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August 25, 2025 32 mins
Description: The search for baby Emmanuel continues after the child’s parents were arrested on suspicion of murder. A police pursuit in Lynnwood ended in a crash, while Caltrans announced plans to repave the 405 Freeway with blacktop instead of concrete. The Powerball jackpot has soared to $750 million, with Conway joking that Bellio has the winning mojo and imagining how he’d spend the prize. Nostalgia is also fueling a surprising comeback for cassette tapes and the tradition of lovers exchanging mixtapes. The hour wrapped with a look at how rising costs are leading many homeowners to defer essential maintenance. 
6:05pm – Search for baby Emmanuel continues after parents arrested on suspicion of murder 
6:20pm – Pursuit ends in crash in Lynnwood. Repaving the 405 Freeway with blacktop instead of concrete. Powerball at $750 Million – Bellio has the mojo!  
6:35pm – How Conway would disseminate his Powerball winnings. Nostalgia Is Fueling Resurgence of Cassettes. When lovers send Mixed tapes!  
6:50pm – Homeowners deferring maintenance due to cost 
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Transcript

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 KFI AM six
forty's Convoy Show. Hey remember that story a couple of
weeks ago where the baby was kidnapped outside of a
Big five sporting good store. I don't know if Belly

(00:22):
and I did this on the air. Maybe we did
it off the air, but in the I don't know.
Fifteen years, fourteen years of working with Bellio, every time
we've heard a story where a baby was kidnapped or
a baby was killed or one hundred percent of the time,
very empathetic, sympathetic, very you know, acknowledging what the parents

(00:43):
are going through and it's the worst nightmare ever. But
Bellio and I both smelled a.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
Rat on that one.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
And I don't know what it was, Bellio, I don't
I don't know whether it was just the feel or
you know, there was there were there were some some
facts and some in that statement that just didn't make sense.
You know that your baby was stolen, and you didn't
get any description of the car or the guy, and

(01:10):
there's no cameras in that area, and nobody saw anything.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Nobody in that area.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Saw anything when a baby stolen right and in broad daylight,
it was odd, and we didn't say anything, you know,
because you don't ever want to be wrong in that
case and pile on. And if you were wrong and
it was a legitimate kidnapping, then you would feel horrible,

(01:38):
you know, parents going through the worst nightmare of their life,
and guys on radio going, I don't know, I smell
a rat on this one. I'm gonna I'm gonna take
a wait and see attitude. See if this side kid
was really kidnapped, that would be odd and people get
down on you for it. But it turns out did

(01:59):
those parents They're up to something, because it looks like
the cops, who are very good at this, have discovered
that it was not a kidnapping and they've arrested both
the mom and the dad.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
More than a dozen vehicles with the San Bernadino County
Sheriff's apartment parked alongside the sixty Freeway east of Marino
Valley on Sunday afternoon, investigators working the steep terrain with
cadaver dogs looking for the body of seven month old
Emmanuel Harrow, who is presumed dead.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
And you know what, the Emmanuel means it means it's
a Hebrew name, and it means God is with us.
God is with us. How ironic God is with us? Well,
God's not with you, folks. Maybe with the kid, but
not you kids. And then so they took the dad
out of jail. He's being held without bond, there's no

(02:53):
bail on his scalp, and I think the mother is
also being held without without bail. And so they took
the dad out of jail to go and look for
this kid in a very specific area and maybe he's
copped to it where they're going to use him to
prosecute the mom. And maybe he knew where that baby

(03:14):
was dropped off and it's been you know, at that point,
it was probably more than a week after it happened,
and so the body probably decomposed. Maybe the animals up
in that area, you know, picked it up and took
off with it. A lot could happen, But how disgraceful

(03:34):
is this crew, These two parents, his.

Speaker 3 (03:37):
Parents, Jake and Rebecca Harrow, now facing murder charges. Jake
Carrow himself was out here yesterday in a red jail suit,
but at the end of the day they left the.

