Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
kf I A M six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
SAMs sex Stop, He's a SAMs Stop. He's stop stop sex.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Stop stop stop.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
Key later later If I am six forty and if
you're not on YouTube right now, shame on you. It
is off the chains in the motown chat with the
mo migos talking about all things sex and sharing food food.
(01:00):
It's a great introduction for doctor SAMs. The sex Doctor
is in and he will now see us. Sam, you
participated in that unfiltered commercial break conversation, which we're going
to make a regular part of this What did you
make of our conversation?
Speaker 3 (01:17):
I love those kind of conversations.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
I'm glad we get to share the off air conversations
now with viewers on YouTube right because a lot of
times the conversations we have off air obviously are going
to be a little more colorful, animated, but really you
get more of a deeper perspective on where our heads
are at when it comes to the subjects that we
were talking about. So please go to the YouTube page
and jump in and have be a part of the chat.
(01:40):
The conversation we just had was hilarious adult. I wish
I could at right. Yeah, listener discretion advice, yes, yes,
what do you want to talk about tonight? In the
world of sex, romance and relationships.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
Well, I was looking. I like looking at different academic
studies that come out. That's just me. I'm a nerd.
I saw one a couple months ago.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
It was a study about if there were any behavioral
changes based on sex and lab rats who were exposed
to radiation in space, and what it found was that
radiation exposure in space space radiation exposure to lab rats
led to female rats having more risk taking behavior and
similar similar risk taking behavior in male rats, but they
(02:26):
spent more time in deliberation before making choices.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
If I understand you correctly, that rats make radiation space
radiation will make rats freakier potentially, yeah, and be willing
to do more things, take more risks, and have their
inhibitions pulled down. It's kind of like, I don't know,
some sort of aphrodisiac. Maybe maybe now they do have
(02:53):
a thing in space.
Speaker 4 (02:54):
Astronaut reported it called the Viagra effect, where being in
zero gravity or microgravity led to ease of arousal, and
then that.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
Would seem like it would be more difficult to force
blood to move in a particular direction when it doesn't
have gravity working as it normally would.
Speaker 4 (03:14):
Well, our body I don't know if you know this,
but if we're upside down, we can still get aroused.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
I only know that from like being under a pool table.
But yeah, okay, so zero G gravity.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
Isn't going to have too much of an effect as
far as our ability to get aroused. It may actually
increase our billit like, it may actually increase it.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
It just seems like the zero G would get in
the way of rhythm motion sometimes.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
You how can I say this?
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Yes, I need some sort of resistance to push against
put it that way exactly.
Speaker 4 (03:48):
That's the big thing here. Now let's talk about some ideas.
First off, we're both really big movie nerds and stuff
like that. Can you think of any movies that have
had sex scenes in it that were in zero gravity? Yes,
moon Breaker, thank you, that was one of them that
I had on my list. Barberella was another one. Aside
from that, You've had a bunch of scenes that are
sex in space. I usually like Captain Kirk on place
(04:10):
where gravity is a thing. Okay, Now, to create gravity
you need centrifical force, if you like correct. Currently, there's
nothing as far as I know, in the Space program
where they're actively promoting and trying to create centrifical force
to create artificial gravity in space at this moment.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
So what happens if.
Speaker 4 (04:30):
There's like a giant space asteroid that's coming now and
we don't have this gravity and we need to find
a way to jump off of this rock and be
able to procreate our way into deep space into the
next habitable place. So that's where the idea of sex
and space becomes actually pertinent. And there's a field of
sex studies called space sexology, which I'm very interested in.
(04:53):
I almost did my dissertation on this topic. I held
off because peorign studies was way better. But yeah, what
happens that we have to jump off of this planet
and aside from protecting ourselves from the radiation of space
which can totally sterilize us, there's a lot of issues
that can happen when you try to procreate in outer space.
There was an Australian company that made a suit called
(05:16):
the two Suit. It was a velcrow scrap that held
a couple together for them to be around it, like
physically next to each other long enough to be able
to have sex, kind of.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Like Velcrow is always somewhere connected to sex always. Yeah,
maybe it's just making never mind, you know, depending on
various you know, positions that you get actors.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4 (05:37):
Now, there have been some attempts from like porn companies.
Pornhub tried to crowdsource something where they could actually film
a scene in space.
Speaker 3 (05:44):
It was unsuccessful.
