Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's kfi AM six forty and you're listening to the
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app kf AM six.
It is the Conway Show. And it's Friday, Yes, yes, yes,
the Friday before super Bowl. And everybody's excited. People are
(00:21):
gonna go to parties, they're going to socialize, They're gonna
be on their phones. That's that's the newest thing. When
you go to a super Bowl party. Everybody's on their
phone right either texting or maybe betting I like that,
or just you know, scrolling because the game is not
that exciting for you. So we'll cover the super Bowl.
(00:45):
There's a lot going on with the super Bowl, with
security and safety, the music of the super Bowl, the
halftime show, the whole run. You know, billion people are
gonna watch it. It's a big deal. It's a big deal.
And then also the missing of Nancy Guthrie, Savannah Guthrie's mom.
It's still a big story. Man, It's unbelievable how much
(01:09):
press this has gotten. And you can tell that that
family really loves their mom, really loves her, and they
all do, all the kids. So she must have been
some special woman, man, some woman. And then I thought
about it. I thought if my mother in law was missing,
(01:35):
I think i'd go look, right, I don't know if
i'd I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
I think i'd.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
Go look, but you know, I don't think I could look.
I think the flashlight. I'd be in jail, like the
number one suspect. That's why you go look to throw
them off the scent. The cops would knock on the
door and I'll be like, oh, I didn't mean to
kill her, and they're like, no, we just want to
look at your ring camera. There's a fender bender out front,
like oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, here it is, here
(02:06):
it is. I usually don't park there. I park across
the street. But I don't know. I think Angel, you'd
go look. You're you know you do anything for your mom.
As a matter of fact, I would go look for
your mom and Bellio's mom. I'd look for Bellio's mom.
Your mom is your mom still with us? Yeah, yeah,
I'd go look for her and Steph, ooh, I love
(02:27):
your mom. I might go for a look for her
during the show. Oh babe, that's a that's a great mom.
You went looking for fush I did.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
Yeah, Yeah, you're a looker.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
Yeah, but I don't know if you are a looker.
I'd have to I'd have to really, you know, I
you know, go to forty years of acting school before
I could read one of those notes in the air.
What you know, are you afraid you wouldn't be sad enough? Yes, yes, yes,
I'm afraid i'd be. I just like lose it during
(03:01):
the reading of the note, like I know, I know. Sorry,
this kind of crap gets this kind of craft gets
you disinvited to Thanksgiving dinners. That's the point. That's the point.
So what would you wear if you did a video?
Like what would you?
Speaker 4 (03:21):
Sir?
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Your choice? That's a great point, Angel Martinez, because I
was looking at what the Dad or the Sun War,
and he wore like a Tucson a hat that said Tucson, Arizona.
You know, all of a sudden, he's like, you know,
doing publicity for the you know, the travel board in Tucson.
And then he had like this really dumpy shirt you
(03:42):
would find at goodwill and jeans, and it was it
was just you know, he he looks like he's there.
He wants to support everybody, but he also wants to
get back to everybody off his property where you can
drink and smoke and play video games again, you know,
because this is a twenty four hour day deal for
(04:04):
all of those kids. You know, they can't. Their lives
were not very public. They didn't choose that direction. And
now with all these cameras, all these reporters in town,
every move they make. They go down to Winchell's Donuts
or pupp and Taco to get lunch, and all of
a sudden, everybody, all the cameras are on him, and
they don't like that, and so they have to. It's
(04:26):
it's a fine balance between you know, wanting to find
your mom and getting these people the hell off your
out of your life too.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
They're in survival mode. I mean they're not sleeping, they're
probably not eating properly. That's right, they're distressed, you know.
Cameron Guthrie, her Savannah's brother is a former F sixteen pilot.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
Is that is it really what the brother is?