Speaker 4 (03:47):
Body of the little boy yet to be recovered.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
It's a case that's drawn widespread attention, not only in
southern California, but across the nation. The boy's parents at
first making a tearful plea for the public to help
find him after Rebecca Harrll claimed she'd been attacked in
a Big five parking lot and u Kaipa reporting that
her baby had been kidnapped.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
And you know, if you go back and you watch
the video, because I record news, I'm a news junkie,
I'm addicted to it. I watched two, four, five, seven,
nine eleven. I just keep watching these same stories over
and over. But I had recorded news, and I look
back at the day that this happened, and you could
tell all the reporters out there were very emotional over

(04:28):
what happened. Maybe some of them are new moms or
new dads, and they were very distraught over what happened.
And they've got to be livid as hell that they
were scammed allegedly by this couple.

Speaker 4 (04:42):
Please, I'm making you, please cause me.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
And how about this? You know this?

Speaker 1 (04:47):
This is all I guess according to the cops, and
I don't.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
There's nothing so far. That leads me to think that
they're anything about one hundred percent right. This is all
an act over that kid.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
I'm making you please cost me.

Speaker 3 (05:04):
But within less than a day, people started wondering if
the parents were telling the truth, the San Berdandino County
Sheriff's Department saying they had stopped cooperating with their investigators,
some saying it was strange that in our interview with
the parents, Jake Harrow was talking about his son in
the past tense.

Speaker 4 (05:21):
It was a healthy baby. He was crawling, he was kicking,
and he was he was playing with his toys.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
How about that talking about the kid as if he's dead.
Oh my god. And you I love the fact that
they think, you know, cops are just morons, right, you know,
it's like don knots, you know, coming out and taking
the information.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
Well, tell me what what happened. I was how big Bob.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Now, cops are good at what they do, and I
think they're going to nail these two.

Speaker 3 (05:51):
One week later, both parents were arrested at their Cabazon home.

Speaker 4 (05:55):
Rebecca Harrow doing an.

Speaker 3 (05:57):
Interview with a reporter from the Southern California News Group
over the weekend saying, quote, I will not give up.

Speaker 4 (06:03):
I will not give up on my baby.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
Meanwhile, residents continue to show up at the Cabazon home.

Speaker 4 (06:10):
Where a man you will lived with his parents.

Speaker 5 (06:13):
It's very devastating to know what happened here and what's
going on, you know, and that they haven't found him yet,
and that these parents could do this to this little baby.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
A lot of in Cabazon. There's a lot of portable
generators that are working out there. A lot of these chaps,
these young men and women who live out in Cavason.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
They're off the grill, they're off the grid.

Speaker 1 (06:41):
They are not paying their electric bills, they're not paying
their water bills, they're not paying you know, taxes or anything.
And so it's a lot of you know, generators and
buying bottled water and living out in in Cavazon.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
And that's what it is. In the background, you can
hear that generator just pumping.

Speaker 5 (07:01):
Away and what's going on, you know, and that they
haven't found him yet, and that these parents could do
this to this little baby.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
Yeah, that's true. How dare they do this man again?

Speaker 3 (07:12):
If Jake and Rebecca Harrow are charged with murder, they
could be arranged here in Riverside tomorrow afternoon.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
Yeah, it's gonna happen this week. So I don't know
how you. I don't know how you get more disgraceful
than that in life. I really don't. I don't know
how you you know, limbo under that that is a
really low bar. Two and again it looks like the
parents are in on this, and that dad was arrested

(07:39):
before and did time for child abuse. And the cops
saw right through it. Cops probably day two, you know,
in talking to these people, and they, you know, they're
not professionals. They didn't think this through. And the cops
asked them some probably some fairly easy questions to answer,
and they were giving different stories of what happened. And

