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August 23, 2025 29 mins
ICYMI: Hour One of ‘Later, with Mo’Kelly’ Presents – Tiffany Hobbs (@TiffHobbsOnHere) filling in ‘Later, for Mo’Kelly’ with special guests Grace Kono Wells, HOA President of Tahitian Terrace Mobile Home Park, and Jon Brown, elected Co-Chair of the Palisades Bowl resident group, who join the program for an in-depth discussion regarding Senate Bill 749, which addresses the closure and change of use for mobile home parks…PLUS - Phillip Weathersby, co-founder of SET Ministries, joins the program to highlight the organization’s 15 years of empowering underserved communities and their upcoming Community Baby Shower in Los Angeles AND Tiffany weighs-in on Kenya Barris and Mike Epps’ new CBS comedy series inspired by the aftermath of the Altadena fire - on KFI AM 640…Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app & YouTube @MrMoKelly
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Kf I AM six forty. You're listening to Later with
Moe Kelly on demand on the iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
App Tifney Hobbs here filling in for Moe Kelly until ten.
Breaking news. Lyle Menendez the second now of the Menindez brothers,
to have his parole denied. So a denial came down
from that district court. Neither brother will be let out
of prison at this time and at least for the

(00:28):
next three years when they can have another parole hearing.
So details are coming out about that. Up next, we're
going to have a conversation, a very special conversation, a
very necessary conversation with Grace kno Wells. She's the HOA
president of the Tahitian Terrace and she along with John Brown,

(00:53):
who is a resident and elected co chair of the
Palisades Bowl Resident Group, have paired with Senator Ben Allen
and Senator Allen and Grace and John are leading a
very concerted effort to help protect the residents of mobile

(01:15):
home parks across the nation, but specifically starting in the
Palisades as a consequence of the devastating Palisades fire on
January seventh, and through their combined efforts through what they
have faced and have been dealing with for months now.
They have authored SB seven forty nine and Senate Bill

(01:38):
seven forty nine addresses the vulnerability of these mobile home
park residents, many of whom own their homes but lease
the land beneath them. This bill is a direct response
to the increasing risk of displacement due to part closures
and conversions, which can be exacerbated by natural disasters life

(02:00):
like wildfires. The bill's goal is to preserve existing affordable
housing stock by allowing community based or nonprofit groups to
purchase these parks, keeping them in operation as affordable housing options.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
Now.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
John Brown connected with Senator Allen a week after the
fires and they started working on legislation with his staff.
They've testified at the Capitol and four committee hearings and
continue to work towards seeing this bill become law. There's
even a petition that has close to fifty thousand people
who have signed on in support of this legislation. I

(02:39):
am one of them, and that petition is the change
dot Org petition. Like I said, I am one of
those signees. Proudly. So the bill goes to the Assembly
for SB seven forty nine goes to the Assembly floor
for its final vote in just two weeks, where the
California Assembly members will hold the fate of the Tahitian

(03:01):
Terrace and Palisades Bowl mobile Parks in their hands. I
am very, very pleased and grateful that Grace Cono Wells
and John Brown are sharing their time with us. They
are busy, they have their own families, and yet again
they are combining efforts to help protect and ensure the

(03:22):
rightful place of the residence of these mobile home parks.
Grace and John, thank you so much for coming on
with us.

Speaker 4 (03:31):
Glad to thank you so much.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
You are most welcome.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
I learned about the change dot org petition about SB
seven forty nine through social media myself because of posts
that were circulating around social media calling for attention to
what you all are dealing with. I knew the mobile
home parks had burned down. I have a friend who
appeared on the show, Alec Edwards, LA Fire Captain Alec Edwards,

(03:59):
just a few months ago, and he talked about his
efforts to help fight that fire there at the mobile
home park. But I didn't know just how difficult it's been.
Can you tell us a bit about what difficulties you
faced since the fire on January seventh.

