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 apps.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
All right, what is spectacular weekend? Weather wise? I told you,
I told you it was gonna be great. I tell
you bell Yo, Yeah, I told you then, and it was.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
Man.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
It was seventy seven on Saturday in the valley. Seventy
seven degrees in Burbank. Never got warmer than seventy seven degrees.
I drove up to Oxnard, Ventura. I had to put
a sweater on. It was fifty six degrees when I
was coming back from Ventura on Saturday night.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Unbelievable. And there'll be a little warmer this week.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
But if you're going to San Francisco, you've got to
bring a down jacket. San Francisco is having the coldest
July it's had in fifty years. Fifty years. The high
or in the low sixties. The low's in the low fifties.
It's freezing in Sance. Just go freezing. Alright, let's get
to Alex Stone. He's with us maybe C news. Alex,
(01:05):
How you Bob.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Remember this in like what October is when we're like, man,
every day it's been so hot.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
But but you know, nice, but this station, along with
TV news stations, they all did this, you know, and
and I sort of fought against it. But about two
months ago they were running stories maybe ABC random as well,
we're in for the hottest summer. Yeah, and I'm like,
that's not news. That's the prediction business, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
That, m'el Like every summer is at it's gonna be
the worst wildfire season ever and the hottest ever, right.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
And then and then there's the worst hurricane season ever.
Then there's no hurricanes, no fires, no heat.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
That guy in a Colorado state always predicting why Colorado
State they don't have hurricanes there when he predicts, well,
there'll be three major hurricanes.
Speaker 5 (01:49):
And yeah, but if you.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
Every year you say there's gonna be major hurricane, eventually
gonna catch one.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
That's true. You know you gotta be right, all right.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Alex Stone, everybody, this guy's great. University of Colorado football
coach On Sanders. I saw a picture of him, and
that I didn't read the article because it's always crazy
with that family.
Speaker 5 (02:06):
It is. And that's the thing about him.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
Yeah, he is polarizing college football fans, love me or
hate him right now. Some believe he is ruining college
football with the portal and what he's done at CU
and that it's been all a big show, and others say, no,
that I mean he's brought attention to it, that the
University of Colorado has never, at least in a very
long time, it hasn't had a lot of attension on
its football program, and it's making tons of money for
(02:30):
the school and a lot of attention on it, and
that it's been exciting. But no matter what side you
come down on there, there's a lot of people who
are backing him up today because he was very open,
very emotional as he announced. He's been battling bladder cancer.
It is an aggressive, invasive form of it. So he
opted he had the choice, do you want to remove
your bladder or do you want to leave it as
(02:53):
is and you're probably gonna die and the bladder. Replacing
his bladder with a replacement bladder, likely through it from
his intestines where they create a new bladder, was going
to be risky, but that was a longer term solution,
so he went with replacing his bladder. And today he
said this to his doctor and the CU athletic trainer Sam.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
Thank you.
Speaker 6 (03:13):
You have no idea how good God is good for
me to be here, You have no idea.
Speaker 7 (03:19):
Thank you, Thank you both, so thank you time.
Speaker 3 (03:23):
And so this was detected during an annual exam that
he has for other health problems that he's had in
recent years, and his primary care doctor said something doesn't
look right with the results. He said he didn't feel anything,
he didn't suspect anything was going on. And so he's
saying he wants this to be a message to especially men,
to get your annual exam and if something doesn't seem right,
(03:45):
to get it checked out, and not to be afraid
of the big sea of cancer, but really to go
for the annual physical.
Speaker 6 (03:51):
Please get yourself checked out. Especially African American man, we
don't like going to the doctors.
Speaker 7 (03:57):
We don't like nothing to do with a doctor. You
know that. So I'm not just talking to the brothers.
Speaker 6 (04:02):
I'm talking to my Caucasian brothers, my Hispanic brothers, my
Asian brothers, my everybody, and my sisters.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
And he said, I must be I must be African
African American. Then why is that I never liked going well?
He said, Caucasian as well, and I agree with you.
I hate going. I had to go on Friday for
a check up, and man, I hate that. By the way,
Crozier's not here with us today, and whenever he's out,
I hope he's okay.
Speaker 4 (04:24):
But he's fifty seven this week.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
He has had zero physicals in his life, zero, not one.
