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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
KFI AM six forty Bill Handle Here it is a Tuesday,
July twenty two. Hey, Tonight, the Dodgers take on the
Twins at Dodger Stadium, with the first pitch at seven.
Listen to all Dodger games on AM five seven The
LA Sports. Stream all Dodger games and HD on the
iHeartRadio app Keyword AM five seven The LA Sports brought
(00:27):
to you by Navian High efficiency water heaters, boilers and
the new NPF hydro furnace.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Learn more at Navianinc. Dot com.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Now, let me tell you what's going on in the
world of AI. And we talked earlier to Mike Dubuski,
ABC News about what's happening with AI and chat GPT
coming out with quote an agency kind of AI that
actually does things for you. For example, it's not just
(00:58):
information about a a cruise. It books it for you,
and it looks at cruises and it's just and books
I'm doing cruise in September, and it would know what
I like to do. You know, what do I want
to see the restaurant? What am I interested in doing?
For the seven days eating, does it ask me, but
(01:20):
already knows that I'm going to be in Greece. Am
I interested in the Parthenon?
Speaker 1 (01:24):
I am not.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
I'm interested in the food stand below the Parthenon. Now
here is We talked about what AI can do and
it is taking over and Dubuski said this, It is
taking over entry level coding, for example, new people coming
into fields where fairly wrote things are done so they
can learn various processes to move up in industry or
(01:50):
for example.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
In the computer industry. My daughter is in the middle
of that.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
She's having a bitch of a time getting a job
with her skill set and coding, et cetera. She's starting
her masters degree, that's it. And then after a master's
where you chessn't get a job, she's going to go
and get a certificate and plumbing. I mean, what the
hell is going on? And then we talked about there
was a story I did. Therapy was going to be
(02:15):
the last place that AI could.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Have been involved with.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
Dealing with your issues, dealing with your anxiety, dealing with
how you cope.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
AI is involved in that too.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Experts have taken models of articles and opinions throughout the
last decade or decades and created these models of AI,
so therapists are at risk. And then I asked the question,
can this show be produced and broadcast via AI? And
(02:56):
here's what I thought, and I came up with, is
the eest person to replaces Will? Will's gone because it's traffic.
It's here's what traffic, Here's what's going. And frankly, I
know we can get better. Someone far more interesting than Will.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Is what about my fashion sense? Oh? Exactly this morning
Will is wearing this. It looks like a checkered light
little shirt.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
But checker flag, like he went to an Italian restaurant yesterday,
okay and grabbed their grab their tablecloth and made a
shirt out of it. And then Amy, Amy, who does
the news fairly easy? I think to replicate sh I'm
just telling you, I'm just going through this.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
Don't give anybody. I know, I'm not giving anybody idea.
I'm just telling you what's going to happen.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Oh, you don't think iHeart has looked at this, so
it doesn't have to pay you a salary. Right then,
the next most difficult one is and I think is
the most difficult or maybe kono to run the board
where it anticipates where the next commercial break must be,
but then it has to figure out Kono can't do
(04:05):
it without AI being involved in my part of the show,
because the two are connected.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
So what I have done is asked Ann. And there
are programs.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
Out there, and I don't think we're going to be
able to do it today, but I have asked Ann
to come up with an AI version of our show
to see how easily it can be replaced and how
much more interesting the show would be if AI produced
the show. I think my voice can be replicated easily.
(04:41):
I think my inflection, my ability to not speak English
very well, groping for words, going off on tangents, making
no sense, getting a little depraved, making fun of insert
name of race, creed, religion, ethnicity here, because I make
fun of every anybody, And I think we can do
(05:03):
it so and we don't have to do it today,
you know, because thanks No, I know, yeah, no, I
know it's it's going to take a little while to
do that, but I'll bet you we can.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
Why are doing this, I'm sorry? Why are we doing
this to prove that?
Speaker 2 (05:20):
Yeah, I'm pretty much well, I'm close enough, I'm close
enough to the end of the career, where you know,
for me it's not the.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
End of the world. Yeah, but you're not looking at
for the rest of us. That is absolutely correct. I
couldn't agree.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
I could not agree with you more than I am
not looking out for the rest of you.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
Welcome to the handle show. You're the best. Thank you
so much.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
All right, Uh, something else is coming up. I like
talk about a social issue, and this one has to
do with Tanning. Now, Tanning is horrible going to the
beach and getting the tan. You look bronze, you look healthy.
