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 (00:29):
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 (00:41):
Kfis Later with mo Kelly. We're live on YouTube, Instagram
and the iHeartRadio app. Let's talk a little bit of
TV with a friend, Chris Woolsey, and you know him
as the Associate communications director for Visio. Chris is good
to see you. It's been a minute.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
It has been a minute, but it is great to
be back.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
You have this very cool app. I've been checking it out,
the Watch Free Plus app. It's not only cool, it's
a good simple user interface, but it also has this
great free content and we love free around here. Tell
me about how Tell me something I don't know about
(01:23):
the app.
Speaker 5 (01:25):
I think we might have talked about this, but the
coolest thing recently about the app is you don't have
to own a Visio TV in order to use the
Watch Free Plus aspect of the Visio app.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
And since I don't have to have a Visio TV,
that means I could probably watch on my phone as well.
Speaker 4 (01:45):
Right, exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:46):
You can watch on any mobile device anybody who owns
a video TV or doesn't own a video TV. You
just go to your favorite app store, download the free
Visio app. Uh huh, create a free account, click on
watch free Plus, and you can hit over three hundred
free streaming channels with tens of thousands of free movies.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
Three hundred free streaming channels, free streaming channels, hundreds hundreds.
Speaker 4 (02:16):
And that is the proper response.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
You have some free action flicks for May. We're getting
ready to leave May, so it was not too late.
What do you have for us?
Speaker 5 (02:25):
We've got some really fun titles this one and I
never actually saw when it was in the theaters. I
was introduced to the star of this film in Saving
Private Ryan, and that is Vin Diesel in Triple X.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Wait, that's the first time you saw Vin Diesel.
Speaker 4 (02:46):
I did. I was late to the party.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
Okay, Mark, we have to get Chris Woolsey on the
movie Pitch Black. You know, that's really the only Vin
Diesel movie. I really like. It's the best. Actually, Ben
Diesel will be I think it might have been the
one which introduced him to i'll say moviegoer, so not
to derail you. But if you want to check out
(03:09):
a vintage Vin Diesel movie, check out Pitch Black.
Speaker 4 (03:12):
Pitch Black was kind of a sci fi Oh no,
not kind of.
Speaker 3 (03:15):
It's all the way side by aliens and everything.
Speaker 4 (03:18):
I have not seen it. I will go watch it
this week.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
It would be like an alien movie, alien companion piece.
If you saw alien pop up in the Pitch Black series,
you say, yeah, that tracks. It's respectable.
Speaker 6 (03:30):
And if you like me, find him kind of laughable
in the Fast and Furious movies like a self caricature. Yes,
he's exceptionally cool in Pitch Black. Yeah, he's understated. He's
not over the top. Now, the subsequent Rittick movies not
so much.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
But in this one.
Speaker 6 (03:42):
Yeah, the Riddick movies were just overblown and ridiculous and
somebody threw too much money at him.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
Pitch Black is a great little sci fi action horror film.
Speaker 4 (03:50):
Okay, awesome.
Speaker 5 (03:50):
Well we have Triple X two thousand and two, Vin Diesel,
Aja Argento, who's this beautiful Italian actress Morton, who's in
the amazing Spider Man really great the stunts. You watch
this movie Triple X, and you are amazed that everyone
in the production of this film was not killed. Like
(04:12):
these stunts are just ridiculous, especially for its time. You know,
they are more practical effects than anything.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
Yep. Absolutely, Yeah.
Speaker 5 (04:22):
He plays like an extreme sports guy who's also a
like three time thief convict and the government hires him
to do all these like ridiculous over the top.
Speaker 3 (04:36):
It's like a forerunner to Fast and Furious.
Speaker 5 (04:39):
Yes, absolutely, directed by Rob Cohen, who's a great action director.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
Really good stuff. What else you got, Well, this is one.
Speaker 5 (04:47):
I think we've talked about this title at some point,
but this is one of my all time favorite action films,
and that is the two thousand and two Tony Scott
classic Man on Fire.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
That movie came out in two thousand and two.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
I know it feels more recent.
Speaker 6 (05:04):
Thing, Yeah, it doesn't feel twenty three years old. But
there's two versions of that though. There's the Denzel one
and the Scott Glenn one.
