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June 14, 2025 32 mins
As federal immigration enforcement intensifies across Los Angeles, Tiffany Hobbs breaks down who ICE is targeting — and who’s getting swept up in the process. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem says agents will remain in LA “until the job is done,” but critics warn of innocent citizens being detained. And a recap of the week’s most critical headlines: the Minnesota lawmaker shooting, “No Kings” protests, and more.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to KFI AM six forty on demand, kay
if I.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. Tiffany
Hobbs here with you until seven, and then Michael Monks
will come on and have his big show, undoubtedly sharing
with you all the events of the day. I saw
on Michael mnk's social media that he was right there
in the middle of everything in downtown LA for the
No Kings protests, so he will share what he experienced

(00:29):
as well as have a lot of updates for you
during his show, and just to continue to give you updates,
We're watching what's.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Happening in downtown LA as.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
Los Angeles Police have issued a dispersal order to those
gathering in downtown LA as the No Kings Day protest
has wrapped up, and while the curfew that's in place
does not go into effect until eight pm, LAPD has
issued that dispersal order. In fact, there have been two

(01:01):
at least dispersal orders issued to the crowd there, who
unfortunately has experienced some unruly behavior to say the least,
with those people there who would be described as being agitators.
All accounts say from our Chris Atler my friend Chris
Atler to Michael Monks, who spoke to Tim Conway Junior

(01:24):
earlier today when Tim was on from twelve to two.
They talked about how peaceful the protests in downtown LA were,
how peaceful the crowds were. Chris Atler spoke of demonstrators
handing police water, handing law enforcement officials food and other

(01:44):
things to keep them going, as well as sharing with
other protesters and attendees in the crowd. So there were
no accounts of anything nefarious until about maybe an hour
ago now, and that's at the conclusion of the No
King Day protests. So we're seeing flash bangs, we're seeing
tear gas deployed right there around First and Maine, near

(02:07):
the roy Ball Federal Building, which has seemingly been the
epicenter of a lot of what can be described as unruly, unsavory,
if possibly even chaotic behavior. But again it's a microcosm of,
or rather a small representation of this group. The overall group,

(02:28):
by all accounts, was peaceful today and this, unfortunately, will
likely be what people remember as these protests continue, these
groups of agitators. We're also following the military parade celebrating
the US Army's two hundred and fiftieth anniversary, coinciding with

(02:48):
Flag Day and President Trump's seventy ninth birthday, although he
says he wants to distance his birthday from the celebrations.
It all just happened to happen at the same time,
happen right there in Washington, d C. Fireworks have concluded,
and it looks to be that that military parade is
wrapping up. Not hearing any accounts or reports of unruly

(03:12):
behavior in Washington, d C. As the rest of the
country also was experiencing these No Kings Day protests and marches.
And we're staying on top of the story out of
Minnesota of these two political figures, one who was killed
alongside her husband. That's representative and prominent lawmaker Melissa Hortman

(03:34):
assassinated with her husband overnight just north of Minneapolis and Minnesota,
and the attempted assassination of Minnesota Senator John Hoffman and
his wife. They are reported to now be out of surgery.
Hoffman and his wife and Governor Tim Waltz says they
are quote cautiously optimistic about their recovery. The recovery of

(03:58):
Hoffman and his wife, Tim Waltz in Minnesota, also saying
calling this act quote an act of targeted political violence.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
The assailant, the suspect still on the run.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
That's fifty seven year old Vance Luther Boulter, still on
the run. Unfortunately, that is a consequence of this very
tumultuous political economy.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
I would say, we're just we're in a really.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Tough time, and continuing with talking about being in a
really tough time coming back to LA and speaking about
these illegal or the anti ice raids and these these
ice raids that have been happening in Los Angeles, anti ice,
protest ice raids. There are quite a few accounts of

(04:48):
American citizens who have been swept up in President Trump's
immigration cracked down since he retook office in January, a
few accounts. The only thing is these accounts are largely
anecdotal and substantiated by others, because the Department of Homeland

(05:09):
Security says.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
In a comment to the Washington Post.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
Through their spokesperson, they said, quote, we don't have data
to provide you on the deportation of US citizens because
we don't deport US citizens. How interesting. But of these
anecdotal accounts, there are quite a few US born people

(05:36):
who are US citizens who say they have been caught
up in the immigration crackdown since January. Let me share
a few with you. There were two children, a four
year old boy who has cancer, and they all were
deported with their mother to Honduras.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
So what happened?

