Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to the
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Well, there's
a guy who was mad at his girlfriend in Florida.
Try to get back at her by vandalizing her car. Okay,
kind of a weak plan overall, but nevertheless, certainly a plan.
(00:25):
But it didn't go well. It did not go well.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Well, it's bad enough to get revenge by locking up
your partner or wrecking their.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Car, that's right.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
It's a lot worse when you target the wrong person.
What An eighteen year old Florida woman admitted to deputies
that she tried to get back at her ex like
egging and spray painting his car.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
All right, that's a plan. It's a plan again, not
the one I would sort of go. But it's not
my go to plan to get back it's me, but
indeed is one.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
But she accidentally vandalized his neighbour's car instead. She's now
facing criminal mischief and alcohol charges.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
She must be young. I don't think when you're older
and you're married and you got kids, and you're in
your thirties, you got a career. I don't think you're
still targeting the ex boyfriend's car. I think that's the
young relationship. She thought he was the beat, real deal.
Jennifer Mete anybody like him the whole run, and she
(01:23):
attacked the wrong car. So bad vibes bad vibes.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Hey.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
The Friars Club, the legendary Friars Club in New York,
has been sold. That's the that was the the you know,
the the area of the site of so many great rows,
and they've sold it. The Friars Club Rose Johnny Carson.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
It's the club that put comics in the hot.
Speaker 5 (01:44):
See Jack Bunny's life has been about as exciting as
the Fourth of July in.
Speaker 4 (01:51):
London and stars in stitches.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
Four times in the past the Friars and Craftings called
them saluted the great comedians, and tonight they salute Jerry Lewis.
Speaker 6 (02:04):
From Frank Sinatra to Donald Trump. The Friars Club was
an exclusive fraternity whose members were mostly in show business.
Speaker 7 (02:11):
And they had to say, when you come into the club,
you feel okay, but when you leave you feel great.
Speaker 6 (02:18):
So when did you decide that you wanted to become
a member of the Friars Club.
Speaker 8 (02:23):
As a kid, I wanted to be a star and
everybody knew that if you were a star, you were
in the Friars Club.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
Yeah, the Friars Club is a big deal for a
long time. I know they had one New York. I
think I know they had one out here in la
as well. That was a big, big, huge deal, the
Friars Club. Nothing was supposed to be recorded, although I
don't know where they got those recordings from. And it
was supposed to be a night where you can say
anything you want and nobody record it, and nobody would
tattle on you either. You could say whatever you want
(02:52):
and how rude it was, how sex as it was,
whatever it was, and you could go about your career.
Not anymore.
Speaker 6 (02:59):
Kerrie Hoffmann credits much of his career as a talent
manager to his membership.
Speaker 8 (03:03):
And I would lean over when he had television deals
being made. It was the center of New York show business.
Speaker 6 (03:09):
But the Monastery as it's known in Midtown Manhattan has
been collecting dust now for well over a year, shuddered
from financial trouble and forced into foreclosure.
Speaker 9 (03:18):
This is that new chapter and that new page for
someone to really continue something from old and bring it
into a new life again.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
It's not going to happen. It'll be a tomorrow, It'll
be a seven to eleven Friar.
Speaker 6 (03:31):
Steve Beninatti says, besides its finances, he also watched the
club's popularity wane over the years.
Speaker 8 (03:37):
Twenty years ago, everyone knew the Friar Club.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Today, I'm not so sure.
Speaker 6 (03:41):
The empty seats they feel are emblematic of a cultural shift.
Speaker 8 (03:46):
Somebody said that in his entire life, Frank Sinatra never
had dinner all alone, and the Friars was a reflection
of that, that camaraderie that doesn't exist anymore.
Speaker 6 (03:58):
But the club's former leadership said as a small group
of old and new members are looking to buy it
back from the bank.
Speaker 8 (04:04):
As things getting more corporate, this is a throwback that
deserves to be in existence.
Speaker 1 (04:10):
Now it's not happening. Fellas, it's not happening.
