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August 22, 2025 33 mins
The Dunning-Kruger Effect was discussed, along with Apple TV+ raising its subscription price by 30% and a rundown of the best streaming deals and bundles for August 2025. The concept of “plussing up,” coined by Walt Disney in the 1940s to describe improving something by adding to it, also came up. Rick Chambers and the KTLA crew highlighted how good creations can inspire while bad actions destroy, with guest Jose Hernandez. A new survey revealed that Americans consider the “perfect” salary to be $74,000, sparking debate about money, side hustles, and the value of a skilled handyman. Finally, anticipation continues to build as everyone awaits the result of Lyle Menendez’s parole hearing.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's cam if I am six forty and you're listening
to the Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Hey everybody, Neil savadri here, Happy Friday, toll you filling
in for Tim Conway Junior tonight, who's on vacation with
his family. Do you think I think the foosh was
listening and he's going, is he coming over?

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Like he's gonna be sad?

Speaker 4 (00:23):
He's not.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
When's he coming? They said he was coming? Are you
bringing hot dogs? Is he brings hot dog Friday? Oh? Yeah,
no hot dogs? And I even told I told Belly, oh,
I'd pay for food. Nothing. Man, you cave quick when
she said no, you don't need to do that. I
didn't cave.

Speaker 5 (00:44):
He did not cave. I will say I honestly, I
forgot Wait wait.

Speaker 6 (00:47):
It's six o'clock. Are we getting food? I'm in, I'm
in the time we get it, it's time to go.
You caved, I in cave.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
I never cave. I that's okay. I love that Sharon
does that.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
What did I do?

Speaker 3 (01:01):
You don't need to do that.

Speaker 7 (01:02):
He doesn't need to do that. That the just said
it sardonically.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
I know, I know the.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Great Oh it's just have anything with the Dunning Kruger effect.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
I know what that means. Now, Yeah, was that the office?
Was that the company?

Speaker 2 (01:28):
I teach yours? And then she goes around thinking she's smart.

Speaker 7 (01:32):
Oh, just as I said something to him and he
just whispered Dunning Kruger effect.

Speaker 5 (01:38):
And I'm like, I ran in here and I'm like,
what is the Dunning a.

Speaker 7 (01:43):
Cognitive bias where people with low ability or confidence in
the subject overestimate their own knowledge. Well, those with high
ability may underestimate their expertise because.

Speaker 5 (01:56):
They assume the task is easy for others.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
It's amazing how the definition really sent them on. She
didn't read that. She's going on what she thinks it is.
That's what's gonna be on her gravestone.

Speaker 5 (02:11):
Now we do have.

Speaker 7 (02:13):
Some actual news. It just went off the screen. There's
a search for a shooter in El Sereno.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
He opened fire at what was it? Was it? H
I see police there.

Speaker 5 (02:24):
Now we're going to pull it up here on NBC.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Yeah, they look like they have someone in handcuffs. All right,
we'll pull that up and get that to you. Breaking news.
That along with the fact that Bellio is learning her
abilities and actually she's very smart.

Speaker 5 (02:43):
The Dunning Krueger Effectually.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
Basically the breakdown is that they found in colleges the
person people who thought they were going to do really
good on a test and they're super smart, aren't smart
enough to know that they're too stupid to do the test. AnyWho,
Apple TV, you know what I love that are own.
Former Fearless leader Robin Bertolucci has said to me on

(03:06):
more than one occasion, you can't be more number one,
and it used to make me laugh full the time.
There's only so much you can do. You fight to
get there, and then you're fighting to stay there. Right well,
in in television right now, we saw a break from
your typical cable TV. If you remember, cable TV broke

(03:29):
from the antenna, right broke from the antenna. We're gonna
bring you all these channels. We're gonna bring you movies,
all these things. Holy God and Heaven, this is great.
We're gonna get all these movies. They did, what was it,
the X channel, I think or whatever, and then a
movie channel, and then slowly HBO and all these things.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
Right, so that became this new thing.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
Now we didn't have cable we didn't even have cables
when I was growing up because of the place we were,
didn't have them dug underground yet or whatever. It came later,
and then we had cable TV. But then, oh my gosh,
they're charging you so much for cable. Why don't you
stream it? And now we have the technology to stream it,

(04:12):
and you can buy this package and you'll get all
these things. So now the cable started using the fact
that they were giving us our internet and say, stream
these packages and then you get all those channels like
HBO and everything that's making the Disney Plus, all these things,
these places that were making their own television and movies.

