Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI Am six and you're listening to the Conway
Show on demand on.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
The iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (00:08):
World Cup is coming and we have a lot of
different places that you can celebrate the World Cup. But
first we have a tragedy coming out of Santa Clarita.
This is not good. This is a horrible story. It's
every parent's nightmare when your kid goes away on a
(00:33):
field trip or in this case, a hockey team goes
on the road and it's then you get a call
saying there's been an accident. It's the absolute worst call
and the worst nightmare you could possibly have as a parent.
And we have a local connection to this, which is
(00:54):
makes it even worse because these are people who live
in our community in Santa Clarita, beautiful place to live,
and everybody in Santa Clarita is getting this news and
is depressed and is hurting and needs to gather and
they will to help this family.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
This is just a terrible.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
Story, just a massive tragedy for this youth hockey team,
the Senacorida Lady Flyers, the girls part of the twelve
and under double A team, were on their way to
a tournament in Denver, Colorado this morning when a snowplow
traveling the opposite direction lost control and hit their sprinter van.
The driver, as you mentioned, who died at the scene,
was the father of one of the players. This crash
(01:36):
happened on Interstate seventy. Video from the scene shows a
massive response, the sprinter van ending up on its side
down a snow covered embankment, the snowplow belonging to the
Colorado Department of Transportation. According to Colorado State Patrol, after
the driver lost control, the plow broke through the cable
rail and the median before colliding with a pickup truck
(01:57):
and then the sprinter van. Aside from the local hockey
dad being killed in the crash, eight passengers in the
van were taken to hospitals, three adults at five juveniles.
Now the exact injuries have not been detailed, but the
president of the Flyers telling us those family members and
players who are hospitalized are expected to be okay.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
That is great news. The really horrible news is the father,
you know, a guy who's volunteered to help the kids
travel with the kids, that he had lost his life
and probably at the end, you know, maneuvered that van
to help save the kids and sacrificed his own.
Speaker 4 (02:36):
Life are expected to be okay. The Santa Clarita Flyers
saying that this evening words cannot express the heartbreak that
they are experiencing. It goes without saying that this crash
is now under investigation.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
All right, so we'll have information on that. It's again
to get that call, you know, and you don't know
whether your kid has made it or not. Everything stops,
everything in your life stops, and you're on the phone.
You're trying to keep everybody in your house calm until
you get more information. And every time you get a
(03:11):
text or a phone call, that's all you focus on.
That's the only thing you do. You go into a
protection mode. And the first thing you want to do
is get in your car and drive there. And I
bet you a million dollars that most of those parents
are on their way to Colorado, most of them, and
(03:35):
and and that's going to be a you know, a
long haul and a long recovery. We don't know what
kind of injuries that these kids have been subjected to,
and you know, you don't know if there's going to
be long term, you know damage, did they hit their head,
have they broken their back, their legs, you know, you
(03:56):
don't know them, and and it's going to be a
a long haul. And then the father, the guy driving
the van must have been a father of one of
those kids. And so it's just the worst news possible.
And so we're going to keep you updated on that
(04:16):
as news comes in. But as I said, I guarantee
you everyone of those parents are on the way to
Colorado right now, And as soon as we have any
of those details, we'll have those for you. But it's
just a really horrible day in Santa Clarita, the absolute worst.
(04:38):
There's a woman who was arrested, speaking of driving crazy driver,
a woman arrested for allegedly driving recklessly at a park
in Whittier. I think we've all seen the video where
she's in her suv driving around the park, all over
the grass, some ball fields, people trying to get her
(04:59):
to stop, and more craziness coming out of Los Angeles.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
This video was all over last night.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
You may have seen it, the gray van or the
gray suv driving recklessly in the park.
Speaker 5 (05:15):
We have brand new details tonight on this video, which
first showed you more than two months ago. You may
remember an suv speeding onto the ball fields at Sorenson
Park in Whittier, young softball players and their parents running
in panic. Well tonight, and investigators are revealing they've made
an arrest. The La County Sheriff's Department says a thirty
six year old woman, Madeline Alatore, has been booked on
both felony and misdemeanor charges related to this incident.
