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June 20, 2025 29 mins
Thieves make off with $2M in Anaheim art heist. Seven Southern California men were charged in connection with what federal prosecutors described Tuesday as the largest jewelry heist in U.S. history. // The defendants, all of whom are from the Los Angeles area, are accused of stealing roughly $100 million in gold, diamonds, rubies, emeralds and luxury watches from an armored car in July 2022, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for California’s Central District. // Juneteenth celebration across the country! The Foosh on driving Uber for Juneteenth celebrations! // Summer Solstice June 20th at 7:41pm pst –The Longest Daylight of the year! $5 Million Scratcher winner in CA. // Chickism the great Chick Hearn Legendary Lakers Play-by-Play announcer and the phrases he coined like his most well-known include "slam dunk", "air ball", "finger roll", "give and go", "in and out, heart-brrrreak", and "no harm, no foul". He also coined phrases like "throwing up a brick", "picked his pocket", "frozen rope", and "pressure cooker" 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI Am sixty and you're listening to the Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
We're having our huge event next Tuesday. We talked about
it earlier, but if you're an advertiser and you want
to join this show and watch your business take off,
email us Conway Event at iHeartMedia dot com. I'll be there.
We'll be doing a live show. You'll be our guest.
That'll be cool to meet you. Stephu shall be there,
Bellio is going to be there. Krozier will be back

(00:30):
for that, and I believe Angel Martinez is coming in.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
Are you coming up for that?

Speaker 4 (00:34):
Angel?

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (00:36):
Yes, love it.

Speaker 6 (00:38):
Yeah, she's Timmy.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Yeah, she's really high on on herself right now.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
She got golden mics.

Speaker 6 (00:49):
And a lot of them, Timmy.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
Yeah, she got five of them, six, she got six,
Oh my god, Angel, what was your favorite golden mic.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
And what was it for? Is it was it titled?

Speaker 7 (01:04):
Yeah, I'd have to say it was the first one.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
And traffic on the seven ten takes side Streets.

Speaker 6 (01:11):
Yes, truly, that was well.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
I love my personal favorite traffic on the on the
four or five take side streets.

Speaker 8 (01:20):
Obviously, my favorite was traffic on the five takes sides.
That one impacted me personally.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
So yeah, I used to like take traffic on the
one eighteen takes side streets, but I thought traffic on
the sixty take side streets.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Was the best.

Speaker 6 (01:34):
Did you hear back up on the seven ten?

Speaker 3 (01:37):
Yes, take side streets.

Speaker 9 (01:39):
You know.

Speaker 10 (01:39):
My my personal favorite though, and this is just really
dear to me, is the one O one backed up
through the valley take side streets.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
Oh that's right, that was good. Can you tell us
how you did that?

Speaker 2 (01:51):
Had it sounded on the on the tape that you
would that you submitted?

Speaker 10 (01:54):
Okay, yeah, sure, okay, let me you got the sounder, Yeah,
I need some I need.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
The traffic sounder that's on Heather. Oh that's on Heather. Okay,
here we go.

Speaker 10 (02:05):
That one oh one out of Calabasas sure is tough
this afternoon southbound slowing loading up from Lost Hills. You're
on the breaks across the valley all the way to
the one seventy one thirty four split.

Speaker 7 (02:18):
Here's what you need to do. Bail off of the
freeway and take the surface streets. Thank you so much, guys.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
You can tell an angel kids pissed you can hear
nerve voice. It drops off at the end and that's
the f you guys. Oh but you're coming up for
it right, Oh?

Speaker 7 (02:52):
Absolutely absolutely, yes, Oh.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
That'd be great. It'll be next Tuesday. Everybody'll enjoy that,
all right. We had a big heighst Anaheim. If you
live in Anaheim, our buddy Chip Yost with KTLA was
all over this thing.

Speaker 3 (03:06):
Man, that's unbelievable. Two million dollars.

