Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
I am six forty. It's a later with mo Kelly.
We're live on YouTube, we're live on Instagram, and we're
live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. I remember I was
in some sort of text verbal confrontation with some flat earthers.
And there's a reason I'm talking about this. The flat earthers,
(00:43):
if you've ever dialogue with them, they also believe that
we didn't go to the Moon, and they'll swear up
and down for any number of reasons we did not
go to the moon. They said, well, if we actually
did go to the moon in nineteen sixty nine, why
did we not ever go back? And then I have
to remind them, as of course of basic history, we
(01:03):
went back five times. We went a total of six
times to the moon. It's not some secret. I mean,
all the information is out there for you. But the
reason I mentioned that is it's a common question why
didn't we go back to the moon quote unquote because
space is expensive and also and also if you're not
(01:24):
old enough to remember, the Apollo missions were during the
time in which not everything was televised. The Apollo missions
was during the time we didn't have the internet. The
Apollo missions was during the time. We didn't get to
see many of the tests or any of the tests.
I mentioned that because SpaceX had another failure tonight and
(01:48):
we're seeing in real time not only how expensive it is,
but how difficult it is. And they're not even trying
to go to the Moon yet. They're just testing a
new type of booster rocket and it's having all sorts
of problems. They've had unscheduled rapid disassemblies the two prior launches,
(02:10):
and Mark Ronner first, good evening, but correct me if
I'm wrong. They lost contact with this latest launch.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
Yeah, I actually had a story that was written earlier
in the evening, and I just now saw the story
the update that it was spinning. I'll read it to
you right here. SpaceX says it still has a lot
of work to do after the latest Starship test flight.
The Mega rocket launched from Star based Texas just after
six thirty PM, but about thirty minutes in, the uncrewed
spacecraft lost control and began to spin. Starship made an
(02:38):
uncontrolled re entry and is thought to have broken up
somewhere over the Indian Ocean.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
Translation spacing is hard.
Speaker 3 (02:45):
It's really really difficult, especially since Stanley Kubrick faked that
all moon Land.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
If you're gonna do it for real, you gotta be careful, right,
But that takes me back to what I was saying
at the top, you know, because mini flat Earth are
their adjacent views. We never went to the moon, as
we did go to the moon, you know, why is
it we never went back and we're seeing in real
time how difficult it actually is to do anything in space,
(03:13):
saying nothing of the privatized version. Now, this isn't this
isn't NASA, This isn't the you know, the further extension
of what NASA was doing fifty five years ago.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
This is an extension of what Musk is doing to
his cars. Well, they've already launched a car, so they're
beyond that.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
Yeah, but you know, is this one of those things where, yeah,
there were plenty of failures by NASA, we just didn't
get to see them. And the types of failures NASA
had sometimes resulted in death. And now we have the
technology where we can have these uncrude space missions, or
(03:51):
at least space tests where we're not risking human life.
Space is very dangerous, Space is very expensive, and I
hope we can start putting to rest the idea that well,
if we actually went to the moon, we should be
going there all the time. We should have a moon
base by now. This is some of the craziness that
people tell me, Mo, Mo.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
This conversation begins and ends with flat earth. Once you
once you say, how do you know that? I'm I'm done,
I'm done. I actually had a debate with someone time
and I said, how is it that we haven't gotten
(04:32):
to the end yet? And then they had a whole
new theory about why we haven't gotten to this edge
because it's protected by the government and they won't let
us get there.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
Just just one government, just just the government get there,
because there's someone out there, maybe Australia, who's not going
to play along, and they're going to accidentally bump into
the dome o.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
Wait, this is that New World Order with the black helicopters, right? No, No,
that that's that's old this. No one believes that they're
It is a dome that we are covered in, and
that's why we haven't got It's just a real circular thing.
We haven't also gotten to the moon because there is
no moon. It's all projected onto this dome which mache.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
Look, I'm telling you that that is the problem. Once
you open up that can of flat earth worms, it
goes down.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
I see what you did there, because there's a flat worm,
and they did a flat earthworm. That credit for that.
Most people might not have caught that, but I did.
You mixed them together, with them together. Sometimes you can't
make sense out of nonsense. And I'm a kid who
grew up post Apollo. I mean they had the moon landing.