Speaker 4 (04:13):
You got to move on while the lights are dimmed.
Speaker 6 (04:16):
Some Friars hope it's just an intermission and not the
club's closing act.
Speaker 4 (04:20):
Ali Bawman CBS News.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
It's over, it's over. It didn't work out all right.
Back here in Studio City, the city residents, a lot
of the residents in Studio City are frustrated over a
housing redevelopment.
Speaker 9 (04:33):
Some say this was a deal that was fast tracked
by city hall without input from anybody that lives in
this neighborhood. Now a half dozen of these businesses you
see behind me, small businesses, but kind of part of
the charm.
Speaker 3 (04:44):
Of living in this neighborhood.
Speaker 9 (04:45):
They say that they were being quickly booted out to
make way for low income housing.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
I'm very upset that we were never forewarned of this proposal.
Speaker 9 (04:54):
The proposal he's referring to would transform this cluster of
small businesses in Studio City into this building for Section
eight housing. That a community meeting tonight, some of the
local residents vented.
Speaker 4 (05:06):
I feel terrible for all these little businesses.
Speaker 9 (05:08):
They've been there for many years, as long as I've
lived here, and it's terrible to take away that.
Speaker 3 (05:15):
I think it's just the wrong location.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
The location not my backyard is what that's called in
Studio City.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
Terrible to take away that. I think it's just the
wrong location.
Speaker 9 (05:26):
The location is a long moor park at Witsit, a
five story, one hundred and two unit low income housing
structure would be built.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
Yeah, Witsit and More Park is a liquor store there.
I think it was called Boxing Liquor. And then there
was another sort of a dive bar there that sold seafood.
It was called the Crab House or crab Pot or whatever.
It was a great hang back in the seventies and eighties.
(05:54):
But it's all coming down and Section eight is going
up right in that neighborhood, witsit and more park.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
Some say that it was rammed through by city Hall.
Speaker 10 (06:04):
I found out about it after it had already been
a done deal.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
RYL. Steffernick is a longtime local resident.
Speaker 11 (06:09):
I get that we need the affordable housing and everything,
but my concern, once again, like with everyone else, is
the parking.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
Yeah, no, it's another not in my backyard. They'll blame parking.
They'll blame you know. They love the businesses. But what
they all are not saying is they do not want
Section eight in their neighborhood. Period. They can frame it
anyway they want it, but they do not want Section
eight housing on the corner of wisit and more park.
Speaker 10 (06:36):
But my concern of once again, like with everyone else,
is the parking.
Speaker 9 (06:39):
Parking is already a nightmare along Moore Park, and this
new building will not be providing parking for its renters.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
Oh is that right? All right? So a bunch of
units you have to park on the street.
Speaker 9 (06:51):
Will not be providing parking for its renters, so more
vehicles will be out there fighting for space.
Speaker 11 (06:57):
First of all, I was surprised it was never brought
up to us as a community, so we had no
say in it.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Stephanie Pollock grew up here.
Speaker 11 (07:05):
How are they able to build something with offering no parking?
It doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Yeah, that's another not in my backyard. They'll blame parking,
they'll blame you know, we love the businesses. It's just
not the right area. It's a it's a an f
you to Section eight housing. That's this is all a
disguise for what they're really saying.
Speaker 11 (07:24):
How are they able to build something with offering no parking?
It doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 9 (07:29):
The Oi Bar is a popular local restaurant and watering hole.
Unlike the dog groomers and the cleaners.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
And the sea, the Oi Bar been to that bar,
you know, hundreds of times, The Oil Bar. Yeah it
was it was older crowd. You know, if you're into
older single women, that's your joint. The Oi bar. It
was called the Oyster Bar. I think they showed some
of the letters blew off during a Santa Ana win.
(07:57):
They just never replaced them, not just the Oi Bar,
but or it's the sound that the women make when
they are, you know, falling apart. Oi Oi ah Oi is.
Speaker 3 (08:11):
A popular local restaurant and watering hole.