Speaker 11 (03:09):
This was a huge art heist in more ways than one.
Take a look at these pieces of art, these sculptures
that were stolen from a warehouse here in Anaheim. Those
sculptures are not only very valuable, they are very heavy.
We're told that the two sculptures together have a value
of around two million dollars, and one of them weighs
around two thousand pounds according to a representative.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
God, how do you steal two thousand pounds in statues
of the.

Speaker 11 (03:37):
Artist Sir Daniel Wynn who created them? The other ways
around four thousand. But who is the artist of the artist,
Sir Daniel Wynn, Who.

Speaker 2 (03:44):
Sir Daniel Wynn. He's been knighted? Huh, Sir Daniel Wynn,
who Sir Daniel Wynn, Miss Sir.

Speaker 11 (03:49):
Daniel Wynn, who created them the other ways around four
thousand pounds, around four thousand pounds, one of them, two
thousand pounds the other. According to Anaheim Police, they say,
according to their investigation so far, it appears the folks
at the warehouse were last here around Saturday. Sometime on Saturday.
When they came in on Monday, those two sculptures were gone.

(04:11):
The sculptures, like I said, were created by artists. Sir
Daniel Wynn, who's also a filmmaker. They reported them missing.
The police police now investigating to see if they can
figure out where those sculptures went. Here's more from Anaheim Police.

Speaker 12 (04:25):
Due to the nature of the items that were stolen,
it looks like somebody knew they were there and went
there with a purpose. But I can say for this
area it's relatively quiet. This doesn't happen often here in Anaheim,
and I would encourage everybody to have some kind of
surveillance or camera equipment.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Yeah, that's a good that's good advice. Have some kind
of camera equipment.

Speaker 12 (04:46):
Some kind of surveillance or camera equipment.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
Real pretty flat, if you don't mind me observing. That
should have been done in the nineteen eighties to have
your video cameras.

Speaker 12 (04:58):
Around some kind of survey camera equipment.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Yeah, that's a good idea. They sell all that stuff.
You can go to Costco and get like twenty cameras.
I don't know if that's to do it yourself thing
or not. Usually screw that up, but have somebody do
it for you. I guess if you can afford that.
I'm looking at these statues right now. This guy's talented,
This Sir Daniel Wynn wi N. This guy's good at
what he does.

Speaker 11 (05:21):
If you know anything about where those sculptures may be,
you can contact detectives at the Anaheim Police Department. This
warehouse we're talking about is near Tustin in the ninety
one Freeway. Reporting here in Anaheim, I'm chippyos to KTLA
five news.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
All right, then we have an update on the jewelry heist.
Remember those guys that followed a semi truck, a Brinks
truck all the way down the five freeway three hundred miles.
They follow this truck before they broke in, broke the
lock off, and stole one hundred million dollars worth of
jewelry and.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
Gold and rubies. Rubies, they got the rubies.

Speaker 5 (05:57):
We know that this group of seven suspecs is accused
of pulling off a meticulously planned heist that totaled about
one hundred million dollars worth of stolen jewelry. Two of
the suspects based a federal court judge here yesterday. We
can tell you. Prosecutors say this group followed a Brinch
truck for about three hundred miles before striking at a

(06:19):
Grapevine truck stop. Now, if convicted, this group of seven
suspects could spend decades behind bar.

Speaker 9 (06:26):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
I wonder how they caught these guys, because these guys
are good. You know, these guys are sensational. Man, nobody
knew who they were for a year and a half.

Speaker 3 (06:33):
Two years. We had a lock on here. You had
a lock on here, and it's gone.

Speaker 5 (06:37):
This is body cam footage from police immediately after that theft.
According to federal prosecutors, it all began in July of
twenty twenty two. Seven men.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Okay, so almost three years these guys were out, you know,
on the lamb and spending money and enjoy themselves.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
Three years twenty twenty two, seven men allegedly began tailing
a Brinx semi truck leaving an intern National Jewelry show
in San Matteo. That truck was carrying seventy three bags
of gold, rubies, diamonds, rubies, and watches.

Speaker 3 (07:08):
Now doubled up on the rubies, rubies.

