something we can think about for the future. This is
act well could be Greek news, but it's Australian news.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
It's really dam it's Kip and this is Petros and
money's Australian news.

Speaker 2 (31:22):
Today we celebrate a composer. Constantine Kukias is sixty years old.
He also could be called and I'm sure he was
growing up in Tasmania kooky ass. I'm sorry, k o
U k Ias? Where's that cookie? As gay as Uh.

(31:43):
He's a Greek guy, but from Tasmania, which is like
Hawaii for Australia. It's just what I understand now. Based
in Amsterdam, we're talking about large scale musical theater and opera,
avant garde Matt things that are right up around. I
still I remember seeing Deflator mouse with you at the
Music Center but a night. Never forget it anyway. Constantine,

(32:07):
as I said, very avant garde approach mesmerizing temporal spatial
production designs supposed to be a big deal. He approaches
opera in a modern way, hence leading to hybrid productions
like Days and Nights with Christ, to Traverse Water, the

(32:29):
Matt Smith Story and our favorite The Divine Kiss Tesla
Lightning in his Hand. This is high brows stuff like
the Great Petros Campani's Greek bass player that we celebrated
in this space sometime ago. This is about eight years old.

(32:52):
What we're listening to. It's called Before the Flames Go Out,
memorial to the Jewish Martyrs of Ionia, Greece. It premiered
in Amsterdam and then toured. He does it all. Matt
does Constantine, He mentors composers, he does operas, he does

(33:14):
musical theater, orchestral and choral works. And like my father,
he also wears a vest. But unlike my father, he
was educated all over the world, not at Rolling Hills
High School and then usc If this looks good on
your dad, yeah, well, you know, if you commit to it,
you know people they might have a certain thing. They

(33:35):
might think you're a valet. But you know, you put
James conn in a vest, and you know he looks
like like Frankenstein. But it's not too late for us
to get into opera and avant garde orchestral music, and
maybe we start with Constantine. Kukias Happy sixtieth birthday. I'm

(33:59):
just lost in the music. It is mesmerizing, as I said,
be mesmerized by Dodger Radio, fool Dodgers versus brew Crew Tomorrow,
Matt and I will be on at three. No, we won't,
Yeah we will. Three to six. It's a kookie ass week.
Is it three to six thirty or three three to six?

(34:21):
Three to six? Tomorrow the Clippers finally figure it out
and clip that half hour foreskin off of the night
three to six, Thanks a lot, Bomber. Twelve to two Thursday, Hey, Bomber,
we'll forgive all of your financial indiscretion if you click
the half hour. Just clip that foreskin off.

Speaker 3 (34:37):
Get the brisk Yeah, can we get that word out
cakes before the season starts?

Speaker 2 (34:42):
Can we get that screen? Call them oil? All right,
we'll be back with more Petro send money tomorrow with three.
Like we said, enjoy the game. In good luck to
Yoshi Yamamo
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