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May 22, 2025 32 mins
ICYMI: Hour Three of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – In-depth analysis of the most viral stories of the week in ‘The Viral Load’ with regular guest contributor Tiffany Hobbs weighing in on everything from a viral story about a Texas Roadhouse fulfilling a customer’s special request for his dog’s last meal, to Chili’s and TGI Friday’s going viral over an exchanging of insults on social media over mozzarella sticks and MORE…PLUS – Final Thoughts on the unhealthy obsession with O.J. Simpson and retrying his double-murder case in the court of public opinion - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app & YouTube @MrMoKelly
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
kf I A M six forty.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Now it's social media, Facebook, Still, Extraktalk, Kidney.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
Viral Load, VILAD, the Viral Load Lad with Tony kf
I A six forty YouTube and the iHeartRadio app and
Instagram Live.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
It's Later with Mo Kelly. Let's get to the Viral
Load with tifty Hop. Let's get to it. You've been
talking about automation.

Speaker 5 (00:44):
Our very first story actually involves artificial intelligence, and it's
not way mo, It's not some sort of robotic what
you know what, whatever it may be. In this case,
chat GPT was used to do something that a human
absolutely should have done, and the human who used chat

(01:06):
Beach Chat GPT is being held responsible for a huge guffaw.
So what happened is The Chicago Sun Times, a major newspaper,
publishes a summer reading list. They have a a compilation
of books that they encourage people to read. And in
this compilation of fifteen books, it was found out when

(01:28):
people perused the list that most of these books actually
did not exist.

Speaker 4 (01:36):
The venerable Chicago Sun Times. Yes, that Chicago Sun Times.

Speaker 5 (01:41):
So, just to further explain in their Sunday edition, they
published this summer reading list with the titles, authors and
descriptions of fifteen books. But it turns out that ten
of the fifteen books actually are not real the names
of the authors those, but the titles again are not

(02:02):
So how could that possibly happen? Well, one of the
employees at the Chicago Sun Times decided to enlist chat
gpt mark by saying, hey, make me a list of
recommended reading material, and this chat gpt bot kicked back
all of these titles. Now, this employee published the list

(02:27):
without checking.

Speaker 4 (02:29):
AI and journalism. I tell you do not go together,
can I imagine?

Speaker 5 (02:34):
So the partner to the newspaper confirmed that a freelancer
used AI to write this article, and of course, the
Chicago Sun Times has issued a very urgent apology because
its readers are up in arms.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
How could you do that?

Speaker 5 (02:50):
This is compromising the integrity of the newspaper. It says
as well that the subscribers will not be charged their
annual or their monthly subscription for that specific edition because
of this huge mistake, and that they're updating their policy
to ensure that this never happens again again. The list

(03:11):
features authors that really exist. I got to ask you,
but the titles did not. This is rhetorical, but I
have to ask.

Speaker 6 (03:18):
This has probably been done before by the Chicago Sun
Times using AI to help getting stuff done right.

Speaker 4 (03:25):
They just didn't get cuts. So, and it makes you
wonder as well.

Speaker 5 (03:29):
It makes you start to question other publications, because if
the Chicago Sun Times is doing it, who's to say
that other major or minor papers, publications, journalistic ventures aren't
using AI.

Speaker 4 (03:42):
We know they are.

Speaker 6 (03:43):
Well, they're using it in college, they're using it to
high school. They use it to write papers, they're using
it to write news stories.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
We know that.

Speaker 6 (03:50):
And that's what is above board and has been sanctioned. Yes,
now we have to wonder, like what they're doing underneath
the table.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (03:58):
And the Chicago Sun Times ill released a statement because
of all this pressure on them to atone for this
huge journalistic sin, and they said, quote, we take pride
and the union produced journalism that goes into the respected
pages of our newspaper and on our website. We are
deeply disturbed that AI generated content was printed alongside our work.

(04:22):
The creator of the list, Marco Buscaglia buscaalia excuse me,
confirmed that he did use AI to generate this list
and said he usually checks, but this time he didn't.

Speaker 7 (04:33):
Run him out of journalism forever right through. That that
is an unforgivable sin in the world of journalism. It
really communicate his ass promptly that that is that is
worse than plagiarism when you're just.