Speaker 3 (04:46):
Yeah, he's six years in the Vermont Air National Guard.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Is that right? What a family? Yeah, you know, overachievers
in that family, Duthly. You know what, So I'm gonna,
i guess, you know, gonna fill up more of my
brain with more information about this family. You know, you
only have a certain amount of of I guess what
what do they call it? Memory? Tough to lose tough
(05:13):
to lose it on that word? What's that word? You
have enough memory? That's a great one to lose it on.
Not an idiot, No, I was gonna say hard drive.
On your hard drive, you only have a certain amount
of space you can before your hard drives filled up. Well,
your brain is like that too. Your brain's like that too,
(05:36):
And part of my brain I have a little stupid
space in there that I'd like to erase and open
up more space for something else. I have Jackie and
Shadow in my brain, so I know the names of
these two eagles in Big Bear, and they're taking up
some of my brain space, and I wish I could
just erase that and fill that up with I don't know,
(05:58):
maybe the name of a playmate or something, you know,
something more interesting. But now you're going to have all
your brains. You're going to remember the names. You know,
a Savannah. You know you never heard the name Nancy
Guthrie before last Saturday. Never heard that name. Well, no,
that's not true. Maybe if you watch if you're a
Today's Show viewer. She's been on that show ten or
(06:18):
fifteen times. You might know that name, but you have
to be a pretty big fan to know that name.
And now we'll all know that name. We'll all know
Nancy Guthrie, we all know where she lives. We all
know the brother's name, Cameron. I don't know the sister's
nammy Annie. Okay, well, there's more space being occupied, and
we'll just all know these people for the rest of
our lives. It's weird how certain things in this country
(06:41):
get attention and certain things don't. Did you know that
while this is going on in Arizona, the lapd LA
Sheriff's Department, I think the Highway Patrol was involved as well.
They arrested six hundred and eleven people a in a
in a sex I guess circle or sex scandal. Yeah, trafficking.
(07:06):
They were trafficking young girls and six hundred and eleven
people were arrested for doing that. Did you hear much
about that? Now we're all on the trail of Nancy Guthrie.
But that's what we got to do, you know, got
to find this woman. Where do you have? Bellow, you're
a pretty good detective. What do you think it is?
(07:27):
You're pretty smart based on nothing. Well, let's not start
with that. You don't base anything on nothing. You have
a pretty good vibe.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
I just feel like it's an inside job. I feel
like maybe it was a crime of opportunity. Somebody knew
that Nancy's daughter was Savannah and you know has money.
That because too much stuff, there's too much information from
inside the house. Like yeah, they mentioned in the note
that the floodlights, the watch, they knew where cameras were. Possibly,
(07:55):
so I think maybe like a relative of somebody that
worked for her or friend her.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Vague, but I'll give you a two out of five
on that one. But we talked about these yesterday. They
could have had very clear footage of the guy or
gal let's just say, guy, you know, I hate to
do that, or gal crap, you know, women don't do this.
But the guy that kidnapped Nancy Guthrie, they could have
had a beautiful picture and beautiful video of him. But
(08:24):
Nancy Guthrie wasn't paying her monthly fee on her security cameras,
wasn't paying the seven dollars a month or fourteen dollars
a month. You know what I did immediately, I signed
up for all of that crap on all of our
video cameras because I can't imagine if anything happened, God forbid,
knock on wood, anything happened to my wife or my daughter,
and I didn't pay the seven dollars a month for
(08:46):
the for the thirty day video where you can back,
you can go back and look thirty days in the past,
so it.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
Just rewrites it like you can't. I think Krozier mentioned
this a few weeks ago, like, can you go pay
for it after the fact.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
No. The reason, the reason why they don't do that,
that is to get you to pay for it. You know,
if we could. Yeah, it's from that point on. Yeah,
if you could, if you could always go and get
you know, backlog video, then why would you ever pay
for it?
