Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
It's Later with mo Kelly. Time to talk Free Movies
with Chris Woolsey of Visio TV, Visio Home of the
Visio Watch Free Plus app.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
KFI Later with Mo Kelly Live everywhere in the iHeartRadio
app and YouTube. It is still Burger King Knight. My
crown had fallen off last segment. Now it's correctly a
top my gnome. Chris Woolsey, Visio TV Watch Free Plus App.
Good to see you, Good to see you with your crown.
Thank you only appropriate. Yes, it is I am the King,
(00:44):
that it's going to be the King. Amen and amen.
Count the money, Count the money. Do monae? Do monae?
Only real Cinophiles know where that's from, Chris? What you
got for us? As we get closer and close here
to October and with that Halloween.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
So we've got a ton of terror titles this month
on video Watch Free plus some of my favorite movies
in that genre of all time, of all time.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
That's a long list of all time.
Speaker 4 (01:16):
It is it is because and I have two of
them on this list tonight. How to talk about one
I've got a hot take twenty sixteen, Trained to busson
best zombie movie ever made?
Speaker 3 (01:30):
Mark? Would you agree or disagree best zombie movie ever made?
Speaker 5 (01:34):
No, it's not the best in my opinion, but it's
really good and it really moves at just as a
breakneck pace.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
It's it's tense, it cooks. When I went to Korea
this last summer and I was on the train, on
the train to Bustan, it made me think of the movie,
and it's like, yeah, I'm on the train too. Did
you did you like nudge people and go sure? Did
you know? No? I did? Yeah. It's like it's like
we're on our way. This is where are we going?
This is a train of what?
Speaker 4 (02:00):
Yes, exactly exactly. It is a phenomenal film. It is
the sixth highest grossing Korean film of all time.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
That is how popular. I didn't know that.
Speaker 5 (02:12):
Yes, it's definitely one of those movies where you think
I've really had enough zombie garbage.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
It's all slop.
Speaker 5 (02:19):
I've had X number of seasons of The Walking Dead
and then you see that one. It's just like, whoa,
why didn't anybody try that before?
Speaker 3 (02:25):
Yeah? Totally.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
And what I love about this movie and It's the
same thing I loved about like Godzilla minus one, is
it has this incredible human storyline that is fantastic without
anything else, and then they layer the zombies over the
top of it and it just ratchets up the drama.
Speaker 3 (02:45):
I love this movie. I think it's one of the
best one that I like almost as much. And I'm
quite sure that MARKO get mad at me and disagree
with me. But traina Busan for me is far as
to drama and density was very reminiscent of World War ZE.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
Sure, I'm not sure about Mark's take on that. I
loved the book. The movie I thought had moments that
were great, the set pieces of Jerusalem, the zombie invasion
there I thought was great. There was a lot. But
what I love about Training to Busan is every single
(03:26):
character had an arc and a journey. Like there were
no like just pat characters that they just wedged in
there because they had to. Everybody was fully fleshed out
and had a complete experience throughout the film.
Speaker 3 (03:39):
It even gets a little emotional, it does. Yeah, I
will agree there because you care more about the characters
along the way. They're not nameless faceless as opposed to
many of these zombie movies like, oh yeah, someone else
got turned Oh yeah, too bad for them. You can't
care about everyone because there are too many people to
care about.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
Totally, No, I love it. What else you got? All right,
so we've got the foreign film zombie. I'm going to
throw in just a good old American slasher horror franchise,
and that is you know, we had Freddy, we had Jason,
we had fill in the blank. Well, now we have
(04:21):
Art the Clown. So this is the Terrifier franchise. Terrifier
one and two. I think we can all agree that
clowns on their best day are terrifying. This is a
clown on his worst day.
Speaker 3 (04:36):
I think this is underappreciated in the annals of slasher movies.
I think the Terrifier series is just as is, doesn't
get its due. Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
One review that I particularly liked said Art the Clown
makes Penny Wise look like crusty, which I thought was hilarious.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
That is a bold stay. That's a very bold statement. Okay,
p He's in the Hall of Fame. It's true, it's true.