Speaker 4 (04:46):
Making it up. Yeah, and then straight up laziness, straight
up lazy. Yes, absolutely, it was avoidable. I'm sorry, go ahead,
it's okay.

Speaker 5 (04:54):
Our next story is a sad story, but it does
have a very heartwarming ending.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
Mo.

Speaker 4 (05:00):
You're a dog lover. I'm a dog lover.

Speaker 5 (05:02):
Many of us are. We love our pets, be them
dogs or otherwise. And unfortunately, as we know, and as
you've spoken about I believe this week in fact, Mo
on the mo Kelly Show, that our time with our
pets is not finite. There is a very limited amount
of time that we have with these pets, and for
dogs especially, often we know the signs that they are

(05:25):
getting to the end, and you're faced with the decision
of what you want to do to transition them out
of this life and into the next. Perhaps well, of course,
when you are faced with that decision and you know
your pets last days are coming, you might want to
make those last days especially comfortable, fun loving. You might
want to make sure that they have their favorite meal

(05:47):
or some special treat. Well, there's one person. His name
is Hunter met Scurries from Pennsylvania and his dog, unfortunately
great day named Iris, was suffering from a major health
issue and they decided to put Iris down to euthanize Iris.
But instead of, you know, kind of taking a simple route,

(06:09):
they decided to go all out and they contacted their
local Texas Roadhouse restaurant to ask that Texas Roadhouse prepare
a final meal. Texas Roadhouse absolutely said yes, and they
prepared it with love. They rode all over the container
that the steak came in. It was an eight pound

(06:30):
thick cut New York strip steak, steak, fries, mashed potatoes,
and freshly baked bread. And when Hunter went to pick
it up for Iris, everyone in the restaurant came to
meet him there, gave them hugs, gave them love, and
once he got back in the car, and later that evening,
he saw that the entire meal was refunded and he
posted it on Facebook and it has gone viral. The

(06:52):
pictures are beautiful, not only of the meal but of
his dog Iris. May she rest in peace and she
enjoyed that last steak dinner.

Speaker 4 (07:02):
That's a very nice story.

Speaker 6 (07:04):
Sad, sad, But yeah, I try not to think about
the finite nature of my pets lives.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
But it's an inescapable thought, it.

Speaker 5 (07:14):
Is, and I am like you, It is the last
thing I want to think of. But I do know
that I would love to be able to provide some
sort of transition like this. Yeah, you know, so in
the second half we're going to get into Chili's and
TGI Fridays are at war.

Speaker 4 (07:28):
We'll talk about that, I know what.

Speaker 5 (07:31):
And then also if you're feeling some next strain from
looking at all this social media and these viral stories,
I'll give you some tips on.

Speaker 4 (07:38):
How to ease that pain right here on the viral Load.
She's Tiffany Hobbs.

Speaker 6 (07:42):
It's Later with mo Kelly more the Viral Load in
just a moment k if I Am six forty, Instagram
and the iHeartRadio app and YouTube.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
Viral Movement Tiffany Live on camfies later with.

Speaker 4 (08:06):
Lookilly, She'll talk about the tough kiss.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
On social media.

Speaker 4 (08:12):
Rolde with Tiffany.

Speaker 6 (08:15):
Hubbs Kfi Instagram, YouTube, iHeartRadio app is later with Mo Kelly.
Let's continue with the viral load in Tiffany Hobs.

Speaker 5 (08:24):
Mo. If you had to choose between Chili's and TGI Fridays,
what would you choose?

Speaker 4 (08:31):
Gosh, you probably neither.

Speaker 6 (08:32):
I haven't been to either in so long, but let
me just say TGI Fridays I went there more than
anyplace else.

Speaker 5 (08:39):
The ironic thing and talking about automation in the last
couple of segments, is that Chili's actually uses those automated
servers kind of like a tower. It's a robotic towers
Denny's as well. We're not talking about the automation in
this story. This is actually between two humans, and it's
something that AI probably couldn't do, or at least not

(09:00):
do as well as these two humans have done.

Speaker 7 (09:03):
So.