Speaker 5 (07:10):
Of gold, rubies, diamonds, rubies and watches. In the early
hours of July eleventh, it stopped at a blind j
truck stop on the Beck while one guard was sleep
and the driver was eating at the truck stop. Authority
say that's when the suspects made their move, cutting the
lock and stealing rubies twenty four bags of merchandise valued

(07:32):
at up to one hundred million dollars.

Speaker 2 (07:34):
Wow, man, oh man, you know Bellio? I said, who
has rubies nowadays? And Balio you said you have rubies?

Speaker 8 (07:41):
Yes, my grandmother had one really red rubies.

Speaker 6 (07:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:45):
Woa is it a ring necklace? It's a ring and
you and you wear it. Never seen you wear the
rubies I have not. It is it like like comedy size,
like it looks fakeh Yeah.

Speaker 8 (07:59):
It is kind of big comedy ring. Well, I don't
think it's a comedy ring. I just haven't had an event.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
Oh, I see we were that big ruby You like
the rubies?

Speaker 6 (08:10):
I do. I think they're beautiful rubies.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Say to rubies, Rubies, rubies, rubies, like those rubies.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
It's a staggering amount of rubies, gold, rubies.

Speaker 7 (08:24):
Diamonds, and luxury watches.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
The sheer volume of rubies is large, mighty. This guy
with the rubies something else's guy rubies.

Speaker 11 (08:34):
These large foot lockers would fill more than a cargo band.
I just can't understand how they could get away with
so much merchandise.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
Yeah, it did seem odd, very odd.

Speaker 5 (08:45):
The indictment now names all seven suspects, including Carlos Mustanza
of Pasadena, JOSEL. Padilla, already serving time in Arizona shot
director Hugo Valencia of Rampart Village. Prosecutors say they used burner,
false names and carefully timed getaways.

Speaker 3 (09:02):
But where is all the merchandise? To avoid being captured.

Speaker 5 (09:06):
In the months before the heist, this same crew allegedly
hit other cargo shipments, stealing Samsung electronics and Apple air
tags across sam Bernardino County Old.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
School right on the road. These breaking into trucks.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
Man, oh man, those guys were good at what they
did for a while and then they got nailed. Crime
doesn't pay, but if it didn't pay, it wouldn't exist.

Speaker 4 (09:29):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (09:36):
Hey Heather, I'm a I'm a big I don't have
any stock, but I like to follow the stock market.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
Mm hmm. What was the market today?

Speaker 13 (09:44):
The market is closed today, the market is yeah. I
completely had a ding dong moment literally ding dong airhead.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
You know you're not alone, though.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Crozier did that once where he's like, wow, the numbers
are look very familiar. Well that's what a lot like
yesterday's numbers.

Speaker 13 (10:05):
If the first newscast at four, I opened it up
and I was like, these are the same numbers from yesterday.

Speaker 3 (10:09):
That's weird. So I hit if you could hear me go,
oh well on.

Speaker 13 (10:12):
A second, and I hit refreshed and they are the
same numbers, and I was like, oh man, well, you
know what, I've just been too busy covering all the
other insane stories we have going on.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
That's right, that's right. Well, it is Juneteenth, a lot
of people have the day off. I'm glad you came
in and worked I'm happy to be here.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
Yeah, and you get time and a half, don't you know? No,
you don't. No, we don't get holiday pay. Wait a minute, Stephans,
you do. I think you get holiday pay, don't you?
I do? And Bellio does? Wait, wait, you don't go.

Speaker 7 (10:40):
We don't.

Speaker 13 (10:40):
I don't know if Bellio does.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
Bellio certainly does.

Speaker 14 (10:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
She said she ain't coming in unless she gets Hollywood pay.

Speaker 6 (10:47):
Holloween pay. Great, it is Hollywood pay.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Different, she called it Hollywood pay.

Speaker 6 (10:51):
We're getting Hollywood pay.

Speaker 3 (10:53):
We don't get that.

Speaker 13 (10:54):
The news people do not get that because we have
a different, unique contract situation.

Speaker 6 (10:58):
So we don't get that.