You also get melonoe and you die. It is not
good for you. It's back with a vengean and it's
(06:07):
a vengeance, and it's not just about looking good, it
is about being healthy for you. Go how is that possible? Well,
by the end of the decade previous decade, Tanning's appeal
had faded. We were aware of the health risks, the
recession shrank indoor Tanning budgets done back with a vengeance.
(06:33):
The President and many of his accolades verge on.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Well.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
In the President's case, it's carrot yellow or carrot or
carrot orange, not necessarily outside it's I wonder how he
gets his ta Does he spray it on? Does he
paint it on with a brush? Does he take a roller,
(06:58):
a paint roller and put it on. I don't know
how that works. I've never had a tan at a
tanning salon, so I'm assuming they spray it on and
then do they bake it on? Is it like paint
that has to dry? I don't quite know how that works.
But here is an issue. You know, it was a
(07:21):
big fan of tanning, Robert F. Kennedy Junior, huge fan
of tanning, and he's always looking tanned. Matter of fact,
last month he was at a tanning salon. And it's
kind of weird because if a health secretary embraces tanning,
that's kind of odd. The Obama administration issued an excise
(07:41):
tax on tanning beds, squashed ads that marketed tanning is healthy,
saying that's just not true. The Biden administration made sunscreen
use in reducing sun exposure central to the cancer moonshot. Okay,
now we have Maha Trump administration make America healthy again.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Under Robert F.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
Kennedy. It does not once mention skin cancer with the sun.
The only time it mentions the sun is its connection
with this circadian rhythm, mourning sun synchronizes the body's internal clock,
boosting mood and metabolism. Also, the issue is that for
some reason, tanning gives us a larger spiritual experience.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
Huh. I mean that's kind of bizarre. And where does
that come from.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
Well, there is a somatic energy healer who is, let's
just say, one of these conspiracy nutcases.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
But this has to do with the sun. Quote.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
They don't want you to know this, but your body
was made for the sun. They being, I guess the
government modern medicine. Six hundred thousand followers, and she promotes
you ready for this staring directly into the sun to
boost mood and regulate the body circadian rhythm. Six hundred
(09:15):
thousand people paying attention to this crapola. Some influencers tout
the sun's uncelebrated because we don't know about this power
to increase serotonin and vitamin D. And it is one
of those it's basically a cancer cure.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
It is.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
Snake oil is what is being pushed. But here is
the difference with snake oil. You actually get oil, granted
it's only snake oil, but you get a little vial
of oil. Going out in the sun and exposing yourself,
you are getting yourself a good case of melano. Now,
(10:00):
you know, obviously these are I'm being hyperbolic here, very
few cases relative to people going out in the sun.
You know, there are cultures and you've seen people of
the Asian culture going out there with umbrellas.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
In the sun. Why because.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
Sun drenched skin is considered out of the working class
people that go out and work in the fields. People
that are a higher level merchants, rich people, aristocracy have
white skin in the sense that they don't go out
in the sun. And it's totally reversed here. So the
(10:40):
healthier you look with that tan, I guess you're not.
The healthier you look with that tan, all right? Tuesday morning,
July twenty two. Tonight, the Dodgers take on the Twins
at Dodger Stadium, first pitch at seven. You can listen
to all the Dodger games on AM five seven the
LA Sports or it's live from the Gallpin Motors Broadcast
(11:02):
Booth and stream all Dodgers games n HD on the
iHeartRadio app Keyword AM five to seven e LA Sports,
and tonight it is ti Oscar Hernandez bubblehead night. Isn't
that usually the first forty thousand people or whoever get bubbleheads?
Or now?
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Is that everybody that gets a bubblehead they have it restricted?
But usually everybody that goes gets one. Oh, okay does
even when it's a sellout, not everybody goes to the game. Bohm,
there're still empty seats, all right?
Speaker 2 (11:34):
Talking about fires, Well, I'm talking about fires. I want
to talk about what happened with this guy named Patrick Goling.