Speaker 3 (09:09):
Well, what if they kept it thirty days and then
you paid a price, you know to get that.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
No, but that, but that's how they get you. Remember
that on Star. On Star was a button you pressed
in the car when you got into an accident, and
then cell phones wiped that out. But on Star it
knew exactly when you got into an accident. It called
the cops and it called the fire department if it
was a bad accident and they were on the way,
and it's fourteen dollars or fifteen bucks a month. But
if you didn't sign up for it, even though that
(09:36):
car had that system and it worked, the cops weren't
coming and the fire department wasn't coming because you didn't
sign up for that. That's the way corporate America gets
you to write that check or put that credit card
down is to know, is to put fear in you
that you're not going to get that video unless you
sign up. And it worked for me because I signed
up immediately. I immediately took out the credit card and
(09:57):
paid the seven dollars and sixty cents or whatever it
was to get the thirty days on my camera off
on our garage because if I if again, if God
forbid it, something happened to my wife, my daughter, and
I wasn't paying the seven dollars a month yet I
was I could easily put a twenty dollars twenty bucks
on a horse to win at Santannita. You don't think
I would feel like an a hole. I mean I
(10:19):
would be suicidal. So I quickly signed up. But I
hate it because it's another thing I have to pay for,
another thing that I've got to pay for. It's not
the amount, it's how many of these stupid things we
all have. We all have subscriptions to all this crap
that we never use ever, a subscription on TV, your
(10:39):
cell phone, your cameras, your security system, all this stuff,
and we very rarely use it. But we all have it,
and we hate it. And you don't really know how
to cancel anything, and you don't. It just drives you crazy,
and then you pay for it month after month. You
see it on your credit card bill and you're like, oh,
I'll take care of that next month. I'll take care
(11:00):
that next month, and you never do. That's the goal
of these big companies is to keep you on there.
And how many charges that our parents never had. My
dad never had any security camera charges he had to pay,
never had to pay a cell phone bill. They didn't
exist when I was younger, never had to pay for
any of that stuff, you know, a streamers or cable TV.
(11:20):
It never existed. And now you're paying thousands of dollars
potentially a month in all that stuff. And we hate it,
but we do it. I don't know why we do it,
but we all do it. We all do it. Every
one of you do it. And don't say no, not me.
I'm in Sherman now because I don't do it. You
do it, You do it.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI.
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
Monks, joins us Hi you bub Billy's VNS and You've
got a big show tomorrow eight to ten, eight to ten,
and you know what, I'll be talking with Adam Miller,
the guy that we're all going to need to know
because he's running for mayor of Los Angeles. We'll catch
that interview tomorrow and it's also going to replay on
Sunday afternoon at two. So if you're not locked into
the big game yet, keep it here on KFI. And
(12:06):
then we also have that accident on Westwood. We were
talking about it yesterday. There are a lot of old people,
old money that live in Westwood, and it's a bad
combination old money, old people, new college students, young people
who are on their phone all the time. It's amazing
that there's not three or four people killed every day
in that area. Not all old drivers are created the same.
(12:29):
There are some who are still competent, some who are not,
some who can still drink and drive at ninety I've
heard of that, yes, and there are some, you know,
that you got to have the difficult conversation with because
it could lead to deadly circumstances. We should note it
has not been confirmed that age played a role in this.
It is clearly suspected because of the suspected age of
the driver at this point. But needless to say, horrible,
(12:52):
horrible tragedy. Three people dead, the more injured, horrible scene.
Did you see the video? Not yet? Oh my god,
she's driving. It looks like she's going sixty miles an
hour when she hits the building and the brake lights
don't go on until she's in the supermarket. Yeah, it's
just imagine being in that bakery. Oh, I know, and
(13:13):
then suddenly you're gone. But you know, but this stretch
of Westwood. I used to live on Ohio and Westwood,
and I heard accidents from my apartment, I would say,
two or three times a month. And that's why I'm here.
Because this came up at La City Hall today, Councilwoman
Katie Rslavski mentioned, Hey, my office secured funding for Westwood
(13:34):
Boulevard a road safety improvement. Good project, how long ago?