Speaker 12 (10:59):
We can.

Speaker 13 (11:00):
I'm here and we work out of the goodness of
our heart. That's why Michael Monks and I are always like, yes,
we'll come in.

Speaker 3 (11:05):
What do you need? Sure, come, I need it.

Speaker 13 (11:07):
So Yeah, before anybody calls her emails or cusses me out,
I'm sorry, I a ding dong moment.

Speaker 3 (11:13):
Markets were closed.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
Markets are closed, everybody tomorrow the numbers will be different. Yes, yeah,
all right, all right, very good.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
Juneteenth.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
Inside of the celebrations across the United States, marketing June teenth,
which is June nineteenth, of twenty twenty five and happens
to be John Colbelt's birthday. He's going out tonight for
Polish food. He's uh Polish ancestors from Poland. Think going
with that?

Speaker 3 (11:37):
All right?

Speaker 9 (11:37):
Here?

Speaker 3 (11:38):
What's going on with the June teenth.

Speaker 9 (11:40):
It's a celebration of freedom and family.

Speaker 4 (11:42):
Let's love one another.

Speaker 9 (11:44):
Black communities across the nation observing Juneteenth today, some already
marking the celebration this past week with parades and lots
of food and music.

Speaker 12 (11:55):
To steel come out here, to be in the essence
of the culture.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
Stuff is just phenomenon to be communal, to.

Speaker 14 (12:03):
Celebrate in the day as like we've celebrated fourth of
July June teenth history, same thing as.

Speaker 9 (12:09):
That on June nineteenth, eighteen sixty five, in the waning
days of the Civil War, the last enslaved people learned
about their freedom when Union soldiers reached Galveston, Texas, announcing
the Emancipation Proclamation President Lincoln had signed two and a
half years before. In twenty twenty one, then President Biden
made June teenth a federal holiday, with opal Lee by

(12:30):
his side. The now ninety eight year old activists spent
decades working to make June teenth a national observance. It
is a community and a family type of holiday. Harvard
professor and att Gordon Reid wrote the book on June
Teenth for how you encourage people to celebrate the holiday,
to use it as a day for young people to
think about their family history and maybe interview older members

(12:53):
of their family and sort of keep that the chain together.
With major American companies following the Trump administrations lead and
rolling back diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, some Juneteenth events
this year had to press on without big backers. But
this is a holiday that we can celebrate on our
own and we should continue whether we're sponsored or not.

(13:14):
The organizer of Atlanta's Juneteenth Parade and music festival says
that hurdle is not a roadblock.

Speaker 10 (13:21):
This event stands all freedom, freedom for everyone, everywhere, all
the time.

Speaker 9 (13:27):
Now, even with the downsizing that we're seeing, there's still
going to be these community picnics and art shows and
pageants all over the country today. And we've learned that
tonight Galveston, Texas, will host former President Biden at its
June teenth observance at a local church that played a
key role over time in that city's journey from slavery
to freedom?

Speaker 2 (13:46):
All right, So enth June nineteenth, every single year, and
I remember the very first one. I think it was
a weekend. I think it was a Sunday or a Saturday.
For the first one, it was just a couple of
years ago. But Stephus, you are drive Uber? Is that correct?
And you've been driving for how long?

Speaker 4 (14:05):
Now?

Speaker 3 (14:05):
It's going up on ten years?

Speaker 2 (14:07):
And do you talk about what you're doing after work?
Or am I talking out of school here?

Speaker 5 (14:12):
No?

Speaker 3 (14:12):
That's fine, Okay, So when you leave here you drive Uber?
Yeah for an hour or two?

Speaker 9 (14:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (14:16):
About an hour and a half. Two hours?

Speaker 2 (14:18):
Man, you must be exhausted by the time you get home,
pretty tired. Are there any June teenth celebrations? The old
chef and shuffle people around in La?

Speaker 15 (14:27):
Well, I mean by the time I get yeah, everyone's
already but home.

Speaker 3 (14:32):
But I'm sure right now there's a lot.