(04:35):
Netflix say, why do we have to be a part
of your bundle? Why don't we buy up as much
content as we can or create our own content, and
we'll become our own channel, our own bundle, if you will.
So they do that, then that goes to its place.
Then everyone says, well, if Netflix is doing this, and
now Disney Plus and you know everybody calls their thing

(04:57):
now whatever plus? Do you know where the plus comes from?

Speaker 3 (04:59):
Krozer?

Speaker 2 (05:00):
Okay, So Walt Disney used to talk about plussing up
the park or plusing things up. He always said never
let it be stale. Plus things up when you can.
So Disney means the actual Walt Disney, the actual Walt
Disney talked about plusing things up all the time. So
that's where Disney Plus comes from. And so now everybody
calls their channel whatever plus not just saying yeah, it's

(05:23):
less and more. But so all those companies start saying,
wait a second, we have our own library, so we
just won't sell that to other people or rented to them,
allow them to use it. We'll put our So everybody
spreads apart Apple TV. Everybody has their own channel, their
own whatever. Apple's TV plus, right, and now they're raising

(05:44):
their subscription Apple TV is by thirty percent.

Speaker 3 (05:48):
So not only I know, and.

Speaker 6 (05:52):
Apple is just consistently to me overall the best streamer
as far as their their original stuff.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
Well, you have the studio all the way, so you
have a lot of great stuff that they're putting out.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
Right, they put out very few clunkers.

Speaker 2 (06:05):
Yeah, they do a great job. But it's raising the
subscription price by three dollars to twelve ninety nine a month,
so basically thirteen bucks a month. Not horrible, but now
you have a handful of these separate channels streaming services.
You're back to what you paid for cable and more. Yes,

(06:26):
So the statement I made about Robin Bertolucci is saying,
you can't be more number one. There's a limit to
the wealth that can be provided with any service. There's
just a point where people won't pay that for plumbing,
or they won't pay that for a pool, or they
won't pay that for a car, or they won't pay
that for TV, because the next thing is going to

(06:48):
come along.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
I mean, now you have what is it, Howdy?

Speaker 2 (06:52):
I think Roku started Howdy, and it's this new station
with older stuff on it, cute name, and and they're
already starting to reinvent to go backwards because you can't.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
You can't be more number one man.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
There's a point where you're just gonna tax people financially,
like Cable did at one point, where you're paying three
hundred dollars because you get your internet from it and
everything else.

Speaker 6 (07:19):
There's no such thing as just being being a thing
and staying that way and being satisfied. It's always got
to be more and more and more and more every
every single time.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
Success doesn't exist, and success kills I've always said that
I believe that success kills It makes you lazy, it
makes you greedy, it makes you all these things.

Speaker 3 (07:38):
It used to satiate.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
It used to be a place where you go, this
is what I think we can do with this company,
and everybody that works for us will get paid. And
that's why, you know, you joked about Kinko's. Why I
thought it was such a great company, and still to
this day I have the best memories is because they
had that mentality, Yeah, we'll open another store, but it

(08:02):
was opening another store to service that area. Yes, I
think when I left there, I was I oversaw like
seven locations or something, and I had left KFI. Had
already been a an intern at KFI, and I left
because they didn't have a ten dollars an hour job.
They didn't have uh ten dollars an hour job. So
I said, I can't stay here. And everybody's like, you'll

(08:23):
never come back. They'll never let you back. Too many
people once you leave here. So I said, okay, well,
you know, I cut my hair, I put on a suit,
and I went to work full time for Kinko's and
went up into manage it and read regional managing and
stuff like that. But that company, I felt just knew
where their level was and how to be successful. And

(08:45):
then they're purchased by FedEx and FedEx as well, We've
got to make we got to be.

Speaker 3 (08:49):
More number one.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
And now they're there every once in a while you
see them, but they were everywhere at one time. And
it's I I don't think the model of of original
business in America that original business is all I want
to do is have my portion and serve people or

(09:12):
with a product or service and make a living at it.
You the corporations, And I don't think corporations are even evil.
They're just people, a bunch of people doing things. I
think what's problematic is being public and being owned by
people that only care about the money, and they redirect
the business just for the money. It's not the corporation,

(09:35):
it's once you go public and then people not in
it that are on the board, you.