We want to make it safer for pedestrians, drivers, and cyclists,
all the people who ended up involved in this. Sure
it's been held up for years, held up by review processes,
and construction still isn't supposed to start. What don't we
hear from Councilman Klaski.
Speaker 6 (13:52):
Here's what she said, says underway to make Westwood Boulevard safer.
My office helps secure funding for this because we knew
improvements were needed. This week, in light of the tragedy,
we reviewed LADOT's timeline for the Westwood Bulevard Safety to
Mobility project. It shows years of scoping, planning, and construction
(14:13):
not expected until twenty twenty seven or twenty twenty eight
to begin. It's not acceptable for a safety project and
one of the busiest corridors in the city, and funding
isn't enough if the delivery timeline stretches into half a decade.
And I know we all have these projects in our
own districts that were just wishing would have been built
ten years ago. We can have meaningful community engagement and
(14:36):
still move faster.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
So she is asking for a thorough review of the
LA Department of Transportations timeline that they've etched out for
this thing. But what she said there was community review,
and that is what slows down nearly every project, but
everything since I was a kid, you know, the one
on one freeway in the valley, they've always wanted to
(15:00):
widen that, and it's always three or four community activists
that fight that. Same with the gondola or gondola from
Union Station to Dodger Stadium, that's always been talked about
for twenty five years. But in nineteen eighty four, that's
when I lived on Ohio and Westwood, and that's why
here are all these accidents. They were talking about that
back then, and they're talking about it now, and it
(15:20):
looks like they'll be talking about it for a while
because the money for this project already secured, the planning
process already underway. But what Councilwoman Yaroslavsky is saying, so
many engagements have to take place. Let's make sure that
we schedule meetings with every Tom, Dick and Harry who
lives in the area and get their input, or let's
do environmental impact reviews and those sorts of things. So
(15:42):
it takes years. It's not just for road safety projects,
it's for trying to build anything. In the city of
Los Angeles. One of my favorite billboards is on the
corner of Santa Monica and Westwood and it's the American
Heart Association, and it's a digital counter and it accounts
how many people have died from cigarettes. And it rolls
over even if you're a stoplight, you'll see it roll
(16:04):
over like to seventy, you know, and it's at four
or five hundred thousand. And I always wanted to fight
for another billboard across the street and also a digital
counter on how many children and wives were saved either
the hand or by the hand or the gun because
dad went out and had a cigarette instead of wiped
(16:24):
out the family. Yeah, just talking about that, the fire
department would have to put that billboard out every three
or four days. Does it make you want to smoke?
It does. Yeah, it makes me want to smoke. You know.
Whatever I see, you know, vaping commercials or you know,
anti vaping or anti smoking commercials, it reminds me to smoke.
My toes start twitching. I have to light up. An
American spirit Now it has the opposite effect. Yeah, and
(16:48):
I think they know that they do. Yeah, it's not
four nons, non smokers, No, not to smoke, that's right.
And the worst, you know, the worst of the bunch
are x Smoke's what I mean. You can't You'll never
never forget how good it was. I remember back in
the Fabulous Forum when you used to be able to
smoke in there, and there was like a cloud on
at some level you could see above the cloud and
(17:08):
below the cloud. It just stayed there like a big
bank of fog. And then they made the Great Western
Form and they would announce this before the game, ladies
and gentlemen, the Great Western Form is a smoke free facility.
And you get all these people, you know, these you know,
pardon me, liberals rubbing their nipples at that thing. Don't
do the applauding, like yeah, and the real guys who
(17:31):
loved to go to watch hockey fights are still smoking anyway. Yeah,
it's a shame. You know, there would have been a
time where you and I could be smoking right now.
That's right, that's right exactly in this building, in this studio,
and it's over. It's over, buddy, Nice to see you.
Eight to ten tomorrow on KFI and two o'clock two
to four on Sunday. Excellent, all right, nice to see it.
All right, there he goes thing talk.
Speaker 5 (17:53):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Hey, your Belinda is in the news. I like your Belinda.