Speaker 3 (05:38):
All right, that's cool, they finally got the person doing them,
But that, you know, why do we have to live
in a society like that where you're out with your
kids in the park and some not is just driving
around recklessly, could have run over any one of those kids.
And what's the solution? I mean, do we have to
put up those what they call ballers bowers, pallas ballast
(06:00):
where you have to protect everything now with cement and
steal just prevent you know, idiots like this. I don't know,
it may come to that where eventually you put you know,
metal poles or cement poles around parks so that never happens.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
But I don't understand why we have to do that.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
Why don't we just take you know, for somebody who's
done this, that should be a wrap on them driving forever.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
I don't know how old she is, but that's uh
that she should ever be behind the wheel again. Ballards everywhere, Yeah,
that's what's going to happen everywhere. Yeah, I mean they
have now you see them mostly around sports facilities and
federal buildings, but you're starting to see them now around
restaurants as well.
Speaker 6 (06:44):
You're seeing them a lot of times where there are
little markets.
Speaker 7 (06:49):
Yeah exactly. Oh yeah, yeah, like the flea market or
out markets and stuff like we have in Claremonta in
the village. Every week they put up they put up
ballards every Sunday morning. It used to be they put
people would put their tru front of the in front
of the way right down, but then they did the Yeah,
more and more you're seeing ballads put up on things
like that.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
They do the ones in Burbank now where there they
fill them with a thousand gallons of water and you
know that recycled water, and then I don't know if
I guess that works. You know, at least they'll slow
somebody down. But you know, we occasionally, you know, once
or twice a year you'll see a guy who either
is really pissed or he's out to kill somebody. Drive
(07:26):
down a parade route and and you can't block off
every street and every sidewalk and it and and it's
odd to see that, and you want to think, you know,
what happened to this guy, you know, who's cruising around.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
I saw one in I think it was Milwaukee.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
It wasn't a big one in Milwaukee, but it was
a guy that was really pissed off that the streets
were all blocked for this parade. And he went around
these cars and was going forty to fifty miles an
hour down the street and kids were flying out of
the way. And that does a lot of damage to
kids when you take them to parade and then they
have to run for their life. That that could scar
them for years or the rest of their life. Yeah,
(08:04):
it's crazy, crazy people, that's what it is. And they
should be taken out of society one way or another
and never ever allowed to drive again. Because driving in
the United States, in California, it's not a right, you know,
the right to drive, it's a privilege, and that privilege
can be taken from you when you do stupid crap
like that. All Right, we're alive on KFI AM six forty.
(08:25):
We'll keep an eye on that on that disaster car
crash or van crash in Colorado, and with will will
come in immediately with any information because I know a
lot of people in Santa Clarita are looking for answers.
They're looking to see how the kids are, if anybody
uh you know has been released from the hospital.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
They want to know that. They want to know the names.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
These are young people, so we probably won't have that
for you, but any more information on that on that
crash in Colorado with this girls hockey team, we will
have that for you. To stay on KFI.
Speaker 8 (09:00):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
What makes me happy is getting emails like this gentleman
who owns Langers DELI. These are my celebrities. A guy
who owns Langers or Arts or Monty's restaurant owners, I
am more thrilled to talk about and to meet than
(09:28):
a guy who scored thirty points for the Clippers or
the Lakers. I know the guy personally, Michael Levine who
runs Monty's restaurant, and I have his text and I
text him not very often, but he's like a celebrity.
To me, I'm like, Wow, that guy owns Monty's restaurant.
(09:48):
And how about this a letter in an email from Norm
Langer himself, tim Me, I was listening to your show
last week when you were talking about OURC Provisions. Although
the people that have the chili, we got the chili
from Smart and Final. It's made by RC Provisions right
here in Burbank, across the street from the Costco on
(10:11):
Victory and Burbank. All right, we continue and they're chili,
and I had to smile. You're absolutely right on the flavor,
consistency and quality. It really is the best chili concarne
on the market. Matt Gmelly, the owner. Oh, I didn't
know that Matt Gmelli owns RC Provisions. He owns Gmilly's
sandwich shops. There's one in Burbank, there's one in Los
(10:34):
Fela's and they it's old school. You walk in there,
you better have cash and you better know your order
or else no soup for you. And it really is,
you know, simple, four or five simple sandwiches, bag of chips,
canna coke, next done. Matt Giamilly, the owner of RC
Provisions has been supplying our meats at Langers for years. Okay,
(10:59):
was that tell you quality? Quality? In fact, RC also
provides the base chili ingredients we use in our bold
house made chili.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
I'm there.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
The chili is what goes into most popular menu items.
