Episode Transcript
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It's beginning to sound a lot like the Holidays. The
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Happy streaming.
Speaker 8 (01:34):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
Forty Yeah Jfi Mo Kelly and Marshall Callier. Now as
it's tech Thursday. Here we're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio
app and Marshall Collier. I am a Google person through
and through. The ecosystem is perfect for me and my lifestyle.
I like to have the Google Chrome and all my
browser tab it or my bookmarks wherever I go, if
(02:02):
I lock it on my phone or a work computer
or whatever. But also beyond that, how I can use
it with my phone for things like Google Lens.
Speaker 9 (02:13):
Well before the iPhone people come off the line, so
you got to come back, folks.
Speaker 10 (02:19):
iOS.
Speaker 9 (02:20):
Google Lens is available for the iPhone. Believe it or not,
So what we're going to what I got to tell
you about it. I love Google Lens, but they have
put some improvements in it. And I'll just give you
a little thing that just happened the other night. We
were watching Only Murders in the Building and Meryl Streep
comes out and she is wearing this really great jacket,
(02:43):
this jacket with fabulous So I froze the TV. I
turned on Google Lens, and I mean it looked like
a custom jacket, and indeed it is. And I found
some weird company who called it Meryl Streep season whatever
it was, jacket from Only Murders in the Building.
Speaker 4 (03:03):
Let's back up for people who don't know what Google
Lens is. I can take a picture of something, I
can look at something with my phone and it's basically
going to do a search for me of items which
are that or closely mimic it exactly.
Speaker 9 (03:19):
And I found the three stores on the internet that
had that jacket, and I went around for the lowest
price because the descriptions were the same. And I'll get
it eventually.
Speaker 10 (03:32):
I'll wear it for you.
Speaker 7 (03:33):
But it's like Shazam except for.
Speaker 9 (03:35):
Products for products, and it well and also, like if
you're fixing something at home and you need a special
screw or you need a certain hex ranch or side.
Speaker 7 (03:45):
I've done that a bunch of times.
Speaker 9 (03:46):
Right, you just tap on the Google Lens icon. You
can bring it over to the front of your phone.
I don't know how it works for you. I phone people,
but it's right on the front of my phone. I
tap it. It says use your cam. Tap that little
button and it takes a picture. Now think about this.
Remember I just told you I just bought this jack
(04:09):
and it was a deal too.
Speaker 10 (04:10):
I was shocked. It was a great deal.
Speaker 9 (04:13):
Yeah, probably some fake website. Yeah that's true, but I
bought it through Google Pay, so there's some sort of guarantee. Anyway,
if you're in a store, just think about this. You
take a picture of the box or the item, or
(04:33):
you use Google Lens to take a picture. Now you
do that when you're standing in the store, it'll bring
up detailed information on the product that you're not going
to see on the box. It's going to show you
pages with customer reviews, what stores carry it, what different
(04:56):
stores charged for it, and if there are a nearby
retailers who have them. And also similar products.
Speaker 4 (05:05):
I have to interrupt you there because my wife and
my mother now because we've shown her how to do it,
they swear by this, my wife will be in the
store it's like, oh, I like those shoes, click click
click click, and then she'll either order them immediately from
Amazon at lower price or find some of the place
where it's a lower price right on the spot.
Speaker 8 (05:25):
Right.
Speaker 9 (05:26):
I mean, this has really made shopping. I can't even
imagine how we used to do it. And Neil, remember
we used to call every store, excuse me, do you
have do you.
Speaker 7 (05:38):
Have this in a size nine right white trim?
Speaker 9 (05:42):
And then you had to wait like ten minutes for
the guy to walk around the store and come back.
Speaker 7 (05:47):
And see if they had it, and.
Speaker 10 (05:48):
Stop, but do you have it in red? So you
know there was a big mess.
Speaker 9 (05:53):
But Google uses AI image recognition technology, and you if
you're in a store, you need to be sharing your
location data because that's the only way if they can
tell you there's a store down the street that has
the same thing. But beauty products, toys, electrical goods all
(06:15):
share their inventory data with Google. Stores such as Macy's, Target, Walmart,
as well as Amazon, So think about it. So seventy
two percent of Americans say they use their smartphone while
they're in store. More than half save they've left a
store empty handed because they didn't feel confident enough to buy. Now,
(06:36):
if you use the Google Lens to get all the
information on your product, you can make your decision on that.
You don't have to go home and think about it.
Speaker 7 (06:48):
I swear by this. You don't have to sell me.