Speaker 5 (09:03):
With major businesses, major brands, they're often social media managers.
There's someone behind the scenes responding to people posting things
on social media, interacting with the customer base, and in
this case, you have Chili's on one end or at
one end of the rink, and you have TGI Fridays,

(09:25):
both restaurants at the other end of the rink, and
they are at war. They're not fighting physically, they are
feuding online via their social media managers. And what are
they feuding over? Politics? No, the price of gas? No,
They're feuding over mozzarella sticks. And of course this feud

(09:49):
has gone absolutely viral. On May fourteenth, TGI Fridays, we'll
just call it Fridays from here on out, use their
official x slash Twitter account to post a message targeting
Chili's mozzrella sticks. They said, quote, somebody tell chilies to
stay in their lane. Oo, the gloves are off. Fridays

(10:14):
wrote back, y'all, this is These are the social media managers, right, y'all.
Are not mozzrella stick people.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
We are.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
That's it.

Speaker 4 (10:23):
That's the tweet. The next day, this.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
Feud continued and more eyes We're paying attention. People are
tuning into this, and Chili's decided to respond by saying,
hey at us next time. Also, we honestly didn't know
you were still open.

Speaker 4 (10:41):
Congrats.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
So they've been.

Speaker 4 (10:43):
Going back and forth.

Speaker 5 (10:44):
It's kind of funny, and Friday's actually responded a few
days ago, and they said, is the cheese pool challenge
accepted or nah? Challenging Chili's to a mozzarella stick competition.

Speaker 4 (10:59):
So shots fired all around.

Speaker 5 (11:02):
In the comments of this Twitter slash x feud between
Chili's and TGI Fridays, of course, fans are weighing in
on what side they're going to choose.

Speaker 6 (11:12):
I gotta say, no one is better at this corporate
social media warfare than Windy Windy. Yeah, wins by a mile.
They set the tone for everyone else. Now that'd be
like brutal. Oh yeah, and whoever is managing in their account,
this is one person or eight people, incredible.

Speaker 4 (11:31):
They deserve a raise.

Speaker 7 (11:33):
Raid because they've changed. They've changed the business because it
used to be very stoic and very corporate. Yes, just
talking about their menu.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (11:41):
Now they actually go back and forth. Oh yeah, they
feud and they're good at it. That's the thing.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
So other accounts, of course, other brands are getting into this,
and it is entertaining for the customers and non customers
alike to watch and partake in. All Right, if you
find yourself using your technology, you're cell phone, your laptop,
whatever it may be, and you are just mindlessly scrolling.
We call it doom scrolling for hours every day, even

(12:10):
broken up into segments of twenty minutes here, ten minutes there.
But you're in the same position, kind of hunched over,
sitting down looking at your phone with your neck kind
of craned in a way that is a bit unnatural.
You might be suffering from something called tech neck. And

(12:30):
this is going viral. So what is technic tech neck
is basically you bending yourself over to look at your phone.

Speaker 4 (12:40):
Oh, I'm sorry. It also can happen with reading books.

Speaker 5 (12:47):
So imagine the position that we're all in right now,
actually at the at the table here in the studio.

Speaker 4 (12:53):
We're sitting.

Speaker 5 (12:53):
But if we were to sit in this position and
look down at technology for any length of time, we
might start to feel a strain. And not only is
exacerbated if you're doing it day in and day out.
And of course these pains are talked about online. They
are viral. People discuss how pain is really a byproduct

(13:14):
of technology. Technology is made life easier, but pain comes
with that as well, And over sixty percent of smartphone
users report musculo skeletal pain, primarily affecting the neck and back,
and recent research back this case. Recent research absolutely connects

(13:36):
the usage of smartphones and other technology to this pain.
So if you're experiencing aching pain in your back, headaches,
widespread pain, and stiffness in the neck and shoulders, you
can do these three things. You can fix screen time,
pop positioning. You can sit up, you can stretch yourself.

(13:57):
You can hold your technology up at eye level vers
is bending over to look. You can perform tech neck
stretches still a family show, and you can do strengthening
exercises to improve your posture. But tech neck is absolutely
a thing. People are talking about it online and it's viral.