Speaker 4 (05:46):
Virgin Galactic rejected a one million dollar offer to shoot
a scene in space. Now, the closest thing that we
have come to it is that there was a scene
shot in the Vomit Comet, one of those planes that
does the up and down where you can simulate zero gravity.
So they're only able to get like a twenty second,
one single twenty second scene, not enough to really, you know,
do anything fun too anyways, So if we don't have
(06:10):
there's also other issues like as far as like, if
you're gonna try to have sex in zero gravity, what's
gonna happen physiologically to the human body?
Speaker 2 (06:19):
Does it let me jump in there? Does it impact
the ability of the swimmers to swim?
Speaker 3 (06:27):
It does not. They haven't done any so far.
Speaker 4 (06:30):
No sex pro or no space program in the world
is willing to acknowledge whatever experiments that they've done. Human wise, However,
they have been able to have various animals pro create
in space, so the ability of semen to find an
egg is still present in zero gravity, just they've tested
it out on animals and first first animal to mate
(06:52):
in space successfully was a fish that was galactic sushi
in nineteen ninety four. Let's see here experiments in nineteen
ninety five not done by NASA, by a foreign space
program in nineteen ninety five done on lab rats. They
found their rats born here on Earth, but they are
They go to space and then have a baby in space.
(07:13):
Those babies lose the ability to roll back onto their
feet when they're placed on their back. It's like how
with cats, you know, they land on their feet. Rats
have very delicate spinal columns, and they lose that ability
to land on their feet when they're upside down. The
part of it is because they lose the spatial awareness
because they're so used to being in zero gravity. But
when they come back to Earth, those specific rats, when
(07:36):
they procreate and they have another lineage, their children end
up having some what would be called developmental issues here
on Earth, but actually, when you think about it in
the context of zero gravity, they may be more optimalized
to function in space.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
It almost sounds like there will be an evolutionary impact
from the very first generation of procreation in space for
the human species most likely.
Speaker 4 (08:03):
Yeah, now this is as far as like you want
not just like sex and space, but procreation in space. Yeah,
we're thinking long term, long distance traveling. If we're in
an emergency and we don't have the ability to get
gravity artificially created. This is what our reality is going
to be. Where if you extend that idea over one generation,
it had these developmental issues here on Earth when they
(08:24):
came back to Earth. If you have to go generation
to generation in space with zero gravity, you're going to
see what some of the issues that you see the
effects of weightlessness or microgravity on the human body, diminished
bone density, heart muscle starts to lose mass, muscles in
general lose mass. Basically, if you extend that over generations, five,
(08:46):
six generations, you'll have decreased and diminished bone density and
muscle mass. You'll have something that's much more optimalized to
function in zero gravity and have the bone density to
push the buttons that need to be pushed on spaceship
to keep them.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Alive and to procreate.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
Well, our muscles only mean something with respect to gravity
and resistance.
Speaker 3 (09:06):
Resistance.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
Yeah, yeah, when we come back, we'll have more with
doctor sam Zia. Are you going to join us in
the unfiltered chat in the hallway?
Speaker 3 (09:13):
Absolutely? Okay, So if you're.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
Watching on YouTube right now, we've implemented this new segment
where when we're during the commercial break and marks doing
the news, we're unfiltered in the hallway continuing the conversation.
But you gotta be on YouTube or Instagram at mister
mo Kelly and you can hear a different type of conversation.
Speaker 3 (09:31):
It's not for kids. Put them to bed. More in
just a moment.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
CAFI AM six forty Live on YouTube, Live on Instagram,
Live in the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
You're listening to Later with mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (09:48):
CAFI YouTube, Instagram. It's Later with mo Kelly.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app and yes it's
mo Kelly after Dark. We're having some adult conversations in
the hallway during the break and The only way that
you can participate, you can see them, hear them, is
to log onto YouTube at mister m'kelly. Make sure that
you like and subscribe so it's easier to find the
(10:12):
show when you come back, and we expect you to
come back. And we're right in the mid of a
conversation with the sex doctor Sam Zea, who is in
in the last segment. Sam, we were talking about some
of the realities of sex and space, some of the
scientific studies which have been conducted with regard to animals
and procreation, sexual behavior in space. How do you think
(10:36):
it to the best of your knowledge, how do you
think this is going to be utilized in the future
in the near term because we have privatized space exploration. Yeah,
we go upon above the common line, not all that often.