(08:02):
then the cops turned the lights on and said they
did some speed wrapping with these two while they're separated
and lined up the stories and they were wildly different,
wildly different.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
So welcome to Southern California.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
Man.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
There's always something gross in Southern California.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
It's not the name of a book. There's always something
gross in Southern California. And these two are the grossest
of the year so far.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
These two idiots unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
All right, we live on KFI KFI Am six. It
is the Conway Show. Yes, ding Dong, there was a
high speed chase that ended up in Hollywood. While we're
in that break, I'm sorry or Linwood. I'm sorry, I
said Hollywood on TV. I guess Linwood is not Hollywood,

(08:53):
she recovered. Still, I guess so right in Linnwood, a
high speed chase, A lot of cops around at the end.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
This is the second chase of the day.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
We've had two, and we'll probably have another one tonight
because people are broken. It's hot, and when you get
pull over by the cops, you just want to run
because sometimes.

Speaker 2 (09:12):
You get away. You know the old days, you know,
twenty years ago, you never.

Speaker 1 (09:15):
Got away from the cops. They always got you always,
And now I don't know. You have like a twelve
thirteen percent chance of getting away. And the criminals know
how to do it. They go to big buildings downtown
where it's hard for the police helicopter to follow it.
They slide into a large parking structure and ditch the

(09:36):
car and sometimes they do get away. Look the guy
driving the milk truck a week ago, week and a
half ago, stole a milk truck, stole a truck out
of Lancaster and then stole a milk truck. Was going
the wrong way on the one ten freeway or the
one to one freeway, I think it was one ten,
and he got away.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
He's still on the lamb. He's still at large. The
guy did this on TV. He stole a milk truck
and got away with it.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
So the odds aren't great that you're going to get away,
but they're better than they were twenty years ago. And
now you have a cell phone so you can call
your friends and say, Hey, I'm going to be at
the Olympic under the one oh one or the one
ten freeway. Slide in there. I'm going to come in
with the milk truck. I'm going to get out. Get
in your car in the back, put a blanket over. Mean,
I'm gone, and you can do it this chase. Though

(10:25):
the guy didn't get away, he got in a radical
crash in Lynnwood. Yeah, ding dog with this guy and
he's gonna do some speed wrapping tonight.

Speaker 6 (10:33):
We know that this was the La County Sheriff's Department
that was in pursuit of a stolen vehicle here through
the streets of Compton and eventually ended up here in
Linwood next to Saint Francis Medical Hospital when the suspect
crashed at the intersection of Bullets and MLKA. At this point,
it's unknown how many people may have been injured or
whether any innocent people were involved, but clearly a large

(10:55):
police presence here at the termination of this pursuit. That's
latest here from Lynnwood in News Shop four. I'mno bck
to you at the studio.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Ah, yes, Leanna Moreno used to be in in Alpha
and then they had Bravo. They had two helicopters an NBC.
I think they're down to one side of the time,
so everybody's broke. Also, Angel is Angel still well, it's Angel.
You with us, right, Hi? Yay hi you. So I
noticed over the weekend tons of traffic on the four five.

(11:24):
Everyone is angry as hell, and they've got another Over
the next year, they're going to close or really restrict
the foural five north and southbound from I believe close
to the airport all the way to Venture Boulevard along
the four five. So twenty five future weekends are to
look exactly like this past weekend and they're repaving the

(11:48):
four five and that's going to be a mess.

Speaker 7 (11:52):
It is. It's horrible, it is, and they're doing it
weekend long.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Yeah, and they're doing it the cheap way. You know,
LA has broke, California's broke, so they're not putting down
concrete anymore. Concrete costs four to ten dollars a square foot,
blacktop two to seven bucks. So blacktop is about I
don't know, twenty thirty percent of what it is for concrete,

(12:18):
but concrete lasts much longer, and so it's you know,
it's better to put concrete down, but it up front
it's more expensive four to ten dollars a square foot.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
And this blacktop they're putting down.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
And I thought all the environmentalists and all the you know,
the California's, you know, the Californians who are you know,
pro environment and want to save everybody, I thought they
were going to reduce the color of black on everything.
You can't have a black car, you can't paign your
house black. The rooftops are black. It absorbs too much heat.
And now they're taking the fairly you know, not white

(12:53):
but gray concrete and turning it really black with blacktop.
You imagine what the the the ten picture of that
four or five once they're all done and next summer hits,
you know, August in September of next summer, it is
I mean that that pavement, it could be one hundred
and fifty degrees.