Speaker 4 (04:34):
Not one. You know, blood test, you're at lesterol, polesterol, nothing.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
He is living.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
He's the biggest gambler on the floor.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
Yeah, by far, and I.
Speaker 4 (04:43):
Appreciate that in him.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
You know, he's gonna he's gonna live till he's like
sixty five, you know, grab his heart and he's gone.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
I think he's the same age as as Leon Sanders.
He's right right there, exactly seven. He's got to be
fifty eight, all right. So what is the process now?
Is what stage is it?
Speaker 5 (04:58):
In h I don't know.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
They didn't give it a stage, but they said it
was aggressive and aggres invasive and aggressive. But they said
he is now well. Now, I guess it wouldn't have
a number because they say he has cured at this
point here.
Speaker 5 (05:13):
He said that because it's real.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
Everybody in this room, I guarantee you have been affected
about if sea work somewhere in your life, some parents,
some friends, some loved one.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
It's over and over again. Thanks God for saving his life.
And he said there will be Porter potties on the
sidelines during the upcoming football season because he asked to constantly.
You're a eate now because of this replacement bladder that
he's got, And he said, look that that's just how
it's gonna be.
Speaker 7 (05:38):
I'm making a joke out of it, but it's real,
like it is real. It is real. It is real.
Speaker 6 (05:43):
So if you see Porter party on the sideline's real.
Speaker 7 (05:46):
Okay, I'm just telling you right now. You go see it,
you go see the practice, you go see one.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
Yeah, which, by the way, he said he knew he
had cancer and surgery coming up when Shador his son,
had that rough time during the draft as he fell
in the picks and he's been through a lobby.
Speaker 5 (05:59):
He said, look, he had to keep it up for
shoot or not let anybody know.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
But he says he's ready to come back, ready to coach,
see you and that he's good to go.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
You know, he's misusing the term.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
Can you play that audio back the like the second
one you play where he talked about the CEA.
Speaker 5 (06:13):
Uh, this one. Let's see, let's go this one.
Speaker 7 (06:16):
Because it's real.
Speaker 6 (06:17):
Everybody in this room, I guarantee you have been affected about.
Speaker 7 (06:21):
The sea words.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Okay, okay, that's misusing that term. The cancer is not
the sea word. The sea word is reserved for the
big sea word something else that you can't say on
the air, right, what cancer has always been referred to
as the big sea but the sea word is something
totally different.
Speaker 5 (06:37):
Different word.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Yeah, somebody in the crowd should have raised their hand
and said, excuse.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
Me, right, it's the difference between you know, call nine
one one or call nine to eleven is a big difference,
big difference. But but you know, obviously I hope he's okay.
You know, everybody when they watched him, they You're right,
they either loved him or they hated him. And I
think what he's done for Colorado, it couldn't have done
could have been done by anybody else.
Speaker 5 (07:01):
Now, as a cu alum, I'm a buffalo.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
I didn't know that. Yeah, went back to like you.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
Know, probably two thousand and two thousand and one, since
the last time there was a good team under Gary Barnett, What.
Speaker 5 (07:11):
Were the teams.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
Like what it was the stadium sold out when you
were there.
Speaker 5 (07:14):
Yeah, I mean.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
Because the kids, we all love to go, you know,
you'd go, and it's all part of the the atmosphere
of going. But now tickets are through the roof because
of what he's done with the program. It has made
so much money for the University of Colorado. And I
mean it's a little ridiculous now what football tickets cost
because of the whole show that has been put on
at SEU. You used to be able to get free
(07:34):
tickets or you know, ten bucks, twenty bucks. Now I
mean we're talking hundreds of dollars to go to a game,
not so probably not for the students, but for everybody else.
Speaker 5 (07:42):
So it's worked. They're making a lot of money.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
You know what else has gone up? I noticed dramatically
are these WNBA tickets.
Speaker 5 (07:48):
Oh I can imagine.
Speaker 4 (07:49):
You know, they used to be four bucks.
Speaker 5 (07:50):
You know either're on ESPN and on ABC and yeah.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
I remember when they first started there were four dollars.
I went to buy tickets the other day, there's seven dollars.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
Now, well, you know, inflation, and then people liking to
watch him any big vacation for the Stone family this year. No,
I mean it's back to school and like tow we
way after Labor Day, beginning in August, it's right back
to it. What grades are the kids in seventh it'll
be the beginning of still junior high, no middle school
(08:19):
with junior high and fifth grade.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
Wow, man, you know what you're on top of it.