Speaker 9 (08:14):
Unlike the dog groomers and the cleaners and the smoke
shop that have to be out by may, Oi still
has a two year lease.
Speaker 12 (08:22):
They're trying to figure out how to get us out sooner.
I mean, at least is the least they're supposed to
be our landlord until Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
That's great seafood there. The Oi Bar, that's it's a
cool hang and that was one of the last bars
in the valley you can smoke in, you know, I
don't think you can now, but it was one of
the last bars where you can go in and have
a cigarette and a drink the end.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
Of that time. And to take care of us like
a landlord is supposed to.
Speaker 9 (08:44):
Some of the business owners, though, are looking into any
illegal options they might still have.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
But the future is looking bleak.
Speaker 1 (08:51):
Yeah's looking grim for which it and more.
Speaker 3 (08:53):
Part these are small businesses.
Speaker 12 (08:55):
Most of them kind of make an ends meet in
the neighborhood and starting the community to go.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
They gotta go.
Speaker 9 (09:01):
Yeah, one of the business owners told me tonight she
has to return her key, so the landlord by the
end of May. No word on when demolition will begin
after that.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
In Studio City, I'm Rick Chambers.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
Okay, that area was under construction for eighteen years. They're
putting water mains and drainage pipes in the middle of
that street of Wiset between Moore Park and Riverside. Forever.
If you're familiar with that area, they had tractors and
trailers and big excavators in that area forever. And now
(09:36):
they're going to do more construction in that area. Another
reason that the people in that area are just absolutely living.
They do not want that building there and they don't
want more construction. They went through eighteen years of putting
water mains and sewage and draining pipes on that street
in the middle of wits It between More Park and Riverside.
(09:58):
It was torn up forever. Now more construction More Park
and Wisit, and there's even more construction south of that
where the Witza Gulf. There was a three par there
or a pitching putt that UCLA bought and they're renovating
that into a sports complex. So there's gonna be a
lot of construction. If you live in that area of
Studio City, get ready a lot of construction come in
(10:21):
your way.
Speaker 7 (10:22):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am six forty.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
We have another suspected killer with the catalytic converters. A
guy was trying to steal a Cadillac converter last night
and another guy came out and said, hey, what's going on.
It wasn't even his car. He was just looking out
for the neighbors cars. And instead of driving off or
you know, shooting a warning shot at him to try
(10:53):
to get him away, they shot and killed this guy.
And it wasn't even his car that they were ripping
the catalytic or from you didn't even own the car.
It's just a neighbor's car. And now he's lost his life.
Another senseless murder here in Los Angeles, just.
Speaker 10 (11:10):
So tragic and senseless.
Speaker 13 (11:11):
Loved ones say that Juan Sanchez was on his way
to work when he was gunned down after trying to
stop that catalytic converter theft. We have video of the
moments leading up to that shooting.
Speaker 10 (11:27):
Thanks now that's him.
Speaker 13 (11:30):
On the left of your screen. We froze the video
just right before the shooting. Sanchez heard his noise at
his neighbor's home and tried to stop the theft.
Speaker 10 (11:39):
He was shot as he approached the thieves.
Speaker 13 (11:41):
Sanchez leaves behind a wife, two children, and a grandson.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Over a catalytic converter, which they probably get fifty to
seventy five bucks if you, you know, you melt it
down or sell it to a you know, a scrap
yard fifty to seventy five bucks. And now these kids
have lost their dad, and there's a grandchild who doesn't
have Grandpa around anymore. Man oh Man La is a tough,
(12:09):
tough place to live.
Speaker 10 (12:11):
He was shot as he approached the thieves.
Speaker 13 (12:13):
Sanchez leaves behind a wife, two children, and a grandson.
He was also an avid church volunteer. The shooting happened
around three am on Tuesday, a block north of Vincent
Park in Inglewood. Video footage from the scene shows the
suspect's vehicle driving away in a gold four door Toyota Camry.