Speaker 5 (04:19):
Yeah, I can jump in. Yeah sure, thanks Grace, and
thank you guys so much for giving us a forum
to share about this. You know, we we we lived
in these amazing communities right along the coast, and it
sounds super fancy, but this was actually a version of

(04:40):
affordable housing, right. You know, most homes in La are
you know, in Pacific Palisades especially, you know, you're talking
starting at three million dollars, you know, and here you
could get a home of your own for half a
million bucks, which you know you couldn't get that anywhere
in Los Angeles County, right, And so it's going to
be amazing place to live. We're raising my kids there,

(05:03):
and Grace actually lived up in the hill just behind me.
It was just a really tight knit community of amazing people.
Half of them are senior citizens. And yeah, we're in
this sort of limbo stage where we owned our homes
that you know again not sheep still right for us
and the park owner who owns the actual land, right,

(05:27):
So this is like basically like an apartment building type
of situation where we own the home structure, but we
rent the land, and they're not communicating with us, They're
not telling us what their plans are they going to
rebuild the infrastructure of the park so we can rebuild
our homes or what. We're just sleepless nights and eight
months later here, we have no idea if we're ever
going to be invited back in to rebuild our homes.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
Oh my goodness, and that limbo. It can't do anything
for the mental state of you and the residents there
as you battle trying to rebuild your lives after this
fire and now not knowing if you'll be able to
return to something that you so much loved.

Speaker 6 (06:11):
Yeah, that's ye, Yeah, you know, we actually agreed.

Speaker 2 (06:16):
We actually started just to tick later because I had
a lot that I wanted to share upfront with our
listeners to preface our conversation. And I'd like to continue
this conversation because I do have some questions. I want
you to talk to us about SB seven forty nine.
Can I keep you on for one more segment after
the break?

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Sure, that'd be great, wonderful.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
We're talking with Grace Cono Wells hoa president of the
Tahitian Terrace, and John Brown resident. They're both residents, and
John is the elected co chair of the Palisades Bowl
Resident Group, regarding the legislation that they have helped author
SB seven forty nine that is in response to the
fires in January and will help address the vulnerability of

(07:00):
mobile home park residents, not just in the Palisades but
across the country if it goes through in two weeks,
and it should. Will continue the conversation on the other
side of the break.

Speaker 7 (07:12):
You're listening to later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty We're.

Speaker 2 (07:19):
Talking with Grace kno Wells hoa president of the Tahitian
Terrace and John Brown, elected co chair of the Palisades
Bowl Resident Group, regarding Senate Bill s Excuse Me seven
forty nine, which is a bill they've authored that will
address the vulnerability of mobile home park residents, many of

(07:39):
many of whom own their homes but lease the land
beneath them. And this bill aims to mitigate the very
real risk of displacement, park closures, and conversions, many of
which can be exacerbated, of course, by natural disasters like
January's horrific why out fires in both the Palisades and

(08:02):
Alta Dina, and we've been talking a bit about the
kind of unknown or hidden challenges with the residents there
at the mobile home parks and what really prompted this
bill to be authored. In response, and John, I'd like
you to talk a bit about SB seven forty nine.

(08:24):
What does the bill include specifically, and then how can
the public support what's next in the process of getting
this bill passed.

Speaker 5 (08:36):
Tiffany, thank you so much. Yeah so so. Senator Ben Allen,
our state Senator. It happens to have a relationship with
the park community directly. He has a dear friend who
lived their family friends and either way, you know, amazing

(08:57):
a legislator who has written this bill seven forty nine.
And if anybody wants to, they can go to support
seven four nine dot com, which will take them to
the change dot org. They could read about the bill,
they could sign the petition and support of the bill,
and they can watch a video about their residence. And
most of all, what you can do is you can

(09:19):
also just google. I mean, I don't even know if
I knew who my assembly person is, you know, nine
months ago, right like. But but what people can do
and what this bill does is that it protects. It
gives the residence some protections and not just our park
when they burn down or a natural disaster. But there's

(09:39):
one and a half million residents. I had no idea
about this. There's five thousand mobile home parks in California,
and there's one and a half million residents that are
vulnerable to the same thing that we're experiencing. Whether there's
a fire or not. The park owner can change use.
They could file to say, hey, I want to sell
this to the Marriot and move all people out and

(10:01):
put a hotel on this land. And what seven forty
nine does is it creates some opportunity that if the
owners of the land want to do that, they can
get an appraisal which gives them fair value for the land,
and the residents have an opportunity to form a nonprofit
and purchase it. So the owner can get a fair