But you have bezos, you have SpaceX where now regular
(10:58):
people like you and me, if we have I don't know,
five hundred thousand dollars or so, we could go to
space as well. How long before space is commercialized do
you think where they will We'll have the mal High
Club and we'll have the sixty two mile High Club.
Speaker 4 (11:14):
I'm guessing it won't be too long. It's not lost
on me that Elon named his company SpaceX and Jeff
Bezos ship looks like a Yeah, it's like the scene
from Austin Powers.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
Really it does. Yeah, it's fantastic. It's a little long
the nose if you want to use that term. But yes,
it's obvious. But I think we're gonna we are on.
Speaker 4 (11:33):
The doorstep of it because as much as people like
to shame sex and sexuality, it still sells, and there's
going to be people who visually want to see what
it will look like. So I'm getting the feeling and
we've seen I mentioned the porn company that created the
zero gravity scene. It was a twenty second scene filmed
(11:54):
in the Vomit comet and it was called the Uranus
Experiment Part two in case you want to look it up.
Of course it is, of course it is. So that's
the thing is that there's already a market for it.
More and more people are going as you know, technology
develops and more exploration, commercial exploration into sec or into
(12:15):
space happens.
Speaker 3 (12:16):
You're gonna see that get sexualized. It's just gonna happen.
Speaker 4 (12:20):
And it really does kind of cater to the idea
of if we do have to you know, the fantasy
of having to escape the planet and and pro create
and you know, keep the species going over an extended
period of time. I mean, they make movies, bad movies
about this, but they also there's a couple of decent
films in there as well.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
We were having fun with this, but by and large,
America is reticent to have any type of real conversations
about sex. We are an uptight society, We are an
uptight nation. And you don't know how uptight we are
until you travel, until you see the world. Go to
Europe for a while. They're not one tenth this up
time as we are. From what you see on TV
(13:02):
to what you see on a on a beach topless beach.
Do you think that America will catch up to the
rest of the world in these the discussions at any point.
Speaker 4 (13:13):
It's not going to do it necessarily publicly, considering how
much sex and sexuality ashamed, but it's going to be
done in private. When I mean, before the Internet, you
had a lot of people, you know, just keeping to
themselves and keeping their kinks to themselves. After the Internet,
those kinks had their own communities created where they get
to reach out and touch each other, and they're very
(13:33):
happy to do sir, what you did there?
Speaker 3 (13:35):
Yeah, thank you.
Speaker 4 (13:36):
So now you're going to have that same idea where
people are going to there's going to be a community
for it no matter what, and they're going to be
able to reach out and touch one another. Whether it's
going to be something that they publicly cheer about and
say this is something that I'm all about and they
make it a big spectacle, or if they just keep
it in the privacy of their own home.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Do you think that we are uptight as a nation
because I wouldn't say that America is more religious than
other nations. You have nations which are actual theocracies. But
I would say a place like Italy is more religious
than the United States and any number of European countries.
(14:19):
Even England is more religious than the United States. To
what would you attribute our uptightness.
Speaker 4 (14:27):
It does go down to like old old fashioned puritanism
and shame a lot of times, and you'll see it,
and not just out here in America. It's the same
with religious a lot of religions and countries that are
you know, based their foundation off of religions a lot
of times will use the shame of sex and sexuality
to control a population and to make it like a
(14:48):
great example of that as Iran, where they use sex
and sexuality as a deep sense of shame surrounding it
so that people so they can control the behaviors of people,
say for eas ample who are gay, where you know,
the options for them are very limited either you know,
get out of the country, escape the country, get sexual
(15:08):
reassignment surgery or stan in hiding or pick you know,
or basically pick how you're gonna die.
Speaker 2 (15:15):
You make a great point too, because sometimes we limit
the conversation of sex to the physical manifestation and expression
of sexual behavior. But it's much more than that. Is
how you identify, it's how you present yourself. It's how
you view yourself.
Speaker 3 (15:29):
In the world. Am I wrong?
Speaker 4 (15:31):
Well, yeah, no, it's how you walk through the world.
People tend to forget and with the amount of shame
religion throws on sex and sexuality.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
Without it, we're not here if not for the kink
of our parents. Exactly.
Speaker 4 (15:43):
Yeah, I mean, and I have you know, we got
Father's Day coming up, and you know I want to talk.