It has a sun roof, tinted windows, and a left
(12:35):
fog light is out. The victim's sister says he was
excited about a recent promotion at Clean Harbor's and had
just wrapped up a project in the Palisades fire zone.
Speaker 10 (12:46):
This needs to stop.
Speaker 14 (12:47):
It's very unfortunate that a family needs to go through this,
and especially my nephews and my sister in law. She's
a cancer survivor.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Oh my god. On top of that, the wife's a
cancer survivor.
Speaker 14 (13:05):
She's a cancer survivor. He was a bread winner and
excited for his new position at work. He had just
finished a project helping out for the Palisades.
Speaker 1 (13:16):
Fires, and now that family is destroyed forever. It'll never
be the same. Over a catalytic converter.
Speaker 13 (13:24):
Now, you may remember something very similar happened to General
Hospital actor Johnny Whacter just last May, when thieves were
stealing the catalytic converter from his car in downtown LA. Now,
if you have any information, you are asked to reach
out to Inglewood PD, the Homicide Department, and back out
your life. A memorial is now growing outside of his home.
(13:45):
There's also a GoFundMe set up to help The Sanchez
family live in Inglewood.
Speaker 10 (13:50):
Niku Kazori, ABC seven.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
Eyewitness, it's tough, ma'am, when you live in La it is.
It is one of the toughest cities to live in.
We throw there's a lot to deal with. We throw
a lot at people every single day. Well, it's gonna
be tough to find these guys, but hey, look, they
found the you know, the general hospital. They found the
(14:13):
guys who killed that guy. So maybe they will find them.
Lapd'll put their finest on it. Or maybe it's Singlewood police.
I don't know if I heard it was near Inglewood.
I don't know if it is in Inglewood or it's
gonna La County Sheriff. Hopefully they find these guys. But
it's outrageous that this is still going on. All right,
some more violence an artison suspect. What's going on here?
Speaker 15 (14:35):
Around twelve thirty this morning, a deputy open fire. Now,
I want you to take a look behind me. You
can see the back window of the car and the
driveway is shattered. Neighbors say this all started when the
woman who lived in the house was setting a fire
to her front yard.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
I heard drigun cheat, yeah, and then that's it. Quiet.
Speaker 15 (14:57):
A quiet neighborhood in Rosemead was disrupted early Thursday morning
when gunshots rang out near Scott Street. The Yelli County
Sheriff's Department says a woman suspected of arson barricaded herself
inside her home.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
She started a fire and then she grabbed a stick.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
She's doing this doing the i'ms in her running.
Speaker 4 (15:17):
Running a walking very fast.
Speaker 1 (15:19):
Holding the fire with the paper and put in the
front door.
Speaker 15 (15:23):
A crazy day out there on wild Other neighbors say
they heard police trying to negotiate with the woman for
a couple of hours.
Speaker 10 (15:30):
We just heard on the loudspeaker.
Speaker 6 (15:32):
We heard the police all the lights and activities, saying
come out with your hands up.
Speaker 15 (15:38):
A search warrant was served and deputies entered the house
and saw the woman holding a large knife.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Oh not good holding any kind of weapon. When the
cops come in, that's usually your last act.
Speaker 15 (15:50):
That's when neighbors heard a scream followed by a series
of gunshots. The woman was rushed to a hospital, where
she later died. Neighbors say this isn't the first time
she has started fire.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Yeah, she seems to have been going through a lot.
That woman through a lot, and the last big major
decision poor one at that is when the cops come
in and you're holding any kind of weapon, You're done.
You're done.
Speaker 15 (16:14):
Video from January shows her burning things on her launch.
I finally has witnessed while walking my dog her lighting fires,
and so the cops have been over here multiple days
a week.
Speaker 4 (16:27):
She's I think she's mentally ill.
Speaker 1 (16:29):
Yeah, I think I'm with you. I think she's not
all there.
Speaker 4 (16:32):
She's I think she's mentally ill.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Yeah. Well, and she's not with us anymore. Didn't get
the help she needed, and unfortunately she made a really
bad move at the end. That's what happens.