Speaker 5 (05:12):
This is the Denzel Okay, this is the og Yeah,
this is what Dakota Fanning is a little girl and.
Speaker 4 (05:18):
Yep, yep. Christopher Watkins in this yes.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
Yeah, and it's very violent.
Speaker 4 (05:23):
It's very there.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
A lot of people meet very bad ends in this film.
I mean all I can say is cigar lighter. That's
all I can say. Yes, if you haven't seen it,
go see Man on Fire with Denzel and I think
they were talking about that, maybe a sequel of some
(05:45):
sort because the ending is ambiguous enough. Well you don't
know how it turns out. Sure, and you could bring
back a grown up Dakota Fanning and pick up that
storyline somewhere along the way.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
Yeah, I think you could, and I think Denzel will
be down for it.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
They kind of reconnected, was it the Equalizer three?
Speaker 4 (06:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (06:03):
In the third one where he's an old man in
the Italian village, it felt kind of Man on Fire ish,
but not quite the same.
Speaker 6 (06:11):
Yeah, Okay, listen, you gotta see the Scott Glenn version.
If you watch the Denzel version.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
What year is that? Roughly? I don't remember the year,
but I just watched it not too long ago for
the first time because I'm a big Scott Glenn fan.
Speaker 6 (06:22):
Oh we know, we know you're a But they're the same.
They're the same movie with a different actor.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
Yeah, he's b.
Speaker 6 (06:31):
I need to rewatch the Denzel one because I haven't
seen it since it came out. But it's fun to
do stuff like that. Yeah, for sure, go watch it again.
It is so good. Tony Scott is just an incredible director.
Give me one more before we go to break.
Speaker 5 (06:44):
This is another one that was kind of like, I mean,
there was another movie or two before this, but really
this was the moment that Antonio Benderaz became a superstar.
And that is the Mask of Zoro nineteen ninety eight.
Catherine is at a job. Oh not the one with
George Hamilton. Yep, correct, Yes, yes it was. I'm sorry,
(07:10):
I just had to do that right. Anthony Hopkins is
in this. It's phenomenal. There was the Legend of Zorro,
which was the sequel, but I particularly loved this one.
I think it was They did a great job of,
I think, bringing to a modern audience a story that
could have felt very campy and silly.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
It could have been, I expected it to be. It
was not, which made it far more enjoyable for me.
Speaker 4 (07:38):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Maybe because it's coming after Zorro, the Gay Blade and
growing up. That was the only real cinematic context for
the character. Sure, so any other movie which comes afterwards, Okay,
this has got to be campy and it wasn't.
Speaker 5 (07:52):
No that it was like gritty and great and he
was hardcore and Anthony Hopkins was great in it.
Speaker 4 (07:58):
No, I thought it was fantastic.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Those are the free action flicks in May. We're almost
out of time in May for the Watch Free Plus app.
When we come back, we're going to talk about the
free blockbusters in June. And you have three big ones.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
Yes, I do. June is looking good.
Speaker 3 (08:14):
It's Later with mo Kelly. I'm joined in the studio
with Chris Woolsey of Visio TV, Associate communications director. We're
talking about the Watch Free Plus app, what's available for June.
We're live everywhere on YouTube. We're live on the iHeartRadio
app and Instagram.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
KFI is Later with mo Kelly Live everywhere on the
iHeartRadio app. We're talking movies with Chris Woolsey, who's the
associate director of communications for Visio TV. I mean, I'm sorry, Chris,
I was had food in my mouth because I was
eating these wonderful chocolate chip cookies. You know there are
other cookies in this box. They're from the Cookie Cafe,
(09:02):
and and you know I'd like to be a professional,
but I wasn't at that moment because I was eating
chocolate chip cookies during the break and anyone who knows
me knows I love some great chocolate chip cookies. So
I just had to throw that in their cookie caffes cookies. Yes,
they're right out, Yes they're right outside the studio. What
Mark Little just walked out of the news Go ahead, Well, okay,
(09:24):
we have these AI cameras which are following Mark out
of the studio so they can get cookies. It's a
little bit.
Speaker 5 (09:31):
Studio is emptying out. They are pouring into the hallway there.
That is exciting. They look amazing. I'm gonna the way out.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Wait because of the AI camera we have it followed Stephan.