Speaker 2 (05:55):
These two children, ages four and seven, were put on
their mother's deportation flight the day after they were all
detained back in April. Late April, the four year old
boy was actively receiving treatment for a rare form of cancer,
was flown to his home country of Honduras or his
mother's home country, because he was born here without his medication.

(06:18):
And that's according to the National Immigration Project. Now attorneys
have taken on the case and are trying to rectify
that situation. There are more reports of children being deported,
including a two year old girl who was born here
and she was deported with her sister who was undocumented,

(06:38):
and her mother after they were detained.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
At the end of April.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
They were detained and then both children accompanied their mother
to what was considered to be a routine check in.
That's where they were detained as part of the intensive
supervision appearance program. During that day, attainment they were then
it was then decided that they would be sent back

(07:05):
to the home country of the mother. And of course
there are attorneys that have taken on this case as well.
When we come back, I'm going to share a few
more accounts of people US born, people who have been detained,
some deported, some released, but all swept up in this
immigration crackdown that the Department of Homeland Security it's saying

(07:30):
doesn't actually happen, but there's evidence to the contrary. We'll
also talk about, as well, some more about the no
Kings protests were following those stories, and as well, I'm
trying to find it here some of the people who
continue to be affected by these immigration crackdowns. So I'll

(07:52):
share all that information and more when we come back.
On the other side of the break, It's Saturdays with
Tiffany right here on KFIAM six forty Live everywhere on
the eye Heart Radio app.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
You're listening to KFI AM six forty on demand.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Okay if I am six forty live everywhere on the
iHeartRadio app. Tiffany Hobbs here with you, and I just
want to thank those of you who have reached out
to me on social media, not just to say that
you're enjoying the show, but to show love to Chris Adler,
to say that you're enjoying the program and that you're
finding it to be informative and that you appreciate the
fact sharing, because that's what I definitely aim to do,

(08:30):
and I have more of that for you. As we
conclude our Deeper Dives segment into who is being arrested
by ICE, there's a lot of questions around the who
we see, the where la right all around southern California,
all these notifications about ICE being here, Ice being there,

(08:50):
some rumored.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
Mostly fact. But all of.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
This is really stimulating and causing a lot of conversation
and subsequent confusion again around who is being arrested and
detained by the Department of Immigration and Custom Enforcement. So
if we continue this conversation on the campaign trail, President
Donald Trump absolutely made it crystal clear that on the

(09:18):
first day of his presidency he would launch the largest
deportation program of criminals in the history of America, in
the history of America. And that promise, of course, is
what helped him get elected. But now as these immigration

(09:38):
raids and as this enforcement is well underway across the
country and focusing here in the Southland. There's pushback because
people are saying not everyone being detained is deserving of
that detainment lawfully or constitutionally. So since taking off a

(09:59):
President T. T. Trump has widened the scope of his mission.
We've talked about it. He targeted not he's targeting not
just criminals now right, but he's also targeting migrant workers,
even some student activists, and even tourists with visa issues.
And as Department of Homeland Security Secretary Christinome and Borders

(10:22):
are Tom Holman have confirmed all of these people are
summed up under the collateral damage label. They're saying, too
bad if you're with these quote unquote criminal undocumented people,
these criminal as they call them, illegal aliens, and language

(10:44):
is important in this. You can get swept up no
matter what, and you will be left to sort out
the pieces as they fall, if you're even able to
do so. As of just this early June, there have
been fifty one thousand undocumented migrants in Immigrations and Customs enforcement.