I think it was a July of nineteen sixty nine.
(05:42):
I thinkly nineteenth if I'm not mistaken. I wasn't a
lie for that. I was still in the womb at
that point. I don't have any firsthand memory, but I
grew up as a kid enjoying. And here's another point.
The Space Shuttle missions, we didn't have when they were
testing the Space Shuttle. We didn't have any disasters. Again
when they were testing the Space Shuttle. And if you're
(06:04):
old enough to remember, they were testing the Space Shuttle
where they would fly they put it on the back
of a seven forty seven, and the seven forty seven
will flap to a certain altitude and they would release
it and the Space Shuttle would then glide back to Earth.
They were practicing just landing the Space Shuttle. They didn't
practice launching the Space Shuttle because the solid booster rockets
(06:25):
was a separate entity altogether. As you can see on
the YouTube channel right now. Thank you for that, Daniel.
You can see right now how they used to fly
the Space Shuttle on the back of a seven forty seven.
In fact, you may have remembered when they were taking
the Space Shuttle out of service, they put it back
on a seven forty seven and they flew it over
(06:45):
to somewhere in LA and they put it on this
pulley and they towed it down to the LA Science Center, yep,
where it now resides. But we grew up in an
air or at least I grew up in an air
with a Space Shuttle, where we didn't have the testing
errors and disasters that we have now. Of course, yes,
you had Challenger, but that was in nineteen eighty six
and that was something well beyond the testing phase. We
(07:07):
are still in the testing phase of SpaceX. It's going
to be a long time if ever we get to Mars.
I don't know if we'll ever get to Mars. In
a crude sense. And there's something else. Why would you
send people back to the Moon when it is so dangerous,
it's so expensive, and now you have the technology in
the way that we send these rovers to Mars, you know,
(07:30):
and to the Moon, and other countries have sent rovers
to the Moon. Why would we go back to the
moon just to say we're going back to the moon. So,
if you're just tuning in another failed launch for SpaceX,
at least this time it didn't blow up on liftoff.
This seemingly it fell apart trying to land or something,
(07:51):
I don't know, back into a parking space. What was
it again, Mark, They lost contact.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
With it, They lost control and began to spin drunk
driving and made an uncontrolled re entry.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Is that what caused the sonic boom the other day? No,
this just happened. Yeah, this just happened. Okay, I have
no idea. I don't know what happened to your house.
Maybe someone was lighting off fireworks. It was a sonic
boom the whole house. Did you have an uncontrolled re
entry at home?
Speaker 1 (08:18):
Mark?
Speaker 3 (08:20):
It was because within the neighborhood you're not far away
from him. You didn't feel that that sonic boom re entry.
Speaker 4 (08:27):
I was probably stacked down at ten o'clock, ten at
night and it was in ocean side. What was it?
Speaker 1 (08:36):
The fireworks?
Speaker 2 (08:37):
What?
Speaker 1 (08:37):
No, it was the sonic boom. It was what was
going on?
Speaker 4 (08:40):
It was a re entry of the dragon rocket that
was coming back in outside of ocean side.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Okay, So what was taken off tonight?
Speaker 4 (08:48):
That one I'm not sure on was talking daily launches?
Speaker 1 (08:52):
Window they are out shattered or rattle shattered? Our house
rattled in Long Beach? Yes, how did you not get
a shake? Rattle and roll? Jake ran and rolled yesterday,
now that I think of it. We we did hear it.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
And we went outside to look and see if the
air conditioner had been knocked over on the road or
something like that.
Speaker 3 (09:12):
We did hear it, yes, Okay, See, so we all
felt something we didn't because mass was You can't have
three different versions of Oh.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
That's called a mass delusion when multiple people alleged to
have experienced the same phenomenon but differently. What's different y'all
saying this?
Speaker 3 (09:32):
No, Nick's house that he had the shaken in the rallying,
I felt a big sensation. Mark thought his air conditioner
was about to fall out. Where were you mo at Saturday?
Down at ten o'clock?
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Yeah, thirty. Oh, I was intoxicated at home get rid
and I got to see it. Yeah, to talk about
that later, but oh it was a long trust you
felt it ten thirty and yeah, I was too out.
I wasn't passed out. I made it to midnight, I
remember on Saturday, but I was not concentrated on any booms.