Speaker 4 (06:50):
I'm just surprised more people don't know about it and
haven't utilize it as a function of just their day
to day living thing. I can't figure out from ooh,
that's an interesting car or any item that I might
want to buy instant Google Lens instantly.
Speaker 10 (07:12):
Absolutely.
Speaker 9 (07:13):
You know, we change as a society and we forget
about certain things. Like I was talking to somebody about
KFI just this morning and they said, well, I can't
listen to it. I don't have a radio. People don't
you don't have a radio at home. I mean, you
know there's that big talk about AM radios and cars,
(07:36):
but an AM radio will save your bacon, believe you.
When I was in the north Ridge earthquake, if it
wasn't for AM radio, I would have been in trouble.
Speaker 4 (07:46):
But the other side of that is, even though we
all know the utility of AM radio, unless you are
intentional and conscious of going to the store and buying
an AM radio for emergency situations, most people are not
going to think about it. And the other portion of
society we know how to get our AM stations because
(08:08):
of the iHeartRadio app or some other app.
Speaker 9 (08:11):
Well, we've just given the tech gift of the week,
Yes we have for the holidays. Get someone who doesn't
have one, who didn't even know you could get news
and talk on AM radio. Get them in AM radio.
And the search that I use is the best signal
(08:31):
am radios because AM radio can be a little bit
touchy when you're talking about in the house.
Speaker 10 (08:37):
Oh yes, we have a boz.
Speaker 7 (08:39):
And kind of to put it to the window.
Speaker 10 (08:43):
And hang out then.
Speaker 9 (08:44):
But seriously, that's a great gift for anybody in case
of an emergency.
Speaker 10 (08:49):
And you can get them.
Speaker 9 (08:50):
Pretty or you can get them with a hand crank
in case there's a power.
Speaker 7 (08:58):
You're given such great gyms tonight in a particular reason
like you'd like it. You're in the zone.
Speaker 9 (09:03):
As they say in basketball, it's shopping, man, it's shopping.
I love using technology for well for oh you know,
for things that people will actually use. I mean we've
been yapping about this AI. This is where ay I
is paying off. Yes, yes, I don't really care about
the quantum computing is very important and it's going to
(09:27):
do a lot, but it's not going to help me
right now and probably not in my lifetime. So I
like talking to people about stuff you can really use.
And you know, I was just looking at a Christmas tree.
I saw some really cool ornaments and I used Google lens.
Where did they sell those? Oh they happen to sell
it at al Dick on Supulvita. Well there you go,
(09:50):
There you go, if you just tune me in.
Speaker 4 (09:52):
Marsha Collier joining us in studio as she usually does
during the week, sometimes on Tuesday. Now she's back on Thursday.
When we come back. Marsha, I don't know if you
heard my conversation earlier this week when I was talking
about wearables are medical information it being available on platforms
which are connected to the cloud, How that invariably is
(10:14):
going to be used against us that I know you
have some thoughts about that.
Speaker 7 (10:16):
When we come back. Oh, you know, I do it's
Later with Mo Kelly.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
Can if I AM six forty Live Everywhere in the
iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 8 (10:23):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 4 (10:31):
Kelly and Marsha Collier Live Everywhere on the iHeartRadio App.
And I already know where Marsha Collier. I think I
know where she's going to come out on this. I
was talking about my pixel watch earlier in the week
and how I love to watch my heart rate, resting
heart rate, how many steps I get in in a
given day. I'm trying to get twenty thousand steps a
(10:52):
day each day this week.
Speaker 10 (10:54):
Look at you.
Speaker 7 (10:55):
As a matter of fact, I'm at health.
Speaker 4 (10:57):
I wouldn't say that eleven five hundred steps right now
out for the day, have of ways to go. But
when I get home, I'm going to work out again,
so I'll get there.
Speaker 10 (11:03):
Will you wear my watch?
Speaker 4 (11:06):
I remember my wife and she's gonna get mad at
me for staying this. One day, she took her her
watch and put it on one of the dogs to
run around the house. I said, I don't know if
it's going to register, but you can try. And one
time she put her on a ceiling fan. It's like
you were just a chi love your cheater. You're a cheater.
But anyhow, it's recording health data right, and I have
(11:27):
fit bits, so it is being stored on an online
cloud platform which can be hacked at any time.
Speaker 9 (11:34):
But wait a minute, we haven't addressed the elephant in
the room.
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Speaker 12 (12:10):
Black Friday is coming, and for the adults in your
life who love the coolest toys, well there's something for
them this year too. Bartisian is the premiere craft cocktail
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cocktails each and out of thirty seconds at the push
of a button, and right now, Martsian is having a
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(12:31):
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spend four hundred dollars or more so, if the cocktail
lover in your life has been good this year or
the right kind of bad, get them Bartisian at the
push of a button, make Bark quality Cosmopolitans, Martini's, Manhattan's,
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(12:53):
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Speaker 13 (13:10):
I have a way to make your morning more efficient.