Our pastrami chili cheese fries is a fan favorite. Steph Foosh,
don't if you heard that pastrami chili cheese fries.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
Came over right there like.
Speaker 6 (11:29):
A pastrami chili cheese burger.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
Oh yes, yes, yes, yes.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
It starts with crispy Listen to this, Steph Foosh and
put your seat belt on.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
Yeah, I know. The next move is you get in
the car.
Speaker 3 (11:44):
It starts with crispy French fries, topped with our house
made chili, finished with melted cheese and our tender handcut pastrami, Simple,
indulgent and very la. Now that you know how much
and now how much you love. No, now that I
know how much you love the original Tommy's chili, and
(12:05):
that you know exactly where the chili comes from, I'd
love to have you come down to Langers and try
our version. Let me know when you're coming. Lunch is
on me oh, sorry, gang, he said, and see where
it included everybody else? Maybe he does says for like
a couple exercisees and then come back out and give
(12:27):
it to us. And then he gave me a cell number.
I have Norm Langer's cell number. How about that?
Speaker 2 (12:32):
Don't abuse it?
Speaker 3 (12:33):
How about that? But that is a great rush. You
know who eats there? A lot detectives and lapd brass.
They're always in there. Every time I've been there, there's
been a table of you know, five six seven cops
there and that area. I know Norm was complaining for
a while that, you know, there's a lot of homeless
and a lot of crazies in that area. I think
(12:55):
they've cleaned it up. I don't have to text him
and ask him. But there is nothing like that that
that Langers. I don't know what they're I think they're
they've slimmed down their hours. They used to be open later.
I think they close it three forty five or four
in the afternoon. I'd have to get that straight. But
the sandwiches there, the rye bread, pastrami on rye bread
(13:18):
with little mustard fries on the side. I don't know
how in La I don't know where you go in
La to be there. Oh Christ mighty, sorry about that?
What is that listed under annoying loud bell? The wrong one? Okay,
(13:39):
all right, but let bell. Yeah, let's try to get
the Norm to come on to talk food on a
weekly basis. Oh yeah, Wednesdays with Norm. Okay, for Tuesdays? Okay.
But I think we have to give more publicity to
more of these, uh you know, restaurants that that are
(14:00):
hanging on, you know, and some of them buy a thread,
you know, because everything is expensive and people are eating
at home and watching their budget. But we can't afford
to lose a Langers, you know. And remember when he
said he was going to close up unless the area
became safer. And this is a guy who has cops
eating at the restaurant every single day. But there is
(14:22):
not a sandwich in Los Angeles that is better than Langers.
And if Norm says that RC Provisions is the best meat,
then you don't have to ask anybody else. That's that's
the best meat. RC Provisions owned by the GMLA family.
That's wow, that's great. That's great knowledge, great knowledge. All right,
(14:44):
We'll try to get the Norman to talk about food,
but that is it's really cool that guys like that
are listening to KFI and take the time to write
I'm sorry I missed that email. It's from January nineteenth.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
I think we're not too far behind twenty twenty five.
Speaker 3 (15:02):
Well, yeah, so sorry. We will get to everybody.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
It's just the backlog. We got a little bit of
a bad flug going up.
Speaker 3 (15:13):
All right, we are live on KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
We are.
Speaker 3 (15:18):
We've got two guys, i think, in the newsroom who
are trying to get more information on this horrible accident
in Colorado. So as soon as all that information comes
out on how the kids are doing from the girls
hockey team in Santa Clarita.
Speaker 2 (15:32):
That was a horrible accident.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
One of the fathers has passed away and the kids
are all in hospital, we will have that for you.