But Art is terrifying. This is a really, really scary franchise.
Give me one more before we go to break. Okay,
so we talked about zombies.
Speaker 5 (05:13):
Yep.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
I think I would be doing the audience a disservice
if at watch the Crown, if we did not talk
about the one that started at all. Nineteen sixty eight,
George Romero classic Night of a Living Dead?
Speaker 3 (05:28):
What say you, Mark Ronner? It changed my life.
Speaker 5 (05:31):
And I'm not exaggerating when I say that I made
my own zombie comic in two thousand and nine, and
we'd have none of that without Night of the Living Dead.
It's a masterpiece. It's fantastic. It is spectacular, and I was,
as I always do, I was looking up a little research.
I did not realize the lead, Dwayne Jones, was the
(05:52):
first black leading male in a feature film where the
protagonist did not have to be a black man, and
Romero insisted that he didn't care about that and just
cast him because of his acting.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
He was just a spectacular actor and he is way
ahead of his time. Yeah, way ahead of his time
for sure. An amazing film.
Speaker 4 (06:13):
So if you have not seen this movie, do yourself
a favor and watch it.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
It is terrifying. It is so well done.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
I think it has a lot to say about modern society,
it's great.
Speaker 3 (06:24):
I would go one step further and say, if you
appreciate the impact of cinema on life, you know, not
necessarily art imitating life, but art influencing life. Neither of
the Living Dead is just one of those movies you
have to see because so much cinema came from it,
either directly or indirectly influenced because of it, what have you.
(06:46):
It's just one of those movies, like then you can
go back and see, oh, I can see how this
horror series took something from that or is influenced by it.
It's just one of those movies you just have to see,
like Psycho and others, but specifically within a horror genre,
Living Dead you just have to see.
Speaker 5 (07:01):
It's still shocking. It's hard to remember at this point
when we've had Resident Evil and a million other zombie movies.
How transgressive and shocking that was in nineteen sixty eight. Absolutely,
and it was made for just over one hundred thousand dollars. Yeah,
these guys all worked for mister Rogers and they got
together on weekends and borrowed their relatives cars and stuff.
An amazing accomplishment, and it brought in thirty five million,
(07:24):
like in sixty eight dollars, but they didn't get paid
for any of that because somebody screwed up the paperwork
on the copyright is correct, nobody got any money from
that movie.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
Wait then who got the studio? Public domator?
Speaker 4 (07:36):
Did the distributor got a ton? And then yeah, there
were no residuals that ever got paid out?
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Did not know that? Yeah, did not know that. Chris
Woolsey coming through. When we come back, we'll have more
with Chris Wolvesey as we talk about the VISYLTV Watch
free plus app. We have all these wonderful selections for free.
But when we come back, we want to talk about
some of the free action flicks available this month. As
we get and closer to Halloween. It's Later with mo Kelly.
(08:02):
We're live on YouTube and the iHeartRadio app KFI AM
six forty. Yes, it's burger king time still.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (08:21):
KFI mister mo Kelly, It's Later with mo Kelly live
on YouTube and the iHeartRadio app. And if you're tuned
into our YouTube video Simulcash, you might notice that I
and Sam the Sex Doctor we're wearing burger King crowns,
and so is Twila Sharp, but he's out working on
the podcast so you can't see him at the moment.
It's because Nick Polio Keinni, in his infinite wisdom, was
(08:44):
kind enough to bring in some burger King. He's going
to tell us all about it in the nine o'clock hour.
But that's why we're wearing burger King crowns. We're happy
to do so we appreciate the food and all the
fun that comes along with it. Right now we're speak
with Chris Woolsey of Visio TV. We're talking about the
Watch Free Plus app where you can get all these
(09:05):
great movies for free each and every month. Now we're
talking Chris about the free action flicks on video Watch
Free Plus app. What you got for us, We've got
a bunch of very.