Speaker 7 (13:12):
Oh you think people are angry.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Now, yes, exactly.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
How about the first guy that gets pulled over at
a high speed chase and he's got to lay down
on one hundred and sixty two degree you know, blacktop,
that's going to be a message.

Speaker 7 (13:26):
For that chap he's gonna get stuck?

Speaker 2 (13:28):
Is it gonna be every other weekend? Is that though,
what I'm hearing? Or is that what you hear? Angel?

Speaker 7 (13:32):
So that's what I heard every other weekend and.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
For twenty five weekends, so we're talking about fifty weeks.

Speaker 8 (13:41):
Yeah, but at least at least the freeway won't be
totally closed.

Speaker 7 (13:45):
I mean they're going to have you know, some lanes
open right right, which is.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
I think almost worse.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
I'd rather them shut the whole freeway down for a
week and get it done. Then just get it done, yeah,
I mean, like Karmageddon, you know, they shut that whole
freeway down for a weekend and they got it all done.
They took the bridge down one weekend, then repaved the
next weekend and they knocked it out.

Speaker 7 (14:07):
But they were done early. Actually, that on that car
and get in.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
That's right, and now it's crazy. All right, thank you,
Angel Martinez. Don't forget tonight, everybody Powerball seven hundred and
fifty million dollar dollars. I'm in on a ticket with Bellio.
I got another group of friends I'm in on it with,
and man, if we make that kind of money.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Bellio is never ever.

Speaker 1 (14:30):
Optimistic that we're going to win, and she thinks we're
going to clean up tonight.

Speaker 9 (14:35):
I'm positive, really positive we are well.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
Because you're mauling one of those those heroes that save Steph.
Fu's trying to Kenyatti, Oh, ken Yati were dragging a marine.

Speaker 9 (14:46):
Has some mojo.

Speaker 10 (14:47):
He won two Prices Right showcases, he won a Let's
Make a Deal showcase, he won pick four numbers of
the Mega millions.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
Yeah, you know you were great. You were trying to
pull his luck off him.

Speaker 9 (15:01):
Yeah, I got a little bit of it.

Speaker 2 (15:03):
All right. Well, I hope we win. We will, Yeah,
seven hundred and fifty million dollars.

Speaker 11 (15:08):
Wouldn't this be the perfect way to cap off the summer?
I mean, take a look at this eye popping number here.
We're talking about seven hundred and fifty million dollars on
the line tonight in the drawing. If someone does win,
they could either opt for twenty nine payments twenty nine
annual payments, or the lump sum, which would be cast
around three hundred and forty million dollars all it takes.

Speaker 1 (15:28):
Now, Kroz, you got a very strong opinion. Are you
a check skuy over twenty nine years or a lump sum?

Speaker 2 (15:34):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (15:35):
Please, twenty nine years straight. Give me the money, not
half the money or a quarter of the money.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Whatever ends up. You're gonna take payments? Yeah, I think.

Speaker 7 (15:44):
I can live over.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
I could buy a candy bar or two at that
point in my lifetime.

Speaker 1 (15:51):
People always have that they're very, you know, they're very
in one corner or the other. You know, either take
the lump sum or take payments. I'd take payments too.
The argument against that is you could make take the
three hundred and forty million and in twenty nine years,
even if you're stupid, you can triple that by putting
it in accounts.

Speaker 12 (16:11):
But I wonder what it could be if you just
took that same money over time and invested it.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
But look, if you have those twenty nine checks coming
in for well.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
Let me see how much each check would be.

Speaker 12 (16:22):
If you're capable of tripling that money over twenty nine years,
then you don't need to win the lottery in the
first place, and you could do it with whatever you have.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
No, it's just pure stupidity. You can do that.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
Let me see, it's seven hundred and fifty million dollars
divided by twenty nine So getting twenty five million dollars
a year for twenty nine years, nice paycheck.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
I think you'll be okay. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
But the other argument is what if that lottery and
the state of California go bankrupt and then you get nothing.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
That's possibility as well.