I'll talk more about like great ways like for me,
the thing that led to my birth was the one
of the greatest pickup lines of all time from my
dad to my mom. So I'll get that's going to
be something in a projecting for.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Yeah. Does everyone know the story behind their conception? Oh?
I know the story of mine, Stephan, do you know yours?
I don't know mine, Mark, do you know yours? I
don't want to.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
I mean, it's not I don't think it's gonna be
like a Richard Pryor story. You know, conceived in a brothel,
were you nobody was set on fire? No, okay, I
can't reach Tawala. He's out there working on the podcast.
I know my conception story, and I think everyone should
know their conception story. Why because it's a part of
history of who you are. I think about the infinitesimal
(16:36):
unlikelihood of you, the physical manifestation of you, that sperm,
that egg coming together, the unlikelihood, the odds against the
mark that we're seeing here today.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
Yeah, I think everyone should know the story behind that.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
No, No, I think not.
Speaker 3 (16:55):
It might not be great, it's not all, but I
think it's great that you're here.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
I'm being serious, and I think that's that's a part
of the unlikelihood of any of us and the outward
manifestation of our personalities. Look, I mean I have an
older sister, same parents, did the same do created.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
A person nothing like me in any way. It's like
the Punnett Square.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
There are are a billion different combinations we could have
coming into this world as but we came with what
we are right now. No, when you think about the
odds that you exist, it's pretty mind blowing. Oh absolutely.
Speaker 4 (17:31):
I just think that Mark might be a little worried
about having like that mental picture and his head, because
that's like a cold shower.
Speaker 3 (17:37):
No.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
No, no, I'm not talking about the no, not no.
My parents only had sex twice. It was when my
sister was conceived and when I was conceived.
Speaker 3 (17:47):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (17:48):
That was the only function of sexual relations, in sex
and their relation. I love that reasoning so much.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
Yeah, that's it. That's there's no other reason for them
to have SA.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
On that note, Sam, why don't you just hang around
for a second, just hang out with us, Yes, some time,
Yeah for sure. All right, we're gonna talk about cannabis
when you come back with the sex doctor. Sam' sia.
It's a later with Mo Kelly. We're still live on YouTube.
We'll still live on Instagram. We'll still live on the
iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
Later with Mo Kelly.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
We're live on Instagram, YouTube, and the iHeartRadio app. I've
always told you about my misgivings with cannabis, and I
usually hear from people in response, well, alcohol's worse. Alcohol
does that, And I said, my misgivings are not connected
to one being healthier. It's just that it's not my thing.
(18:51):
I don't like the smell of it if someone's smoking it.
I had tried an edible once upon a time. They
didn't do anything for me. I don't get anything from it.
But for those who want to keep telling me about
the quote unquote safety and non addictive properties of weed
or cannabis, I just want to forward this onto you.
(19:15):
There's a new study from the University of California, San Francisco,
and it has determined, long story short, that whether you
smoke cannabis or use edibles, chronic use is bad for
your heart.
Speaker 3 (19:28):
I'm not a doctor, but if you told me that you're.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Putting a foreign substance carcinogen in your lungs, like smoke.
If you were to smoke cannabis, Yeah, that's probably going
to impact your cardiovascular system. Not a doctor, but that
makes sense to me. That is not hard to figure out.
But when you say edibles, it does raise my eyebrows, like, hmm, okay,
it may not have considered that. The findings published just
(19:51):
yesterday in Drama Cardiology. It tell us about JAMA real quick.
Oh yeah, Journal of American Medical Association.
Speaker 4 (19:58):
Yeah that if it's published in there, it's been peer reviewed,
it's it's it's legit.
Speaker 3 (20:04):
Okay, jet okay.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
Well, this study published suggests that long term marijuana use
can seriously impact your blood vessels in a way that's
similar to tobacco.
Speaker 3 (20:15):
Makes sense.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
Researchers found that people who regularly use cannabis, regardless of
how they consumed it, had roughly half the blood vessel
function compared to non users.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
It constricts your blood vessels.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
Long story short, and of course then that increase your
risk of heart attacks and high blood pressure, or conversely
high blood pressure which may lead to heart attacks. The
study brought together fifty five seemingly healthy individuals between twenty
twenty one and twenty twenty four. All participants were regular
cannabis users, either smoking or consuming THHDC products at least
(20:53):
three times a week for a year. None of them
used nicotine, so that was a variable where they could
isolate just cannabis use. Beyond the decreased blood vessel function,
researchers found that marijuana smokers also showed changes in their
blood that could damage the cells lining blood vessels. Those
who primarily use edibles, however, didn't show those same changes.