Speaker 6 (09:40):
Know, becomes bigger, better, more, Yeah, NonStop that because all
you are you're not product.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
You're not producing.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
When when the product stops being the product and you
serve the making of money, you're.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
Chasing something other than why you're there. Yeah, you're not
a business. Anymore.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
You're your bank. You're trying to make money and you're
not creating anything anymore. And I see Apple TV doing this. Yes,
they're doing it right, they're doing great product. But if
you got to keep Nickel and Dining, then you made
a big mistake in the decision to do this product,
because it is it is going to outgrow we the people.

(10:17):
Because every once in a while, my wife will say,
holy God, look at our bill here, and I'll go, oh, wow,
I didn't we watched these three things. You know, maybe
maybe we don't watch those three things anymore. We watched
just one.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Yeah, So I'll be curious how this goes, because once
Apple TV does it, others will continue to do it
and we don't fight anymore.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
We used to.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
You remember when Netflix went up and everybody's like, oh no, no,
that's not happening, and they backed off. Well a couple
of years later they increased it more and every nobody
said anything.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
Yep, damn it.

Speaker 6 (10:56):
Yeah, come on, Michael, I've cut out and I've cut
out one because it was a big one, like a
monthly one, like sling. It's like I just don't need it.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (11:05):
You finally you start once you really start assessing which
ones you need, it became the decision kind of makes itself.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
I think I could live with just like the Disney
Channel and uh Didney Channel, Apple and Netflix.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
I think, all right, that's pretty close. Yeah, especially because
Disney contains Hulu and all those other ones.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Yeah, yeah they do. And it's got Star Wars and
everything else on there. It's got Marvel, it's got Disney,
It's got That's kind of where I'm at. All right,
I'm cutting it radio still free though.

Speaker 8 (11:35):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KF
I am six forty and.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
Thank you all for your support tonight on the program.
We're here for you, buddy. Yeah, all right, yeah right here.

Speaker 5 (11:50):
Okay, bleussing it up plus plussing it up.

Speaker 3 (11:54):
She keeps coming in here going. I learned something today.

Speaker 9 (11:57):
I no.

Speaker 7 (11:57):
Normally I listened to your all your show, and I
normally do not learn anything, to be honest with you,
but today I did the Dunning.

Speaker 5 (12:06):
Kruger effect plussing Kinko's management style.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
Pretty good, pretty good, pretty good.

Speaker 5 (12:15):
I hear Angel think is Angel here?

Speaker 8 (12:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (12:18):
Just been here all day?

Speaker 9 (12:20):
I am here, and that cracked me up when Bellio
said she usually learns nothing from listening to your shows, the.

Speaker 5 (12:26):
Same thing you don't learn from him, and that's great.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
Well, this is why, this is why, at six twenty five,
more than two hours in the program, you're coming on.
You see why stuff that stuff that chunk lay in
your mouth, sister, go ahead.

Speaker 9 (12:46):
Do a plug, okay, not a USA dot Com. I'll
be in Lukedia this weekend on Sunday at the Lukedia
Art Walk.

Speaker 5 (12:55):
Thanks Neil.

Speaker 3 (12:56):
We were just talking about making. No, I love that
you do that.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
I was talking to Bellio about making and how I
think harokit can get theological for a minute here, God
forbid I do that on radio. But everyone always goes
well when it says that create, even God's image, What
does that mean? I say, God's a creator. I think
we're destined to want to create. I think in literature
and theology and life, the good create and the bad destroy.

(13:21):
And so I support what you do and I love
that you do it because you're using your your head,
your heart, your hands and making something. And I will
always support that except buying me. I don't want your sandals.

Speaker 5 (13:35):
That's okay, They're not for everyone.

Speaker 3 (13:36):
No, Actually they're lovely. I don't wear sandals. I don't
know what it is.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Yeah, Bellio, geez Foosh would rather get in a car
accident than come to work. That's the way he's like.
You know what.

Speaker 3 (13:57):
This just in They pulled the food from a burning car.
From a burning car. God bless that boy.

Speaker 9 (14:06):
I was gonna say, Rick Chambers, he translates much taller
in person than he does on television, and usually it's
kind of the opposite.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
Yeah, you've never met him, or you just met him
and noticed that.