Wasn't the boom on Sunday? What would have been on Sunday?
(10:08):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
I had just gotten home from I think I late dinner,
and the landlady thought that I'd done something.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Well do you may be talking about something entirely different.
You may have done something. Yeah, maybe I did. I
don't know.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
But there was a loud boom, and we were instructed
to check out all possible sources of said boom.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
See that's the difference between white folks and black folks. Yeah,
when there's a boom, we assumed that we were near danger.
I did not die for cover. You go outside of
say hey, what is that making this noise? We assume
the worst. We looked at that guys.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
It was ten forty five Pacific extent of daylight time
on Saturday night.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
I know it was on Saturday because me and my
son were watching anime. That's what we do on Saturday.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
We assume that that means either they shooting or there's
something going on, and we stay asses in the house.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Yeah, that was Mark with his other half going off.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
What made that sound sound? Outside?
Speaker 2 (11:15):
On March outside and my bathrobe and my cargo shorts
with a broom in.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
My hand, and I was like, what's going on out here?
All right? I know, Stephan, we gotta go to break.
Here's here's a perfect example. If you see a bunch
of people running, Mark, what is your first inclination?
Speaker 2 (11:36):
Let's see which half am I answering with your white half? Oh,
to find out what they're running from and not run
with them.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Yeah, you're dead every.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
Time everything time my other half joined them and tried
out run them.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
Somebody else's find out later because that means dangerous coming
in this direction. Yeah, I get where you're coming from.
It's later with Kelly. We're back alive on YouTube, Instagram
and the iHeart radio app, and we're off. We gotta
tell you we have a hot summer coming this way
and it's not hot boy or hot girl. It's just
straight up hot.
Speaker 5 (12:08):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
KFI A six forty. It's Later with Mo Kelly. We're
live on YouTube, Instagram and the iHeartRadio app. And I
gotta say, oh, that was pretty cool, Daniel. I like
the new animations on the transitions. That's pretty cool. You
gotta tune into YouTube. It's so I went out there
and told him how cool it was. Yeah, I didn't
see it the first time. Hey, Daniel, can you do
that again? Do it again?
Speaker 5 (12:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (12:36):
All right, So everyone wait, we're gonna give you five
seconds to get to YouTube. This is more important than
the show. Mister m R m O K E L
L y OK five four three two one transition Woo Hercules.
Hercules is fancyse I like it so cool. It's TV.
Speaker 3 (12:59):
But nah, so he got some of that video toaster
software from the eighties.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Yeah, I know at night he's just playing around with him,
doesn't know what to do with himself, and we appreciate that.
I'm gonna say it was kind of warm this weekend,
but not as hot as it's going to be in
future weekends at Alte Valley is another fact as as
a matter of fact, it's supposed to reach one hundred
and two degrees this coming weekend. One hundred and two degrees. Now,
(13:30):
since I've turned fifty, I'm a little bit past fifty. Now,
since I've turned fifty, I am not interested in extremes.
Not extreme heat, not extreme cold. I needed to be
eighty degrees every single day, and that's not impossible. It's
just when I'm in my car, I can make sure
it's not too hot. If I'm in my house, it's
(13:51):
not too hot. Coming to the station is the only
time I'm really vulnerable. For about thirty five steps leaving
the parking garage to the double glass doors to get in. iHeartMedia.
That's the only time I'm vulnerable those couple of steps. Though,
Oh you could burn up like the wicked Witch of
the West. You kind of you kind of.
Speaker 6 (14:10):
I can't imagine what an ant feels like when they
use a magnifying glass on them, because you're between two
buildings and so the sun just reflects and it just
burns you.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
It's like the vampires in near Dark. You can catch
a fire before you get to the building.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Absolutely. Since you mentioned ants and magnifying glasses, did you
ever do that as a kid, I'm sorry to say
I did. I never. No, I did it with leaves. Yeah,
doing it with insects, that's that's that's I really are
progress to a serial killer.
Speaker 3 (14:41):
You know, there's a level of cruelty and inhumanity and
just doing that to ants, I didn't.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Say it wasn't. I'm not even gonna tell you about
the stuff I did to moths. Okay, what you don't want?
What type of.