Speaker 4 (09:18):
Cool Okay, So this movie is it's sort of okay.
So this is the twenty twelve Wrath of the Titans,
not to be confused with the nineteen eighty one classic.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
Clash of the Titans. Right with was it Harry Hamlin.
Speaker 4 (09:35):
Yes it was, yes with I think it was the
Mark Rono will probably know, but I believe it was
the last movie that Ray Harryhausen did, who was in
charge of all those stop motion animation on it, and
he did the original King Kong.
Speaker 5 (09:49):
Wasn't Olivier in that as well as I Blues, I
believe I think you was, which is somehow hilarious.
Speaker 3 (09:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (09:55):
Yeah, stunt casting at its finest. But this is really
really a fun movie. Perseus enters Hades to rescue his
father Zeus, who's kidnapped by his son Ari's and his
brother Hades. Sam Worthington plays Perseus.
Speaker 3 (10:12):
If I could jump in there, yep. This cast in
an Oscar sense is almost legendary.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
Yeah, you think given the material, you can almost laugh
and say it's little bit beneath them. But you're talking
about Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson, Ralph Fines, Rosamund Pike. There
are some real heavy hitters in this movie. Absolutely, yeah,
Dandy Houston. I mean, you know, list goes on and
on and it's super fun.
Speaker 4 (10:37):
Like I don't know how well it did in the
box office, but it's very fun. It's hard living up
to Clash the Titans, which is like one of the
greatest fantasy films of all time.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
So I think, so, Mark, would you agree with that.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
It's been forever since I've seen it, but I'm looking
it up on IMDb right now and I kind of
want to watch it again.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
I watch it about every two three years. I've managed
to find it on TV somewhere or something will trigger
my memory and I go watch it. So I was
I was torn when they remade it.
Speaker 5 (11:07):
Yes, but I mean I love the old Harry Housen
stop motion animation, and for some reason, even though it
is obviously puppeteering, it just seems more real to me
than the CGI.
Speaker 4 (11:17):
Agreed. Yeah, he was a genius. And yeah this this
also has the great line release the crack. Yes, yes,
so it's fun just to see Liam Neeson do that.
But yeah, so we've got that for action. This is
This is another one that you know, it's it's hard
to remake the classics, but this is twenty ten the
(11:42):
A Team. This is the movie version, written and directed
by a friend of the show, Joe Carnahan.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
That's true.
Speaker 4 (11:50):
Yeah, and you know it's again it's oh, maybe the
best theme TV theme song of all time.
Speaker 3 (12:03):
I don't know about the best because there are a
lot which come to mind, But I would say it's
one of the better film adaptations of the TV show.
Speaker 4 (12:11):
Yes, yeah, absolutely, it's super fun. And again, Liam Neeson,
we're going very Nissan heavy this week.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
You know, Twalla's gonna hurt you for that, right, is
that right? Oh yeah, ask him after the segments over why.
Speaker 4 (12:23):
Okay, he's got strong feelings strong Okay.
Speaker 3 (12:28):
I will definitely have to hit him up for that.
Speaker 4 (12:30):
But Bratley Cooper, Patrick Wilson, Jessica Biels, Rampage Jackson, there
you yep, yep.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
And I think they did a great job. I think
so too. I think it was true to the spirit
of the TV show. George Papard, mister t and all
them yep, yep.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
Ten thousand bullets fired and how many deaths zero?
Speaker 3 (12:52):
That's right, zero, always ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
But and then another adaptation we have two thousand and
eight Max Pain.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
I thought this movie was underrated.
Speaker 4 (13:06):
I thought the exact same thing when I rewatched it
getting ready for this, I was like, this is.
Speaker 3 (13:11):
Actually really good. Yeah, yeah, I think it was not.