As a dad, I remember when I stayed home from
school one day. I wasn't feeling well and my mom
said to my dad, Hey, Jamie forgot his lunch. Can
you take it to school for him? And he was
He said sure, you know, he's on his way to work.
So he's leaving and I said, hey, Dad, I said,
where are you taking that lunch? He goes to Jamie?
I said, what school are you going to? He goes
(08:44):
in Sino Elementary. I go no, and he says, is
it Portola? I go zero for two. It's Birmingham. He goes, oh,
Jamie's in Birmingham already. It's like, yeah, he was going
to go to his elementary school.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
Don't have to teachers names. I'm always like oh that.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Manuscalco does a great bit on that. He said, you know,
there's there's an emergency card with two names on it,
and you decide to call the dad. Oh no, it
was a Burgetzi did that? He goes, you decide to
call the dad for that effort, and that's about right.
Speaker 5 (09:15):
When my phone has has rang run before.
Speaker 3 (09:18):
When it's the school you're going, Man, they could not
find mom because it's like whenever they asked for their birthday.
And the boy's like November. Yeah, money, And I'm like, Jackson,
that's right, right.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
I got a lot of do you remember emergency cards?
You had to fill out the emergency card to tell
where the parents are in case anything happened to you. Well,
when I was in third grade, I assume because my
mom was there every day. I put my dad works
at CBS and my mom works at Bullocks, which is
a department store.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
And my mom got so f and angry. She goes,
I just shopped her. I don't work there. I'm like,
give you were there every day? I thought you worked there.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
It's a target.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Now, that's exactly right, money, Thanks for coming on. We'll
speak to you again this week. All right, see you
bub there? He goes Alex Stone. Everybody, that guy's great
with ABC News, Very very smart dude, I love that guy.
All right, We've got more news croziers out for Brigitta
Augustina to Augustina.
Speaker 4 (10:12):
How about that? Is that pretty good? They're pretty close?
All right?
Speaker 8 (10:16):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
Conks joins you got Monks? How you bum.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
Michael Monks, the star of Saturday Night here on KFI
seven to nine pm. Did you have a big breaking
news story? I thought there was a fire or something
went on. Yeah, we you know, we stay on top
of what's happening as it's happening. In addition to reviewing
the week that was, we had what the yacht crash?
Speaker 4 (10:41):
Oh, that's when Weena Delray we had that. That's right.
Speaker 9 (10:43):
It was a lot in Burbank was the center of
the news universe for a day because of the airplane situation.
What was the other thing that happened in Burbank? Oh,
on the way to Vegas the plane almost so yeah,
the plane almost went down.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
And but you know, I saw that yacht crash in
Marina del Rey, and I think the most shocking part
of that story are people are still going to Elterito.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
Not a lot of sympathy for the yacht captain. I
see not in this room.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
But I love Elterito. But I thought I was the
only guy in the world. You know, he's still going
to get fried ice. Well, nobody got hurt, so you
might be right. But the enchiladas at El Toedo, the chips,
the salsa, the man, I tell you it's so great.
It's you know, I don't think it's great now compared
to other Mexican food in town. But I enjoyed that
growing up. I got used to it, and I enjoy it.
(11:34):
I love Eltito.
Speaker 9 (11:35):
You know, there are so many great Mexican and Latino
food places around this Star team. You could talk to
a thousand people and get a thousand different answers on
what's the best, right, But if you're in Ohio, I
think it's still chee cheese, a celebration of food.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
Yeah, that's you know. They don't have those anymore. No, wait,
is that right? Do they have Ponderosa?
Speaker 9 (11:53):
No?
Speaker 4 (11:53):
Do you remember Pondailo to.
Speaker 9 (11:55):
The last one closed shortly before I moved back here.
It was on the Kentucky side of the river, and
it's gone.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
Ponderosa is what Sizzler is today and yeah, similar buffet.
But I don't think like Sizzler has an odd business
plan where it's the only steakhouse in the world where
you stand in line to get your steak.
Speaker 4 (12:14):
I don't see that at more. Have you ever been
to a Golden Corral? Yes?
Speaker 2 (12:17):
I love Golden Corral? Yeah, you love it when you
go in. Yeah, there's one out here, let's say buffet. Yeah,
you know, and they at this one they charged more
for it was stadium seating. The closer you get to
the buffet, the more you paid for your table.