(11:06):
That's the highest on records since September of twenty nineteen.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
White House officials have said that they hope ICE can
scale arrests up. They were operating at about six hundred
and sixty or so during the first hundred days of
Trump's presidency, but now they're hoping to scale those arrests
up to three thousand arrests per day. Within that three thousand,

(11:35):
there's confusion as to who is legitimately arrestable now. Initially
US officials targeted those criminals, those potential public safety threats,
but it has come to light that a significant number
of these undocumented migrants detained have otherwise clean records. So

(11:58):
people who are undocumented in it do have clean records.
They're not all of these really bad actors. But as
you heard Christy Nomes say and borders are Tom Holman say,
they committed the crime of entering the country illegally. Therefore,
by definition, they are committing a criminal act. That is

(12:22):
why language is important. So we're not just talking about
the violent criminals. No, that scope has widened to anyone
who has entered the country illegally, whether they pay into
our economy, pay any sort of taxation, receive any sort
of anything, are a contributor to this society in a

(12:45):
positive way. If they entered illegally, they are subjected or
can be subjected to these ICE raids. Now, there's an
organization called the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse and they compile
immigration figures. They estimate that of the over fifty one
thousand people in ICE detention facilities as of June first,

(13:09):
almost half had no criminal record other than entering the
United States without legal permission. ICE has characterized the arrest
in LA one hundred and eighteen to be, in fact
in recent weeks as being the worst of the worst,
the worst of the worst people, But not all of

(13:31):
those people were in fact the worst of the worst.
And across the country there are quite a few people
from sports figures to the most famous or most popular
TikTok star with one hundred and sixty two million followers,
an Italian citizen, to actresses, to students who have been

(13:52):
detained and either let go or are currently fighting deportation.
So all of this adds to the infusion of why
are all of these people being painted with the same
extremely wide brush under Trump's immigration policy. Well, that's what's

(14:12):
provoking these protests today and have been provoking these protests
for the last few weeks, and will continue to provoke
these protests in days to come, and of course we're
following developments in Los Angeles in downtown LA as these
protests seem to be moving into a more anesthetical oppositional

(14:32):
way to what we saw earlier with the No King's
Day protests.

Speaker 3 (14:37):
So we'll keep you apprized of all of that.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
When we come back, we're going to just take a
relook at everything we've talked about and even maybe talk
about how some of these restaurants in downtown LA, how
they're spiraling, because this is really unsustainable and hurting the economy,
the closures, the enforcement to the protests, the curfew, discuss

(15:00):
some more ramifications of what's happening around the Southland. It's
k I AM six forty Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Saturdays with Tiffany until seven.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
You're listening to KFI AM six forty on demand.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
What a weekend Saturdays with Tiffany KFI AM six forty
Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio App. I have vowed and
I hope that you are doing the same, to certainly
indulge in some me time. Once I am off the
air and Michael Monks comes aboard. I have been looking
at a nice bottle of wine on my countertop for

(15:36):
about a week and a half, and I keep waiting
for the right moment, and just as I think it's
the right time to enjoy it, breaking news, just as
I think there's the right time to enjoy it, some
crazy alert about something happening somewhere that I need to
be apprized of. So hopefully I'll be able to go
home and just enjoy all of this. Hopefully people in

(15:56):
downtown LA will follow this dispersal and take their butts
home so we all can relax more safely into the
evening after a day filled with peaceful protesting for the
No King's Day Parade in downtown LA, and things are
starting to devolve unfortunately. As I'm watching here on CNN

(16:19):
Live in La. See the police out. They have their
full looks like tactical gear on their helmets. You see
reporters here with remnants of it looks to be whatever
was cast into the air, so perhaps tear gas. I
know there are reports of tear gas being deployed into
the crowd that was refusing to move as they continued

(16:43):
or began to get more unruly and then continued to
be unruly over the last maybe hour or so. We
had Chris Atler call in reporter Chris Atler, and she
let us know that when she was downtown.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
Things were fine. It was really peaceful.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
There were yoga sessions and you know, musical circles and
singing and dancing and things that were otherwise nondescript and
just you know, positive. And now things seems seemed have
seemed to change, and we as the night falls, we
know how these things tend to go. So the curfew