Go to the YouTube channel right now because it followed
them into the hall where they're eating the cookie. I'm
being serious that we didn't make this happen. They just
left the studio and the camera automatically follows you thanks
to the A and you can see them eating these
cookies from the cookie cafe.
Speaker 4 (10:03):
That's crazy.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
This is unscripted, y'all.
Speaker 4 (10:06):
Unbelievable.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
But we were talking about June free blockbusters in June
four Visio TV's Watch Free Plus app, and I know
that you have some heavy hitters.
Speaker 4 (10:18):
I do, and I didn't even realize. I was just
looking at the titles.
Speaker 5 (10:21):
I just picked three movies that I really like, and
then I was looking at I was like, oh, there's
kind of a theme here, so it's kind of like
cops and criminals. So we have The first one is
the nineteen ninety five serial Killer Classic Classic seven Classic,
directed by David Fincher, and I think this was one
(10:43):
of the first movies that people were like, Wow, this
guy is a storyteller. He really knows what he's doing.
He knows how to run a camera, he knows how
to manage his actors.
Speaker 4 (10:53):
Like it's phenomenal.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
This movie was impactful to me on a number of levels.
There's a bit cool layer. You know, I'm not trying
to give away the movie if you haven't seen it.
There's a thriller, just enjoy a movie layer and it
has an ending, which is a typical of movies.
Speaker 5 (11:14):
Yes, yes, this was one of the first modern films.
Used to see these with movies like Psycho with you know,
the Alfred Hitchcock movies.
Speaker 4 (11:24):
And then I feel like we lost.
Speaker 5 (11:26):
It for a long time, and this was one of
the first movies where you literally finished the film and
you just sat in their seat because you didn't know
what else to do. Like it just it's such a
great ending.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Brad Pitt, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Spacey.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
Not a bad cast, No, Gwynep Paltrow.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
Gwennip Paltrow, I forgot.
Speaker 4 (11:46):
Yes, Yep, it's fantastic.
Speaker 3 (11:50):
What else you have?
Speaker 5 (11:52):
This one I missed until recently, and that is the
twenty ten Caper Film Takers.
Speaker 3 (11:59):
Oh yeah, Chris Brown, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:02):
Yeah, it's so good. The cast is phenomenal.
Speaker 5 (12:04):
Chris Brown, Hayden Kristensen, Matt Dillon, Idris Elba.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
Another hell of a cast.
Speaker 5 (12:10):
Yeah, Paul Walker, rest his soul. It is really good.
It's really well written. And I love movies like this
where you have you get the perspective of the criminals
and then you get the perspective of the guys who
are hunting.
Speaker 4 (12:26):
Down the criminals.
Speaker 5 (12:27):
It's kind of, you know, like like Point Break or
like those fun movies where you just kind of go
back and forth between these two people like, Okay, here's
what they're doing, Here's how the other guys trying to
stop them. They're gonna change it up and they're gonna
get like it's just it's great and the like we said,
the cast is fantastic.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
And it's free, right free. It's not like any type
of gimmick or trig.
Speaker 5 (12:49):
Nothing, no subscription. It is a subscription free, free process.
And like I said, there's tens of thousands of movies
on Watch Free Plus.
Speaker 3 (13:01):
Now I have to make sure that Mark Ronner downloads
this app because he is our resident expert on free
streaming products.
Speaker 6 (13:11):
Yeah, I'm surprised I don't have it already. I'm happy
to mix it in with my two B binges.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
Is he allowed to because he's probably under two be's contract. Yeah,
I know in a way that Twalla's on the contract
with way Moo. Mark is under contract with two B. Yes,
two of these for all my dental work.
Speaker 4 (13:29):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (13:30):
Just download the free video app, create a free account,
click on Watch Free Plus and boom, knock yourself out
endless entertainment.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
I know you have one more you can share with
us before you get out of here.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
I do, and this, this movie has a special place
in my heart for a couple of reasons. This is
the two thousand and six Cops and Robbers Classic Smoking
Aces and this was written and directed by Joe Carnahan,
who I went to college with.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
Wait, Joe Carnahan is a friend of the show. No, Yes,
he's been on the show. We talk on social media
all the time. I'm being absolutely serious.
Speaker 4 (14:04):
Oh my god.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
We were just talking about Tom Cruise for Oscar and
he weighed in on the debate on threads. Yes, well,
then tell him.