Speaker 12 (16:51):
If the state and lottery go bankrupt, we got bigger
problems now.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
But you're you could have had the money and now
you're with us all the losers.

Speaker 2 (16:59):
Well are you going to keep that money? I know,
what are you gonna do with all of it? Right?

Speaker 12 (17:02):
So, like, oh, you're gonna put it in a bank?
You put in investments. If California goes bankrupt, you're losing that
money anyway. It's wherever it's gonna be is gonna be
gone unless you got it in your mattress.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
It's gonna f up your life if you win, because
every time you get a text or a call, you're thinking, Oh,
this guy's hounding me for money. You know, I said,
if I just said, hey, you know Crozier, how's the
pavers going in the back, You're like, Oh, I know
what you want.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
I know what you want, new car, new house?

Speaker 7 (17:28):
What do you need?

Speaker 2 (17:29):
No, I just ask about the pavers. Yeah, yeah, what
do you need?

Speaker 4 (17:32):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Well I had an I, AM and I on this
house in Malleb. It's not much. You can come by Hello, Hello, Yello.
I rely on KFI.

Speaker 3 (17:40):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
KFI AM at six forty.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
It's Conway Show seven hundred and fifty million dollars for Powerball,
power Ball tonight. So you gotta get your tickets. When
does that cut off? Is that seven o'clock? I think
it's seven, So got to try to slide in there
and get your tickets.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
I think it's just before eight o'clock or just before eight.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
Okay, So if you're on the freeway, get off freeway,
go get your tickets. And if you do win tonight
because you got off the freeway and you did buy
the tickets because you heard it here on the show.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
I've got to think there's a taste coming my way.
Gotta be. I mean, how else would you live with yourself?

Speaker 9 (18:26):
And then I would get half of whatever.

Speaker 2 (18:28):
God always in my pockets.

Speaker 9 (18:31):
I thought that was the deal we made.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
No, we made the deal that on my tickets you
get have not on every ticket in the world.

Speaker 8 (18:39):
You know, no, Because if they hopped off of the freeway,
it's because of the stellar traffic report God, and they
figured out, okay, I'm gonna hopp and get it to us.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:50):
Maybe maybe they got off after they heard crash a
deanery're like, oh, I gotta.

Speaker 2 (18:55):
Get it to drink.

Speaker 7 (18:56):
Probably I would.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
If if I do win, I will give you, know,
you guys all ten grand And if you complain it's
going it's going south, it's not going north, I'll tell
you I'll take it.

Speaker 8 (19:13):
I'll take it as long as we don't get a
restraining order served up as well.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
Well, you probably get that as well.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
But you know, if I have seven hundred and fifty
million dollars, I think I'm gonna be able to hire
lawyers that can keep you guys away from me, because
your lawyers you can hire are like, yes, direct. Well,
with seven hundred and fifty million, I could get top
shelf guys to just keep you heathens away from me. No,
but I'd give you guys money if I won. You know,

(19:46):
I think Steph Fush has his own but he's out, Yeah,
he's out. But I'd give you guys some cash. Pelly,
how much would you if I got if I won
seven hundred and fifty million dollars, what would you be
happy with?

Speaker 2 (19:58):
Seriously?

Speaker 1 (20:01):
I mean, not not that, not on a ticket we're
in together. If I personally just you know, you read
in the paper that I won.

Speaker 10 (20:08):
If I may say, I feel like I've been very
loyal to you for a day you have, you have
very very and.

Speaker 9 (20:14):
My work with you is beyond the show.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
That's okay, I'll agree with that.

Speaker 10 (20:20):
Yeah, I mean I'm Conway's show from morning to late
at night.

Speaker 9 (20:24):
That's weekends, holidays.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Yes, I think you're right.