Speaker 2 (14:59):
All serial killers start with animal cruelty? So you've got some.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
They are insects. Yeah, that you're telling us Kingdom.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
Order a philom You know, I never know about the ants,
So you've got some.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Ok Wait, let's be clear, y'all. Have never stepped on
an ant intentionally? No, not intentional?
Speaker 3 (15:22):
Come no, no, no, no, no, I don't go out of
my way some liar, the.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
Liars stepping on and is different than torching them like
a wrathful god.
Speaker 3 (15:32):
Okay, and now that I look, I would. I don't
even step on roaches. Mark tried to give me to
go in and get the iHeart bathroom roach, and.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
I said, no, you Okay, Look, I don't like to
step on roes because they're nasty, not because I'm trying
to spare you exactly.
Speaker 6 (15:45):
I would say, those are the ones there are the
size of your thumb.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
Yeah, let them live. They're huge. Alright. So what's the
line here? What what is it that you will kill
and won't kill? I'll kill me some bees.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
I would kill a man and that tried to or
did molest or harm one of my children, I'd kill
them dead. All right, all right there, that's what I said.
But that's a person who has harmed my child. You're dead.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
But what if a bee stung you, that's harming you
or your child?
Speaker 3 (16:12):
If a bee stung my daughter or my son, I'd
be like, hey, ass off the grass.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Okay, you're gonna have You would be bad at your
kids sitting on the grass. Yeah, they're harassing the bees.
Get away from the bees. Hey, Mark, what is your line?
Speaker 2 (16:26):
I think the line generally is, if you go out
of your way to kill any other living thing for
your own personal amusement, you need to be locked away
for life.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
You're sick of Yeah, you're a sociopath. Yeah, you would
not even spray ants with raid. Well, if they were
getting into the house.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
Yeah, but I'm not going out of my way to
torture them to death with the sun.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
Okay, so you're not going to step on them. They
just happen to be. If you see a line of ants,
you would hop over them like it was a superstition.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
I like how you're trying to put this on us,
like you're not the one who just spoke your.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
K A question as far as what is or what
is not fair play?
Speaker 2 (17:02):
What's fair play is if something impinges upon you and
gets in your way and you've got to deal with it,
then you deal with it. But if you go out
of your way too for your own enjoyment, destroy them
like you are the almighty with with with the rays
of the sun, then you need professional help as quickly
as possible.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
You've never killed a spider in your house and just
squeezed the brains in life out of them.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
I killed one just last night. It was a big one.
It's the size of a golf ball. Now here's the thing.
No look, no, look look for me. I will allow
spiders lee way to leave. I will let a spider leave,
even if it's in the room of his car around
there the bed. I'll say, hey, I'm gonna give you
the opportunity to get out of here.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
You're gonna have a conversation.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
Because look, because it's like, it's not it's.
Speaker 1 (17:50):
Not the spiders, the one that's hanging over you ahead
big on the ceiling.
Speaker 3 (17:55):
I'm the one that I've seen hanging. I try my
best to catch those things. And you know what I've done.
You know what I've done to get over my fear spiders.
I've started grabbing them with my hand, grab on my hand.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Know that Mike kill him. You know, Moe wants to
pretend he's gold. I'm just thinking of all I having
a conversation with the spider. I'm not having I do
any type of insect or wrapping in. I'm not.
Speaker 3 (18:23):
But I set you all the video the other day
when I was in the bathroom and I say, hey, man,
that there's a whole video I shot. I said, you
just do your thing. I'm backing up. I'm not messing
with you. You you do your own thing.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
It was a whole I'm not trying to look, I'm
not trying to step on a roach. But I will
drown it and raid. I will do that, and you're
saying that I am the bad guy for drowning a
roach in raid.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
No, I'm saying that if you like to torture the
insects for amusement, then there's a high likelihood you've got
assorted animal bodies buried around here.
Speaker 1 (18:59):
I did not say I enjoyed it. You said you
burned them with a magnifying glass. I was curious. I
was curious. You were homicide curious conducting a science experience
experiment with the rays of the sun and a magnifying glass.