(10:24):
price for their land and the residents aren't put out
on their butts right right, And I mean, if anybody
listening cares anything about the housing situation that is going
on in this state, this is one of those bills
that could support and help start getting towards a correction
where there's more affordable housing for people. So again it's

(10:47):
supports seven forty nine. Or you could even while you're
watching TV, just google who's my assembly person and send
them a direct email through through their website and say, hey,
you support seven forty nine the assembly people. It's the
assembly members that are going to be voting on this
in about a week or two, and so it's those

(11:08):
people that are really holding the fate of what's going
to happen to us, Grace, our pets, our dogs, our families,
the senior citizens. Otherwise this could become this whole land
there was three hundred and fifty homes. It could become
two mega mansions, right, I mean, it's just really scary

(11:32):
what could happen. So I hope that people can really
take a moment and help that.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
Can you give the website one more time so that
people can support.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
It's support s U P P O RT support seven
four nine dot com and that again we'll take you
to the change dot org where you just can sign
it away and you know, but more importantly, and again
I'd probably sound complicated, but it's really not. If you
google who's my assembly person and send them a direct

(12:04):
right through that it'll probably take you right to their
website and then there's going to be a contact for
me and you could send them a message that just said, Hey,
I'm a constituent, I voted for you in your district
and I support this bill. It makes a big difference
because they need to hear from their constituents, right.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
Yes, so yeah, got it. Thank you for that grace.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
In about a minute and a half, can you share
some words to collectively encourage the residents of your mobile
home park, the Tahitian Terras of which you are the
HOA president, and also the Palisades Bowl, which is right
there next door. You guys have always been in lockstep
with each other. How would you like to encourage resiliency

(12:48):
for those who are listening?

Speaker 4 (12:51):
To encourage resiliency to those that are listening. You know,
I have to say, first of all, our communities are
very tight. We do bounce idea is off each other
and we support each other. And also all the fire
victims in the Palace States, the Greater Palaces as well.
You just gotta you just got to come together with
you know, all of us. This is not just about

(13:13):
the parks that burn down, but it affects not only
other mobile home parks in the state. But it does
also affect the unsut society. Affordable housing, you know, that's
being detreated in California. They always talk about, oh, we
got to have affordable housing, building these eighteen story apartments
and all that. Hey, guess what affordable housing's already here,

(13:35):
Like John said, there's what I don't know, hundreds of
mobile home parks, thousands in California already. Let's not lose that,
you know, keep that there, Let's keep them going. And
all you have to do is just all we have
to do is just get this thing passed. It'll preserve
our rights. It gives people an opportunity to stay home,

(13:55):
to stay put. It's not time the owner's hands. It's
not saying you've got to sell. It's just gives the residents.
It's an opportunity to purchase the land and stay home
in these homes that many of them stayed here for
what forty years, fifty years. There's a woman in our park,
she's the one hundred and money. Wow, you saw our part
teaching here is being built, and then she saw it
come down. People like her, you know, we're also fighting

(14:18):
for as well.

Speaker 3 (14:20):
Well.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
I thank you both for what you do site seeing
and unseen. I'm sure the work is never ending, but
it is also evergreen, and for that you are just
heroes amongst many heroes coming out of this horrific tragedy.
I wish you well and you are both welcome back
here on KFI anytime to share anything.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
About your platform. Tiffany, you are most welcome.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
We've been talking with Grace Cono Wells hoa president of
the Tahitian Terrace and John Brown, elected co chair of
the Palisades Bowl Resident Group regarding Senate Bill seven forty nine,
and you can google Senate Bill s B seven forty
nine for more information and a direct link to the
change dot org petition of which I am a very

(15:08):
proud signee as well to help these mobile home residents
the Palisades Bowl in Tahitian Terrace get back into their homes.
That's all they want, and they want to protect others
from this situation in the future. Thank you both for
coming on with us. On the other side of the break,
we're going to be talking to Philip we Weathersby. He

(15:28):
is the founder of Set Ministries and they have a
beautiful community baby shower in store this weekend this Sunday,
and he's going to share some details about that.