Speaker 6 (14:16):
Any type of repetitive movement or locking your body in
a certain position for extended periods of time is going
to cause pain, discomfort, injury. It doesn't matter we sit
at our desks too long. You have back problems, you
have hip problems. I mean, if you stay in bed
too long, you'll have those same problems. So it kind

(14:36):
of makes sense. But now we're actually shedding light on
our phone habits how they are killing us.

Speaker 5 (14:44):
And I would love for people to lock themselves into
position Saturday evening from five to seven pm so you
can hear me right here on what's my show's name?

Speaker 4 (14:54):
Saturday transition to and then you lost control of the
card in up in the ditch. It's a way, mo Hey.
Saturdays with Tiffany five to seven pm. I'll also be
filling in Sunday from two to four pm. I see
what you get there. That was a nice callback. There
you go, So wait Sunday from two to four, Sunday
from two to four.

Speaker 5 (15:12):
I've been working the last couple of Sundays. It's been
a blast. Please join me. I'm exhausted, but you won't know.

Speaker 4 (15:18):
Lots of energy. Two days now two days and a
full time job in the middle. So there you go.
All right, God for you, Good for me.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 4 (15:33):
With Mo Kelly one Kay six Live everywhere in the
iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 6 (15:42):
And I just want to talk about something different than
what I plan to talk about because it's really important.
At the last at the end of last segment, Tiffany Hobbs,
who was talking about how she had gone from one
day to two days here on KFI. She start off
doing Saturdays kind of as needed every now and then

(16:06):
here and there to getting her own show, Saturday show,
and then to broaden to Sunday as well, at least
for the time being, and that's also in addition to
her five day a week job. I want to be
able to give you your flowers in advance because people

(16:27):
don't always see or understand the amount of work that
you put in and people more generally put into this job.

Speaker 4 (16:36):
It is not easy. You have to not want to
do it, you have to love doing it.

Speaker 6 (16:43):
And I tell you and other people all the time,
your success is my success because you have been dutiful,
you have been diligent in getting better at your craft.
You've put in the time, and it's nice to be
able to see your growth not only in your craft,
but also on the station. We have some very nice

(17:05):
messages from listeners and I should say viewers in the
YouTube chat shouting your praises, and that makes me feel really,
really good because I know from whence you had come.
So I just wanted to just shout you out and say, yes,
I notice I've been watching and I'm proud of you.

Speaker 4 (17:25):
I didn't want I didn't mean to make you cry.
I'm just saying, you know, breaking camera and I'm crying.
I forgot. I said, oh, shoot, they can see.

Speaker 6 (17:33):
But okay, I'll fill up the time with me talking.
If you know me, and I say that you know me.
I take this radio thing real seriously. I don't take
myself seriously. I take what I do seriously. I put
a lot of time and effort. There's not a day
in which I don't come in before four o'clock. Usually
I'm usually hear about three hours before I'm on air,

(17:53):
trying to prepare as best to show as I could.
You have a similar work effect, yes and that, And
people always say, like, you know my glory, you don't
know my story. You were a listener and you've made
the transition to being a talk show host, and there
are plenty people out there why I could do that too.
It's like, no, you can't, and you know you can't

(18:13):
because you put into work, you know how difficult it is,
and you're dealing with the news that's just right in
front of you.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (18:19):
If I were to come in and just talk about
whatever I want, having nothing to do with news, yeah
that'd be really really easy. But I got to talk
about Karen Baths. I have to talk about what's happening
after they eat and fire. You gotta talk about the budgets.
You got to talk about You have to be interesting
and funny all the time. It's really difficult what we're
gonna say stuff. No, I like your I like your
take on it.

Speaker 7 (18:37):
Where everyone has one got one show show, even if
it's three or four hours however long. But it's doing
it daily as and as far as you know, we
know how hard she works. I mean, it's it's doing this,
it's doing her regular job and the weekend right though
a couple of people.

Speaker 4 (18:55):
It's not easy.