You can get caught up on the news in about
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host of the Seven podcast from the Washington Post. And
in that time I will run down seven stories everything
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might miss otherwise, my name's Hannah jule Go. Follow the
(13:33):
seven right now wherever you're listening, and we will get
you caught up.
Speaker 6 (13:40):
It's beginning to sound a lot like the holidays. The
Roku Channel your home for free and premium TV is
giving you access to holiday music and genre base stations
from iHeart all for free. Find this soundtrack of the
season with channels like iHeart Christmas and north Pole Radio.
The Roku Channel is available on all Roku devices, Web, Amazon, fireTV,
(14:01):
Google TV, Samsung TVs, and the Roku Mobile app on
iOS and Android devices. So stream what you love and
soon up They're with iHeartRadio on the Roku Channel.
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Speaker 9 (14:44):
Fitbit is being discontinued by Google. Yes, yes, So what
happens now, Well that that data has to go somewhere
I assume. Well, let's also tell the listeners that if
you're looking at a fitbit because they're cheap right now,
there's a reasons.
Speaker 10 (14:59):
There's the reason why they're cheap right now.
Speaker 9 (15:02):
And if you'd rather buy one that may not be supported,
may not have a thing something going in the future,
may have repair problems, think about it.
Speaker 10 (15:12):
I would beware. I am not buying a Fitbit.
Speaker 4 (15:16):
I have a pixel Watch, which is integrated with fitbit technology.
I don't know going forward whether Google is going to
have its own proprietary.
Speaker 10 (15:24):
They already have their own.
Speaker 4 (15:25):
Yeah, I know they have Google fit and I assume
that they will somehow bridge the gap. I just don't
know what it's going to look like.
Speaker 9 (15:33):
Said, Yeah, I don't know what it's going to look
like either, But right now, I just don't think would
pick this year to give a gift of a smart
watch speaking of and I know the hell hold it
is the X It's just difficult place, but it is
your only key to using GROCK. GROCK is Elon Musk's
(15:57):
or X's AI. It is being trained masterfully. Now remember
you've got Gemini from Google, You've got I guess it's
Siri from iPhone yea Apple intelligency, And you know they're
(16:17):
all out there sucking data. But this one's particularly on GRO.
GROC is on X and Elan had posted they want
to train it to make it a medical diagnostic tool,
and he asked people to load medical test results cts,
(16:38):
bone scans so that GROC can learn how to interpret them.
Speaker 10 (16:45):
So you know, MRI is the whole thing.
Speaker 9 (16:47):
A lot of people have u It's in its early stages,
but the more it sees, the more it'll learn, in
the hopes.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
Of ultimately that it would be a medical tool in
and of itself.
Speaker 9 (17:00):
Yes, and what I like about GROC is the fact
that they're open about what they're doing and why they
want you to share the information. And sharing the information
to GROC is voluntary, unlike the twelve page terms of
service that you have to sign on the other things.
Speaker 7 (17:20):
Can you do it blindly or does it know that
it's my MRI?
Speaker 9 (17:25):
No, you can do it blindly. It goes on your account,
let's say, gotcha, But you know, it could be your dog,
it could be your cousin, it could be anybody. So
it seems in the beginning it's fully analyzed blood test results,
and some users said it identified breast cancer, but it
(17:45):
also grossly misinterpreted a bunch of other things. Some physician
posted that they put a textbookcase of tuberculosis up on groc,
and Groc said it was a herniated disk.
Speaker 4 (18:01):
So grock is going to fail as medical boards at
this point, not ready for prime time exactly.
Speaker 9 (18:06):
The bot also mistook a mammogram of benign breastsyst for
an image of testicles. So so we have a little
ways to go with all of them.
Speaker 15 (18:21):
Tomato tomorrow, Yeah right, But I think that these has
a second opinion will be valuable because we can't escape them.
Speaker 9 (18:33):
When you get your blood test results, right, and your
doctor gives you all that blogoney from that, don't you
jubble check it on the internet.
Speaker 4 (18:41):
And course I look at the charts in the high
range and low range. It's like, okay, my cholesterols in
a higher range, whatever the numbers say, So I can
understand for myself right.
Speaker 9 (18:52):
I mean, my cholesterol is only one hundred and thirty seven,
but I have a problem with my small particles of
some I don't know.
Speaker 10 (18:58):
You know, I'm not a doctor. So incomes GROC.