Speaker 6 (14:12):
I apologize when they came to do interviews for Smoking
Aces and I only wanted to interview Jeremy Piven but
not him.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
No, no, no, no, Joe kr I'm being very serious. He
is a friend of the show, okay, and we need
to reach out to him again to have him back
on the show. Well, it wasn't my fault, that's all
he should know. He's carnal Joe. It was the editors
who said just pick one. I had to, Okay.
Speaker 5 (14:35):
So he and I went to cal State Sacramento together
and my friend Jim was a friend of his, and
Jim had recommended me to be one of the leads
in his first movie that he was going to film
while I was at Sack State. Ended up getting delayed.
I moved down to La to become an actor. He
shot Blood, Guts, Bullets and Octane in Sacramento and half
(14:59):
of my seat her buddies were in that movie and
it was it was just fantastic, and then his star
it just rose.
Speaker 4 (15:06):
Ever since.
Speaker 3 (15:07):
We need to get this family back together, right, So
we need to get Joke in the studio. We need
to get Chris Woolsey in the studio. We need Mark
Runner to apologize for.
Speaker 5 (15:16):
Over It's long overdue, but again Stack cast Jeremy Piven,
Ryan Reynolds, Rayleota, Ben Affleck, Peter Berg before not then
director's biggest director, producer common Andy Garcia, Alicia Keys. It
is such a fun caper movie. Jeremy Piven plays this
(15:38):
like lowlife lounge singer who is going to turn state's
evidence against this mobster. And this mobster hires every hit
man in the world to come and kill him. And
it's very fun. And the other reason I'm connected to
it is my buddy Mike Falco, who I was an
acting class with in Los Angeles, plays an FBI investigator
(15:59):
in this movie as well. No relation to Edie, No odd.
They just gotta ask you have to. I would have
been disappointed if you didn't.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
Chris Woolsey, we love what you do. How can people
either find you on social media or find Visio TV
and what they're doing elsewhere?
Speaker 4 (16:15):
Look for us.
Speaker 5 (16:15):
We're on all the social media's for Visio Watch Free plus,
w F Plus or Watch Free Little Plus sign look
for us Video dot Com, slash watch free plus. We're
all over the place. But download that free Visio app.
(16:35):
It is gold.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
So I'll look for you in a couple of weeks.
I mean, hopefully there won't be another coincidence where like
their chocolate cookies in the studio mess up my intro.
Speaker 5 (16:45):
But you know I have the thing with chocolate chip cookies.
You know, I don't blame you as well. You should
as well you should.
Speaker 6 (16:50):
You're not gonna need to worry about the rest of
the cookies. And he saw to that right.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
Be sure you could tune in to the YouTube live time. Okay, y,
we have a brand new i'll say presentation because Daniel,
our technical director, has added these animations and transitions. It's
a beautiful, beautiful thing. So make sure you like and subscribe.
When you subscribe, it makes it very easy to find
the daily YouTube show. It is something spectacular, no exaggeration,
(17:18):
and you get to see our guests like Chris Woolsey
who joins us tonight.
Speaker 4 (17:22):
Absolutely love to be here. I'm counting the day until
I get to come.
Speaker 3 (17:26):
Back see you soon. It's Later with mo Kelly KFI
AM six forty Live everywhere including YouTube, Instagram, and the
iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six.
Speaker 3 (17:37):
Forty KFI mo Kelly Live everywhere on YouTube, Instagram, and
the iHeartRadio app, and please tune in to the YouTube show.
You get to see all the magic that Daniel, our
video technical director, is creating. As far as this video landscape,
(18:00):
it's not a different show from the radio show. It's
a different way for you to experience it. When I'm
telling you about how people are running out of the
studio to eat some cookies, you get to actually see it.
It's not theater of the mind, it's actual video theater
in front of you. Those cookies are dangerous. Oh they're
(18:21):
dangerous because they'll they'll make you eat everything in the box. Yeah.
Speaker 7 (18:24):
Quite possibly some of the best cookies I've ever had.
Shouts out again to the Cookie Cafe and the Cookie
Cafe they make breakfast burritos.
Speaker 3 (18:33):
Oh, hot pies, they do all types of goodies.
Speaker 7 (18:37):
So God bless you good cookie making angels.