That's a big story for our listeners, and we have
a lot of listeners, a lot of P one listeners
in Santa Clarita, and they want information and we're trying
to gather it as soon as possible.
Speaker 8 (15:50):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
We are trying to get as much information on the
accident that happened in San Well the teams from Santa Clarida.
It happened in Colorado. A girls hockey team got into
an accident. The van that they were riding him was
hit by a snowplow and the father driving or either
in the front seat or driving, was killed. And the
(16:21):
girls are in the hospital. They're all expected to survive,
which is great, but it's a local story here.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
That's a big deal.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
Santa Clarita hockey team, we played for you again just
in case people are tuning in and didn't hear it before.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
But it's a again.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
It's the worst phone call you can get, and then
you just look for answers. You know that your call
that your kid has been in an accident, somebody has died,
and your kid is in the hospital, and you don't
want to hear it second and you want to get
in the car, get to Colorado, either flying or driving,
(17:05):
and make sure that you have eyes on that child
and that child is okay. And that's happening right now.
Moms and dads of those kids are driving ninety miles
an hour on the fifteen on the forty whatever direction,
whatever freeword they're taking on their way to Colorado to
(17:25):
be with those kids. And what those parents have to
do though, is not go one hundred and twenty miles
an hour and also slip on the ice or the
snow and add this to this tragedy, because that could
happen as well. So let me play that story for
you again because it is very important. It's a local story.
It happened to these girls from Santa Clarita girls hockey team.
Speaker 4 (17:48):
Just a massive tragedy for this youth hockey team, the
Senacorida Lady Flyers. The girls part of the twelve at
under double A team, were on their way to a
tournament in Denver, Colorado, this morning when a snowplow traveling
the opposite direction lost control and hit their sprinter van.
The driver, as you mentioned, who died at the scene,
was the father of one of the players. This scrash
(18:08):
happened on Interstate seventy. Video from the scene shows a
massive response, the sprinter van ending up on its side
down a snow covered embankment. The snowplow belonging to the
Colorado Department of Transportation, according to Colorado State Patrol. After
the driver lost control. The plow broke through the cable
rail and the median before colliding with a pickup truck
(18:30):
and then the Sprinter van. Aside from the local hockey
dad being killed in the crash, eight passengers in the
van were taken to hospitals, three adults and five juveniles.
Now the exact injuries have not been detailed, but the
president of the Flyers telling us those family members and
players who were hospitalized are expected to be okay.
Speaker 3 (18:49):
Okay, that's great news, but again, the parents want to
see that now. They want to be there and hug
their kids, and they're not going to be happy until
they do that.
Speaker 4 (19:00):
Are expected to be okay, The Santa Clarita Flyers saying
that this evening words cannot express the heartbreak that they
are experiencing. It goes without saying that this crash is
now under investigation.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
So the guy driving the van was one of the
fathers of one of those girls on board. And this
is a twelve and under hockey team, so these kids
could be nine, you know, ten, eleven years old, twelve
years old maximum and those are babies, those are you know,
(19:32):
they're they're not you know, fully grown, They're not women,
they're there children, they're even I would say even you know,
less than children, they're babies.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
You know, at that age.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
You know that if you have a daughter and she's nine,
you still treat her like she's a baby, you know,
because that's the way fathers and mothers will be forever.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
I think you'll do that forever though.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
I think once you have a kid, you always see
them in their smallest, most vulnerable state. Even as they
get older, you look at them like they're always much younger,
because when you're bonding with a kid, with your child
when they're younger, that's the image that you always have
(20:19):
of those kids when you get home, when they run
to the door to you know, because they're thrilled your home.
And so these parents are all rushing to the scene,
maybe even you know they're panicking. Maybe they even drop
the credit card on a private plane to get there
(20:40):
as quickly as possible. That there's no expenses that are
a concern. You know, if somebody said, hey, we can
get you there in an hour, but it's gonna cost
you fifty grand, the credit cards come out and say
let's go. We're going, and they're all on their way
there right now, and that's going to be it's really
(21:00):
difficult for the whole family, all the friends, the neighbors.