He's at his dad's house and the fire starts getting
near it, and so he yanks this pull cord and
this Honda engine comes to life, and it begins sucking
water out of his dad's pool, and it is out.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
Of the hose. Out of the nozzle comes this spray.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
It's an agricultural nozzle, irrigation nozzle, and it was on
top a pole a few fade away, all connected with
a fire hose, and in one minute flat, the system
goes across the landscapes fifty gallons of water in one minute.
And if you ask him or his dad, it absolutely
(12:24):
saved the house. And it is the brainchild of Goling
and an Arizona engineer and they came up with this,
and this is the latest entrant in the growing group
of high tech sprinkler systems you do at home, and
I had I have a friend of mine he sold
(12:45):
his house now moved to Las Vegas, and he had
a sprinkler system at home, one of those massive commercial
sprinkler systems that you see on crop land. And it
was if there was a fire, and I think he
had it connected to some smoke detectors kind of thing.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
It drenched the house.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
And a lot of people who have used these, and
very few but have sat there with hoses say their
homes were saved.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Now it's a little risky.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
The fire people will tell you it's not such a
good idea to stay around when a fire comes up
the hill, particularly the Palisades fire, which overwhelms anybody. There's
no there's nothing anybody can do about something along the
lines of a Palisades fire. One hundred mile an hour winds,
and this fire goes far faster than even a car
can drive.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
But these systems can and do help.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
Strangely enough, the folks that are against them the most
are the fire officials and the professionals in the field,
saying here's what happens. People have these systems and they
distract from the less glamorous but proven measures to protect homes,
brush clearance, the multipane windows which everybody has, and it
(14:05):
encourages residents to stay back during the evacuation to protect
their homes. That's an easy fix, by the way, a
real easy fix, and that is it's connected to an app,
and it's all done on your phone, and you can
start it immediately from any place. So that is not
particularly a reason not to have one. They still are arguing,
(14:32):
you may not that should be a last resort, but
it should be first resort because what ends up happening
is this is not connected to the municipal water system.
This is the pool where there is twenty thirty thousand
gallons of water. That's a lot of water to put
on a house, and as a fire overwhelms that area,
(14:54):
fire comes up that area.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
If you have a house that is.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
Drenched and I mean water all over the place and
it keeps ongoing as the fire goes through that area,
it's not going to burn. How many stories have we
heard of people with hoses and saving their home and
their neighbor's home because they stayed behind. Now it's a
big risk. Now, you don't want to be a krispy critter,
(15:21):
which happened to a few people during the course of
the Palisades fire.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
But as I said, technology is there. It's a clever idea.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
And they're coming up with a more sophisticated system. And
you know, do you pay a couple thousand dollars for it? Yeah,
if you have a home that's expensive and maybe you
have a lot of equity in the home. Sure, Okay,
a little bit of politics I want to throw in
into the mix. Now, Hunter Biden did a couple of
(15:52):
interviews podcast interviews, and he slammed the Democratic Party, Jake
Tapper of CNN, who wrote that book Obama Aides, George Clooney,
Now Hunter Biden and the way this is being described,
whose very name inspires a Pavlovian response from right wing
conspiracy theorists, actually pulled a page from the opposition's playbook
(16:18):
when during those interviews he leaned into grievance politics, hurled expletives,
condemned people who quote did not remain loyal to his father,
whoa A new podcast hosted by Jamie Harrison, former chairman
of the Democratic National Committee. He said that Democrats lost
(16:41):
to Donald Trump because they abandoned his father. That was
the only reason. There was no grand conspiracy to hide
his father's health issue.
Speaker 1 (16:49):
Bs.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
Of course there was. We lost the last election because
we did not remain loyal to the leader.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Of the party Woo. That's my position.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
We had the advantage of incumbency, we had the advantage
of an incredibly successful administration, and the Demock priority party
literally melted down. He didn't talk about the disadvantage of
Joe Biden being Joe Biden. Then he attacks Clooney, very
high profile left wing finger figure, finger figure who was
(17:21):
the first major player to tell Biden to step down
from the campaign re election campaign after that disastrous debate performance.