Speaker 6 (18:56):
I can't say it's just one radio personality told us
to me. But I've been told by a number of
radio personalities the hardest thing about radio is that you,
as the host don't matter. And I didn't get that,
and then I figured it out over the course of years.
I could have a horrible day, No one gives a

(19:17):
damn work harder. Yeah, I could have something going on
at home. My wife and I could have been fighting
or something. Doesn't matter. And I say it doesn't matter
because people tune in, they're giving of their time, they're
giving of their attention, and it's very personal. It's a
intimate medium where you don't let just anyone in your
car as you're going to work or you're going home.

(19:37):
You don't just let anyone in your Earbudds when you're
in a gym working out, you have to earn their
time each and every night, each and every week. And
you can't bring that other stuff from the outside world
into your show. You could be sleepy, you could not
be feeling your best. And if you work long enough
in this business, you will deal with all those things.
Like anything could have happened. I could be distracted me personally.

(20:01):
I could be distracted with with my pets. One could
be sick or something, or I'm worried about my mother,
you know, or when my father was living those worried
about his health difficulties.

Speaker 4 (20:10):
That's not something I can bring on the air. You can't.
You can maybe touch on it like you are channel,
but the focus is not on you. We don't matter,
you know. You check it at the door. Yeah, you
have to.

Speaker 6 (20:22):
And it is strange, it's almost counterintuitive. It's like, wait
a minute's called labor with Monkel? How can talking to
the third person? How is it that Mokelly can't matter
because you're not tuning in for me to just dump
all my problems at your feet. Correct, it's supposed to
be interesting and entertaining. That's damn hard to do on
a day in, day out basis. So absolutely, I'm not
saying that you're going through a whole lot of drama.

(20:42):
I'm saying you, like everyone else, is carrying a low
a five day week job.

Speaker 5 (20:47):
And then my other job, it's the same format. I
am there to deliver information. I'm a teacher, and my
students understand me as a person, but I have to
check my emotions at the door as I encourage them
to do as well. You're human and you'll have your moments,
but you're there ultimately to serve and to give them something.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
It's a product. Education is a product. Radio is a product.

Speaker 6 (21:10):
A great point, it's almost like a franchise in the
sense that if I get a McDonald's hamburger in LA
it should taste pretty much like a McDonald's in New
York City or Chicago or New Mexico. If someone should
listen to me or to Tiffany on a Monday night
Tuesday night, they should know about what they're going to get.

(21:31):
If they're actually listening at least quality of presentation. It
should be consistent. It shouldn't be like, gosh, move seemed
like he just woke up.

Speaker 5 (21:39):
Right, And that's where it's hard and it is challenging,
and to be good at it you have to keep
that at the forefront of your mind.

Speaker 7 (21:47):
You're going to say stuff. The chat room is blowing
up of how proud they are of you, Tiffany. Oh,
everyone's just telling you. And then there's one comment that
I saw and I agree with this. Tiffany is on
an up trajectory. Yes, yes, they are like beyond proud
of you.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
Thank you.

Speaker 4 (22:05):
It means so much, it really does. From the bottom
of my heart, thank you.

Speaker 6 (22:09):
So keep drawing, keep striving, keep consistency, because if I've
learned anything of this business, yesterday's show does not count
because someone might have heard you, let's say last Saturday,
and it's oh, wow, I really like this Tiffany Hobbs Hols.
I mean wow, I got to tune into her again.
And then next week you come in and lay an egg.

(22:29):
You've lost that person. You won't get it back. So
the consistency, I think it's the most difficult part. The
energy is the second most difficult part when you say,
like it's easy to listen to a show for three hours,
it's damn hard to put a three hour show and
keeping your energy up and being as involved in your
own show much less than anyone else. I have to

(22:52):
care about it more than anyone else. And like you said,
people just think, oh, you work three hours a day. No, no, no, no,
I'm still told it's like you have no idea. Look,
there are people who can come in five minutes before
their show and just do a show and be great
at it.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
I'm not one of those people.

Speaker 6 (23:11):
I actually have to make sure that I'm as well
informed on the subjects that I'm going to talk about.
That's the I am practiced. I will never be considered
one of those naturals.

Speaker 7 (23:22):
No, I've gotten emails from you and to Wallett like
nine in the morning, am I starting? We're planning the show,
and you're planning the show.