Speaker 7 (15:40):
You're listening to later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Tiffany Hobbs here with you, and what a jam packed
show we have had and we are still still riding
this momentous wave. We have another conversation with a very
influential person. This person's name is Philip weathers Be and
he is one of the founders, along with his wife,

(16:07):
Britney weathers Be, of Set Ministries. Now, let me tell
you a little bit about Set Ministries. They're a Christian
based organization that was started with the goal of empowering
individuals by providing them with the tools, resources, and support
needed to take control of their lives and improve their circumstances.

Speaker 3 (16:29):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Over the past decade and a half, the founders of
Set Ministries, Philip and Britney weathers Be, have established themselves
as trusted partners and leaders spearheading positive change in the community.
And SET Ministries has a major event taking place in
Los Angeles this Sunday, two days from now, August twenty fourth,

(16:55):
as they host a community baby shower. Yes, the purpose
is to make sure that underserved women are exposed to
and can engage in a baby shower of which they
may not be able to have without the support of

(17:15):
set ministries. And Philip is here to tell us the
event details. I just want to preface this by saying
Philip is also in education, and educators have more than
one job nowadays, many jobs they're juggling, and that Philip
is educating kids and also doing this sort of you know,

(17:38):
doing these sorts of events is nothing short of just
It leaves me lost for words that you have the
time to be able to do this. Welcome Philip weathers
B two KFI.

Speaker 6 (17:52):
Well, that introduction, Tiffany was amazing. I would love to
meet Philip myself.

Speaker 3 (17:56):
The way I introduce it, that's pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Guy.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
You're welcome. You're welcome. Tell us a bit about what's happening. Sunday.

Speaker 6 (18:07):
Okay, Sunday is going to be let and I know
that word is done for, but I have to use it.
We're having a community baby sour. It's eight twenty four.
That's this Sunday, that's Kobe Day from one to four
at Magic Johnson Park Community Hall. It's going to be
just amazing, Like you read. We're trying to create an
opportunity for women who are underserved who won't necessarily have

(18:30):
the same opportunity to be celebrated. Yes, you know, eventually
they'll get the things that they need. Some of them
will get diapers, they'll get you know, bibs and whatever,
car seats and all this type of stuff, and we
have that, But the celebration particpany is what we're really
trying to emphasize on because too often is parenting seen
as something that's just a natural part of life, but

(18:53):
it's not always celebrated in a way that people should
be so they can start off this long journey with
a nice steam of head on their head and a
nice strong back and a nice pair of legs, because
that's what support does. It makes us ready for the
journeys ahead. So that's just what we're trying to do.
We're trying to empower all these women. You know, I
love the idea when we heard about it so many

(19:15):
you know, we just had a baby last year, so
where congratulations, remember, thank you so much my baby. She's
like hearingson chay. So maybe I'm you know, getting it wrong,
but that the feeling that would felt when we had
her was so supportive and so much love from all
of our peers and some members and our friends that
I felt wrong. And you know, when she brought it

(19:36):
to me, was like, yes, this is exactly what we
need to do. So we're going to make sure that, yes,
they get the things that they need as far as
diapers and you know, all the material things. But also
we want to have a live performance. We'll have a
singer there. Her name is Eiriss, amazing singer, calling my
little sister. She has an amazing voice. We're going to
have a comedy up there. We're going to have a comedian.

(19:58):
I felt like laughing. It's very yes, you know, especially
you know what the road ahead for you guys, because
it's never easy task having a baby, so I'll see
it firsthand. And and they tripped me out. But yeah,
we're just you guys already. It's funny, Tim, because I
told myself that I wasn't wonder you know, I don't know.

(20:19):
I'm not trying to get to too logo on here,
but I fell gonna look and if you know, you
know a lot of my friends were said to come
of them passed out and I did it, and I
was okay.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
Good for you, look at you, thank.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
You, and that made you want to have a baby shower,
community baby shower for others because you saw what it
took to bring that child into the world.

Speaker 6 (20:40):
Well it took exactly.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
Can you tell?

Speaker 6 (20:42):
Almost people signed up? Fourteen resource Lendos games prizes, anything
you can.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Name it beautiful, Give us the website information and the
location and time one more time.