And then Biden just ripped into him, saying he's no actor,
he's a brand. You think in Middle America, the voter
in Green Bay gives an s a crap about George
Clooney thinks who we should vote for. And in a
(17:45):
separate interview with a YouTuber, he said, George Clooney is
not an efing actor.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
He is an e f ing.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
I don't know what he is. He's a brand. F
him and everybody around him, and he went on and on.
Now I want to point something out, and that is
a couple things were missing. First of all, Joe Biden,
who said he was a transitional president, who acknowledged that
he was old and there would be one term. He
(18:15):
is a transitional president, turned around and said, I'm running
because of this hubris that somehow he's the guy that
is going to lead America and America needs him, and
didn't think there were any physical disabilities, and therefore anybody
(18:36):
who didn't back him up. According to Hunter Biden, that's
the reason that he had that Biden lost because they
didn't have the backing. But I want to point something out,
and that's during the debate, and this is where the Democrats.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
Have to go forward with this.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Donald Trump, and he did this right for his supporters,
gets up on that debate stage and makes stuff up.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Makes it up.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
Eighty percent of Americans disagree with this.
Speaker 1 (19:06):
Seventy percent of Americans were unemployed during Obama.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Ninety percent of the crime is committed by illegal aliens
in this country.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
Makes it up.
Speaker 2 (19:17):
And here's the problem. Who are the fact checkers? Where
do we get the information from the fact checkers? Why
from the major media. That's where we get it. And
if the major media is fake news, and therefore the
fact checking in and of itself is fake, then who's
(19:39):
telling the truth?
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Why it's Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
And therefore eighty percent of the crime that's caused in
this country is by illegal aliens. Because that's the truth.
Fact checkers don't count because they're fake. And what should
have happened and is Joe Biden should literally have turned
around and they knew what Donald Trump was gonna do.
(20:07):
There was no surprise there. Donald Trump is an open book.
There's no hidden agenda with Donald Trump. He says exactly
what he means, and means exactly what he says, and
does precisely what he promises to do. And we know
what he was going to do on that stage is
make stuff up. And Biden should have turned around and said,
(20:31):
you are a liar. It's not eighty percent, it's only
ten percent. You're making this up. Donald. Now the fact
checkers come back and say that Biden is lying because
he's going the other way. But again, same thing. Who
(20:53):
are the fact checkers, major media? And they and that's
fake news. And none of the far right believe anything
that major media has to say everything that is said
by conspiracy theorists is right.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
So here's where the Democratic Party blew it.
Speaker 2 (21:18):
Create your own conspiracy theorists. You fight fire with fire,
and they didn't do that. And someone had to figure
this out. You know who was one of the best
advisors that Donald Trump had, Baron Trump, Donald Trump's eighteen
(21:38):
year old son, who said, Dad, you're missing the young people.
Speaker 1 (21:42):
You're missing people my age.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
And Trump realized it, and he put resources into it,
and they just ran a better campaign. They ran a
better campaign. Would Joe Biden be a better president?
Speaker 1 (21:56):
Who the hell knows?
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Joe Biden be asleep throughout the entire president, so it
would be his advice. All Right, we're done, guys, It
is it. Gary and Shannon rut Next tomorrow it's Amy
and Will back to the normal lineup from five to
six o'clock. Neil is not here tomorrow, but I am.
I go six to nine and we start all over again.
Kono and and of course are here. Gary and Shannon
(22:19):
are next. Oh, and I'm taking phone calls. I'm taking
phone calls for handle on the law. I'm doing it
off the air. I'm starting in just a moment. The
number is eight seven seven five two zero eleven fifty.
Eight seven seven five two zero eleven fifty. Marginal legal
advice off the air, no breaks, no weather, no traffic,
(22:44):
no commercials. We go right through them, and of course
no patients on my side. Eight seven seven five to
zero eleven fifty. You can do it right now. This
is Handle on the law. Oh, no on the news. No,
it's Handle on the hand had KFI see, I'm already
in my.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
Head, is all. I can't do this, handle A. I
cannot do this. I know A I can. We're going
to do that too.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
I'm my head is already into the legal show. Eight
seven seven five two zero eleven fifty.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
This is the Bill Handle Show.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
Catch my show Monday through Friday, six am to nine am,
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