Speaker 7 (16:44):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 9 (16:51):
Hey.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
Trump was on Air Force one and mention our show.
Donald Trump mentioned the Conway Show. Kind of odd, right,
the United States talking about the Conway Show. Weird.
Speaker 5 (17:04):
I love that Tim Conway Junior show. Lots of people
say he's making radio great again, and that I might
actually be one of those people now. Just really remarkable
work that Tim Conway Junior does.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Oh that's great, fantastic.
Speaker 4 (17:17):
How about that?
Speaker 1 (17:18):
Donald Trump mentioning The Conway Show.
Speaker 5 (17:21):
I love that Tim Conway Junior show. Lots of people
say he's making radio great again and that I might
actually be one of those people.
Speaker 12 (17:28):
Now.
Speaker 5 (17:29):
Just really remarkable work that Tim Conway Junior does.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
That's very nice of that man. That is really cool.
All right, angry, angry and hungry at the same time.
What causes this?
Speaker 4 (17:44):
There is science that you are, in fact actually hangry.
Speaker 12 (17:47):
You could help a couple of people out there who
are not the nicest before lunchtime.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
So yeah, I get that. You know, when you're a
waiter waitress, I feel bad for you. If you're a
waiter waitress, I'm talking to you right now, I feel
bad for you because you have to deal with people
all day long who are angry and hungry. I don't
use the term angry because I'm sort of not a
douchebag yet. But some people use that term, and I
(18:12):
think they're all d bags. I believe, so. I don't know.
Maybe your dad uses it and he's cool. Maybe your
mom uses it and you like her. But whenever anyone
uses that term angry, I always think less of them. Sorry.
There's a couple of things in life you can say
that I judge you on that's one of them angry.
(18:34):
And another one is if you're at a restaurant and
you're about to order a meal. Let's say you're you're
gonna you want to order a caesar salad. If you
say the following to a waitress or a waiter, I
judge you, and it's hard to ever come back from it.
But I can't stand being with people. And I know
(18:58):
Krozier doesn't do it because he's not DBAG. I can't.
I can't stand when I go to a restaurant and
somebody says to the waiter, when they say, can I
help you? What would you like? Because and if they
say this, my skin crawls and I want to run
out of the restaurant. I'll do your caesar salad. I'll
do your caesar salad. I've heard that from people who
(19:21):
I've been to dinner with. I'll do your caesar salad.
I'll do your taketos. Not I'll have right, I'll do
what are you gonna do to them? Yeah? What kind
of sick guy are you gonna do? Yeah, I'll do
your milkshake, I'll do your salad. Yeah, I'm gonna do
your burger. What are you gonna do to it?
Speaker 3 (19:41):
Huh?
Speaker 1 (19:41):
What kind of mess you're gonna make with this thing?
What are you gonna do with your burger? What am
we gonna do with it?
Speaker 3 (19:47):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (19:47):
That drives me crazy. And anyone who does use that term, Ah,
they never come back with me. I always write them off.
I don't care how close they are, what kind of
family member they are, I write them off. I'm done
with them. They I'll do your salad crew, God almighty.
Speaker 12 (20:05):
So the science behind being hungry, this is something that
I look into because I will admit I'm probably a
part of this group, as you said you were.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
Eva.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
Okay, don't use the term hangry. You're on my s list.
You use the term hangry, I'll stop texting you, I'll
stop calling you, I'll stop everything. I don't like that term.
Speaker 4 (20:22):
Sometimes we get.
Speaker 12 (20:25):
Well, i'm not gonna say, I'm not gonna point fingers,
but let's just stick to G O and I. So
the science between being angry, it really, honestly, you can
assume it's associated to your lowered blood sugar, but it's
a little bit more than that. You know, when you're hungry, Yeah,
when you're hungry your blood sugar drops. That can increase
your risk of being moody, being impulsive, and being aggressive.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
We'll get yourself a sandwich then, you know, don't get hungry.