Speaker 3 (21:17):
I'm not a doctor. I'm definitely not a sex doctor, but.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
We have long had like a correlation in use between edibles,
alcohol and sex.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 4 (21:30):
A good friend of mine actually is Ashley Manta. She's
one of the foremost experts on sex and sexuality and
cannabis use. And she found that for her it was
something that she was prior to that in orgasmic and
a bait like a lot of her feelings were rooted
in anxiety and stuff like that. And she'll openly discuss
this stuff and anxiety based on several different factors. And
(21:55):
what smoking did was make her not have that focus
on the anxiety. Anxiety symptoms diminished and she start to
actually get pleasure out of sex and set and really
enjoy it more.
Speaker 3 (22:06):
The thing is a lot I'd like to see more
about the study.
Speaker 4 (22:09):
Because you know, one of the things that you associate
with cannabis use is stagnation, just wanting to sit on
the couch and not do anything except eat some chili
free doos and that, which sounds great right now, I'm
actually pretty hungry. But that's the thing is you're gonna have.
I want to see how much of that is related
to stagnation because a lot of times people who you know,
(22:32):
I know plenty of people who incorporate cannabis use into
their physical like into their exercise routine and stuff like that.
But for I want to see what the actual like
other health issues that may have existed for these people.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Right there's a difference between someone who leads a sedentary
lifestyle who's added cannabis into their their diet, if you will,
their daily ingestion habits, and someone who's maybe a high
performing athlete and also so introduces it.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
Yeah, I'd like to.
Speaker 4 (23:02):
See if there's many like further, you know, anything more
in depth in that study to account for that, because
you can say, like you know you have heart issues,
But could that be because you're more sedentary, more stagnant
because you're smoking.
Speaker 3 (23:15):
More and more marijuana. I don't know. I need to
go further into that study.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
Charger fifty five in our in Motown with the Momigos,
he says, talking about marijuana, it's a plant, all natural,
and I have to remind people just because something is
natural doesn't mean that it is safe and meant for consumption.
Cocaine is unnatural alcohol, the fermentation of fruit is quote
(23:40):
unquote natural, so it is tobacco. So as tobacco, right,
it does not mean that it is healthy for you.
And Charger fifty five said it also has helped many people. Well,
so has chemo. You know, just because it's helped you
doesn't mean that it's not also harmful to the body. Yeah,
A lot I like to use when it comes to
(24:02):
any substance use. Really is a line from the movie
Drunken Master with Jackie Chan A boat can float in water,
but it can also sink in it.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
That was almost profound respect to the Drunken Master reference.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
When we learn more about cannabis, do you think and
I know this may not be specifically your feel, but
I think there is a connection to your field. What
do you think the future may be for cannabis as
it relates to our sexual health.
Speaker 4 (24:34):
It could be something for people like say, who have
PTSD and may have some sexual trauma.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
It may be used for people.
Speaker 4 (24:41):
I've seen people who have gone through sexual trauma who
have you incorporated cannabis into their activities and it makes
it so that they are much less in their head
and more present in their body.
Speaker 2 (24:53):
Mister Reef for nine nine nine goes back to a
previous conversation we had talking about double dipping and sharing things.
Mister Reefer nine nine nine says, if you can't share food,
I doubt you'll share the joint.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
Correct.
Speaker 2 (25:08):
The whole idea of passing the joint is like, I
don't know how many lips have been on that thing.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
That ain't cool.
Speaker 2 (25:13):
You're correct, mister Reefer, that's accurate. Is that his given
name at birth? Probably that's the name that he chose
for himself, at least for the chat. Oh okay, I
don't know if his mama named him. That's the name
of Reefer. He was as a child, he was Reefer,
but now refer, Yeah, that's how he had. That's his
(25:35):
pronoun little roach, little roach. I don't know what to say,
he guys, it's just weird. I tell you, you want
to mix it in sex and and passing a joint
shows just off the rails, off the rails.
Speaker 3 (25:52):
But let me ask you this one more question before
we go.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
In the way that we have, if you can look
at marijuana, we have become more or comfortable with the
idea of use of marijuana, not only in a medicinal sense,
but obviously in a recreational sense. We have more and
more states which have legalized it. You think that's going
to be the same as far as sex and in
(26:17):
the way that Amsterdam has a red light district. Will
America ever get there? You've got parts of this country
where it's already there. Nevada has uh you know true,
You've got brothels over there, You've got uh.