Speaker 9 (20:28):
That's worth a one hundred million.

Speaker 10 (20:30):
Wow, don't you think, Wow, I have a hundred million.

Speaker 9 (20:36):
I've given you ten years of my life.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
Oh my god, ten years a hundred million. So if
I gave you fifty million, to be depressed about that,
well a little bit.

Speaker 9 (20:47):
A little bit, a little disappointed in you?

Speaker 2 (20:50):
Really lie?

Speaker 10 (20:52):
Okay, you've got six to fifty left, right, Yeah?

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Well not really. I mean if I take the lump
sum and you know.

Speaker 9 (20:59):
Well you weren't going to do that, but you know, I.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
But from what I read online that most people who
win the lottery it does ruin their life.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
It doesn't help them.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
You know, there's one guy in North Carolina who won
two hundred and eight million dollars and his life fell apart.
You know, people stole money from him. He blew a
lot of it on investments that didn't that went south,
and he blew through all two hundred and eight million
dollars whatever his share of that was, in four years.

(21:30):
He was broke after four years. And he said in
an interview, if he had to do it all over again,
on the way to the lottery office, he would rip
up the ticket and throw it in the river.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
How crazy is that?

Speaker 1 (21:44):
But wouldn't you love the opportunity to not be that guy. Yes, yeah,
I think I would too. Yeah, you know, but it's
it'd be a nice taste, you know. Seven hundred and
fifty million dollars. I saw this while I was on
vacation last week at one of those you know, like
farmer market type things where people go when they sell

(22:05):
their wares.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
I one in Claremont every Sunday morning. Is that right? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (22:08):
I like those things. I enjoy those. And I noticed
that cassette tapes are hot now. There were two booths
that had cassette tapes and they were selling like hotcakes.
People love cassette tapes. What's going on with these things?

Speaker 2 (22:23):
This is my brand new album.

Speaker 13 (22:26):
Taylor Swift might have been holding vinyl when she unveiled
her twelfth album, but she's also selling a sparkly orange cassette,
a sign that even this archaic format can have its
own new era.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
My mother was about to throw this away.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
The problem with the cassette tape is you got to
take it out and remember which side the song was on,
and then they're like.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Oh wait, I gotta fast forward. I fast forward to
too much?

Speaker 12 (22:51):
Oh I get a back, Like if it's one you recorded,
or the printing kind of rubbed off.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
Yes, yeah, yeah yeah, or and those cassettes do wear
down after a while, and so I don't.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
Know if they maybe of them may come back. I
don't know.

Speaker 13 (23:03):
Is that tapes. The data company Illuminate found in twenty
twenty three, more than four hundred and thirty six thousand
cassettes were sold in the US, way up from eighty
and twenty fifteen.

Speaker 4 (23:14):
People who weren't.

Speaker 13 (23:15):
Even born when cassettes were the norm are feeding the rebound,
with nine percent of gen Z music listeners purchasing a
cassette in the past year.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
What are those tapes called?

Speaker 1 (23:26):
I'm sure, Krozer, you received some, you probably never made any.
What are they called in a relationship when it goes south?
Mixtape mixtapes? Yeah, mixtapes?

Speaker 2 (23:34):
Have you ever gotten those? Oh yeah? But does slame songs?
Oh yeah?

Speaker 12 (23:40):
I a a girl. I was my girlfriend when I
was in college. She was still a senior in high school.
My freshman year in college, she sent me like a
bunch into that stuff. I think I might even have
still still one of them, like.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Just the way we were happy. Oh way, Henny Rogers
and she the lady memories like.

Speaker 9 (24:06):
You know, men make mixtapes as well? Really, yes?

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Is that right?

Speaker 10 (24:10):
It's actually a sign when a man like has true
feelings for you when he makes you a tape of
his favorite songs.

Speaker 12 (24:17):
Only if it's the first one he's made for you.
But where's he making in prison? Which he's wiped out
your family because you wouldn't date him anymore?