Speaker 6 (20:54):
Yes, So it's set ministry dot org. Uh set stands
for serving or said in serving communities and power mindset
transforming lives. So s the date ettet dot org. Yeah,
Set ministries, I'm sorry, setmanistries dot org beautiful and then
go ahead to do good information. The date is eight

(21:17):
twenty four, which is this Sunday, from one to four pm.
The location is Magic Johnson Park, Magic Johnson Community Park Hall.
So once you go inside of Magic Johnson there's a
lake right there and there's also a community center. We'll
be right inside of that. We'll also have flags and
bends up as well, so you can find your way
to us. And that'll be from one to four this Sunday.

Speaker 5 (21:38):
And it's completely free, completely free, completely free.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Philip I wish you the utmost success with this beautiful event,
and I hope that you can make this an annual
event and you will with the support of the community,
because that's what you give to the community.

Speaker 6 (21:56):
Thank you so much, You're appreciate them.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
No problem so again, and this is set Ministry's founder
Philip Weathersby along with his wife Brittany Weathersby, and they
have a community baby shower this Sunday, Magic Johnson Park
located at one two six four or five Wadsworth Avenue
in the city of Los Angeles, nine zero zero five nine.
It's this Sunday, one pm to four pm. If you

(22:21):
know an expecting mother, you can take her to Magic
Johnson Park for this community baby Shower between one and
four and enjoy giveaways. Everything is free, guest speakers, parenting resources,
health resources, refreshment's treats, connections with other expecting moms, games, raffles, entertainment,
and a guest speaker. And you'll meet Philip and Britney

(22:43):
as well, and they are wonderful human beings. Philip, you
are welcome back anytime to KFI.

Speaker 6 (22:50):
Thank you so much too. If you guys have a
bust night.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
Up there, you do the same. Tiffany Hobbs here for
one more segment. On the other side, We're going to
finish out the show with a new show that's in
development and I hate it allready, and I'll tell you
what that show is.

Speaker 7 (23:04):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Tiffany Hobbs here filling in for Mo Kelly all night,
and we have one final segment. A quick programming note,
Chris Merrill will be in for Mo on Monday, so
make sure you stay tuned for that. It is the
vacation season. Kind of late in the season, but vacation season. Nevertheless.

(23:30):
I'll be here Sunday from two to four and I'll
make sure I talk to you that I'm preempted Tomorrow.
Saturdays with Tiffany will not be on tomorrow because of
the Chargers and they better win when they take over
for us.

Speaker 3 (23:45):
But it is what it is. I won't be here tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
I'll be back next Saturday for my regularly scheduled broadcast. Mark.

Speaker 8 (23:53):
Yes, Tiffany, Mark, how are you? I'm okay? And you
did a great job tonight.

Speaker 3 (24:00):
Thank you, so do you but you always do.

Speaker 8 (24:02):
Oh thank you.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
That's you know, the pizza health you got some.

Speaker 8 (24:07):
I protested, but eventually I realized that I couldn't insult
you by not eating.

Speaker 2 (24:12):
Too brute good. I'm glad you had pizza and we
got that settled. So let it go on the record
that I did provide if any of you out there
in the audience here any kind of rumbling, that's literally
my stomach, because all of a sudden, I got really
really hungry at like nine fifty one, and it has
not stopped. So I'm like just going through it over here.

(24:35):
We're going to say there's still some left in here.
I don't want pizza. I had pizza for lunch. How
about that at Thin Crust Pizza people had it. I
had a couple of pieces, And you know, pizza is
not the best decision for me at this part in
my life.

Speaker 3 (24:50):
It doesn't want to stay in.

Speaker 8 (24:53):
Would you like my super powerful health concoction that I
brought today?

Speaker 3 (24:59):
What's it?

Speaker 8 (25:00):
Chicken bone broth, fresh lemon juice, and ginger It.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Sounds like a direct no stop, no pass, go, no
collect two hundred dollars trip to the bathroom.

Speaker 8 (25:10):
It doesn't make you poop, Just relax, it's an anti inflammatory.
It'll make you live forever.

Speaker 3 (25:15):
Are you're saying that I'm inflamed.