Speaker 9 (14:19):
Yeah, I just met him. When was it last Thursday
or a couple thursdays ago when the heroes came in
and Fusha's parents came over to the studio or something.

Speaker 5 (14:30):
Yeah, he's a tall guy. He's a handsome man.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
Actually I think i've seen him out and about like
and no, like I mean years and years and years ago,
but I think i've seen him like at a club
or out and about.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
Someone ooting the boot. Yeah, if I remember correctly.

Speaker 7 (14:48):
He's a really nice man, too, very nice. Yeah, like
really nice. I thought he did a lovely job on
that story. You know, if you know, Fush deserves to love.
Anybody can put back nine hot dogs on a Friday.
Jose Hernandez the Uh, his cameraman photo journalist, also deserves
a little love.

Speaker 5 (15:06):
He was great.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
Why does that sound familiar? I wonder if I've met him,
met him? Yeah, you come in.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
I don't know if they've done stuff back in the day.
I would have to let you know, camera people in
or cruise in, or authorize them to be able to
come in stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (15:23):
I don't know. Maybe I've met him.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Doing that, or maybe you're a nice guy. He's on
the you know the Mexican newsletter I get monthly.

Speaker 3 (15:31):
You know the periodical.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
Well, it's like an eight page newsletter and they tear
four pages out because my mom's white.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
What they don't want me to have all the set
you meant, like for toilet paper or something noise.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
It's like, no, don't give them all the secrets. I'm like, oh, interesting,
they're painting the wall black. That seems weird. How where's
the other page? Hmm, that's weird.

Speaker 8 (15:55):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
Hey, everybody, it's Neil Savandra in for Tim Conway Junior.
Tonight gonna be hold, you know, handing everything off to
Tiffany Hobbs coming up who idore by the way, coming
up at seven in for mister mo Kelly. I will
be with you tomorrow slightly shorter show two to four
thirty as we will give way to the Chargers game

(16:23):
that will be coming up at four thirty with the
pregame stuff.

Speaker 3 (16:27):
So please join me there, won't you.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
And I think so Tiffany gets preempted tomorrow Michael does
as well, So Michael Monks will not be on. But
I will have a little bit more time than last week.
I think we had an hour together last week. So
we'll have a good time, all right. The perfect salary

(16:51):
for Americans, so says this survey, seventy four thousand dollars.
Now to me, that sounds like a lot of money.
I know in California we get a little twisted because
we think, oh gosh, you got to you know, to

(17:12):
live out here, you got to make way more than that.
But do you know that seventy four thousand dollars across
the country is a lot of damn money. It's only
maybe on the coasts that we think, oh, maybe that's
not enough or whatever. But I remember the first time

(17:32):
I made that much money. Like, I saw that much
money and I was like, holy hell. But did it
change from when I made twenty five grand a year? No,
Like nothing in my life made me feel better because
I made that much versus when I made twenty five
grand a year. Now I was scraping by at twenty

(17:55):
five grand a year I had, I was doing freelance
I had, I got, I changed direction in jobs and
I had to pull something just completely out of nowhere.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
But in a nutshell.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
This this says that Americans say the perfect salary averages
about seventy four thousand dollars. Half the respondents felt that
their current pay doesn't support their desired lifestyle. One in
five about you know, just the twenty percent or so
want six figure incomes. Twenty four percent are unhappy with

(18:33):
what they earn now. But you know, everybody's got side hustles.
Do you do anything on the side crow, I used.

Speaker 3 (18:41):
To do handyman stuff around town around Claremonta's.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
Oh yeah, yeah, I remember you do that for friends
and yeah stuff too, yep, which is a godsend to
find a good handyman.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
You know.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
Well, no, I was you know I was telling Bellio
that it was hot yesterday and I spent hours recabling
a can't lever umbrella, which is the least fun thing
one to do by yourself. It's it's not complicated, but
it is specific.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
Yes, there it oh, I'd say head to toe three
hours or so. So basically, what you have to do
is you have to pull things apart, and you have
to make sure that all the drivers, all the wheels
and everything like that.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
The gears because it is a ratchet system because once
you pull it up, you don't want it to fall
down again. So there's spring attention, screw, there's you know,
plus the cable. You have to rethread the entire spine,
the whole neck, if you will, of this thing. You
have to put the cable in and it if it

(19:51):
gets any resistance, it's just started pushing back. So I
had to take needlenose, special needle nose players and feed
it in by inch. There's a handle joke in there somewhere,
but they're just inch by inch. Just wheep and get
that through until it came out the other side. And
then you have to do these special knots on both ends.