We've had we had a remote in your Belinda at
a smart and final. It was a huge Smart and
Final and we had about three hundred people show up,
so that was a cool deal. That's right before the
White House charity thing we do every year. But your Belinda,
I think home to the Nixon Museum. The Richard Nixon
(18:21):
Library I think is in your Belinda. Pellyo. You live
fairly close to your Belinda, don't you fairly? Yes, it's
a beautiful eric.
Speaker 3 (18:29):
I love it there right, the Nixon Library is there.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
I will say though, that your Belinda is the home
of ninety five people wanting to make a left hand turn. Though,
when you get in line to make a left hand
turn your Linda, you could be the ninety sixth person
in line to try to make that left that's one
of the drawbacks. However, it is it is beautiful down there.
(18:54):
A lot of great schools, a lot of great families,
and your Belinda is in the news today because it's
the warmest spot in the nation. In the entire United States,
with the exception of Alaska and Hawaii, the contiguous United States,
in all of the land, there is only one place
(19:14):
that's eighty eight degrees, and that's yor Belinda. Eighty eight
degrees today, the warmest place in America. So congratulations to
your Belinda. If you live down there, you're enjoying eighty
eight degrees. All right. Now, let's look at the coldest place.
It's it's in a place called I've ever heard of
this before, east southeast of Est Court estcor rt Est
(19:39):
Court Station, Maine. It's north Maine. It's about two hunred
and seventy three miles north of Portland, Maine. And it's
right where Maine, the United States, and Canada meet. The
northernest part of the nation, with the exception of Alaska,
is this city. And it is minus twenty seven degrees
(20:02):
minus twenty seven degrees. All right, let's do the your
quick math. Okay, your Belinda is eighty eight and this
place in Maine is twenty seven, So eighty eight plus
twenty seven is one hundred and fifteen degree difference. One
hundred and fifteen degrees difference. Your Belinda and Northern may
(20:27):
Bad vibes r. We got a crime in Sunland. We
don't have time to do it. We'll come back and
do it. You're not going to believe this. A grandfather
picking up his granddaughter from school or dropping him off
at school. School activity, and a lunatic stabs the grandfather
(20:50):
and the granddaughter stabs him, and a guy came to
the rescue and save both those lies. So we got
to give him at a boy for that. But that's
where we live. When you simply are dropping your kid
off or your grandkid or picking him up from school,
you've got to watch out that somebody is not going
(21:10):
to try to stab you to death. Didn't know these people.
It was just a completely random, random attack. Stabbed and
we'll come back and tell you that story. It's crazy.
It's crazy where we live, all right. Rely on KFI
Congratulations your land eighty eight degrees the warmest part in
the nation, so you guys get the blue ribbon for that.
Speaker 5 (21:31):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty's Conway show.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
We try to warn everybody about crime in La County,
southern California, the city of La because you are you
don't have any immunity to it. You're not immune to it.
You could be next you. A crime in this area
(21:58):
is a lot of the time completely random. And this
happened in Sunland to a grandfather and his ten year
old granddaughter stabbed outside of a school, completely random. They
both woke up this, you know, in the morning and said, hey,
(22:19):
it's just gonna be a normal day. I think the
grandfather is still in the hospital. The granddaughter, thank god,
made it and was released. But you've got to now
be careful in everything you do, everywhere you go. You
got to have your head on a swivel. It's horrible,
but we do. Everybody.
Speaker 7 (22:38):
We did speak to that family and the brother of
that suspect. They say he's been dealing with sys kosis
and schizophrenia for some time now. They say they really
hoped it wouldn't have come down to this, and they
say they just tried to get him help.
Speaker 8 (22:50):
He has mental issues. I want him to get the
help of HI didn't want it.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
You know a lot of people have family members like this.
We have a family member like this, and my dad
tried for fifty five years to help, and there's just
nothing you can do after a certain point, because if
(23:15):
people don't go in to get help voluntarily, you can
incarcerate them against their will for the most part, and
until they stab somebody and then the state takes over.