Speaker 9 (19:02):
And I'm not using GROC as an example because when
the transparency comes to the other you can still upload
all this stuff to chat GPT also they will do.
But until there becomes one that becomes a specialist in
the medical stuff, I really wouldn't be relying on it.
Speaker 7 (19:22):
No, no, no matter.
Speaker 9 (19:23):
And a lot of people are and it's valuable, and
I plan on putting dental x rays up, you know something, you.
Speaker 7 (19:32):
Know, But is this any different?
Speaker 4 (19:34):
I know it is, but I think of it in
terms of when we get some information, we get on
WebMD and we go down the WebMD hole and we
think we're trying to self diagnose ourselves.
Speaker 9 (19:45):
And okay, so you take a look at that of
what we're doing, you know, and after we get the
blood test, like what we said, we do think of
AI as your brain looking at the blood test, but
it has a bazillion in sources for it to look
at and compare data, and don't it isn't slow like
(20:06):
us with thinking or reading or listening. It can look
at a bazillion sources and maybe eventually do the job
and give you a good second opinion.
Speaker 4 (20:18):
Well, I've always thought of AI in the analogy of
it's now in elementary school, and by the time it
gets to high school, college, postgraduate, which may be literally
ten to fifteen years from now, we may have something
that can do what it was originally designed or hope
to do exactly.
Speaker 9 (20:37):
And the only way it can do that is by
getting these things uploaded to them and seeing if they
can read the diagnostic or something. I don't know how
you can tell it it was wrong or anything.
Speaker 4 (20:51):
Well, I think of this the AI in a conceptual sense.
We were talking about Google lends. It looks at something,
it identifies something, relates it to something in its database.
This is not all that different if it looks at
certain results and can identify that and then relate it.
Speaker 9 (21:08):
A few years ago, before the pandemic, I was working
with IBM and remember their famous computer.
Speaker 10 (21:16):
Watson, right Watson.
Speaker 9 (21:18):
Watson had a deal with the MDM Anderson md Anderson
Cancer Hospital in Texas and they were going to use
it for diagnostic purposes. And just what I said just
what I said. They didn't have enough samples. They really
(21:40):
didn't know what they were looking at. The project was
abandoned eventually, and that was really sad because it could
be a great tool in discovering cancers and things like that.
Speaker 4 (21:53):
I thought Watson was going to be the leader, maybe
because I was sucked in by Jeopardy Shows in which
was beating everyone.
Speaker 9 (22:00):
Well, you know, IBM is a good PR department, but
then again Watson is. We tossed in quantum computing, which
I will save that for the new year to explain
what quantum computing is.
Speaker 7 (22:15):
Yeah, it's going to leave all what we conventional computing
in the desk.
Speaker 9 (22:19):
Exactly exactly, but that's where Watson will go. I mean
that would be Watson will be like a nineteen ninety
five PC when it comes to quantum computing.
Speaker 4 (22:31):
I know, you remember the old IBM computers that were
size of bookshelves and the tape, the analog tape was
was running in them.
Speaker 9 (22:40):
One of my first jobs was in a place and
they had keyboard.
Speaker 10 (22:45):
They had a room with just the computer.
Speaker 9 (22:48):
I think it was an IBM three sixty, I'm not sure,
and they had these giant tapes and they had these
stations where these people sat at a desk, right, yeah,
and they had staff of key punch cards which were
about the size of a number ten envelope. It was
a heavyweight card and there were holes punched in it,
(23:11):
and the holes were punched in because these people would
type in data and the proper holes would be punched
in the card. So then a giant stack of these
cards would be put in a hopper and they were
into the computer.
Speaker 7 (23:29):
Did you like that though? More time? Please? Got it?
Speaker 9 (23:35):
Okay, okay, that's a sounder, right, But anyway, they'd go
into the computer, they'd be transferred to the tape and
outwood come data and this would still be faster than
anybody could do it without.
Speaker 7 (23:49):
That's what they used basically for the Moon missions exactly.
Speaker 9 (23:53):
There was more technology in iPhones and android phones maybe
ten years ago than there was in the Redstone rocket
that Alan Shepherd went up in.
Speaker 7 (24:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (24:06):
Yeah, well look it's growing exponentially. Who knows what the
technology and AI will look like in ten years, just
ten years.
Speaker 9 (24:15):
But we're going to keep you posted on the fun
stuff because really, you know, I'm no Einstein, that's the truth.
Speaker 4 (24:23):
But we'll go through this together, Martea Cargo is always
great to see you.
Speaker 9 (24:27):
Thank you Moe, and have a happy Thanksgiving everybody.