Speaker 14 (14:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
Do you see? Is summer the best time for Uber?
Fourth of July looking forth to July?

Speaker 3 (14:41):
Big? That's huge, some money maker right there. Where would
you go?

Speaker 2 (14:46):
Will you stay in La or we go to Huntingdon
b wherever it takes me?

Speaker 15 (14:50):
Yeah, I've ended up in Data Point thousand, Oaks, Santa Monica.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
I'll go everywhere.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
What's the most a guy could make on July fourth
driving Uber? Can you make five hundred bucks?

Speaker 3 (15:02):
Uh?

Speaker 15 (15:03):
Well one year I made about eight fifty on just
on July fourth week. Well, no, no, no, not it's the weekend. Yeah,
that's a lot of dough. Yeah, man, oh man, eight fifty.

Speaker 3 (15:14):
Yeah. It takes care of your rent for on a
you know, just working a weekend and a drive a Prius.
So oh, I see. So you don't take it, not
even less on gas? Yeah, man, you got it going
on dude. Yeah, that is great. I was.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
I took an Uber about six months ago. I was
going to a place in Pasadena and I wanted to drink.
So I want to pop into an Uber and I
get a new Uber and the guy says, uh, he goes, hey,
he goes, this is my full time job. I'm a
writer in Hollywood. I'm like, oh, that's cool. I said,
have you sold anything? He said, yeah, the studios are
all there's a bidding war on my script right now. Like, oh,

(15:50):
that's let's a cool idea. Hey, buddy, you missed that
left hand turn here? He like blew through a couple
of turns, like I felt bad, Like he's telling me,
you know that all these studios are fighting over his script,
and then he's missing turn after tear and after a turn,
and there was like no opening because he was telling
me about the plot of his of his script, and

(16:10):
it sounded very good, and I didn't and I didn't
want to interrupt the flow because he was like pitching
it to me.

Speaker 3 (16:16):
But I had to.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
Finally say, oh, yeah, no, that's great. I'm sure you
know Universal buy it. But you know, buddy, you got
to make a left here.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
You didn't want to dismiss him, but you got to
make it to your place.

Speaker 6 (16:25):
He shouldn't be telling his ideas to passenger.

Speaker 3 (16:27):
Well, there was already a bidding war on it.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, he was gonna make He said
he was gonna make three to five million dollars, and
Riseley said that. I'm like, yeah, buddy, oh that's great.
Could you make left here? I'm sure you're gonna do great,
But we're about half a block from where I gotta be.
Please please, please, all right, we've got a lot going
on here.

Speaker 3 (16:50):
What do you want to do here? Oh? This is
an unbelievable.

Speaker 6 (16:53):
Story, take a break.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
We have to take a break. Okay, wake it back.
I'm gonna tell you about a guy who cleaned up
with these scratchers. If you're like me and you buy
the scratchers, this guy cleaned up.

Speaker 4 (17:03):
Man.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
I dream about stuff like this.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on de May from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
It's Conway Show. Tomorrow? Is it tomorrow? The day after tomorrow?
What's the day today?

Speaker 6 (17:16):
Nineteenth?

Speaker 2 (17:17):
Okay, so it's Saturday. Is the longest daylight of the year?

Speaker 6 (17:22):
No, tomorrow?

Speaker 3 (17:23):
Is it tomorrow?

Speaker 6 (17:23):
It's tomorrow?

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Twenty first twenty ll J cool jay, damn it. So
tomorrow is the longest daylight will have, not the longest day,
but the longest daylight will have of the whole year.
So starting on Saturday, it gets darker earlier than Friday,

(17:45):
and it's gonna get darker earlier all the way until
December twentieth. So tomorrow the longest daylight. Go out and celebrate.
I think it's seven forty one, monsieur? Is that what
time this sun goes down? Let's see what about here
in Burbank, all right, in the San Fernando Valley, to borrow.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
The sun will be going.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Down and let's see here sundown sun eighth eight almost
eight or nine eight o eight.

Speaker 3 (18:19):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (18:20):
Then it's gonna get darker and colder and chilly and
snowy and rainy.