I don't know if it wasn't promoted correctly. You know, Look,
it's a game that turned into a movie, right, sure, Okay,
And obviously if you look at the history, not a
lot of those movies are successful when they're adapted adapted
from games. Maybe with exceptional Resident Evil. I can't think
(13:31):
of all too many. Final Fantasy failed, Doom failed, just
about most of the movie adaptations of games. I don't
know what they would consider f one a game adaptation. Sure,
I mean Larcroft, Lara Croft, but you can name them
on one hand. Absolutely what you're saying with Max Pain, No.
Speaker 4 (13:50):
It's fantastic and great cast, Mark Wahlberg, Milacunis, bow Bridges, Ludacris,
Chris O'Donnell, very fun and it feels it has a
look and feel like the Crow it does, and it
has a very similar raw.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 4 (14:08):
It's that kind of like comic book turned up to
eleven and it's a very similar storyline.
Speaker 3 (14:15):
Mark Wahlberg's wife.
Speaker 4 (14:16):
And child get killed, and so he decides he's going
to take on the entire underworld and kill pretty much everyone.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
What do you like most about discovering these titles? Going
back and finding these titles and then rewatching them, because
I will text back and forth with Mark Ronner, especially
like over the weekend, we will find a movie that
we're talking about and want to go back and rewatch
and it just Yes, the nostalgia is great, but you
also get to reappreciate the genius of some of these
(14:48):
movies which did not have necessarily the CGI that we
do now, didn't have all the tips and tricks that
they bathe movies in, and movies had to more stand
on their own, on their own two feet on the
you know. And there are a lot of gyms where
you look like they don't put that much energy in
the movies anymore. It seems like it doesn't it.
Speaker 4 (15:10):
Yeah, And to your point, the practical effects that are
in some of these films that's it, Yeah, are just
incredible and the work when you look at it, if
you go and like read up or listen to a
podcast on the making of a movie like the Thing,
it's bonkers the amount of engineering they had to invent
things for the movie that didn't exist before just so
(15:34):
they could do these crazy effects because computer graphics didn't exist.
And so it's it's really just like a marvel of
engineering and the communal.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
And that mom still holds up since you mentioned the Thing. Absolutely,
it's so good. It's my son's favorite movie. Mark, correct
me if I'm wrong. Didn't it do poorly at the box? Off?
It did?
Speaker 5 (15:54):
We were not ready for it, we didn't deserve it.
A lot of Carpenter's movies bombed or didn't do that
well when they came out, and then they were recognized
later on as the masterpieces they are. I've seen the
Thing more times than almost anything except maybe The Road Warrior.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
It's so brilliant. It's great cash too. He's about Kurt
Russell Britling.
Speaker 4 (16:15):
He looked at fifty five in all of his movies.
He came out of the womb with like crows feet. Yeah, amazing,
real quickly, What did you think of the prequel to
the Thing?
Speaker 3 (16:27):
I did not see it? Good.
Speaker 4 (16:28):
I gotta be honest. I miss I've heard you missed.
I miss nothing. Yes, not a damn thing.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
But before we close up, let's remind everyone about the
Visio Watch Free Plus app. Where to get it, how
to get it, how is it? How much does it cost?
That kind of stuff? Perfect?
Speaker 4 (16:47):
So, if you have a video TV, you just turn
it on on your homepage. You go down to the
watch tree Plus icon, click on that. It'll take you
right into the environment. There's tens of thousands of free
movies and TV. You never have to pay for anything,
with new arrivals coming every week.
Speaker 3 (17:05):
Tens of thousands of free Absolutely, I don't know if
you can beat that with the bats.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
And if you don't have a Visio TV, do not despair.
All you do is download the free Visio app from
your favorite mobile app store, create a free video account,
click on live TV and it'll take you to an
area with over three hundred free streaming channels. Again, with
tens of thousands. There's really no downside to this. It
doesn't cost you anything. All you have to do is
(17:33):
just go get it.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
That's it so easy. And if you like me, you
already have a Visio TV. You already have it. There
you go. You got to do nothing. Chris Woolsey. When
you leave, make sure you talk to Tula. Ask him
about Liam Neeson and ask him from about ten feet away.