You got to make, you know, plans real quickly to
you know, watch the other kids that are going to
be home. Maybe Grandma comes by. You know, you got
to watch the dog. You got to make, you know,
watch you know, your brothers and sisters. Maybe they have
young kids. If you have a nine year old, the
chances are probably pretty good. You also maybe have a
(21:21):
two or three year old at home, and you don't
want to take the two year old on a trip
like that for a lot of reasons, and so you
have to have somebody watch that kid. You're on the
phone the whole time. It's a big deal. It's a
major deal for these families. So I hope they all
get their tonight and they bring these kids home safely.
But it's going to be a real, uh, a real
(21:43):
heartbreaking moment when you know, they have to make arrangements
for the father who lost his life to come back,
and that kid's going to need a lot of attention
as well. So it's a lot a lot going on
out there in Santa Clarita, and we'll have information all
afternoon and in the evening on that tragedy.
Speaker 8 (22:05):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
We're still looking to get all the details from breaking news.
It's a girls hockey team involved in a fatal crash
in Colorado, and it was a sprinter van carrying members
of the Santa Clarita Valley based girls hockey team and
they were involved in a fatal three vehicle crash with
(22:33):
a snowplow and two other vehicles eastbound on Interstate seventy
that's the main thoroughfare through Colorado on Thursday morning this morning.
According to the Colorado State Patrol officials, the occupants of
the van were girls and adults affiliated with the Santa
Clarita Flyers twelve and under girls hockey team, whose home
(22:54):
rink is the Cube in Valencia. So this is a
major story with a wreck connection to southern California. And
we have a lot of people who live in Valencia,
Santa Clarita New Hall that listen to KFI every day
out on the way to work and every day on
the way home. There are people driving home right now
(23:14):
to Valencia who are listening to KFI a source familiar
with the team said not all the members of the
team were traveling in the van, and the team's coach
was not in the van. Here is a quote quote.
Our twelve AA Lady Flyers were on the way to Denver,
(23:35):
Colorado to participate in WGHL weekend. We asked that you
keep our hockey families in your prayers and give them
time to sort through the details of this tragic event
that was on a Facebook post from SCV Flyers president
Prescott Littlefield of the sc Flyers facebook page. The sprinter
(23:59):
van was carrying ten occupants, of whom three adults four
children were transported to the hospital for treatment of injuries,
according to a news release from the CSP the color
I imagine that's the Colorado State Police quote. In addition
to one juvenile juvenile was transported by a medical helicopter
(24:21):
to an area trauma center with critical injuries. All right,
So that's new information. Anytime you transport somebody with a helicopter,
that is very serious. One adult male passenger refused to
be transported to the hospital, and the driver of the
sprinter van was dead on the scene. This California State
(24:42):
Patrol I'm sorry Colorado State Patrol responded to the crash
at eight fifty three in the morning. So these kids probably,
I mean, if you backtrack it, they probably stayed in
Grand Junction or somewhere in south west Colorado, had breakfast,
(25:03):
got in the car, and we're going to try to
make it from wherever they stayed last night to Denver
for the tournament. The Colorado Department of Transportation plow, the snowplow,
was traveling westbound on I seventy when the driver lost
control nearly a mile past post to eighteen. The plow
(25:28):
struck traveled. The plow truck traveled through the median, breaking
through the cable rail and into eastbound traffic. The plow
collided with a Toyota Tacoma. It was traveling eastbound in
the eastbound lanes. After impact, the Toyota went through the
media and struck the BMW traveling westbound in the westbound lanes.
(25:52):
According to a news release, and it looks like all
lanes of that seventy were closed and that that must
have been for hours and hours and hours, and there's
no work around that.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
I mean, if that's.
Speaker 3 (26:06):
Closed, it's going to be awfully tough to get around that.
So any more information on that, we will have that
for you. But it sounds like one of the kids
is in critical condition, and so if you're the parent,
you want to get their asap without stopping. You get
the car and you drive, and you drive, and then
(26:29):
your wife takes over and she drives and you don't
stop until you get there.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
Tip we get some breaking news of fire burning near
the four five in Dell Air. Ooh okay, let me
run that audio. Here we go. I've live coverage.