(20:13):
I like that kind of thing. Just not in like
ninety seven degree heat. But it's hard to find a
good handyman. You will try, even the company that I
bought these things from, you know, even looking calling companies
that make them, you can't find somebody that does it.
You can't find somebody that because we're living in a

(20:34):
throw it out society.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
I'm not that guy. I do everything I can.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
To refurbish, reuse, or donate, fix something to donate that
I can. Well, those are things that I that I
think put us in a better bracket to make less
because you're not throwing things out, you're not whatever. So
you have these side hustles. And I got to tell you,
if you're a handyman, God bless you, or a handy person,

(21:00):
non business owners are considered, you know, already running that
kind of side hustle type thing. You have fifty two
percent to say they're entrepreneurs and they're doing they have,
you know, maybe a traditional job somewhere and then they
do something on the side. But most people say seventy
four thousand hits right, and that number has not changed.

(21:24):
I remember reading this number for years ago on a
similar study, and I think we've gotten to the point
where we have blown pass because we got used to
two incomes, which wasn't the norm, and so you push
past you no longer have necessities anymore. You have once
necessities aren't as expensive as one would think.

Speaker 6 (21:48):
And when you really nail down what's necessary.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
Oh gosh, I saw somebody complaining the other day. There
was somebody on TikTok or something complaining about somebody calling
her out at a store for using EBT where when
she had an eighty five dollars manicure and drove like

(22:13):
a BMW. Okay, that's when you start missing the point.
When I made twenty five thousand dollars a year, I
lived like I made twenty five thousand dollars a year.
I knew what I made and I didn't move past it. Now,
it was their time in my life and my youth
where I was like, just spend, spend.

Speaker 3 (22:32):
It's got magic plastic. You put it on here and
you're good to go. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
I made those mistakes, thankfully, pretty early on. But you
look back and you see, man, I look at my
parents and what they did, And my mom told me
once that my dad at one point was making six
or seven thousand dollars a year and they went in

(22:58):
to buy a used car or something. Imagine that's happening now,
and the guy looked up at the loan office or whatever.
He looked up and he said, sir, how do you
do it? I mean, was flabbergastard even the way way
back then. But you know what, my mom was taught

(23:21):
sewing and all these things. She made her dresses, she
made our clothes. As a kid. She had home act.
How I took home ac. I also took metal shop.
I took wood shop. I took all these things that
you you know. I went into ROP a Regional Occupational
program to learn offset printing, type setting, all kinds of things,

(23:44):
because that's what we used to We were a nation
of people that built and created and did services. But
now we're a nation of people wanting to get rich
by I have a blog or look I have I
have boobs, Go talk about fashion like me, like me, Yeah,
it's like or hate me, hate me, And if that fails,

(24:05):
you've got nothing, you know, So seventy four thousand is
I still look at that and I go, holy hell,
that's a lot of money.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
And you can do so much with that, depending on
are you willing to do stuff around your house yourself. Yes.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
You know, when I look around and see the things
that I've done, or my wife's done, or in the house,
I'm like, we could be paying out out the eyeballs
to have other people.

Speaker 3 (24:33):
That's what I do with my house all the time now. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
Oh yeah, and your house is beautiful because you're doing
it to your taste.

Speaker 3 (24:39):
It means a little more.

Speaker 7 (24:40):
You know.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
If you want a great garden in that that four
tier parking lot you have as a backyard, that you're
gonna have to do it. Yeah, but you also get
it exactly the way you're done. You know how many
times I have to unf something that someone else did.
That's a professional. I was charged two grand from a plumber,
and I respect the hell out of plumbers. Yeah, two

(25:02):
grand from a plumber to put new trim in the bathrooms,
you know, the knobs and stuff. They couldn't get them
off the old ones, so they left that. They put
the shower head and they put the cap on the
tub in both bathrooms. Two grand. Two guys came out. Yeah, see,

(25:25):
we got new plumbers, but I had to go in
there chisel off the old ones that have corroded and
do it myself. Not too grand, not yet, not too
brand indeed, all right, let me call them off my soapbox.