I don't want you to get caught with a left
upper cut or anything. Oh, I am so excited about this.
(17:55):
Oh you don't know. Oh he has strong feelings about Liam.
Speaker 4 (18:00):
All right, I'll I'll hear his Liam, and I'll raise
him a.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
Mark Wahlberg, Oh, you have a Mark wallwork story. I might.
I don't know. We got to get Joe Carnahan back
on the show. You do, Let's get the band back
together Againah? Yeah, yeah, he's been working on since. We
interact back and forth on social media, but I have
to say, like, hey, come on the show. Yeah, let's
do it. Sack State, come on. Always good to see Chris.
Always good to be a selu we gont to talk
(18:26):
about KFC as a hell a food motif going on
tonight KFC and maybe the descendant would be descendant of
Colonel Sanders allegedly supposedly that's next. KFI AM six forty
We Live Everywhere, the Heart radio app and YouTube.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
You're listening to later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (18:47):
Kelly six Live Everywhere on YouTube and the iHeartRadio app.
Even though it is Burger King Knight, we can talk
about some other folks. Growing up. I didn't get to
eat Kentucky Fried Chicken all that often. I don't know
if my mom didn't like it, because she usually made
(19:09):
those decisions. It was more of a McDonald's house. But
I liked KFC on the rare occasion in which I
would get it. The taste was just something special. We
had a pioneered chicken buy our house was not as good.
We had a church's chicken not far from our house
and where we went to church. As a matter of fact, Nope,
unintended was not as good. I always preferred KFC. And
(19:33):
then you get older and you get to make your
own decisions, like, well, I'm gonna go ahead and buy
myself some KFC. And I was always an original recipe, dude,
I never liked extra crispy. The reason I'm talking about
this is because the recipe is the issue. And there's
this guy he goes by real Colonel Sanders on social media,
(19:59):
who claims to be the great great great nephew of
Colonel Sanders, and he is upset with the KFC corporation.
Forget this, KFC allegedly has been spending the last decade
sexualizing Colonel Sanders in its marketing campaigns. That miss something.
(20:23):
I don't remember Colonel Sanders being sexualized in any way.
What did I miss?
Speaker 6 (20:30):
I remember like they had what's his face? In wrestling,
they had sewn Michaels dress up. I think as him
and go out with the big muscles and everything. They
had different people portraying him, so I don't know. Maybe
they had a porn stars.
Speaker 3 (20:42):
Yeah don't. I don't remember any women in the commercials
with him. I look, if someone can like point me
to one, sure, But I'm just saying Colonel Sanders is
just about as unsexual as you can get.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
Well that said, I think Ron Jeremy would be a natural.
I mean, I don't believe he's at liberty to do
such a thing at the moment.
Speaker 3 (21:11):
I don't think Ron Jeremy's gonna be doing much about
anything for the rest of eternity. A younger n oh, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah,
well yeah, so this great great great nephew would be.
Nephew says that he's mad at the KFC Corporation for
sexualizing his uncle, and he's reached out to KFC over
a number of occasions talking about the things that they
(21:34):
think is wrong. He thinks is wrong with the company,
it's marketing practices, and so in response, KFC blocked him
on social media, or at least the intern working the account.
Since he was blocked, the nephew he then sought revenge
and released what he claims, is the recipe for the
(21:56):
original recipe. I don't know how you could, but he
listed all the ingredients, y eleven herbs and spices. Now,
have you ever tried to cook any of the stuff.
I remember there was a time where someone released a
recipe for missus Field's cookies, and this is not the
first time that someone allegedly had released the recipe for KFC.
(22:18):
So I wonder is anyone actually tried to cook it
and make it taste anything like the actual food?
Speaker 5 (22:24):
I haven't, but are you going to divulge the ingredients
right now? Can I do it without getting in trouble?
I was wondering, Well, it's not like the Manhattan Project.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
It's chicken. That's true. That's true. I'm trying to think.
Let me see where I can find it in the story. Uh,
you can't seem to find it. You know.