Speaker 3 (18:41):
For making this happen. What's the website. The website is
Thecookie Dot Cafe. That's pretty cool. Yeah, we have TIChE
sweet crepes omelets. Oh, we got to have a brunch
over here. We gotta have a brunch to a live remote. Yeah.
That means that Stephan need to cook at the food
and bring it to us. That'll be your brunchy time.
(19:06):
Where's their nearest location or the.
Speaker 7 (19:10):
Three zero six five to one thousand Oaks Boulevard Unit
H and.
Speaker 3 (19:15):
Yeah, thousand Oaks. Okay, that means Stephan's gonna have to
drive a thousand Oaks woo. Yeah that's not close.
Speaker 7 (19:20):
That sounds like some uber eats that is all you. Yeah,
that's not exactly close, but it would be worth the drive.
Speaker 3 (19:30):
Very quickly. Short segment. We often talk about neuralink that
that's supposed to be that brain chip that Elon Musk
is creating where you can control technology just with your thoughts.
And I've always been skeptical because of the non demonstration
of the product. It's one thing if you're saying that
(19:51):
it can do this, it can do that. It's another
thing if you actually show us, look, demonstrate to us
that it actually works. But more time, not all we
get is this guy who had the neural linked implant
in his brain. Tell us about what it can do
or the range of motion or the capabilities that it
(20:12):
had from what I read, again read, because they won't
show us. This guy, Nolan Arbaugh couldn't be left alone
for thirty minutes now, he says. He says he can
play online chess and perform other daily tasks, despite becoming
paralyzed after a diving accident in twenty sixteen. He says
(20:35):
he can write an email by simply using thought. Oh
wait a minute, if we're talking to that guy, why
can't he just show us? Why can't Why are you
such a doubter? Quote? I just have cursor control, so
I'll go into my email, you know, click around. I
don't have any I don't have to say anything. It's
just I think, I think, I want to click, and
(20:56):
it clicks whatever I want. And then after that I
will use their dictation. Or I can use a virtual
keyboard on my computer screen to type out whatever I
want to say. Close quote. Yeah, can you just show
us is shown?
Speaker 6 (21:11):
Isn't this from the same guy whose rocket just failed
and whose cars.
Speaker 3 (21:15):
Keep getting recalled? Okay, okay, same guy. It's the same guy.
But I don't believe that Elon Musk actually builds the
cars or builds the rockets. He's not that type of engineer.
Oh so he's just a figurehead. Yeah, yeah, he's not
finding a starter. He gets he's the money man. He's
not Tony Stark.
Speaker 7 (21:32):
And this neuralink genius idea is it's we're seeing the
video here. He's literally neuralinking right now.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Would you do it? Touala? Would you get one? If
I was.
Speaker 7 (21:44):
Paraplegic, Yes, I want a neuralink plug my brain in.
Speaker 3 (21:49):
So you take a neuralink for a test drive while
in a way. Mo.
Speaker 7 (21:53):
You know what if I am paraplegic and I can
no longer drive and I want to, you know, get
myself somewhere. Yeah, I'm a way moo, but I'm gonna
I'm gonna have a way, MO, come my way by
way of neuralink. I'm gonna let the neuralink mind link
to my phone or whatever, my app straight to Waymo
come to me.
Speaker 3 (22:10):
Can we be clear. Elon Musk is not Thomas Edison.
He didn't invent anything, right, He's he's facilitating the growth
of these companies, which I think is admirable. He's had
tremendous success in growing companies. But that's different from being
I don't know, Steve Jobs, for example, You're not You're
(22:32):
not the creative driving force behind the technology in the
sense of coming up with the ideas and then developing
the ideas and the products which are associated with him.
Speaker 7 (22:44):
It's a big difference. No one is giving props to
Musky on this. No one has given him any props.
Speaker 3 (22:50):
No, but we refer to this, we say, you know,
this is neuralink Elon Musk company. Some people wrongly interpret
that is that he is the creative genius behind it,
other than you know, maybe hiring the people possibly.
Speaker 7 (23:02):
But these are also people who think he invented social
media with his purchase.
Speaker 3 (23:07):
Of no no no, no, no no. That was more like al Gore,
who invented the Internet. I'm so done with people.