Speaker 4 (24:30):
Hey, are you coming out to pastathon on December third?
Speaker 7 (24:36):
We'll check you count let us know. I don't know
where it is, but it's always at the Anaheim White House.
Speaker 10 (24:41):
Okay, you know if you're going to be there.
Speaker 7 (24:44):
Yes, all of the KFI lineup will be there.
Speaker 10 (24:46):
I think maybe I think I need pasta.
Speaker 9 (24:49):
What's the date again, December third, that's the day before
my birthday.
Speaker 7 (24:53):
Yes, you'll be twenty four.
Speaker 10 (24:55):
Everybody can see that. If I show up, I'll see
you soon.
Speaker 8 (24:58):
Alrighty later with Moe Kelly on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 7 (25:08):
With Mokelly on k.
Speaker 4 (25:12):
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He announced yesterday that he's leaving social media. It's unclear
whether he's leaving it temporarily or if it's going to
be permanently. He gave the indication that was probably going
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a break from social media.
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He said that he was going to leave X.
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Speaker 12 (26:14):
Black Friday is coming. And for the adults in your
life who love the coolest toys, well there's something for
them this year too. Bartisian is the premiere craft cocktail
maker that automatically makes more than sixty seasonal and classic
cocktails each and out of thirty seconds at the push
of a button. And right now, Bartisian is having a
huge sight wide sale. You can get one hundred dollars
(26:36):
off any cocktail maker or cocktail maker bundle when you
spend four hundred dollars or more so, if the cocktail
lover in your life has been good this year or
the right kind of bad, get them Bartisian at the
push of a button, make Bark quality Cosmopolitans, Martini's, Manhattan's,
and more, all in just thirty seconds, all for a
(26:58):
hundred off amazing toys. I'm just putting kids get one
hundred off of cocktail Maker when you spend four hundred
through Cyber Monday, visit Baptisian dot com slash cocktail. That's
b A r T s i a n dot com
slash cocktail.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
Finding the right news podcast can feel like dating. It
seems promising until you start listening.
Speaker 17 (27:20):
When you hit play on Post Reports, you'll get fascinating
conversations and sometimes a little fun too. I'm Martin Powers.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
And I'm Ala hey Azati. Martin and I are the
hosts of Post Reports. The show comes out every weekday
from the Washington Post.
Speaker 17 (27:34):
You can follow and listen to Post Reports wherever you
get your podcasts.
Speaker 10 (27:38):
It will be a match.
Speaker 17 (27:39):
I promise.
Speaker 6 (27:44):
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Speaker 3 (28:44):
Now life is hard.
Speaker 4 (28:46):
Zuomo is easy, but that's a part of his larger
social media presence. He posts the most or did post
the most on x slash Twitter, and I know that
he can be pollar rising with some of his posts
but he said Lebron James said he's leaving due to
the level of negativity. This is something that I have
(29:10):
a complex view of Lebron James. I'm not necessarily his
biggest fan in a basketball sense, but I can respect
that he's one of the game's greatest players. This is
year twenty two and he's still at the top of
his game. He's one of the best to ever do it.
I don't think he's one of the best Lakers because
(29:32):
he hasn't been with the Lakers long enough to earn
that distinction. He's only won one ring and I'm a
Magic Johnson fan to the very end. But I can
understand what he is saying, and I can understand on
a very small level what he likely has been feeling,
if only because if you are a public figure, or
(29:54):
at least if you're on social media with your real name,
your real face, and they they know that you are
the person monitoring that account, not just some publicists, not
some intern There may be an addition to you, but
they know that Lebron James looks at his own social
media accounts. The type of vitriol that you're going to
(30:17):
receive from in his case, millions of people who are nameless,
faceless who don't have any reservation to say whatever they
want about whomever they want, including him, his son, family members, whatever.
(30:37):
And if you've ever really been on social media, and
I don't assume everyone has, but if you've ever been
on social media, you know that there is no limit
and there is no basement as to what people will say,
and they'll do it under the cover of anonymity. And
if you are a public figure like Lebron James, you
cannot respond in the way that they've come at you.
(30:59):
And I understand that on a very small level because
I know how people will come at me on social
media at key right right, you'll find me on x
at mister mo Kelly, or you won't. But the point
is they'll hide their face, they'll hide their profile, or
be a private profile, or be a fake picture, no bio,
(31:20):
and they will say absolutely anything, knowing good and well.
If they said it in person to either Lebron James
or any reasonable individual, they would get knocked the f out.