Speaker 8 (25:16):
I don't know if you noticed this, but I'm really
like eighty years old.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
You looked at like a couple of months ago and
then now, I'm just kidding. You never look a day
over like forty seven. Okay, all right, you look good
and your hair is growing back.

Speaker 8 (25:30):
Was there something wrong with it?

Speaker 4 (25:31):
Was it?

Speaker 3 (25:32):
No, you cut it.

Speaker 8 (25:34):
Let's move on. There's nothing going on with my head.
It's the same head, the same hair.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
It looks good.

Speaker 8 (25:41):
I'm looking like sideshow Bob, and it's time to find
a bar see. I don't know if this happens to you,
because I don't know if you noticed this, but our
hair is slightly different, barely. But when you break up
with your barber, hard to find another one.

Speaker 3 (25:53):
Told you to find a black barber. They'll get you right.

Speaker 2 (25:56):
Every time I think I need a fade, I think
you need a fade. Ask them for an the point
of the picture and say you want that.

Speaker 8 (26:02):
Give me an undercut, please.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
Please please die the bottom of your undercut like pink
or something.

Speaker 8 (26:08):
That's going to be a great look for a newsman.

Speaker 3 (26:10):
Shake it up.

Speaker 8 (26:11):
It's radio. I think Peter Jennings had that ton.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
Before we go.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
Speaking of television, there's a new series in the works
that CBS.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
I hate it.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
I am vehemently opposed to it. It's a comedy series
set in out to Dina in the aftermath of the
ou To Dina wildfire, and it's in the works from producer,
writer Kenya Barris, and actor Mike Epps now. According to Deadline,

(26:43):
Kenya Barris, the writer and producer of this upcoming show,
has written and is currently untitled. It's a multi camera
comedy series about two brothers living through the wildfire that
raged and ravaged through out to Dina. The series is
kind of like an odd couple situation in the sense
that the characters, these two brothers, end up living together

(27:06):
despite their differences. And the differences is that one brother
wants to sell the house or the property rather burned
out property in Altadena, and the other brother wants to
keep the property or fix it up, and they're forced
to then live together and control their differences their oppositions.

Speaker 8 (27:27):
And the title is.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
There's no title, but it's a comedy. And I don't
know who greenlit this or why but it is in
horrible taste.

Speaker 8 (27:36):
Oh yeah, it'll be especially horrible if the titles something
like burned out.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
Can you imagine this is That's exactly the way they
would go.

Speaker 3 (27:43):
Oh my god, the shock value too. It's been eight months.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
It's the fact that it's not just being discussed, this
is already in the works at c B S. So
I'm not happy about it. Don't have a lot more
to say about it. Not a lot is a lot
has been released. But I do know that there have
been community conversations on social media where they are lambasting
this idea. They're saying that they're going to many members

(28:10):
of the community of Altadena, the City of Altadena, saying
that they're going to do whatever they can to try
and get this blocked, that this shouldn't happen. But the
fact that it is, the fact that it has already
been given the green light to proceed, is just horribly
tone deaf.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
It's just or are you going to say, Mark.

Speaker 8 (28:30):
Well, I think blocking it's going to be a moot
point because I don't see a whole lot of people
watching it. I mean, if humor is tragedy plus time,
we need more time.

Speaker 3 (28:38):
We need more time.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
Eight months does not a good comedy in this case
tragic comedy make but we'll see. Thanks for hanging out.
It's been wonderful. You'll be able to Robin, where will
this show live? With me on it on the regular
Mo Kelly page. This will be up when when.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
Much ten fifteen minutes after Okay.

Speaker 2 (29:03):
So at about ten fifteen, ten thirty you can catch
this show. Listen to it while you're on the treadmill.
That's what I do. Interviews with everyone we spoke to,
Philip Weathers, be Grace Cono Wells, John Brown, wonderful, Thanks
for listening. Remember Chris Merrills in on Monday. Mark, We'll
be here on Monday, and Mo will be back sometime

(29:25):
in the near future after September first.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
You've been listening, so later with Mo Kelly. You can
always hear us live on KFI AM six forty seven
pm to ten pm every Monday through Friday, and anytime
on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Later, with Mo'Kelly News

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