Have some snacks around you can prevent hunger. It's a
million grocery stores within a mile of you get food
the house.
Speaker 12 (20:54):
But there's some science to that that is also associated
to an increase in cortisol that stress hormone, and even
adrenaline that fright or flight hormone, and so that can
lead people to being a little bit more snappy when
they not had their meal. Ways to avoid this, you
want to keep your snacks on you, and you want
to make sure that there are snacks that include lean options,
whole foods. Almonds for example, nuts and berries. This can
(21:16):
help you sustain that glucose.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
Okay, there's a good trick. Yeah, next time you're really
angry and really hungry, just have a couple of almonds.
That'll help you out. Yeah, just throw about three four
almonds in your mouth, chew those suckers down, and you'll
be off to the races.
Speaker 12 (21:36):
Almonds, for example, nuts and berries, this can help you sustain.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
What is he talking about? Squirrels, nuts, and berries and almonds. Almonds,
for example, if squirrel gets angry almonds.
Speaker 12 (21:48):
For example, nuts and berries. This can help you sustain
that glucose so that you can be nicer when you're
a little bit hungry.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
I'm honestly, I'm just speaking.
Speaker 4 (21:59):
Just look at why you get angry.
Speaker 9 (22:01):
I just.
Speaker 6 (22:04):
Well, listen next time you criticize my every two hours meals.
Speaker 10 (22:09):
I'm always nice.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
Always.
Speaker 12 (22:11):
Yeah, it's you know that probably is one of the
reasons why she is so nice. You just always have snacks.
Speaker 4 (22:17):
That's what we all need. So sugar is not a
good snack like a candy not a good snack.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
By the way, it's an excellent snack. It's an unbelievable snack.
It's probably the best snack out there. These guys have
it exactly wrong. A Snickers, a Hershey's bar, kit kat,
almond joy mounds, whatever you want. You know, sometimes you
feel like a nut, sometimes you don't. But a candy
bar is the most beautiful snack in the world. They
(22:44):
have it one hundred percent wrongat like a candy, not
a good snack. You know, it's the best snack. They
had one wrong. It's the best snack.
Speaker 7 (22:54):
Tact like a.
Speaker 12 (22:54):
Candy, not a good snack. You know, when we have
craving z but we want to reach for sugar because
your mind right associated in emotion right.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
And then when you when you have a craving for sugar,
do yourself a favor. Treat your body to sugar. Enjoy
yourself every once in a while. You don't always have
to be healthy. You don't always have to do the
right thing. If your body wants the snickers, go get
it and effing snickers. Your body's held up for fifty
sixty seventy years. It's drag your ass around wherever you
(23:23):
want to go. Give it a give it a little
joy in life. Break out the snickers and let it
have a Snickers small thing, got almighty. Everything is always
with the nuts and the fruits and the berries. And
you got to leave a healthy life and no meat.
Know this, and the smog and the water you drink.
(23:43):
Just give yourself a break every once in a while
and open up a candy bar. You'll you won't have.
You have no idea how great that's going to make
you feel. It's the best snack in the world. Candy
small thing.
Speaker 12 (23:57):
You want to reach for something that can spike up
your blood sugar, increase that doo mean, make you feel happy,
but that does not last. That usually leads to a crash.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
Who cares?
Speaker 12 (24:04):
You're back to those in moves.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
Corolla had a great line about this. He said he
was working with a guy who said he can't have
a Snickers at noon because he'll crash by two, and
Corolla's line was, wait a minute, Snickers is going to
take you out? Is that right? I thought maybe cocaine
or methanmphetamines, or maybe you know, way too much weed,
(24:27):
or you know, a fifth of bourbon would take you out,
But a Snickers is going to take you out? Who
the hell am I working with? Kind of weak souls?
Are these people? God Almighty? Like the last guy left
in the world who calls it right? You know, if
your body wants his Snickers or a candy bar, treat it.
Treat it, God Almighty.