You could have done with fuses on a leaf. We
did do that, and then we weren't. Look. It wasn't
(19:21):
like I put the ant in the microwave, which I
did later on in life. Jesus, what did you have
on a lab coat and goggles? No, it was no
true story. It was here and I just opened the
microwave and the ant was in there, and I said, well,
this is an opportunity to see what's going. Yeah. I
closed the door, turned it up to like two minutes.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
The ant was practically begging for it. What was the
ant wearing? Mo a short skirt? Yeah, geez, Louise, we gotta.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
Go to break this Later with mo Kelly kiff A
six forty alive everywhere in the iHeartRadio app. And the
Big One is coming to California, the earthquake, the Big One,
and we're gonna tell you within a couple of decades
when it's going to be here.
Speaker 5 (20:03):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
If you're not checking out the YouTube show, you're missing
up in this like a television show with seamless transitions
for camera action. This Later of mo Kelly. We're live
everywhere on YouTube, Instagram, and the iHeartRadio app. I have
breaking news. The Big One is officially on its way
(20:35):
and scientists have narrowed it down as to when it
is going to strike, not only when, but where. And
I'm going to give you the information. I'm going to
break some news right here on I Am six forty
and YouTube and Instagram and everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
Oh word word two words, very soon, and it's going
(20:58):
to be in the Bay Area. The Bay Area is
almost now certain to suffer a devastated earthquake within the
next few not minutes, not hours, not days, not weeks,
but within the next few decades, Carnesia, next few decades. Hey, hey, hey,
(21:24):
It'swalla handed me this story like it was going to
be soon, as in like next few days or something, No,
next few decades. I misunderstood him. I thought he said days,
but the story says decades. I mistoo it. I thought it.
Speaker 3 (21:36):
Zaid it was days because they were talking about this
swarm of earthquakes that has just recently hit the area,
and the swarm of earthquakes is what led them to
deduce the timing of the big one.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
Let's talk about the timing. The Big One has a
seventy two percent chance of striking San Francisco by the
year twenty fifty five. If I'm still alive, I'll be
eighty six years old. Mark Ronner will be ninety four,
and Stephan will be seventy one.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
We'll all have Parkinson's, so we won't even know there's
an earthquake. If we're lucky, we'll be synchronized with it.
If we're lucky, you'll have Parkinson's.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
I'll have some sort of dementia, but it won't be
Parkinson's Alzheimer's. Oh, there's a contest. Nobody wins.
Speaker 3 (22:23):
I know that that this seems like it's far off.
I just believe that there is more to this story
than their leaders believe. I think they want us to
kind of feel like we're okay with this twenty fifty
five and twenty thirty two in but in actuality the
swarm of earthquakes. This is just making sure it's on
our mind because if it happens sooner, they can always say, well,
(22:46):
we told you about the swarm.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
The big one is estimated to be somewhere between seven
six point seven and seven point eight on the Richter scale,
and if you know anything about earthquakes, that's exponential. Okay,
A seven point eight is exponentially more powerful than a
six point seven. Those numbers actually matter. We're having some
fun with it, but to be serious, depending on where
(23:10):
that quake is, if it's in San Francisco or maybe
just off the coast of San Francisco, it could have
a tsunami implications. Now, if there's any good news in this, Sorry,
San Francisco. I know we're in the same state, but
not really because that's an eight hour drive. So as
far as I'm concerned, you don't impact me. San Francisco.
I don't like the giants, so I don't like you
(23:31):
San Francisco. So if it should hit up there, I
don't want anyone to die. I'm just saying I don't
care too much about San Francisco if it should slide
into the ocean, I just don't want the big one
here in LA. And I promise you, if the big
one hits in here in La, it really won't matter
where anyone is because there won't be anything you can do. Yes,
(23:53):
if a seven point eight earthquake hit, let's say in
downtown Los Angeles, where are you going to drive? You
know where exactly are you gonna go? Hopefully we'll still
have the ability to communicate and find loved ones and
strategize as far as how you would get to each other.
But you're not gonna be able to drive your Look,
(24:14):
on a typical let's say Tuesday night, and you're driving
trying to get home at five o'clock or something, it's
gonna take me about an hour and a half to
two hours to drive twenty two miles. Now throw into
it the random, haphazard circumstances of an earthquake, I'm not
sure I'll be able to get to my car. Maybe
(24:35):
it's pancaked in the parking garage. This is all assuming
I live in the first place. Big sus could be buckled,
all that collapse, no power. It could be no power,
buckle collapse and fires and panic. You're assuming that in
a major situation like that, that there is some semblance
of society still remaining and we have not just turned
(24:56):
on each other like in the movie War of the World. Something.