Speaker 6 (22:44):
I just spotted something because I'm silly, and I googled
sexy Colonel Sanders. Oh no, hell, and I found Chippendale
KFC Colonel Sanders.
Speaker 3 (22:58):
Is it like someone who's doing a parody.
Speaker 6 (23:01):
It's it's from KFC's site on YouTube.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
It's from KFC themselves. Oh play it please? Here. Oh
you want the sound the sound on this here? Yeah,
I want. They're all dressed up for Okay, I give
you play by playoffs. They all give to Daniel. He's
got it. Okay, this is I think, Oh wow, this
is that is some male striper music. This is intense.
(23:32):
And it's on a work computer.
Speaker 6 (23:34):
You're real, it's stay for It's on YouTube.
Speaker 3 (23:40):
It was a mother's day thing. Why is this great
great great nephew so worried about and uncle he never
met being sexualized? For all we knew. I mean, you know,
Colonel Sanders could have been a stone cold pimp. I mean,
he could have had plenty of women, don't I don't know?
You know? Oh, anyhow, here the here's the recipe according
(24:01):
to real Colonel Sanders. The eleven spices and ks chicken
are and I can't call it a recipe. These are
just the ingredients because we don't have the proportions or
the cooking method. The eleven spices and KFC chicken are sage, garlic, powder, cardamom,
I don't know what that is, cayenne, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, coriander, ginger,
(24:24):
white pepper, and black pepper. You know, without the proportions.
I don't know what that means. That doesn't mean much
of anything. No, you need a skilled professional with the secrets. Yeah,
I mean, and do you just throw it all in
the pan? I mean, do you throw it all in
the flour or whatever? And then on the chicken you
gotta tell us how to prepare it. But those are
the eleven herbs and spices. Yeah, I did not know
(24:46):
that there was like a chip Chippendale's Colonel Sanders. Should
we look at them differently? Now? It's confusing, isn't it.
Who was it Norm McDonald who was playing Colonel Sanders
for a while.
Speaker 5 (24:59):
I think they rotated so a lot of people at
a crackhead, I know it was a comedian.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
I think it was Norm McDonald McDonald KFC. Yes, it
was Norm McDonald's Colonel Sanders. And I thought that was
a good portion of their marketing campaign. I thought it
was funny. Oh. Now if you go to our YouTube channel,
you can see the magic Mike Colonel Sanders. Oh dear god,
(25:23):
so this is what he's mad about at mister mo
kelly on YouTube? Really really remember KFC not too long
ago said that they were going through like a complete
remodel of its locations to update it to remain current
and remain competitive.
Speaker 5 (25:41):
Well, they changed Kentucky Fried Chicken to just KFC because
they didn't want people to be using Kentucky that had
some sort of rural aspect to it that I think
didn't market well for them, So just KFC now.
Speaker 3 (25:54):
Well, I do wonder the enduring marketability of the Colonel
Sanders character. In the way you have Jack in the Box.
They have reinvented Jack a few times over its history.
Wendy's has reinvented Wendy or the mascot over time. McDonald's
(26:15):
it has moved away from Ronald McDonald for the most part.
I would think.
Speaker 5 (26:19):
Maybe after those Terrifyer movies came out, he's still around.
Speaker 3 (26:22):
The only one who needs to be updated, no disrespect,
because this is Burger King Knight is the Burger King.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
Well, we had the Burger King King with that giant
like head, yes, and they had him in video games.
They had him as one of your trainers in a
boxing game.
Speaker 3 (26:36):
He looked like a criminal. It was, he looked like
a pedophile.
Speaker 5 (26:39):
I thought the creepiness and awkwardness of the Burger King
commercials is kind of funny.
Speaker 3 (26:44):
No, and they were going for that because Burger the
King would from peer from behind corners and just kind
of stare at you with like a Jason Vorheys type stare.