Speaker 7 (24:48):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
You know a lot of people like that. Alexa you know,
Alexa Plus is out now. I think that's the Amazon
version of it, and now they're incorporating AI into it,
so it's gonna be Alexa Plus. This might be interesting.
This might be a cool tool around the house. If
you're looking for some help around the house. Let's find
(25:15):
out what Alexa plus has to offer you and your family.
Speaker 16 (25:21):
The next generation of Amazon's Alexa is here. The company
announced Alexa Plus, powered by artificial intelligence. This is the
first major update since the product's launch a decade ago.
Amazon says Alexa Plus will work seamlessly with the apps
customers already in use.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
Okay, that's a cool deal.
Speaker 3 (25:40):
Following a subscription model.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
A subscription model, a service will be.
Speaker 16 (25:43):
Included with Amazon Prime or cost nineteen ninety nine per
month on its own. Alexa Plus can't call you an uber,
order groceries. Even read your children a bedtime story.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
Oh thank god, you don't have to have any more
contact with your kids. They can be on their phone
and then when it's time to read them a bedtime story,
you don't even have to go in their room. Yep,
just call on Alexa Plus and then wait till they
get older and they need a lot of therapy and
they blame you for using way too much Alexa around
(26:17):
the house. Read your children a bedtime story? Oh please
don't do that. Please I'm on my knees, get on
my knees, all right, I'm on my knees, getting old.
I'm on my knees and I'm praying like I'm at
like I'm ten years old, sitting next to my bed.
I've got my hands crossed and on both knees. My
(26:38):
eyes are closed, and I'm begging you. I'm begging you
to please promise me.
Speaker 4 (26:47):
Ow.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
It's for so effing hard. My knees are buckling.
Speaker 17 (26:52):
I'm begging you, please, please, for God's sakes, please don't
ever ever rely on Alexa or Alexa plus to.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
Read to your children at bedtime. Please do me that favor.
I won't ask for anything else. I'm not asking for
anything for you from Christmas, for Christmas or Hanika or
New Year's or my birthday. Just please promise me, in
your life, if you have children, you'll never rely on
(27:25):
Alexa or Alexa plus to read them a bedtime story. Okay,
thank you. Oh that's so hard on the knees. How
did I do that? When I was ten? Did you
do that stuff? Foos? Should you pray before you went
to bed? I? Actually, yeah, yeah, I did the same thing.
Did you get on your knees. Yeah, yeah, I did
(27:47):
the same thing, buddy. Yeah, I wonder how goofy that
looked my parents. You do that, Rona, You get on
your knees and pray as a kid not so much,
and you can see the result, can't you. Hey, buddy,
I thought of you when Gene Hackman died. I know
you well enough and your you know your likes and
dislikes when it comes to motion pictures. I bet you
(28:09):
were a big fan.
Speaker 18 (28:10):
He was terrific and I've been watching clips of him
all last night and today and thinking about what I
want to say tomorrow. Okay, one of my favorites. Also
the best shouter in all film history. Nobody shouted like him.
He was the best man.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
You always believed that. He also did everything seamlessly and effortlessly.
You never saw him trying to act. It just almost
seems like every role he was in was written specifically
for him. That's how great he was.
Speaker 9 (28:42):
You.
Speaker 18 (28:43):
You know, there's this latter day saying he got the assignment.
You believe that about anything he was in. And there's
still Hackman movies that I haven't seen as an adult.
I just watched something a few months ago called Prime
cut with him and Lean Marvin. Holy crap, you got
to see that movie? Wait, I'm writing this down prime cut. Yeah,
all right, Island Mob movie and oh I love I
play sort of an oddball heavy in it to Lee
(29:05):
Marvin's Mob, Hitman and Forcer.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
It's really good prime cut Okay. And I'm not going
to ask you where it's streaming because I hate when
people ask me that, just like, if you can't figure
it out, then don't watch it exactly, you know. I
hate when people say, oh, what where? What streamer is
it on? If you can't figure it out, then don't
you know and then throw the TV out?