Speaker 9 (26:41):
Reports that this may have jumped the freeway now impacting
the northbound lanes. You are also looking at now on
your screens images from Air seven live images there. Now,
both La County and La City Fire do have units
on scene there, and this is also impacting traffic in
the area.
Speaker 5 (26:59):
It does look like and I think that's the four
or five we're looking at right there. And what's good
and encouraging here is you don't see a lot of wind.
You're looking at the trees. There's almost no movement in
the trees at all, so no wind.
Speaker 2 (27:11):
Typically this doesn't this near La.
Speaker 5 (27:13):
The wind will be out of the west, coming off
the ocean, heading on shore, which is another good thing.
It'll be a moist air coming from the ocean. But
there's the there's the actual fire there on the on
the side of the freeway.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
Yeah, this is right near the Los Angeles International airpart
I don't know why they keep sending del Air. Nobody
knows where the hell del Air is. It's a dumb,
made up name. But this is right near lax and
El Segundo is to the west of the All right,
let's crank.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Up the audio.
Speaker 5 (27:38):
Yeah, right next to the four five four or five
and one five areas. This is La City Fire's response.
We'll have more on this coming up on an Eyewitness
News at six in just a couple of minutes from
right now.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
Okay, it looks like they're getting a handle on it.
I hate to say it looks like a bum fire again,
but that's that's all they You know, the signs near
freeway fire on in the brush, in the brush, in
the shrub, homeless, homeless, homeless, that's what that screams of.
Maybe it's not, but we've all lived in La and
(28:09):
surrounding areas long enough to know when we see a
bum fire, and that's what's going on.
Speaker 2 (28:14):
I think.
Speaker 8 (28:15):
All right, we have breaking news.
Speaker 5 (28:16):
Now. This is on the west side of l A.
You're looking at del Air. This is a fire that
is burning near the four or five freeway. It's basically
between They.
Speaker 3 (28:24):
Gotta stop using that term del Air. That's a made
up that's a made up name. It's Hawthorne in that area.
Del Air me. Yeah, they wanted to get they wanted
to take the stink off of one of those cities
there and named it del Air. It's it's Hawthorn, It's Elsagondo, Inglewood.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
That's where this fire is unincorporated, correct, mmmm it.
Speaker 3 (28:45):
Oh it is okay, I think so, all right, But
I've been living in southern California my whole life.
Speaker 2 (28:49):
Never heard the term Delair, not once.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
Between the one oh five and four or five freeways
on the southbound side of the four oh five. Last
report it was three acres inside. But there was a
recent report that flames may have jumped the four h
five freeway and into brush on the north bound side
of the freeway as well. We have Air seven on
the way. I think there might be a marine layer
problem there. So it's getting there as soon as it can.
(29:15):
But you can see the sloke from that.
Speaker 3 (29:16):
Fire Delair is a small, unincorporated residential neighborhood Bellio's right
again next to the Interstate four h five and the
one oh five. It consists of two roughly rectangular shaped parts,
one of the northwest bounds of the one oh five
in the city of Los Angeles near El Segondo. It's
near Hawthorne, El Segundo. Another one is the south. It's
(29:40):
a very small piece of property. It's like the size
of your backyard.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
Del Air. Never heard of it.
Speaker 3 (29:49):
Angel Martinez is Angel with us. It's not Randy full Oh,
Randy Fuller is Randy with us?
Speaker 2 (29:54):
Real quick, I am Brady. You ever heard the term
del Air? Do you know where? Do you know where?
That was? Just listening to you and I feel the
same way. Never heard it, saw it on a map,
and I'm like, del a, what's that? And they're staying
it on TV, Shelare.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
That's so great that they just, you know, all of
a sudden use that term without explaining it. You know, yeah,
oh you know it's del Air. You know you're born
and raised on del Air Man. My great grandfather from
del Air.
Speaker 5 (30:16):
Man.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
Everybody's no del Air. That's where the first.
Speaker 6 (30:20):
You know it's a legit complaint. When the traffic guy says.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
Where he's got to look it up?
Speaker 3 (30:25):
Del Air, Oh that's crazy, all right, but I appreciate
it any thanks man. All right, We're live on KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeart Radio 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 iHeart Radio app.