Speaker 3 (25:42):
Don't get hurt. All right.

Speaker 8 (25:44):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Hey, everybody, Neil Savadri here, happy to be with you
on this Friday. You know it's cool. I have not
seen my boy or my wife at all today, which
is rare. It is one of the blessings of doing
what I do, so I'm looking forward to seeing them.
But you know what, the chance to hang out with
Bellio is always a treat. With Crow and Robin and yes,
even Angel with her chunk list. Actually, I love me

(26:14):
some Angel.

Speaker 4 (26:15):
She's great too.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
I love this whole crew and it's always fun. And
coming up next is someone else that I adore, and
that's Tiffany Hobbs coming in for well.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
I think I think you're doing great.

Speaker 4 (26:24):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
I think you know.

Speaker 2 (26:26):
I am a pretty stern judge of things being here
as long as I have, and.

Speaker 4 (26:30):
You intimidate me, scare me a bit.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
That's just my odor.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
But it's really hot out there, so you know understand.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
It's a little intense, but no, I really love what
you're doing and I think.

Speaker 4 (26:44):
You don't right.

Speaker 10 (26:45):
Thank you very much, Neil, and I obviously will follow
you anywhere. Whether it's a sad wife has an issue
with that, you know, tell her that it's all and
it's it's it's it's innocent.

Speaker 3 (26:56):
You guys got to hang out.

Speaker 4 (26:58):
We did, and you know, she's delightful.

Speaker 10 (26:59):
I was telling you off air, I really enjoy talking
to her, Your mother, your boy, they're a great representation
of you.

Speaker 4 (27:07):
Your wife.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
She scares me.

Speaker 10 (27:08):
She you know, as she should, because I can tell
that she like her. I would say her line is
very thin, and it feels like you're towing right there.

Speaker 4 (27:18):
You're right there with her.

Speaker 2 (27:20):
She's very intense and she has a weird skill. The
more insane things get, the calmer she gets, and.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
It creeps me there.

Speaker 4 (27:29):
I like that, no wonder, I like her.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
So oh it's weird. Wow, you guys do similar gigs.
You deal with people certain needs and.

Speaker 10 (27:36):
Yeah, yeah, you have to be able to maintain your can't.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
Get you can't Uh what does she say? She goes,
I can't be crazy when everybody else is being crazy.
Someone has to be the adult.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
Yeah, and you kind of have to out crazy the crazy.

Speaker 3 (27:49):
Sometimes you're the intense crazy.

Speaker 4 (27:51):
It sounds like radio.

Speaker 3 (27:52):
Oh boy, thanks for that therapy lessening, doctor Wynney. But no,
I do.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
This is not just to sit here and glad handed
pat everybody in the back. But I do appreciate what
you do and I love that you're on KFI. I
think your voice is important. I think it's nice to
have more female voices on KFI. Yeah, it just really
is one of those things. There's been times where we
had more and the left heaven flow comes. So what
do you have in store? Do you do the when

(28:17):
you fill in on a Friday? Do you do the film?

Speaker 3 (28:21):
No?

Speaker 4 (28:21):
Unfortunately not.

Speaker 10 (28:22):
We kind of we deviate from Moe's formula, which everyone
loves and you know, give him a good show, of course,
and I'll talk about a little a little bit about
that in a second, but Moe really wants his formula
with him because only Mo can disseiminate that information and
officiate the games as well as he does.

Speaker 3 (28:40):
I've done it a couple of times and he goes,
you're brutal.

Speaker 10 (28:43):
I go, oh, yeah, that's probably why, because you did.

Speaker 4 (28:46):
There's no we can't do it.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
Anymore, don't do that anymore. So, Yeah, no one wins anything, ton.

Speaker 4 (28:52):
I know, No, I mean they win.

Speaker 10 (28:53):
Listening to me, I would hope that surprise my round tone.

Speaker 4 (28:57):
Yes, it's going to be a good show to what's
going on.

Speaker 10 (29:00):
Oh yeah, some big updates about the Menindaz brothers, updates
that happened last night, updates that probably will break during
the show.

Speaker 3 (29:07):
You know, they shut their mom in the face.

Speaker 4 (29:09):
I heard about that. Yeah, and their dad too.

Speaker 3 (29:12):
Yeah, but you know, he seems like a bastard. But
they shut their mom in the face and.