Speaker 7 (31:32):
They would, they would.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
But you know, anonymity is almost like liquid courage, and
it provides an opportunity for people to say things knowing
that they're actually going to reach the person that they
wouldn't say normally. And we're all people, and after a
certain point you may just get tired of it. I
(31:55):
know that all the stuff that's been said to me,
and I'm not some victim. I'm just saying, as a
statement of fact, all the things which are said to me,
I cannot respond in kind. At times i'd like to,
and I can be very creative in how I respond,
and I can have some fun with it, and sometimes
I can tee you up. I can post what you
say that I can come with some sort of witticism
(32:17):
and return and then block you.
Speaker 7 (32:18):
But I cannot say the things that you say to me.
Speaker 4 (32:21):
Lebron James cannot say the things that you say to him.
And just because you make millions and millions of dollars,
it does not mean that you have some sort of
right to say whatever you want to that person. It
doesn't mean that because he or she is on social
media that you and then are entitled to say whatever.
(32:41):
Now I'm not saying this against the law. This is
not a free speech conversation. This is a decency conversation.
And I talk about this with Twalla all the time,
you are free in a legal sense to say just
about whatever you want, whatever insult you want. Just know,
(33:04):
especially with Tuala, if you say that same issu in person,
there's a.
Speaker 7 (33:09):
Freedom of response.
Speaker 4 (33:11):
That free speech works both ways, and the response may
not be what you want. I'll give you a perfect example.
I could walk up to Mark Roner and say, hey,
you a whole. You wouldn't dare I wouldn't. I wouldn't
because I love you too much. But hypothetically, if I
were to say hey, you a whole and then hit
you in the face, you know I can control what
(33:31):
I do, but I can't control how you would respond.
Speaker 7 (33:34):
I would turn the other cheek mom, not if you're driving.
Oh I didn't say which cheek? Okay.
Speaker 4 (33:43):
My point is I understand why someone like Lebron James
would take a step back and the common refrain that
I hear is no need to announce you're leaving.
Speaker 7 (33:55):
This is not an airport. Yeah. I get that, and
there is something to that.
Speaker 4 (34:00):
But at the same time, I don't begrudge him for
doing it and saying it, if only because he's sending
a message that sometimes it is too much and sometimes
you think that it's okay to say whatever you want,
however you want, about whomever you want to that person
or the people in their family. But it does, it
(34:21):
does pile up after a while, it does, and you
can't have it both ways. You can't say in the
sense of okay you want to. There is something I
would say cool air quotes about having people that you
can reach like a Lebron James, because twenty years ago,
before social media, there's no way you'd ever be able
(34:42):
to contact Lebron James. You can write a letter to
the Lakers or something, and maybe you get a response,
you know, fan mail in a traditional sense.
Speaker 7 (34:50):
But now you can reach just.
Speaker 4 (34:53):
About whoever you want, including politicians, entertainers, athletes, because of
social media, because more times than not they actually maintain
their own social media accounts. And you can have a
conversation with Lebron James. He may not always acknowledge what
you say, but there's a good chance that he may
see what you've said. And people take that to the
(35:15):
nth degree and they try to say the most outlandish
things in the hopes that he'll either see it and
or respond.
Speaker 18 (35:22):
If you're still on Twitter and I know you've left MO,
but William Shatner is still on Twitter and he has
been taking on assorted trolls and he has he has
still got his wits about him one hundred percent. It's
been really entertaining watching him take people down who think
they're going to take a run at a ninety three
year old man.
Speaker 4 (35:42):
And he has I would say, the blessing of being
at a point in his life where there really aren't
any consequences to anything that he does.
Speaker 7 (35:51):
He can say whatever he wants. You can't cancel him.
Speaker 4 (35:54):
It's not like you want to get his show canceled,
to him kicked off of something.
Speaker 7 (35:58):
There's nothing for him to well.
Speaker 18 (36:00):
And he's just provoked by a bunch of morons who
are nothing more than trolls. They're not even funny. They're
just saying rude things because they can, and generally anonymously,
which to me is just a massive mark of cowardice.
Speaker 7 (36:15):
Matter.
Speaker 18 (36:15):
If you're coming at a public figure who everybody knows
their name their identity and yours isn't public as well,
you're a coward.
Speaker 7 (36:23):
I say it all the time, all the time.
Speaker 4 (36:25):
If you're going to talk mess to me, at least
come with your real name, your real photo and a
public profile because I'm doing it at least meet me halfway.
And I get any number of people who want to
say some slick stuff on one of my social media pages,
and I say, look, you can do that on your page.
Speaker 7 (36:46):
You can do whatever.