(17:19):
is still in effect of eight pm to six am
in that area, in that zone. I know the square
mile radius has been disputed by some, but certainly a
curfew in downtown LA. And we are about an hour
and twenty three minutes away from the start of that curfew.
So if you're going to get food, I have some

(17:41):
updates for you because downtown LA restaurants are going through it.
And that should come as no surprise to any of
us in looking at what's happening in downtown LA. If
you have driven through at any point in the last
few days, specifically probably about a week now, you've certainly

(18:03):
noticed that things look a lot more sparse Raoul, This
is so funny. I see you on the camera and
it's just your face for a second, like completely and
out your hand and I'm like, what the heck, Hi, Raoul.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
That's hilarious.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
So Downtown LA is experiencing quite a few closures, and
this is now five years removed from COVID. Five years
may not feel like it's that significant for some and
for others it may be. But five years later, people
are still Businesses are still trying to recover from the

(18:39):
closures that happened with COVID. Businesses are still trying to
recover from a fledgling economy, especially restaurants, and now with
this eight pm curfew in that zone in downtown LA
and with no indication when the curfew might end, restaurants
are reeling now. There have been instructions given to restaurants

(19:04):
about how to kind of ebb and flow with everything
that's going on, but a lot of restaurant owners are
saying that those instructions seem to be ever changing. Just
as they get used to one way of doing things,
in this last couple of days, they're asked to pivot.
For instance, patrons are allowed to enter restaurants this was

(19:26):
one such rule in downtown LA during the ongoing curfew. Currently,
patrons can enter restaurants before eight pm, but are required
to leave immediately after dining. So you can go in,
but you can't really lag around, and you gotta be
out before eight pm, and you need to keep your

(19:49):
receipt as proof of you visiting that restaurant should you
be stopped by law enforcement and question and potentially thrown
to the ground. Right, Okay, Now, the thing about it is,
diners are already scared to go into downtown LA, And
I think that goes without saying. Watching what's happening, seeing
the visuals and the optics of everything happening, you might

(20:12):
not necessarily be fearful of violence, but if anything, you
are anxious and apprehensive to put yourself into a large
crowd of thousands of people to get that, you know,
get those cold noodles.

Speaker 3 (20:27):
Right.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
I have a wonderful restaurant that I'm not going to
share the name of I'm gatekeeping right now because I
don't want you all to go there. And it's right there,
smack dab in the middle of Little Tokyo. Now, I
could try and go, but who's to say that when
these agitators pass by, not the peaceful protesters, but the agitators,

(20:48):
that they won't get a little, you know, a little
excited and perhaps victimize my vehicle, or that I won't
get stuck in traffic trying to navigate, or that I
won't be within the curfew boundaries and then find myself
on the other side of eight pm, and now I'm
having to deal with law enforcement and just the sheer crowds.

Speaker 3 (21:13):
Those people all are looking for something to eat and drink.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
So the places that are actually still open, and there
are few, there are few. Most are closed, but the
few that find themselves open are being inundated by these crowds,
so that all prevents patronage as these businesses have been
used to. Now, while the instructions may be ever changing,

(21:38):
the curfew has resulted in the early closure of the
businesses that are still open. For instance, Ryan Bailey, who
co owns Taiwanese tasting menu restaurant Cato, and his partner
John Yao made the decision to pivot from dinner only
to kind of a different hour, and other restaurants are

(22:01):
doing the same thing. But he does say that after
the curfew was implemented, they lost quote around five thousand
to ten thousand dollars in product and somewhere between three
thousand and five thousand dollars of unreturnable labor.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
He said.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
Overall, they're estimating that they'll lose upward of one hundred
thousand dollars because of the curfews, and with no end
in sight to the curfew, this is causing a lot
of businesses to be extremely fearful of their future in
downtown LA. And then you take into account any vandalism

(22:47):
that has occurred. Their businesses are boarded up, and in
some cases, like along First Street, there's kind of a
Heather helped me out. What is it called when you
when you live in a town home or a development
and there's a coalition of people or the organization howay,
thank you. There's kind of an howay on First Street