But there's a lot of families out there who have
tried for years and maybe even decades to help a
family member with psychological problems, and you've run into brickwall
(23:41):
after brickwall. I know, many many times I'm sitting over
there with my dad, my dad trying to figure out
what to do, and it takes a toll on you
and this guy and this family is in the same position.
Speaker 8 (23:55):
He has mental issues. I want him to get to help.
HI didn't want it to come to this.
Speaker 9 (23:58):
Esteban says his brother has been dealing with bounts of
psychosis since schizophrenia place.
Speaker 8 (24:03):
They had him instituted at. Somebody had told him he
doesn't have to take his medication, and he listens to
that person.
Speaker 9 (24:09):
Neighbors on El Dora STREETA and someone say they're upset
to hear about a little girl and her grandfather who
were stabbed this morning getting ready to leave for school.
The incident, though not exactly.
Speaker 4 (24:19):
Shocking, just your worst nightmare as a neighbor. You don't
want this in your neighborhood.
Speaker 9 (24:25):
Mike Augajanian spoke with the family of the victims who
didn't want to go on Camrock.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
I think this guy, Mike auga Janyan, I think this
is the guy that stepped in and helped say the
lives of both of these people, the grandfather and the granddaughter.
I think that's the name.
Speaker 9 (24:38):
Mike Augajanian spoke with the family of the victims who
didn't want to go on Camerack. He detailed what took place.
Speaker 4 (24:44):
The grandpa puts the daughter into the granddaughter into the car.
Psychopath runs at the daughter, at the granddaughter a tame sort,
not a straight up stabs are on the arm. Where
grandpa runs at him, he turns a knife on him
and stabs him in the neck on the arm, and
then that moron jumps into the car. Luckily, the grandpa
(25:05):
was able to pull the kid out of the car
and takes off with their car.
Speaker 9 (25:08):
Police say that suspect then fled in the family's car
on to mcvine Avenue.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
That was a victim's vehicle.
Speaker 10 (25:14):
He took off and we were able to track that
vehicle to that location.
Speaker 9 (25:18):
Neigh We're saying an incident just like this one almost
took place months ago.
Speaker 4 (25:22):
A child almost got stabbed six months ago and is
released three days after the stabbing. Six months later. Now
that child is in the hospital for.
Speaker 10 (25:31):
Working to confirm that there was a similar type incident
that occurred. We're looking through the records to determine if,
in fact, that did occur.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
Okay, is that the same child? The same child was
stabbed Wait a minute, I got to go back here.
Speaker 4 (25:46):
And is released three days after the stabbing six months later.
Now that child is in the hospital.
Speaker 10 (25:52):
For working to confirm that there was a similar type
incident that occurred. We're looking through the records to determine
if that did occur.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Okay, If that did occur, is it the same child
and the same suspect, and that didn't get him locked up?
He was able to get out and do it again.
The hell's going on now.
Speaker 7 (26:10):
The family does say they are so thankful that their neighbors,
that child as well as the grandfather are in stable condition.
They say there his brother Eric of Ilz is being
booked has not been charged yet with that crime. Reporting
Live in Sunland, Curly Gomez, ABC seven NYE Witness News.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
It's wild out there, absolutely crazy. All right. On a
lighter note here, the World Cup is coming to town.
What will it cost? How much will a trip to
the World Cup cost? Airlines, rent a car, hotel, food, tickets,
the whole run. What does it cost to go to
the World Cup if you're coming from overseas?
Speaker 11 (26:50):
Dave Ornstein and his wife Peg you run an Airbnb
called the Rocker House right across the street from Sofi Stadium.
Speaker 12 (26:57):
Literally from out the door, out the gate, it's about
a minute walk to your seat in the stadium.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
Yeah, those people have cleaned up, the people that owned
the homes. They went through four years of hell of
construction every single day in their neighborhood, and now they're
cleaning up an airbnb across the street from so Far
for World Cup two thousand a night easy.