Speaker 1 (24:26):
I made this jape? Yeah, gotcha care? He killed my
mom and dad and my brother and his friend. Hey
he killed the brother's friend, yes, at the house, wiping.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
My all up.

Speaker 9 (24:36):
But this is his favorite song, My Heart.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
Will go On by Celendia. He recorded it off the radio. Yeah,
my heart will go on.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
But those four hearts they're done anyway. I'm in San Quentin.
How's it going?

Speaker 2 (24:49):
His tape? You'll love it? Hey, you, belly, have you
ever gotten a mixtape or a guy?

Speaker 7 (24:55):
No?

Speaker 9 (24:56):
Really, not that I could think of.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
You ever made one?

Speaker 1 (24:59):
No, Bellio, you're not a lovebird, it guess not. Yeah, Angel,
you've probably have gotten some non No really, but.

Speaker 8 (25:07):
I did have a voicemail one time that was just
this sappy song after.

Speaker 9 (25:16):
I actually played the.

Speaker 12 (25:17):
Dumb song on the.

Speaker 7 (25:21):
Answering machine. That's how long ago, Sammy?

Speaker 2 (25:24):
Do you make them? You sound like guys make like
two a week wrong button.

Speaker 14 (25:29):
Yeah, No, I've made them in the past. But for myself,
based off of whatever mood I was feeling, that's not mixtape,
that's just a copy. Oh No, I just had a
bunch of different songs. It was a mixtape for me.
I never really tapes faded and that started becoming like
if you could burn a CD.

Speaker 1 (25:45):
No, but you know what a mixtape is though, I mean,
it's a it's a series of songs that try to
get the chick back in your life or try to
get the dude back in your life.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
Don't give up, baby.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
But our mixtapes always looked at like, wow, man, did
I make the right choice of not seeing this one anymore?

Speaker 10 (26:07):
I'm sure your mixtape was you your voice to Theemo tape?

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
This show here's here's what I talked about Alex Stone
by a murder.

Speaker 9 (26:22):
Here's me on hughle Houser.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Alex Stone was talking about Southwest Arolines going to tickets.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
I don't want to hear this all right.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
We're live on kfive KFI AM six forty is Conwoys show.
There are a lot of homeowners out there in selling California,
might be one yourself listening right now, and they're postponing
essential maintenance on the house.

Speaker 2 (26:43):
That is not a good sign.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
You gotta keep the house maintained because if you start
letting one things go and then another and another, all
of a sudden, you're a hoarder and you're living in
you know, squalor. And that's what you know. Whenever I
see like, you know, if there's if our dog does
number two in the house and I see it, I

(27:07):
always pick it up uhmediately. I never walked past it
and say, oh, I'm I'm late. I'll get it later
or maybe my wife will grick get it. Because that's
the first step to being a hoarder and being you know,
living in filth. The first step is always the one

(27:28):
dog do that you didn't pick up immediately.

Speaker 2 (27:30):
Hey's angels, my gun, Sammy, can you shut it off?

Speaker 1 (27:35):
Thanks by, But it's you know, it's that one dog do,
or it's the one, you know, one thing you didn't
pick up that you should have, Like, you know, the
dog urinated and you didn't clean that up immediately, Then
it's easy to pass up the second one, and the
third one, the fourth one, the two hundredth one, the
twenty thousandth one, and then you're living in a house

(27:58):
that's on TV because you're a pig. So you've got
to keep up on the maintenance of your house. Maybe
it all have the money, I get that, but if
you do, you got to keep that house an old
There's a saying the only thing that works in an old
house is you, which is true. If you have an
older house, you'll know that you're always working on it.
Things are always falling apart, but if you start to

(28:19):
let things go, it quickly accelerates.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
But people are doing it.

Speaker 15 (28:23):
If something breaks in your house, a new study shows
more people are putting off fixing the problem, which is
leading to more constantly repairs.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
All right epic wireless chargers at work and at home.

Speaker 15 (28:35):
Jabari Taylor knows the importance of taking care of routine maintenance.

Speaker 9 (28:39):
We caught up with them as you stop.