(23:09):
in Little Tokyo. It's obviously not a condo development, but
all the business owners get together and they provide the
genitorial services, they provide security, and because of their collective
involvement in that, they have also pivoted to providing boarding
up of businesses. If you're not in Little Tokyo, however,

(23:29):
on the outskirts, for instance, like Mike's Deli, which is
I forget what street that's on, but there are streets
just west of Little Tokyo in downtown LA outside of
the Little Tokyo zone. They are being asked to provide
the boarding up of their businesses on their own, and
there are organizations that have come out and offered assistance,

(23:51):
but not everyone has been able to receive that sort
of support. So people are coming out of pocket for
their businesses to assure that if there are these agitators,
like is what's happening now, their business won't be vandalized
because it will be protected by their windows being boarded
up or by having these sort of partitions in front

(24:15):
of their businesses. But all of this is resulting in,
you know, just a lot of upheaval, economic upheaval. These
businesses are saying they cannot sustain this.

Speaker 3 (24:28):
H this is terrible.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
When we come back, we're gonna go over some more
information about what's happening in Minnesota, because I really feel
like this is the biggest story in the news, and
I do have some updates I want to share with you,
And then we'll talk to Michael Monks and see what
he has going on on his wonderful program.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
It's been a day right here on.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
K I AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Tiffany hops here till seven.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
You're listening to KFI AM six forty on demand.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Okay if I.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app, tifty
hobbs here with you for one more segment.

Speaker 3 (25:07):
Can I say Happy Father's Day?

Speaker 2 (25:09):
This is a week in it, but it shouldn't week
enough news, but it certainly shouldn't obscure this beautiful holiday tomorrow.
Happy Father's Day to all of you who are in
the role in any capacity, to your father's to your grandfathers.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
All of you.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Raoul, Happy Father's Day and happy Birthday Monday. Right, you're
so so so welcome now you and Tupac Geminis. That
makes perfect sense to live and die in La. Right,
It's perfect California. Love all of this stuff. It's perfect
Tupac songs, the crowds out there for you, all for you, Raoul.

Speaker 4 (25:50):
Yeah, I told them not to do a big old
parade in DC, but they still did it.

Speaker 3 (25:53):
Any you know they can't resist you, Raoul?

Speaker 4 (25:56):
Are you kidding.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
I you know they love me. What can I say?

Speaker 4 (25:59):
What?

Speaker 2 (25:59):
We all you, and we wish you the absolute best,
absolute best. You're so so so welcome. Our own kfi's
own Will Coleschreiber checked in. He went down to the
No Kings protest, and he wanted to share that he
went to the march in excuse me, in downtown Pasadena.
They're all over right from Santa Barbara and north of there,

(26:20):
all the way into Orange County and down into San
Diego County as well and throughout LA. But he was
in Pasadena, and he said he saw thousands of loud
but peaceful protesters, all types of people from all walks
of life. People being really cool and polite, some even
handing out free bottles of water. Just a few motorcycle cops,

(26:44):
all being profusely thanked by the crowds, and incredibly creative signs,
all with one basic theme, No kings, no dictators, and
no ice. He said, what I did not see masks, violence,
excess of law enforcement or troops.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
So Will was out there. He was enjoying.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
Himself and exercising his constitutional right, which I appreciate.

Speaker 3 (27:10):
That's why we here, That's why we're here.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
Why we live here, for the freedoms that we're able
to access in this country, and of course it's why
so many want to be here. I just want to
give you a quick update about what happened with Representative
Melissa Hortman and John Hoffman and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
Minnesota.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed in this assassination
attempt are actually successful assassination and Senator John Hoffman was
shot in this assassination attempt alongside his wife. Now here's
some information that has since come out. Authorities have identified
the suspect as fifty seven year old Vance Bolter. A

(27:50):
manhunt is currently underway to locate Bolter. Officials say that
he left a list of politicians at the scene, a
manifest so if you will. They also said that bolt
impersonated law enforcement and that that manifesto recovered had the
names of more lawmakers, so of course security was extended