Speaker 3 (29:23):
Well.
Speaker 18 (29:23):
Also, IMDb makes it more on proof. All you do
is type in the name of that right it comes
up and it tells you right on the right hand
side where it's available.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
What was the show you and and Moe Kelly were
talking about in Tawalla? Is it Paradise?
Speaker 5 (29:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 18 (29:36):
That's excellent. It's not quite finished yet, but that'll leave
your jaw hanging over.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
What is that about? It's hard to tell you about
spoiling it.
Speaker 18 (29:44):
It's about that's okay, murder in a really what you
find out is an unusual setting.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
Okay, you know what, I never saw the movie The
sixth sense. I never saw it. What and somebody rounded
it for me the other day saying that that kid
was or the the kid was dead the whole time.
Speaker 18 (30:01):
Uh not exactly. Oh good, Okay, then I'll watch it. Okay,
it's just watch any shamel in movie. M Night Shellan.
He's kind of a one trick pony. You see one,
you don't need to see the rest.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Buddy, you have got to be doing a movie podcast
or a movie show on this station. And I and
I'm I'm I'm blue in the face talking to everybody
about this. Have you been yes? Really yes? Well thank
you and especially look, this is a company town. There's
no other town in the world that makes more you know,
(30:34):
features or television shows or or or creatively when it
comes to you know, motion pictures and the entertainment business.
And we don't and we don't have a show on
this station when it comes to movies.
Speaker 3 (30:45):
We should.
Speaker 18 (30:45):
I think about that all the time. You're one hundred
percent right. We are in the epicenter of entertainment for.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
The entire world, right, and there's nobody better than you.
Speaker 9 (30:53):
I know.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
You hate to hear that because you're a humble guy
and you hate compliments. I get that. I appreciate you
are the king. There's there's no nobody who knows more
about movies and actors, directors, producers, plot lines and and
sequels and what's good and what's bad than you nobody.
The thing is, I don't get out that much. So
that's that's that flips that perfect, that's perfect. That's that
(31:14):
actually works in your favor. Well, you've been really nice,
and I appreciate it. You got somebody's got to make
a decision around here to uh to do that. And
I got a meeting, uh you know tomorrow with I.
Oh wait, he's not here anymore. I'm gonna lean on
some people. I got a meeting with somebody in sales.
I think that we can put something together. But you really,
(31:34):
you've really got to do something, buddy, you know, I
think I think your knowledge of the movie business is
second to to nobody. I don't know anybody that I've
ever met, and I've been around people in show business.
I don't know anybody who knows more about movies than you. Nobody.
I have no social skills. That's that that works in
your favor. Here well, I I appreciate it. I'd love
(31:56):
to do it.
Speaker 18 (31:56):
Whenever I noticed that I'm the only one who does
you know, the oh bits when that's right, this actor dies,
And I love doing those, and I love adding the
sound and the clips to them.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
And your movie reviews are great. I've seen movies based
on your reviews. Oh good. I didn't know we had
the same taste, but that's good. Well, sometimes we do.
But I also, you know, I love the fact that
you know, even if you see a movie that you
don't think is great, you don't s all over it either.
You know, like, Okay, it may not be for me,
but it might be for you.
Speaker 6 (32:26):
You know.
Speaker 18 (32:26):
Well, I'm a big fan of movies that may not
have been the biggest thing in the world that when
they came out, but they've got good stuff in them.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
So that's why I love to be so much. There's
tons of that there. Yeah, I'm gonna be all right,
what is a prime cut? Prime cut? Prime cut?
Speaker 3 (32:40):
All right?
Speaker 1 (32:40):
I'm watching that tonight. Yeah you should. You'll look. Tell
me what you think after you do. I appreciate when
you talk about Hackman. Do you know what time I
think tomorrow? Around eight thirty ish, okay, tomorroway thirty all right, perfect,
all right. Moe Kelly is up next, with his whole
crew right here on k i AM six forty