Speaker 5 (26:54):
Yeah, but it's the head that they had the poor
actor where it's like the fast food equivalent of a
Michael Myers mask.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
That's that's what I'm saying, because he looked like a
serial killer and just kind of lurking there. It's like
watching you eat. It's very uncomfortable. But I guess it
worked for a time with Burger King. But KFC, they
have been struggling to keep up in this fast food
war with these other outlets which just have better marketing.
(27:23):
KFC has really struggled as far as their marketing is.
Their their their restaurants were physically out of date. Their
advertising was out of date. The food still tasted good.
I like KFC taste wise. I like the original recipe.
Here's a tip for you. Their chicken pot pies are
actually surprisingly good. They're very good, that's what I hear.
(27:44):
I've never had one. Yeah, I always get a chicken
pop pie from there. It's delicious. I usually get original
recipe when they when they had popcorn chicken. I get
popcorn chicken, definitely got to get biscuits, and the sides
very depending on the location and you are in the country,
Like you can always get the macaroni and cheese or
the mashed potatoes and gravy. But for a while, I
(28:07):
don't know if they still do. Just like down south
and East Coast you can get mean greens, they'd have
collared greens, and they just have different sides depending on
where you were in the country. I wish they did
call out here. Yeah, they did for a time. I
don't know if they still do. Mm hmm. They brought
that back, I would be right back there, Oh yeah, honestly. Yeah.
And there aren't that many locations. What's the nearest KFC
(28:28):
to us here?
Speaker 6 (28:30):
Uh, there's one in north on the border of Burbank
in North Hollywood on I think on Burbank.
Speaker 3 (28:36):
But that doesn't sound close. That sounds like like no,
it's four or five miles about ten minutes away. Okay,
all right, because you see a Popeyes everywhere, you just
don't see a KFC like that. There is a pop
two Popeyes closer to us. See, yeah, there's one of
them by that Vaughan's on pass yep, that one by
the Old Sardos and then the one by next to
(28:58):
the Routes on San Fernando. Yeah, yep, it's Later with
Mo Kelly I AM six forty live everywhere in the
iHeartRadio App. And I'll tell you about people me included,
who always listen to the same songs on repeat. Why
do we do that? We'll tell you why when we
come back.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
Mister Kelly, can if I YouTube iHeartRadio App. And you
know just from listening to the show or listening to me.
Music is very important in my life, always has been,
always will be. Part of why it's so important, and
I've said it before it and it's worth mentioning again.
I believe music is the closest thing we have to
(29:53):
a time machine. It'll take you back to wherever you
were when that song came out, and it will evoke
all the associated memories who you might have been dating
at the time, good feelings, bad feelings, but it will
take you right back there in a way that nothing
else in life will. And I've also noticed this is
just me. As I get older, I listen to less
(30:14):
new music. I just like the stuff that I've liked
for years, and I listened to it. And if there's
a song I haven't heard in years, and I may
hear it because they'll play it on the radio or SiriusXM.
I listen to yacht uh yacht rock radio all the time,
and I said, oh, I want to hear that. And
with serious XM, you can, you know, rewind and replay it,
and I'll do it, and I'll listen to it over
and over again. And then I came across this article
(30:37):
which talks about people who listen to the same songs
on repeat as they get older usually have these three reasons.
And this, according to research found it really fascinating because
it's kind of speaking about me. And I will listen
to a song over and over and over and over
and over again in my car and I have an
(30:58):
hour and a half drive, like into studio, and I
may listen to a song on a given day, maybe
ten or eleven times, singing, maybe singing different parts, whatever.
And this is what this study says. People who listen
to the same songs on repeat as they get older
usually have these three reasons. Number One, they're chasing nostalgia.
(31:20):
Check mark. That's accurate. It says. One of the biggest
reasons that people tend to listen to a more select
group of songs and go back to the ones they
knew in their youth as they get older is because
they want that feeling of nostalgia. I would agree that
it is accurate. And you probably wonder why nostalgia because
it's so comforting. It's something that we all naturally seek out,
(31:43):
especially as we get older. I would characterize it is
the songs which make me feel good from my youth
or my childhood, helps me connect with relatives who are
no longer with us. It helps me connect to the
innocent of my youth. I remember what I was feeling
or thinking, or who I had a crush on back then,
(32:05):
and those are really pleasant feelings to have, especially in
a world like today, the world that we have. So
the nostalgia check mark absolutely. Here's the second reason why
people will play the same song over and over on repeat.