Speaker 3 (24:59):
Now, I do see one shining light in this story.
In this prediction, anyone living in the Bay Area can
start plotting when they want to move, move further in,
then move maybe the Vegas, move even further into California,
because that's gonna all be you know, under the ocean.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
Well, you can't wait. If you're gonna move, you might
as well move now.
Speaker 3 (25:25):
Well, I mean, like, you know, give they have at
least ten years to start, you know, live it out,
and then be like, okay, it's time to go.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
These are things that I don't worry about. You know.
It's one of those things where, yes, to be absolutely serious,
there will be a major earthquake in California sometime in
the future. Will it be within our lifetimes, I don't know.
We may get a five point five or six something
something on the level of north Ridge or Loma Priata,
(25:53):
But the big one, I don't know if and when
that's going to happen. It's not something that is going
to keep me up at night because you can an't
worry about it, you can't actively think about it. Are
there measures that you can put in place to better
prepare you for a mid level earthquake? Sure? Absolutely, I
have the earthquake kit in the car. That's presuming I
(26:14):
can get to my car. That's presuming that you know,
I can get to my car and get somewhere else
that we don't. We don't know the extent of damage,
We don't know the circumstances what you'll be dealing with
in an emergency situation like that. It's almost like, and
I've talked about this before, but it's but it's a
good example. It's almost like when I was in school,
(26:35):
and I can't remember Mark, if you had to do
the same. You're a little bit older than me, so
I assume it's true. Yeah, Okay, I had to do
nuclear nuclear war drills when we would get under our desks,
the duck and cover drills. Correct and we were told
in the events of a nuclear attack, we would get
under our desks. Now, as you get you realize that's
(27:01):
not going to protect you from anything. And you have
all these We had these drills. We would do them
maybe once a month. We had a fire drill, and
we had these movies and actual nuclear war drills.
Speaker 6 (27:12):
I grew up as a child in the Cold War.
Do yourself a favorite. Lewis Black has a great bit
on that. It is so funny. That's the only reason
I'm laughing. So why didn't you find it and edit
out all the curses? Lewis Black? But yeah, yeah, I heard.
That's ridiculous when you look back on it. No, it
is ridiculous. I don't know Twalllet did you have them
in grade school?
Speaker 3 (27:31):
Yes, And when you look back, it's just mainly to
get the kids on the ground and then a praying position,
seek and kiss you.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
Yeah, yeah, that's all.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
Did you have to watch the cartoon with the turtle,
the duck and cover cartoon?
Speaker 1 (27:44):
I don't know if it was that, but it was
an animated cartoon depicting a nuclear attack, and it was
also this instruction if you happen to be outside and
you're get in front of a curve. Get as low
as you can, so all the houses low over your something. Yeah,
I remember that. Don't look directly into the blast. It
(28:06):
won't matter. Trust me. Maybe you want to look into
the blast so you'd be blind when it hits you.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
You know, I really I do remember thinking that the
things were being taught like were realistic until until I
saw a terminator and then I said, oh no, that's
what happens during a nuclear blast.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
No we're not surviving. You can look at the early
tests of low yield atom bombs. I'm not even talking
about thermonuclear hydrogen bombs, just atom bombs. You have no
chance in hell.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
No, those will left your day and tualla didn't you
see that day after mini series in I think the
eighties they scared America, scared the living daylight everybody.
Speaker 3 (28:47):
I do it the day after because I remember the
scene with the soldier who's driving and uh and and
the car stops and he gets out. He tries to
run because you tried to hurry up and get to home. Yeah,
I remember that thing to myself. Where was he going?
No one was gonna survive that.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
I can tell you. This is the Cheery ass show.
We're talking about killing insex and no you're talking about
the world six It's Later with Mo kellyk if I
AM six forty We live everywhere on YouTube. You have
to check out the YouTube show. Daniel are technical director
is doing big things, big big things with the production
(29:24):
of the YouTube show.