Speaker 15 (28:40):
Buy this ACE Hardware store for replacement filters for his
AC unit.

Speaker 14 (28:45):
I think maintenance is super duper important because if you
don't do it, then it's going to be a bigger issue.

Speaker 4 (28:49):
Down the road.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
So I like to save.

Speaker 14 (28:52):
Myself hundreds of dollars top the line by taking care
of the issues right now.

Speaker 9 (28:57):
With each filter.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
You know, that's always a big decision. When you go
to home Depot or Low's or Walmart and you're looking
for the filter for your air conditioner or your furnace.
You have a central air conditioning and there's a filter
usually twenty by twenty you know, twenty inches by twenty
inches you put up on the ceiling and there's a

(29:18):
couple of screws there and it holds it up there,
and you should change those every six months or so.
And especially in a place like La that's really a desert,
a lot of dust and a lot of debris and
a lot of crap gets in there. And you save
your big air conditioning unit, your blower by keeping it clean.
And those filters are very inexpensive. But I did the

(29:40):
same thing over the last week where you go in
and you look at the filters and one of them's
four dollars, one of them's eight dollars, the other one's fourteen,
and the other one's twenty five dollars. You never know
which one to get. You never know which one to buy.
You know, is this one you know, going to be
the twenty five dollars one, will it you know, block
the will it be strict the airflow or the cheap one?

(30:02):
Well enough dirt get through, I got to replace the
entire unit.

Speaker 15 (30:05):
You never know, with each filter costing just under nine dollars,
Jabari says he changes his filters every month.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Good for it, Try all.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
Okay, then that's that's ridiculous. Those are not designed to
change every month. There's no way that that thing gets
dirty enough to change every month.

Speaker 15 (30:21):
Jabari says he changes his filters every month.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
Okay, Jabari is is losing money.

Speaker 15 (30:27):
Trying to avoid a buildup of dirt and dust that
can cause higher energy bills and expensive system repairs.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Okay, with the money he's spending on filters, you can
buy another unit in four years.

Speaker 15 (30:38):
Which can run you about one hundred and fifty to
six hundred and fifty dollars, depending on the problem.

Speaker 2 (30:42):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
So if he's buying filters every month, and they're you know,
eighteen dollars or twenty bucks of filter, and he's buying
them every month, that's two hundred and forty dollars in
three years. He's going to spend six seven hundred and
twenty dollars seven hundred and twenty dollars just on filters
you can buy.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
You can literally buy are the.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Replacement parts in the blower for that kind of money?

Speaker 15 (31:03):
A new study from ACE Hardware Home Services shows majority
of all millennial homeowners aren't taking care of their homes
like Jabbari, with eighty seven percent of people saying they're
delaying repairs and routine maintenance. Another fifty seven percent of
people also admitting to avoiding using parts of their home
because of unresolved maintenance issues.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Oh that's great, kay u's a house because it's it's
falling apart.

Speaker 14 (31:28):
You want to look for somebody who really cares about
your house as though were their mothers or their grandmothers.

Speaker 15 (31:33):
Andy Bell, the CEO of ACE Handyman Services, says there
are basic steps you can take to protect your home
and wallet from pricey repairs. First, pay attention to the
inside and outside of your home.

Speaker 2 (31:47):
What other part is there?

Speaker 15 (31:49):
First, pay attention to the inside and outside of your home.

Speaker 1 (31:53):
And what's the third part? Just the inside and the outside?

Speaker 3 (31:58):
God?

Speaker 2 (31:58):
Is that flat? Advice?

Speaker 15 (32:00):
First, pay attention to the inside and outside of your home.
Do routine walkthroughs to make sure there aren't any visible problems.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Okay, I subscribe to that. I think it's good to data,
all right.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
Moe Kelly is still in Italy, and so I have
who's taking over for him?

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Who's on tonight, Sammy? Do you know who's on for
Mo tonight?

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Chrismaer Okay, excell He's gone up next on KFI AM
six forty 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

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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