Speaker 3 (18:24):
It's gonna be horrible starting Saturday.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
All right, maybe not, but to the longest daylight we have,
it's kind of a cool deal, a big celebration.

Speaker 14 (18:32):
To warn meteorologist Brian Sherman, we're getting toward that time
of the year where the season start to change again,
and we are looking ahead into the summer months, which
is actually happening as we head toward the end of
the week. When we take a look at the Earth
and what causes all four seasons, spring, summer, fall, and winter,
it's because the Earth is tilted at about a twenty

(18:55):
three and a half degree axis, and that's what gives
us all four seasons every year. So when we look
at when these seasons are, it's either the equinox or
the solstice. In terms of summer, it's going to be
the summer solstice. This is the time of the year
when we hit the summer solstice that the Earth is
tilted more toward the sun at that twenty three point

(19:17):
five degree axis, so that in turn allows our temperatures
to get warmer because we're spending more time toward daylight
and getting further into the calendar as well. The summer
solstice is this coming Friday, June twentieth, twenty twenty five,
so we're going to spend most of the day Friday
in spring. This is also going to be the day
where we have the most daylight fifteen hours, sixteen minutes

(19:40):
and six seconds of total daylight. It's not like you
see on social media where Alaska there are parts of
the region up there and down toward the Poles that
are incomplete daylight.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
Yeah, you know what in Seattle, if you live in Seattle, Washington,
the sun's going to go down at nine twelve pm
and then you'll be able to see it till about
ten pm.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
So man, it does.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
Stay late, really really long up in Seattle. However, in
the winter, that sun goes down around three point thirty
four o'clock in the afternoon, and that is wildly depressing.

Speaker 14 (20:13):
But this is where we kind of peek every year
the most daylight we see. Then as we get from
July and to August, we start knocking off a few
minutes or so each and every day as we head
out of summer into fall.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
Yeah, it's about a minute and a half a day
that we lose of sunlight starting on Saturday, and then.

Speaker 14 (20:30):
Also into winter, which is actually when we see our
shortest days of the year. So get ready, we're heading
towards summer, even though it's already felt like through the
weekend and early this week, and those days are going
to be sitting longer for a little while.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
That is fantastic, all right. This guy got a scratcher.
My life dream never had one this big or even close.
This guy cleaned up with a California scratch.

Speaker 16 (20:57):
You're the mother was looking for some mommi time. Not
only did she get a few minutes alone, she got
a five million dollar winning lottery ticket.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Five million dollars scratcher.

Speaker 16 (21:06):
For this woman and menfa mother asked her husband to
take their toddler out for the house for a little
while to get a break. The father took the toddler
to breakfast and on his way home, he stopped to
get a few maximum million game scratchers. To their surprise,
one of them five million dollar one. They plan to
invest and pay off their mortgage.

Speaker 3 (21:25):
Well about that, what a surprise. I do that all
the time. I never win. Yeh, scratcher five million dollars? Belly?
You get Belly? Are you into scratchers? You and John gamble.

Speaker 6 (21:38):
Here and there? Yeah, but I never win.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
Yeah, I'm with you. I think a hundred bucks is
the most I won.

Speaker 6 (21:45):
That's pretty good.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Yeah, I think I spent two one hundred gets.

Speaker 6 (21:49):
To get that.

Speaker 8 (21:49):
Yeah, that's not good. It was home which is scratcher?

Speaker 4 (21:53):
Do you like?

Speaker 6 (21:53):
See? And that's another thing. I don't know which one
to pick.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
I don't like to buy the thirty dollar ones because
that really depresses me. So I got like the five
dollar ones. Maybe if I'm high, like a ten dollars one.
But I don't like the dollar ones because you know,
you can win like two dollars, who cares, But those
ten dollar ones can really pay off?

Speaker 6 (22:12):
Is that what this was the I don't know what they.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
Never said what it was. But there are some for
thirty bucks. You know, you can buy a scratcher for
thirty dollars.