Speaker 5 (29:26):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (29:33):
With Kelly six ft live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app,
YouTube and Instagram. And growing up, I guess I was fortunate, blessed,
lucky to live near a park. I was living in
(29:58):
the suburbs Harbor City to you can find a park
every couple of miles. Wasn't that difficult. But if you
lived in the city of Los Angeles, it was going
to be a little bit more difficult, but never as
bad as it is now. Of one hundred major metropolitan
areas in the United States, Los Angeles ranks ninetieth in
(30:22):
the Trust for Public Lands annual Park Score rankings, which
takes into account equity, access, investment amenities, and overall acreage.
Five years ago, LA was ranked forty ninth. Again, this
is the city, not the county. You would argue that
LA has not invested in what they call green spaces.
(30:45):
It's become an urban jungleist. They say, where you have
new apartment buildings, condominiums, shopping malls, or some sort of
business parking lots, Those are parking structures. Those are much
more viole valuable that investing in actual parks. Only sixty
two percent of Angelino's live within a ten minute walk
(31:07):
of a park, and that's compared to seventy six percent
among the one hundred most populous US cities. More than
one point five million LA residents lack a park within
ten minutes of home. And I think within ten minutes
of home that's a luxury. You would think ten minutes.
If you live in a place where you're fewer than
(31:28):
ten minutes from a park, you're doing well. I'm not
far from I'm trying to think the nearest park to
my house. I don't know if Chester Washington golf Course
would count, but there are no parks near my house,
not within ten minutes that I can think of. Oh,
there's Jesse Owens that's probably the closest one to me,
(31:49):
Jesse Owens Park, But that's still about fifteen minutes away. Honestly,
it's a luxury. Stephan, you're in the same general area
as Meg getting a park now, the one I used
to go to, like you said, because there's none around us,
was Prairie.
Speaker 6 (32:06):
Yes, that's like a drive that's like ten to fifteen minutes.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
I mean they're three like golf courses. There's yeah Chester Washington,
there's a laundra and there's one other's Madison something and
then there because again you're in the same area.
Speaker 6 (32:21):
There's that one on Prairie and I think Manhattan Beach
Boulevard and they're turning it into a sports complex.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
There's one on Prairie and like Dilamo Boulevard going towards Torrance.
Because I know when I go to Scott Robinson Honda
no plug, just truth, I know I pass the park,
but I'm almost in Torrents and I'm a good twenty
twenty five minutes from home. So when I read this
about La being a desert as it relates to parks, yeah,
(32:48):
it makes sense. I don't know how you reverse that trend.
Because land is so valuable and expensive, they're not going
to think of a park as the first thing to
put there. Even though it does have absolute value for
a community in a scenic sense and just a public
health sense. It's good for kids to play in, but
(33:10):
you just don't see them, and LA is just not
a priority. This is not necessarily a political thing, is
you know. We've had plenty of mayors, We've had plenty
of people on a civic level who could have put
parks in, and I don't know if it would be
popular enough for elected officials to even pursue. This just
might be a statement of fact. Yes, LA is one
(33:32):
of the worst when it comes to parks. It's a
major urban city, and even though LA is so very
spread out and vast, parks are probably not high on
the importance list, on the priority list, unfortunately. And if
you'd live in suburban Los Angeles, you may take it
for granted that there is a park somewhat close to you.
(33:55):
When I was living in Harbor City slash Torrents, you
couldn't go three minutes direction and not hit a park
in Carson, you know, or in Torrents, or even in
San Pedro everywhere, but not in La proper. It's unfortunate
and it may not be fair, but it's definitely a
fact we're gonna check in with Chris Wolsey, who's back.
(34:16):
We're gonna find out what's happening and what's available on
a watch free plus app in just a moment k
IF I am six forty and definitely tune into the
YouTube show. Daniel, our technical director, has done wonderful work
with it. The addition of animations and transitions. It's like
it's really well well done. Make sure you like and
(34:36):
subscribe so it'll be easy to find when you come back.
Make sure you join the Momigos in Motown, which is
the chat function. The party's already started to have it
a good time, so you might as well join us.
We're live everywhere on YouTube, Instagram, and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 5 (34:52):
Common Sense left California a long time ago.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
We're bringing it back. Okay, s I n K O,
S T h D two, Los Angeles, Orange County lives
everywhere on the radio.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
S