Speaker 6 (23:28):
Yeah, And it may change over the course of the day,
but the planning of what we plan to do is
a day long endeavor. There we may be booking guests
as early as seven in the morning, and then we
come do the show at seven o'clock. At night, and
then after I leave here, I may have other things
that you don't care about. I may be doing a

(23:48):
hit for cable news, either in morning or at night.
I'm doing BBC late at night. They don't care.

Speaker 4 (23:56):
Handle tomorrow morning.

Speaker 6 (23:57):
That's right, I'll be doing Handle tomorrow morning. Nobody cares.
I'm saying, like I want sympathy. I'm saying, people don't
see what goes on behind the scenes. I see what's
going on behind the scenes, and I'm saying, keep doing
what you're doing.

Speaker 4 (24:09):
Thank you. I'm proud of you. I'm proud to be
a part of this team, but you can't have my show.
I No, that's the truth. There's always somebody coming. There's
always somebody taught me well, and I am forever in gratitude.
Thank you.

Speaker 6 (24:24):
Look, if there's anyone who embodies my three principles, it's
you be humble, be hungry. When I say be humbles like,
there's always more to learn, there's always things that you
can do better.

Speaker 4 (24:36):
And I think about it when I air check myself.

Speaker 6 (24:37):
Oh I could have done that tease better, or I
could have laid out that story better. I kind of
rushed over. I skipped those things you know, so be
humble in what you do. Be hungry. In other words,
be confident that no one cannot work you. That's what
I mean by be hungry. And also be a student
of your craft. If I listen to other people say, oh,

(24:58):
I like what they did, How did they do that?
How do they tell that joke? So well, you're always
hopefully improving, hopefully because if you're not improving, that means.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
You're getting worse. Correct.

Speaker 7 (25:09):
And I think about um too, and I have that
philosophy as well, where the reason you work so hard
is because someone is willing to come in here and
do it for cheap cheap.

Speaker 2 (25:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (25:18):
Yeah, there's someone half my age who's willing to do
it for half the money. Yep, and will work possibly
twice as hard. The only thing that I can control,
because I'm getting older and my monetary demands are not
getting smaller, is to continuously work harder. That's the only
thing I can control. There will always be someone who's
twenty seven, twenty eight who's going to do it for
minimum wage. I'm quite sure they can find someone who

(25:39):
will do this job for minimum wage. So it's incumbent
upon me to make it not worth the station's while
exactly to entertain that exactly, and you do keep shining.

Speaker 4 (25:51):
Thank you you too.

Speaker 6 (25:53):
It's later with Mokeli. We're gonna check in with George Nori.
Then have my final thought and get this. It has
to do with OJ Simpson. Yes, Oj, because for some
reason he's back in the news.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
Is Later with Mo Kelly.

Speaker 6 (26:14):
Let's check in with George Norri you find out what's
coming up on Coast to Coast, Am. George, how you doing, sir?

Speaker 4 (26:18):
We I'm doing great. We've got a super show for
you tonight.

Speaker 7 (26:21):
We're gonna talk about Alcatraz, is that gonna open up
as a prison, how to calm people down when they
go crazy?

Speaker 4 (26:27):
And later on Prophecy I'm Coast to Coast.

Speaker 6 (26:30):
Well, if people don't calm down, I guess we can
put him in Alcatraz.

Speaker 4 (26:33):
He'll never get out. No, that's true.

Speaker 6 (26:35):
It's gonna cost a pretty penny to refurbish it, but
I'm quite sure you'll cover that tonight.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
You got it.

Speaker 6 (26:40):
Before we get out of here, I previewed my final
thought and it has to do with OJ, and you're
probably thinking, like OJ, Yeah, that was my question. Isn't
OJ dead? I thought that Oorenthal James Simpson was dead.
You mean we as in America were still obsessing over
all things OJ.

Speaker 4 (27:00):
Well, it seems that way.

Speaker 6 (27:02):
Jennifer Peace, who says she was dating OJ's close friend
Al Cowlings at the time of the murders, claims Al
told her that OJ had told him.

Speaker 4 (27:16):
That he committed the double murder. And I'm thinking, like,
this matters, question mark. I have no idea.