Speaker 4 (29:15):
Shot their mom in the face. They shot them.

Speaker 3 (29:18):
Too, maybe because you know, you know how it is.

Speaker 10 (29:21):
She can't just go around shooting bastards in the face
without repercussions.

Speaker 3 (29:24):
No, which is why I don't do it, and which is.

Speaker 10 (29:26):
Why they're facing what they're facing now with some are
a lot of disappointment, I would say, So we'll talk
about those updates.

Speaker 4 (29:34):
Kristen Crowley, former fire chief.

Speaker 10 (29:36):
She is hot, no pun intended, and I don't mean
in the looks category, no offense meant at all. She
is really upset with Mayor Bass the city. She's filed
acclaim against both. Yeah, right, rightfully, so.

Speaker 2 (29:53):
I think rightfully so, and I think she was the
scapegoat and she got screwed in that.

Speaker 10 (30:00):
And she is going to talk about it in this
in this filing, and I have some details that likely
will turn into a lawsuit, as these things do, so
I'll share with you guys what's going on there. At
nine o'clock hour, two really big interviews. We're going to
talk to the HOA, president of the Palisades Bowl and
the HOA president of the Tahitian Terrace, both of those

(30:23):
mobile home parks and palisades that burn to the ground
right next to each other. So both of those representatives
will be coming on to talk about new legislation that
they're pushing through to protect mobile home residents from displacement
in the event of situations like this with this fire
and what they're up against and hoping to get this

(30:43):
legislation passed.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
God bless them, Matt. Yeah, that was a gem that
we all looked up at went how did they they
pull the how'd they get that? But you need that,
you do, You don't need a one big house up there.

Speaker 10 (30:56):
And all they want is to go home and they
haven't been able to do that, and they don't know
if they ever will, and this legislation is hoping to
help them do that. And then at nine point thirty
we're going to talk to Philip weathersp He is the
founder of a really cool religious organization called Set Ministries,
and they're having a community baby shower on Sunday, So

(31:18):
we're going to talk about the details they're in. It's
all to serve people who are, you know, a little
little hard what they're dealing with economically, and it's a
community baby shower, and he wants people to come out
and support that. So it'd be a great conversation to.

Speaker 4 (31:33):
Find out for any new mom or any new.

Speaker 10 (31:35):
Mom is welcome. So we'll give all the details there.
It's your cool idea. How cool is that? Yeah, they
have all the trimmings, all the presents, all the speakers
and performances. It's a whole kind of festival dedicated to
these moms.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
That seems so old school, like an old town, like
a small town where it's like we all celebrate. Yeah,
we all cry at the losses and we all celebrate
with the newborns and.

Speaker 4 (32:01):
As it should be.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
Yeah, oh I like that.

Speaker 4 (32:03):
Yeah, So he'll be on at nine thirty.

Speaker 10 (32:05):
That first interview with the mobile home park representatives will
be at nine o'clock, and in between we'll have scammers
gonna scam. We'll have a deep dive segment about how
AI is going to possibly replace parental supervision and interaction
with children. There are toys designed to do just that,
and a whole lot of other show to come.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
It's gonna be fun, excellent. Don't go anywhere.

Speaker 2 (32:28):
You have Tiffany at the mic moments from now, nice
to see you.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
She is being preempted.

Speaker 2 (32:33):
Tomorrow as I will have thirty minutes, and Michael Monks
will be preempted tomorrow for the triggers.

Speaker 4 (32:39):
So we're all doing the three right, I heard tell
I guess ten minutes.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
I thought we should do meeting of the mouths that'd
be used to do that on KFI.

Speaker 4 (32:46):
Is that allowed? Is that FCC regulated? I don't.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Yeah, we all get together, we pick a topic and
we all talk about it.

Speaker 10 (32:52):
I mean on radio meeting. Oh I thought, oh, okay.

Speaker 2 (32:55):
Sorry, after the co belt incident of ninety eight, can okay?

Speaker 4 (33:00):
Got it? Understand?

Speaker 2 (33:01):
That's when he went to KBC, All right, let's go
to the top of our Hey, there's someone I haven't
seen a long time.

Speaker 3 (33:09):
I see you, Good to see you.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now, you
can always hear us live on KFI Am six forty
four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime on
demand on the iHeartRadio app

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