Speaker 6 (23:14):
I just think it's reasonable if you get a neuralink
in your head to expect it to catch on fire.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
At some point, you have to assume that a lot
of people have to die for this thing to work.
Speaker 7 (23:23):
Now, all the monkeys already died. Remember we covered that. No,
I know that the monkeys. I said, I'm talking about
somebody is in people. No, all the monkeys died.
Speaker 3 (23:31):
That was enough.
Speaker 7 (23:32):
The monkey trials were enough to go on and put
it in this gentleman's head for him to be sitting
here tapping out whatever he wants just by thinking.
Speaker 3 (23:39):
I call bs Okay, I called it's a magic trick.
There's someone on the other side of the screen type
it on a keyboard. That's so cooled. Rook three, tonight seven.
Why are you trying to take this away from this man?
Speaker 4 (23:55):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
Look, I'm a conspiracy theorist. I'm not a believer. I
don't believe that he's using his thoughts to type on
a keyboard. I don't believe that. Why because you're telling
me there should be some way that you can demonstrate.
Speaker 7 (24:09):
We keep showing the video on YouTube of him bringing
up stuff with his mind. What more do you need proof? Look,
he's right now, this is him.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
Okay, if you tuned it into the YouTube, show he's
using his mind. Right, but right now they're showing the implantation.
It's a pan or teller in this because it's look
at the real No, look at that thing. That is amazing.
It's like a little chip in and look, this is real.
This is happening right now. No, it's a it's a
(24:39):
it's a predetermined string of moves on a video game
with the guy in the neurally he's not doing anything.
Speaker 6 (24:48):
It's a washer. They're putting a washer in the guy's skull.
This hate is unecessary.
Speaker 7 (24:54):
Neuralink is yet another step towards our future that is
helping these individuals to live a fully functioning life where
they can communicate, don't need any help type of somehow
You not to say, hey, send this message to Mo. No,
you can neural link that message to MO. Why can't
he do something?
Speaker 3 (25:09):
Use it like the clapper, like clap, clap his tongue
or something, click his tongue, turn on the lights or something.
Speaker 6 (25:15):
I want to see somebody behave in the clap clap clapper. No,
you're so wrong.
Speaker 3 (25:23):
That is wrong.
Speaker 4 (25:25):
It's not wrong.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
It's all about science and make it useful. Don't you
think that the world would benefit from a mouth clapper.
Mouth clapper, mouth clapper. You got to use your mouth.
Speaker 4 (25:37):
I can't use his hands.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
The clap, he's a paraplegic.
Speaker 6 (25:39):
Sink it with your internet. If use your neuralink to
start up the air fryer? What yeah, demonstrate something useful?
Why would I have a neuralink to play chess with
a computer. He's also sending out emails and stuff. He's
typing out messages. He's doing all types of things. He's
scanning the Internet looking stuff up. He's doing everything that
you and I do, so he can send us spam
(26:00):
from the neural inink. Now what a good science marches on?
Doesn't it spam from the neuralink?
Speaker 3 (26:05):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, honey, turn off the light? Has this
ever happened to you?
Speaker 8 (26:11):
Presenting the clapper lets your appliances turn on and off
just by clapping clap on the music.
Speaker 4 (26:19):
It's easy.
Speaker 8 (26:21):
Just plug the clapper into any household outlet. Then plug
in your LAMB, TV or stereo.
Speaker 3 (26:26):
Clap on, clap off. For places hard to reach, the
clapper makes it easy.
Speaker 8 (26:32):
Plus, the clapper comes with an extra feature to make
your home more secure. Turn to the away function and
your lights turn on at the first sound it heres.
Minutes later, they turn off and the clapper resets to
help protect your homes.
Speaker 3 (26:46):
Leave.
Speaker 8 (26:46):
Your appliance is plugged into the clapper and your lights
will go on, turning away on what a guests Clap on,
clap off the clapper.
Speaker 3 (26:56):
It's later with Mokelly care If I am sin is
forty live everywhere in the iHeartRadio app. Hey, don't laugh
at technology.
Speaker 4 (27:01):
I'm not.
Speaker 6 (27:01):
I'm just thinking instead of clapping this one. You gotta
throw a Nazi salute. Don't act like I'm the one
who did it. Mark Runner, he's on film.