Speaker 6 (22:21):
See, but then like you don't win anything. It's like, wow,
what a waste.

Speaker 3 (22:24):
It's a huge depress Yeah, hugely depressing.

Speaker 13 (22:26):
I like the crossword puzzle ones because I feel like
that takes up more time and I'm at least getting
a little bit of my money out of it.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
But those are complicated because you never really like sure
if you win her law, if you want a laws.

Speaker 12 (22:40):
Or not.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
You know, you can scratch off the bottom there there's
a code on the bottom, and just take your camera
and take a picture of it. And then if you
have the lottery, the California Lottery app, which I do,
you can take a photo of that and it tells
you redit way whether you win or won or loss.
So you don't even have to scratch it. Scratch the
coat out saved you a lot of time. That's what

(23:02):
That's what That's what Menace does. That's what I do.
He never scratches it, just scans it. And that's what
I do. I scan it. But you know what, what
you got to tell Menace this. I don't know how
often you see them, but I've scratched it off and then,
you know, took a picture of the code and it
said it was a loser. And then I just kept
it for some reason, and I took it into the
store and it said it was a winner. So on

(23:23):
my phone it said it was a loser, but I
brought it in. It was one hundred dollars. It was
a winner when I brought it in. Well, that's not good,
that's horrible. But those machines you got it.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
You can't.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
You know, you got to go to like two or
three different machines and confirm that you're losing work. Yes,
it's a lot of work, but they're fun. When you win, man,
you feel like you're high as a kite.

Speaker 10 (23:42):
Man, That is that?

Speaker 3 (23:43):
Really?

Speaker 6 (23:43):
So you've been high as a kite once?

Speaker 3 (23:45):
I no, I mean off money, not off weed or anything.

Speaker 8 (23:48):
Well, I know, but you only won the one hundred dollars,
that's right, that's correct.

Speaker 2 (23:51):
Yeah, of all my lottery scratch outs, I won one
hundred dollars once. I'm probably down around I don't know,
thirty grand exactly. That's exactly my point, right, I'm down
a car maybe, Yeah, pretty good education.

Speaker 4 (24:08):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KF
I am six forty.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
Heather Brooker just won four dollars on the scratch.

Speaker 7 (24:17):
Or yay, I've had that my purse for months.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
Oh, that's not good. Because they do expire.

Speaker 6 (24:24):
No, yeah, all right, okay, what's how long do they expire?
How long?

Speaker 2 (24:29):
I don't you mean the exact date and time? I
don't know, got almighty? How how deep is my and
in your eyes? How deep is my addiction to these things?
Where I know the expiration on all of them?

Speaker 6 (24:43):
Pretty deep?

Speaker 5 (24:44):
Who?

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Man, oh man, I think it's I think they give
you six months after the last tickets sold or something
like that.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
I forgot that our own Bellio used to work for
the Los Angeles Lakers, and you worked for with chick
hern for a couple of those years.

Speaker 8 (25:04):
I did the first two years. That must have been
the last two years, my first two years.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
You and you, I mean, he's the king, the guy.

Speaker 8 (25:12):
No, it was such a podcasting, such an honor to
work with him.

Speaker 3 (25:16):
Was he nice to you?

Speaker 6 (25:17):
He was very sweet.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
Did he ever roll up a paper and give you
a bump?

Speaker 6 (25:22):
No, he never did that.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
Never did that. That was his move. Yeah, rolled paper.
I would give you one in the ass like a swat. Yeah,
that's true.

Speaker 6 (25:32):
I didn't experience that.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
I've been asked not to do that, shoe, But Sue,
did you did?

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Was Chick's energy still high when he was like in
his eighties. Yeahs to be doing a good game, right,
he could.

Speaker 8 (25:48):
Still call a great game and tell you know he
had he has a pig valve replacement. Oh, I didn't
know that that that did affect his energy right before
he had that surgery, that operation.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
Wait, he had it picked valve and it was replaced.

Speaker 6 (26:01):
He had it put in. I replaced his you know,
with a pig valve.

Speaker 3 (26:05):
Wow, and he's still doing games in.