Speaker 4 (36:47):
You can say whatever you want about me, and I
won't say anything on your page or even official KFI page,
But if you come to my social media then you're
going to have to act like you have some home
training in some manners.
Speaker 7 (37:00):
I'm being serious. It's not a lot to ask. It's
not a lot.
Speaker 4 (37:03):
I am not going to provide a space for you
to just come and insult me racially or otherwise. And
I'm supposed to take it well because you know my
page is public. No, my pages are public because they're
for a friends, family, and if you happen to like
what I do, beautiful, but that's not a license for
you to act like an ass.
Speaker 7 (37:22):
No.
Speaker 18 (37:22):
I actually don't think the Internet should be anonymous.
Speaker 4 (37:27):
I'm waiting, and I know Clubhouse tried to do it
to a certain degree. I'm waiting for these social media
sites to actually require some sort of identity verification to
get a profile, and that will be probably the best
social media site. But social media platforms and providers they
(37:49):
don't want to do that because it limits the amount
of engagement, It limits the amount of users for all
to talk about we hate bots controls. No, they don't,
because they still want the unique, They still want that interaction,
they still want that movement of the platform.
Speaker 18 (38:05):
I think if enough people migrate away from the places
that have just become sewers, and I wouldn't dream of
naming any place in specific, they're gonna get the message.
Speaker 7 (38:13):
Sooner or later.
Speaker 4 (38:14):
We'll see, we'll see, I mean, because they always talk
about freedom of speech. Well, part of freedom of speech
is freedom to leave. And people will leave and they
will spend their time and their and their you know,
and their energy in places that they feel is most
beneficial or or most enjoyable. You know, I have a
problem with threads. Right now, you get on threads, everybody's
(38:37):
asking a dumb ass question that they could have found
out just two seconds of Google. It's like why is
the sky blue? And they do it what they call
rage bait, knowing that people are going to say, why
the hell are you posting this? Why are you doing this?
Dumb ish and so Threads is just is I'll say,
regressed into just stupid banter.
Speaker 18 (38:58):
So threads is nothing but that and AI generated MILFs
as far as I can tell.
Speaker 4 (39:04):
Yeah, yeah, it's like, okay, this is not a real profile.
This is just like five pictures you put up yesterday
and all of a sudden you want to know about me. Nah,
not falling forward, It's the Later with Mo Kelly CAFI
AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. In fact,
I'm going to continue this conversation into the next segment
because I have some other thoughts I want to share
on this, as far as leaving social media and some
(39:26):
of you trolls out there who think you slick.
Speaker 8 (39:28):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 4 (39:34):
Fourteenth Annual CAFI Pastathon is here. Chef Bruno's charity, Katerina's Club,
provides more than twenty five thousand meals every week to
kids in need in southern California. Your generosity makes it happen.
There are three ways to help. You can donate now
at KFIAM six forty dot com, Forward slash Pastathon, and
you can shop at any smart and Final store and
donate any amount at checkout. You can head into any
(39:56):
Wendy's restaurant in southern California and donate five dollars or
more and get a coupon book for Wendy's goodies. And
of course, our all day live broadcast from the Anaheim
White House will be on Giving Tuesday, which is December third.
Come on out and see us anytime from five am
through later with Mokelly ending at ten pm. Donate on
(40:17):
site drop off pasta and or sauce donations. As always,
one hundred percent of your donation goes to Katarina's Club.
We have some special events coming up Tomorrow and Saturday. Tomorrow,
Tim Conway Junior will be broadcasting live at the brand
new Winds in Mission via Ho which is two three
zero two to two Alicia Parkway. Come by and say
(40:39):
hello to Tim and the Gang. Donate five dollars or
more in store and get a coupon book. And also Saturday,
from two to five pm, The FOURK Report with Neil
Silvaga will be broadcasting live at Spartan Final in Lake
Forest which is two three six three one El Toro Road.
Come by say hello to Neil, maybe get a Thanksgiving
turkey and make it Oakfi Postathon, and if you can't
(41:03):
do it there, you can always do it at postathon
dot com and get all the information there. If I
got some time, maybe I'll roll out and say hello
to Neil. Haven't seen him in a while because our
schedules are so different. But you know, Lake Forrest is
a long ass drive, but I'll do it for deal.
I'll do it for deal before we finish up this hour,
and I'll be joined on the line by Sarah Brightman,
(41:25):
one of the greatest sopranos of all time. That's coming
up at the top of the hour. Before we do that.
Got to finish this conversation talking about social media. And
I am understandably older than most when it comes to
this social media generation. I came up prior to social media.
(41:48):
I am much more aggressive when it comes to a holes.