Speaker 6 (27:23):
This was on the landing page of Radar Online, somewhat reputable,
not completely but somewhat home page breaking news supposedly. At
this point, I really don't understand the obsession. The killer
of Casey Anthony's child, according to Casey Anthony, is still

(27:43):
out there. In fact, Casey recently joined TikTok and is
peddling her wares as a quote unquote legal advocate get
the f out of here, but nobody cares. Well, that's
not exactly true. Everything I read says that Casey Anthony
is doing very well financially since her acquittal. Casey is
still alive, nobody really cares or is reporting on her.

(28:05):
You can you can do the search on your own
look up Casey Anthony and see how few stories come
up about her. And she's doing very well financially. Nobody's
writing any stories about who might have said something to
someone about something. Three people removed regarding Casey Anthony, and
she is cashing in on her notoriety and infamy, notoriety

(28:29):
only connected to her beating the rap for murdering her
own child allegedly, no outrage, nothing but I know oj
was trial of the century as in last century. We
are more than a quarter away through this century, and
nobody cares about Robert Blake killing his ex wife. And

(28:50):
he was literally at the seat of the crime when
his wife, excuse me, ex wife was murdered. The prosecution
didn't even have to prove Blake was around when his
ex wife was murdered. Robert Blake literally drove Bonnie Lee
Bakeley to the murder scene, walked away from the car,

(29:10):
came back and.

Speaker 4 (29:11):
Coincidentally, oh, my goodness, ex wife dead. He beat the rap.

Speaker 6 (29:18):
He ended up hanging out with karaoke singers like me
at the Sportsman's Lodge in Studio City, eating dinner at
four pm.

Speaker 4 (29:24):
Like most old people do, and nobody said boo. Nobody
wrote any.

Speaker 6 (29:29):
Stories about him, no one was upset about anything. Nobody
was asking ex girlfriends or he was not even a
topic for discussion. And speaking of Blake, I had someone
reach out to me true story a few months ago,
and that person wanted to tell me and this is real.
I don't want to use his name, but he was

(29:50):
saying that people cared just as much about Robert Blake
as they did Ojay. Mind you, at the time, the
person didn't even know that Robert Blake was already.

Speaker 4 (30:01):
That's my point.

Speaker 6 (30:03):
They supposedly care but don't know the basics. The obsession
with oj is beyond strange. Now people under the age
of forty have zero first hand memory of the trial
or the murders. Now they may know about it because
the subsequent coverage, but they don't remember it. And get this,
this Jennifer Peace person who just happens to also be
a former porn star, probably was paid handsomely for telling

(30:27):
this story, which is two people removed in terms of hearsay,
and it's not even the first time she's told this story.
I mean, I understood the fixation while oj was alive,
but not now, not this late into this century. There
are no more stories to tell, no more documentaries to make.
These outlets are literally recycling the same stories and reinterviewing
the same people and getting the exact same information. Here's

(30:50):
how I know this from the Radar Online story quote
this was not the first time that Jennifer Peace, who
used to do adult films under the name Devin Shier,
has told this story. September twelfth, nineteen ninety four story
published by UPI reported about Peace, claiming quote Cowlings told
her Simpson acted in a blind rage when he killed
his wife. Close quote Well, then, why are you re

(31:12):
reporting the exact same information and why are people still
interviewing this person to only get the stuff she said
exactly thirty five years ago. It's kind of rhetorical. The
obsession with all things OJ is something I'll never understand.
I have my suspicions, Don't get me wrong, I have
my suspicions, but we should be beyond the obsession at
this point. Everybody's dead. Everybody's dead, there's nothing new to share,

(31:38):
nothing new to tell. There are still high profile murderers
still walking around and profiting off their fame. As an
acquitted murderer, Casey Anthony. But it's time to let him go.
It's time to let them die and let Nicole and
Ron rest. For KFI AM six forty, I'm Moe, Kelly,

(31:58):
Chuck pull Lading Talk k f I and k O
S t h D two, Los Angeles, Orange County, Live

Speaker 4 (32:07):
Everywhere on the Youngart Radio f

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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