Speaker 11 (27:18):
They've hosted hundreds of visitors for some of Englewood's biggest
events over the last few years at this newly renovated
four bedroom home, but the World Cup in June will
be their biggest yet as Sofi Stadium will host eight matches.
Speaker 12 (27:32):
Opening night is going to be about seven thousand dollars
a night.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
Wow, seven grand a night just for the Airbnb. Holy smoke.
Speaker 11 (27:43):
That's when the US takes on Paraguay. A four nights
stay at this house with a backyard and hot tub
will cost nearly twenty thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Oh my god, that is wild. And he's probably got
a line of people that.
Speaker 11 (27:55):
Wanted two tickets to the US opener will run you thousands,
if not tens of thousands of dollars.
Speaker 12 (28:00):
Eight people can stay here. So yes, if you're spending
on opening night, you know, on basic seats, maybe seven
eight thousand dollars, what is another thousand for you to
stay you know, in the in the in an airbnb
right here.
Speaker 11 (28:16):
Inglewood is one of these sixteen venues for the World
Cup throughout three countries. Inglewood hosted the Super Bowl back
in twenty twenty two, and Mayor James Buttz knows this
will be an even bigger deal when it.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
Yeah, a bigger deal comes to revenue and also the
you know we've got the World Cup coming in then
we also have the Super Bowl next year will be
at so far, and then the Olympics. We have three
straight years or four years of unbelievable action in Los Angeles.
(28:50):
And again i'd like to have anybody listening right now.
And maybe is the wrong audience to do this with,
because this audience does behave. But when the world comes
to see we have got a straighten up, we've got
to clean this town up. We've got to make sure
we don't rob, kill, rape, or the visitors. Leave these
(29:12):
people alone, let them go home and tell all their
friends and family members in Brazil or in Japan, or
in France, or in South Africa, wherever they're coming from,
tell them. Let them go home and say that la
is one of the greatest places in the world to visit.
And so let's give everybody a break here. If they're
(29:32):
from out of town, don't rob them.
Speaker 13 (29:36):
About one hundred billion dollars for Super Bowl week, So
with eight matches, I don't know, we could probably have
a circulation value of money in the county of two
hundred billion.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
Wow, two hundred billion dollars is going to be sent spent.
That's unbelievable of money in the county of two hundred billion.
And these are two hundred billion dollars that would never
have come here. You know, people from around the world
would never spend seven thousand dollars a night on an
Airbnb unless it's the World Cup and we're gonna have
eight tournament. We're gonna have eight games at Sofi Stadium,
(30:09):
so there's gonna be a lot of money and a
lot of people coming in town. Don't rape them, don't
kill them, and don't rob them. Please let them. Let
them be. They're visitors. They're coming to see Los Angeles
and when they come to CLA, they're gonna see all
of us, So please leave them alone.
Speaker 11 (30:29):
The World Cup's gonna be here, right But local soccer
fans like Miguel Gutierrez, who grew up in Englewood, says
he can only dream about going.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
The World Cup's coming, but the majority I don't think
we're gonna go because it's too expensive to buy a
ticket to go to a World Cup here.
Speaker 11 (30:43):
Still, the Los Angeles World Cup twenty twenty six host
committees reassuring local soccer fans they will be able to
enjoy World Cup related activities across LA with a series
of events and watch parties.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
It's gonna be great. It'll be a great time for LA.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
It's a mobile pop tour that begins on March third,
and it will literally cruise around the county for one
hundred days with stops at high traffic locations.
Speaker 11 (31:09):
And for Orangstein, it's a once in a lifetime score and.
Speaker 12 (31:12):
We knew that it was going to be something pretty spectacular.
Speaker 1 (31:16):
Yeah, it's gonna be great. All right. So we've got
three big events World Cup, super Bowl and the Olympics,
so let's all behave please please, all right. We live
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
(31:37):
through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.