I just am And people say some stuff online they
wouldn't dare say in person. If you want to have
a discussion with me, and I can't speak for anyone else,
if you want to have a discussion with me, it's like, well,
I heard you say X, Y and Z, and I
(42:09):
really got a problem with that, or I think you're wrong.
Speaker 7 (42:11):
I am all for that. You can send me a.
Speaker 4 (42:13):
Direct message on Instagram or on Facebook and we can
have that discussion. You can be snarky, you can be smart,
alec good. But the moment you start with personal insults,
we've crossed into a different type of interaction, really different.
And I got to remind folks, you don't know me
(42:34):
like that. I don't care if you hate everything. I
have to say, you don't know me like that. And
I don't speak to anyone directly. I have people reach
out to me and say you said this and I
was offended and you were talking.
Speaker 7 (42:49):
About me, and say, I don't know who you are, dude.
I talk about stuff. I talk about La City Council.
I talk about homelessness, I talk about Metro.
Speaker 4 (43:00):
I'm not talking about any particular person or group, and
I'm very conscious of that. I don't talk about groups
of people that is not by coincidence, because I'm aware
of how people can misinterpret that. I talk about people
specific people's behavior. I talk about Diddy and his specific behavior.
(43:21):
I don't talk about a group of people. I'm talking
about him. I may talk about the methods employed by
a group of people, and I say, hey, when you're
protesting this way or that way, it's ineffective. But I'm
not insulting the group of people. But sometimes people take
it very personally and they come at me on social
media and they want to make personal remarks, usually Rachel.
Speaker 7 (43:44):
And here's something about that.
Speaker 4 (43:45):
Since I think about it, know that when you racially
insult me, you're not only racially insulting me. That's inclusive
of everyone who looks like me. That's inclusive of my mother,
that's inclusive of my sister, that's inclusive of Tuola Sharp,
that's an inclusive of everyone in my family friends. So
(44:06):
you have to remember if you want to go there
with me, it's going to be received very differently. You're
not only talking about me, and I only ask for
a modicum of respect.
Speaker 7 (44:16):
That's it.
Speaker 4 (44:17):
We can debate, we could disagree, but once you start
with personal insults, Stefani'll tell you block immediate Moe. You
are such a freaking block, you know, Oh Tuala, remember
the time where you had someone inbox you saying that
you need to like whop my ass to get myself
(44:37):
in shade?
Speaker 19 (44:38):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, there have been too many occasions
where people have gotten beside themselves. I remember one classic
moment where someone was hurling insults behind a fake profile,
and the threats that this individual received and were turned
(45:00):
were such that he was very uncomfortable. And when you said,
I dare you, I dare you put up a real
profile so I can see who I'm talking to. And
he eventually put up a photo, his real photo of himself,
and he was differently abled. He was in a wheelchair,
and this, that and the other, and it's like, come
(45:23):
and say that in my face.
Speaker 7 (45:24):
And I think his response was that's very rude. I
can't I remember that.
Speaker 19 (45:28):
Yeah that, And it was like, now you see, Now
you see how it really is when you really really
try to tell when you want to cross that line,
and as you say all the time, turn me back
into the old met Yeah, then it's a different story.
Speaker 7 (45:42):
That's why I'm off X.
Speaker 19 (45:44):
I can't even enjoy your witty comebacks anymore because I
get too amped up. Social media is not for people
like us. It's just not Yeah, people don't know me
like that.
Speaker 4 (45:54):
I'm the person who's been had his life threatened, who
would go to music industry events and shooting may pop off.
It's like the social media does not phase me. If
you have something to say to me, then we can
talk about it as men. But I that's the thing
I couldn't deal with X because someone always has something
to say anonymously about some stuff that usually wasn't even true,
(46:18):
making up stuff, saying well you said this, No I didn't,
Yes you did. I have a damn podcast. This is
not a debate. This is not a debate. That was
always my favorite when they would accuse you of saying
something when you were not even on the air at
that time.
Speaker 7 (46:35):
Oh that's even different. You know that. I look, I
sailed this to say.
Speaker 4 (46:44):
I understand why Lebron James may say, you know what,
I'm going to take a step back.
Speaker 7 (46:48):
I'm want to take a step back. And you can
call him a cowward, you can call them anything.
Speaker 4 (46:52):
I'm just saying, if you had to deal with what
someone like Lebron James had to deal with, and you
had to use your real face, your real you probably
would change some of your real behavior. It's later with
Moe Kelly, Can't Fight, Am six forty live everywhere in
the iHeartRadio app.
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Speaker 6 (48:22):
It's beginning to sound a lot like the holidays. The
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