Our taste in music becomes more refined as we get older.
(32:26):
I would agree with that the older we get, we
are more set in our ways. Music included for me,
I don't know if there's a better music decade than
maybe R and B's nineteen seventies. And I'm a kid
who basically grew up mostly in the eighties, But musically
(32:46):
I love all that seventies stuff. Late sixties less so,
but seventies that's where. That's the sweet spot of all
the great music. And as I get older, I don't
feel the need to discover new artists or new song,
new genre. I'm happy with the stuff that I already have.
Why because it makes me feel good and I don't
(33:06):
necessarily need to spend any time trying to figure out
Cardi B's latest song. I don't care. I don't care.
It might be great, But like put it this way,
I'm a creature of habit. This is my OCD. When
I go to a restaurant, I usually order the same
thing every single time. Why Because, just like music, I
know that it's going to evoke a certain feeling. I
(33:26):
know that I'm going to enjoy it. If I'm going
to go to Denny's, it's going to be a French Slam.
If I go to Cheesecake Factory, it'll be the Louisiana
chicken pasta period because there are no surprises, and I
know I'm going to get a certain level of enjoyment
for my money. And I believe music is the same way.
I'm gonna play the song because I know it's going
to make me feel good or it's gonna make me
(33:47):
remember some very pleasant memories. And thirdly, if you are
a person who finds themselves playing the same music over
and over on repeat as you get older, this third
reason is people like us not actively trying to discover
new music. Yeah, there it is, there it is. And
people ask me all the time, do you know about
so and so? Nope? Have you heard the latest vite? Nope?
(34:11):
I thought you liked Stevie Wonder. Have you heard his
latest album? Nope? All the oldest stuff is good. Have
you ever wondered why oldies stations do so well? It's
not nostalgia. It's the people who've grown up with that music,
who will cling to that music, who will forever appreciate
that music.
Speaker 6 (34:32):
There's a great documentary on the impact of music on
people with dementia. It's called Alive Inside. I highly recommend
from twenty fourteen.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Not to get too morbid, but I will say this
the day that my father passed. Actually, in the moments
leading up to his passing, he was mostly unresponsive until
until we started playing Ray Charles, and that for a
moment had him. I'm more aware of the people and
(35:03):
the surroundings because the music cut through. How much I
don't know, but I do know that it made a
difference because he was responding, He opened his eyes and
saw my sister. It's like there's definitely a connection. There
is something therapeutic about music which transcends a lot of
our understanding. So I get it. You know, when as
(35:25):
I get older, I'm not I'm less and less interested
in discovering new music. I've already found the best music
I think ever in my life, and that's good enough.
I don't need to experiment. I don't need to cheat
on the nineteen seventies.
Speaker 5 (35:38):
That's because you, like most intelligent people, know that Curtis
Mayfield Superfly is the greatest album ever made.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
I don't know if I can disagree with that. No, No,
it's really really up there there. I would say maybe
Stevie Wonders, I will say most of his stuff in
the nineteen seventies, I can't even say, Intervisions, Talking Book,
those are some great, great albums that. There's one from Earth,
Wind and Fire. I probably throw in there as well
(36:07):
where you can listen, excuse me, from top to bottom.
No skips. I don't know if there is such a
thing in today's world, no skips. I don't know if
even artists actually do albums. They do a song here,
a song there. Oh yeah, they'll put out an album,
but it's not great content top to bottom. And that's
just old man, get off my lawn. But I'm right.
(36:29):
This later with Mo Kelly
Speaker 1 (36:30):
Asy and kost HD two Los Angeles, Orange County more stimulating,