Speaker 3 (26:30):
Sex work is something that is going to be there.
Speaker 4 (26:33):
How much you want to criminalize, shame and stigmatize the
people who engage in it, That's something the government doesn't
have to engage in. That's something that the government doesn't
have to you know, sanction the discrimination against people who
are just trying to make a buck.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
The day ain't gonna be today though, No, it's gonna
be at so it's laid with Mokelly.
Speaker 3 (26:54):
I don't even have a final thought tonight.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
You come in, you think you're gonna have a certain
type of show and it goes in a different direction.
My final thought would have been way too serious and
just way too much of a downer for this show.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
This show is just great. It's incredible.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
Uh, mister Reefer nine nine nine, says ding Dong with
this crew love it well, we appreciate you, mister Reefer
as well. B One in the Motown chat says, smoke
weed every day, just like the song Nate Dog.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
Uh. Eric Lisardo says past the duchy on the left
hand side that I was thinking that. Yeah, Yep, yep, yep.
It's Later with mo Kelly. We're still live on YouTube,
Instagram and the iHeartRadio app. We'll check in with George Nori,
who probably wants no part of this conversation none at all.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
You're listening to Later with mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
Later with mo Kelly, YouTube, Instagram, iHeartRadio app. Please go
to YouTube at mister mo Kelly, subscribe. Like a show
like tonight is going to be a regular occurrence. We're
gonna be talking in the hall. It's gonna be unfiltered,
it's going to be raw, and it's going to be
a whole lot of fun.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
But you have to just join the party. Make it
that easy.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Coming up in just a few moments, we'll be Coast
to Coast Am with George Nori, who joins me right now,
Good evening, sir.
Speaker 3 (28:13):
Mister Kelly, you're not kidding it is raw, is Oh
did you get to check out some of it?
Speaker 4 (28:18):
I heard a little bit of you.
Speaker 3 (28:19):
All right, all right, I hope I didn't run you off.
I'm gone, I'm out of the studio. What's coming up tonight, George,
I'm not telling you well, damn, I.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
Guess this is gonna be a short conversation. Then I'll
be on in second, so we'll just have to listen
and find out. You got it all right? The show
is coming up to just a few moments. George is
boycotting having a conversation with us. Maybe we offended him,
but Coast to Coast Am. No, he's got jokes, I know.
Oh no, he's a funny, funny guy. And this is
something and I always throw in Mark's face because George
(28:54):
and I have hung out, gone to lunch together. Uh.
George is conversationally funny in ways that I don't think
people know from just listening to him on the air.
They get glimpses of it when we have our cross talk,
but usually during the show it's a little.
Speaker 3 (29:09):
More buttoned up.
Speaker 2 (29:11):
But when he's not buttoned up, funny, funny dude, funny dude.
Well you keep teasing me with three of us going
out to lunch. Well, okay, we have to set it up. Oh,
tomorrow's Friday, so I won't be able to ask him,
but he's listening. So George, we have to set up
a lunch date you, me and Mark while you're in LA. Yeah, George,
we're way overdue this. Yeah, we have to figure out
(29:33):
how long it's going to be in LA and then
maybe go get some good food and have Mark pay. Well, okay,
just puff the brakes there breaks there. Of the three
of us, I think I am least likely to be
able to.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Afford to pay.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
That's okay. You can wash dishes, I know. Are these
liquid lunches? Do you get to see George get a
little tipsy. No, we actually eat, well, you can do.
I don't know if George drinks.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
I don't know that. I don't know that he does.
According to the moment goes he does.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
Well, I hope he does. I'm to say, I don't know. Yeah,
I don't have any firsthand knowledge of that. Get him
back on the phone. I don't think we can. I
think he's getting ready for you. That's pretty funny the
way he stiff armed you right there. I sure did
that was that? And it's like he wasn't kidding. He's like, no,
I'm not telling you.
Speaker 3 (30:14):
I'm not telling you're not telling you.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
And he doesn't either, No, No, he does not. It's like,
what are we going to say? It's like, hey, tell
me what's on your show? What's iHeart going to do?
Put him on probation right right, Yeah, it's George freakin' Norri. Yeah, yeah,
he wins. Tomorrow night, we will be playing name that
movie cult classic. We will not have a theme. To
the best of my knowledge, there will be a runner report.