Speaker 3 (27:11):
Camera on Mark Runner. He's on film, Mark Runner. Don't
blame the victim. I have that because I get the
hate mail. I get your hate mail. I get to
Walla's hate mail. They said that, Mark Runner. I want
you to tell I'm being serious. You need to tell
Mark Runner that you need to tell to Wala. No,
I don't pass on messages put out your social media.
Speaker 6 (27:35):
You're worried about mail from people defending a Nazi salute.
Speaker 3 (27:38):
No, I'm just saying I don't want to hear it
from them for something you said one way or the other.
Speaker 6 (27:44):
Tell them to go away, Mack Schnell, please I please,
I nine nine.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
What's German for news? I don't know?
Speaker 1 (28:05):
You're listening to Later with Mo Kelly on demand from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (28:13):
Kelly six Live everywhere on YouTube, Instagram, and the iHeartRadio app.
Some of my students from Songs of Keto West Los Angeles,
they competed in our Southern California have Keto Invitational tournament
(28:35):
this weekend. We have some photos up at my Instagram
and threads at mister mo Kelly and my m ok
E L L Y. I'll be uploading uploading more pictures
at videos when I get home late tonight. But it
was a great weekend. Long story short is as a
way to say thank you to our kids for all
the training and hard work that they had put in
prior to the tournament. We set aside some seats at
(28:58):
a Karate Kid Legend screening which started earlier tonight in
Century City, so not even for the adults, not for
the parents, just for the kids and students, so they're
enjoying that movie right now. And also Ralph Machell, the
star of the Karate Kid, also gave an update on
the Karate Kid musical adaptation, and you can tell Tuala
(29:22):
that Karate Kid is going the way of Back to
the Future where it's going to be, and even Harry
Potter for that matter. You have the musical, you have
TV iterations, you have all sorts of merchandise, and a
life decades beyond the original movie.
Speaker 7 (29:41):
Karate Kid is actually something that I can see living
on stage. It is made for a musical interpretation, absolutely
made for it.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
It has a strong musical soundtrack. Music is prominatly featured
in the original movie You're the Best Cruel Summer Banana Rama.
There are a lot of recognizable songs which translate very
easily to the stage in a musical form, just like
Back to the Future, back in Time, the Power of Love, right,
all those things that those elements are essential for what
(30:17):
would be a classic musical. And this is Ralph Baccio.
He says, the Karate Kid musical, which I have seen,
is in development, written by Robert Mark Kayman, who wrote
the original. I think it's you know, I think it
has to take that journey of workshopping. It's often Broadway
shows too, but we shall see. So they're gonna put
(30:37):
it on Broadway I'm down with it. I would love
to see it. And it's a simple enough story at
its foundation where it lends itself to a musical, it
makes it real simple.
Speaker 7 (30:48):
I can guarantee you with the bond that we have
with Broadway on Hollywood and The Pantagious, we will be
getting that show when it comes to LA I.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Can probably better because we need to give tickets away.
And the Creamy One on YouTube, that's his handle, the
creamy one. He says, don't forget Peter Satara. That's the
second movie. I Am a man who will fight for
your honor. That's the second movie. Wait, the creamy one's
a guy. I don't know. That's just the handle, just
(31:21):
a creamy. It is a creamy individual. Okay, was just
mark This individual's creamy. I'm quite sure he was choosing
between creamy and Smegma. I don't know one of the
Let's move on.
Speaker 7 (31:35):
If it is a woman who is the creamy one,
it takes a whole.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
I'm sorry I asked. He even has his own sign
off every time he leaves, stay Creamy all not stay Creamy.
Creamy visits the Motown Chat every show, So I'm appreciative
of the creamy one.
Speaker 6 (31:55):
I wish I hadn't asked you did? You brought that
on yourself? You want the cream?
Speaker 5 (31:59):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (31:59):
I do want any crew who love the cream? Negative
on the cream.
Speaker 3 (32:03):
K I am six forty YouTube, Instagram, We're live everywhere
the iHeartRadio.
Speaker 4 (32:06):
At perfect for achy indecisive minds.
Speaker 3 (32:09):
Kfis cooling info.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Jel quickly relieves ignorance and leaves a minty fresh scent.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
K f I and the k O S T E
HD two, Los Angeles, Orange County
Speaker 4 (32:22):
Live everywhere on the ear radio