(28:13):
to them. There's an active, extensive manhunt underway stretching into
South Dakota. Now, authorities do believe that Boltu is still
in the Twin Cities area, but they do think that
he has every intention to leave and could be heading
to South Dakota. The Minnesota Orchestra this evening performed a

(28:34):
musical homage for the victims of the shooting as part
of their Saturday night concert. And lastly, there is a
fifty thousand dollars reward for information leading to the arrest
and capture of Lance Boltu. There's a lot going on.
Please be careful if you are out in those areas

(28:56):
listening on the iHeartRadio app because it is ongoing and
we'll have updates throughout the evening. Michael Monks is here.
Michael Monks, you were downtown today. I think I can
guess what you might be talking about on your show.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
Absolutely, we'll recap what went down this afternoon with the
many thousands of people in downtown Los Angeles. In fact,
I just got off the phone with the organizers of
No Kings in Los Angeles.

Speaker 3 (29:19):
See fifty one, right, that's the name of the group.

Speaker 4 (29:22):
Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, And they said that there was
across southern California two hundred thousand people. Now that's an
in house estimate. Was tend to be inflated. Who regardless
of who's organizing what, you always fluff the numbers a bit,
But I mean without a doubt, Mike, heis around twenty exactly.
I'm six to three. Right in downtown they estimated about
twenty thousand. I heard that on some of our television friends,

(29:43):
and the helicopters above was a lot of people. But
right now, what we're dealing with is what we have
been dealing with night after night in downtown LA as
things go awry. So we're going to keep updated on
what's happening. A dispersal order has gone out. There's just
some people who are still lingering, but it's around this
time where things tend to go haywire once they tell
you to leave, and the folks who don't leave, they'll

(30:05):
start to make a rest. Leading up to today, they've
really cracked down on people lingering after those dispersal orders.
I think the deployment of the National Guard may have
a fused under the local police because they're not messing
around anymore. And so we'll probably see as that curfew
hour approaches in approximately sixty minutes that this is going

(30:26):
to intensify as they try to clear out this area
around Alameda Street. We'll keep you updated. I am going
to be joined live in the eight o'clock hour by
some representatives from the Downtown Los Angeles Residence Association who
are going to talk about what impact this has all had.
I live down there too. It is a complete ghost town.
Outside of the protest area. It's just been dreadful. The
fashion district today completely abandoned, no street vendors, a lot

(30:49):
of the stores are just closed. So there's a lot
of fear in the community and a lot of uncertainty.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
I've been wondering what residents were experiencing me to because
you're living in the middle of this tumultuous experience and
people probably expect to kind of go on as normal
in certain regards. You have to still go to work,
you still want to pick up the kids, or have
to pick up the kids, or you know, go to
the gym or whatever, walk your dog.

Speaker 3 (31:14):
And it's like, how are people being impacted?

Speaker 4 (31:17):
Some it feels a little bit like covid era in that,
you know, there's some people who are locked in, some
people were wandering about, and then there's that air of
uncertainty about what will tomorrow bring. That's what it feels
like right now.

Speaker 2 (31:30):
It's all so uncertain and fluid, and I'm glad that
you are on the ground, Michael Monks that you're right
here and you're going to give us all the information
we need.

Speaker 3 (31:38):
You got it. I'll be listening.

Speaker 2 (31:40):
If you missed any part of this show, make sure
you go online to iHeartRadio dot com and go to
featured segments.

Speaker 3 (31:46):
You'll be able to catch whatever you have missed.

Speaker 2 (31:49):
You also can follow my own accounts of what's happening
in the downtown LA area or just outside of the
area at tiff hobbs on here. At tiff hobbs On
here that's my Instagram handle where I do share a
lot of information, a lot of content. It's been great.
If you are out and about, please be safe, get home.

(32:10):
If you're in that zone before eight pm, don't test it,
don't push it. It's not the time. Happy Father's Day
to all of you fathers. You are appreciated and loved
for what you do sight see and unseen, and I'll
see you right back here next Saturday. On Saturdays with Tiffany,
it's been a blast. KFI AM six forty Live everywhere

(32:31):
on the iHeartRadio app

Speaker 1 (32:33):
KFI AM six forty on demand
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