(30:36):
I don't know what it's going to be on. I
don't know that Mark knows what it's going to be on. Well,
here's the deal. The new karate Kid movie comes out,
and I have absolutely no interest in that none. My
My nostalgia requirements for that were met long ago. I'm
karate kidded out. You've already seen that movie too, right, Yes,
so let me just say this. Let me give my
down and dirty review, hopefully will not impact mark Runners.
(31:00):
I love all things karate Kid. The karate Kid one, two,
and three written by the same guy, karate Kid twenty
ten written by the same guy, Robert Mark Cayman. I
believe his name is Cobra Kai all sixty five episodes
written by this guy. This movie karate Kid Legends, written
by Robert Mark Kayman. You would think that they would
(31:22):
have that going for them on the back end of
the success of Karate Kid Legends continuity saying someone who
gets the series, understands the series, understand what the fans want.
Speaker 3 (31:35):
I can say unequivocally this movie is hot garbage.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
Well, I'm not wasting my time. Then there's a pretty
promising looking horror film called Bring Her Back that.
Speaker 3 (31:47):
I may review tomorrow. Garbage. I want to see that.
Which one bring does that? Bring Her Back?
Speaker 4 (31:55):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (31:55):
Okay, okay, Yeah, it looks good. It does look promising,
and if you know, people can also make suggestions. There's
tons of streaming content that we just don't have time
to get into. It doesn't have to be a theatrical film.
Speaker 3 (32:07):
Hot garbage. Oh I believe you.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
I'm going to do not It's I can't in good
conscience say Mark, go see the movie? Would I would
not be your friend if I did.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
This, I wouldn't. I wouldn't go for free.
Speaker 2 (32:18):
I saw it for free, Hot garbage. We've had so
much of the TV show? What's this going to offer?
The problem is, and this is not a giveaway. It
took all the goodwill from the TV show, the things
that it did right in the TV show, and used
absolutely none of it in the movie. If you haven't
(32:39):
seen a TV show, it does not matter because you
thought it was going to connect right. I thought that
they would use something from the TV show as a
reward and pay off for this six seasons that we
watched it.
Speaker 4 (32:51):
Do you feel like this might have been targeted to
more of the American audience or the international audience because
of Jackie Chan It's hard.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
To say they were trying to appeal to a number
of audiences, definitely to the younger audience. In other words,
if you haven't seen the previous movies, with the exception
of the twenty ten Jackie Chan Karate Kid, you're okay.
Speaker 3 (33:13):
There's no continuity issue.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
If you're aware of Daniel LaRusso Ralph Machio who played
the Karate Kid in nineteen eighty four, you know who
that is. You don't need to know really any of
the backstory to watch this movie. So all to have
that writer continuity, it doesn't mean a damn thing. And
the question is coming from somebody who made a Drunken
Master reference. So everybody loves Jackie Chan, but I don't
(33:38):
need to see him in this. I'd rather watch actually
Drunken Master two if you want the inside scoop on
the best Jackie Chan martial arts movie of all time,
Drunken Master too, and make it all the way to
the end of that and look at the outtakes that
show him getting injured. It's a phenomenally entertaining old movie.
Speaker 3 (33:55):
I've seen that.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
This is what I will say about Karate Kid Legends
before we go, and it's not a boiler really, uh,
Ralph Macchio is only in the third act.
Speaker 3 (34:06):
Of the movie. How is that even possible? Thank you?
Speaker 2 (34:09):
Because it's advertised like he's a real big part of
the movie, he's not. Yeah, the way you described it,
it sounds like he's more in the trailer than the
actual movie. The trailer is the sum total of his
contributions to the movie. I'm not exaggerating. He's the karate kid. Yes, okay,
So what you're saying is we have a potential class
(34:30):
action lawsuit here.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
Maybe I should go to the trailer. Lie, the trailer lied.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
If you're watching a trailer right now on YouTube, that's
the sum total of Ralph Macchio's contributions to the movie.
Speaker 3 (34:41):
Thumb's down, boo, we have to watch what we say.
Speaker 2 (34:44):
Oh you rushed me out? Oh I guess he shows over. Okay,
shorty life everyone now, I already up, good night.
Speaker 3 (34:49):
What the hell is going on? Well, we're about to
tell you. K S I KOs HD two Los Angeles,
Orange County lies every wearing on the Egart radio app