Speaker 6 (26:07):
His eighties, I know, is amazing.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
He created the he the phrase slam.

Speaker 6 (26:12):
Dunk, a lot of them.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
Also, the yo yoing up and down, no harm, no
foul I think was one of his.

Speaker 6 (26:20):
The mustards off, the hot dug.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
Yeah, the eggs are cool.

Speaker 7 (26:23):
Refrigerator yeah yeah, the Jello one and the jello.

Speaker 5 (26:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (26:29):
I did slam dunk, airball, finger roll, give and go
in and out, heart.

Speaker 2 (26:33):
Breaks, wait, wait, wait, go slower with these. You know,
he's an icon and you're zipping through them like they're checking.
So these are known as chickisms. Okay, then some of
the most famous ones are slam dunk. He created slam dunk.
That's unbelievable. I mean, everybody a phrase. Everybody uses that
term worldwide. Now, yeah, slam dunk contest. He also did

(26:57):
air ball. I can't believe that he created air ball.
Nobody said that before, No, God, but they call it.
I missed, Oh I miss.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
Probably interesting to know a miss.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
He missed the bast Okay, finger roll. Oh that's a
good one too, finger.

Speaker 6 (27:15):
Roll the give and go right in and out?

Speaker 3 (27:19):
Oh, in and out. They stole that one from him.

Speaker 6 (27:22):
No harm, no foul. Wow, And get this one.

Speaker 3 (27:26):
I love no harm, no foul.

Speaker 8 (27:27):
When he used to say that that was great, he
coined this phrase throwing up.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
A brick that was his.

Speaker 8 (27:34):
Yes, he created brick for play by play, Yes, unreal
picked his pocket.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
I don't know if he created that.

Speaker 8 (27:43):
He did when we were talking about calling a game
play by play for basketball.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
Yes, oh well, okay, I mean you know, like they
can't you can't say, you know, oh, the Lakers murdered
the Celtics. He came up with that, like, no, I mean,
not murdered or pickpocket.

Speaker 8 (28:01):
But to use that phrase for for for that ceiling, yeah,
for that play, to say, no other play by play
announcer was using that.

Speaker 6 (28:09):
Okay, frozen rope.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
Oh, that's a good he Wait, he created a frozen rope, yes,
I mean they say that in baseball the time too.

Speaker 6 (28:17):
Pressure cooker. Why do you think that's fun?

Speaker 2 (28:21):
I don't know, yo yoing up and down. I think
he created that one as well.

Speaker 6 (28:25):
Bunny hop in the pea patch.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
I don't remember that.

Speaker 8 (28:28):
I can't throw a pee in the ocean, which I
love that one.

Speaker 3 (28:31):
I think that's a homeless guy that created that.

Speaker 6 (28:33):
No a cot with his hand in the cookie jar.

Speaker 8 (28:37):
Okay, the mustard's off the hot dog, which is also
one of my favorites.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
That's a good one. How about that one? What did
did did you ever? I mean, but his energy was
good up in the until the enhn.

Speaker 6 (28:52):
Well, he did have the operation to have a.

Speaker 8 (28:55):
He had a damaged he had a replace, he had
a damaged valve.

Speaker 6 (28:58):
So he was you know, his energy was.

Speaker 3 (29:01):
Did he have caught? Would he drink coffee or not?

Speaker 6 (29:04):
Really sure what he drink?

Speaker 2 (29:05):
Really you don't know. Okay, well we gotta take a break,
we'll come back. I'm gonna tell you that I think
Bellio wiped out chick Hert.

Speaker 5 (29:15):
No.

Speaker 6 (29:15):
I did not like first of all, it was just
a suggestion.

Speaker 2 (29:20):
Okay, all right, we got a great chick hern story.
We come back because I think Balio.

Speaker 3 (29:25):
Killed him. All right, We're live on k if I
AM six four.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeart Radio app.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
Now you can

Speaker 1 (29:35):
Always hear us live on k if I AM six
forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime
on demand on the iHeart Radio app

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