Speaker 4 (12:31):
You know, they usually have to wheel you out of
that place.
Speaker 7 (12:33):
Oh I know.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
I saw a guy in Sizzler at the buffet in
electric wheelchair. Yeah, you know, so he turned that into
his own drive in That's America. You know, he's driving
around his electric wheelchair. I enjoyed that, all right. So
something more serious here. The raid, the ice raid hearings
are going on or they went on. Okay, so think
about this.
Speaker 9 (12:51):
We had that ruling here from a federal judge based
in Los Angeles that basically brought to a stop a
lot of the immigration enforce and we have not seen
or of bus that we were seeing since early June,
they came basically to a halt, and the federal agents
kind of moved operations up to Sacramento. We saw some
busts up there because they are not protected by this
determination by a judge here that there was racial profiling
(13:14):
going on, that federal agents were going to places based
on the location not because they have reason to be there,
but because it's a place that immigrants might be, or
because they were hearing people speak Spanish, and the judge
that you can't be doing that. And so it stopped
now today because the Trump administration appealed that ruling. Both
(13:35):
sides of the argument were in front of the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
Wow, all right, Okay, so I still don't I can't
wrap my brain around how local ordinances are affect federal
troops and federal policy.
Speaker 9 (13:50):
Well, because this could be a violation of the federal
fourth Amendment to the Constitution unlawful search and seizure, those
sorts of things. Because the argument here by the local
federal judge. Keep in mind, this was based in Los Angeles,
but this was a federal judge who said that these
stops do not have the component of reasonable suspicion that's necessary.
(14:12):
So I watched this hearing today. It took just under
two hours for the arguments. No determination was made. We
expect that to be quote in due course, maybe by
the end of the week, could be tomorrow, maybe next week.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
You really don't know what these things.
Speaker 9 (14:24):
But I've got some SoundBite from each side, and Tony,
if you don't mind playing that first one.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
There's definitely no policy of conducting detention. This is an
attorney for the Trump administration.
Speaker 10 (14:33):
I don't think there was.
Speaker 5 (14:35):
I mean, now the storl of the judges, there's.
Speaker 10 (14:37):
No policy that says we're going to conduct expressly, you know,
stops without reasonable suspicion. But I think the argument or
the allegation is that there is a policy of conducting
detentive stops based solely on some combination of apparent race
(14:58):
or ethnicity, specifically Hispanic or Latin, the language speaking Spanish
or speaking English with an accent, locations in the area, which,
according to your own declarations, are chosen based on information
that in the past some unspecified number of illegal aliens
(15:22):
have used or found work in that location or that
type of location, and a general sense of type of
work loosely based on how they look.
Speaker 9 (15:34):
So what's important about what we heard right there? Okay, Jan,
I've never heard a judge use the term illegal alien.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
Well, there you go.
Speaker 9 (15:40):
That's crazy. Trump's an office again. Wow, all right, and
that is a legal term. The three judges who presided
over this hearing today are appointed by democratic presidents. Now,
the Ninth Circuit has a variety of judges who've been
appointed by presidents dating all the way back to Nixon. Basically,
who I've seen your status at this point, but luck
of the draw, I guess for some perhaps that these
(16:02):
three were Democratic appointees. The federal government is saying, we
are not racially profiling. We have intelligence that tells us
to go to these locations. The judges suggesting, you haven't
proven that with many of these stops, the bus stops,
the car washes, the home depots that you're going to,
places that you just assume there are legal immigrants there.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Ultimately, the whole thing is to try to slow this
down to you know, the ice raids, and to try
to get done well.
Speaker 9 (16:34):
There are certainly people who want to see that all stop,
but they think they have found here is a legal
way to stop it. It's not just somebody saying that,
you know, the military needs to get out of Los Angeles,
the ICE Agency to leave. That's not happening, right. But
through a court decision, you can force the administration's hand.
The administration is saying, we're harmed here irreparably because we
are unable to do our work. But the judges today said,
(16:56):
how can you be harmed if you're not racially profiling?
Because the judge's order says you can't be racially profiling.
So with all of your enforcement, as we can see,
it's pretty much stopped. There's a question about whether you
were racially profiling.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
Right, Okay, So I'm sure the next step appeals, you know,
all the way with the Supreme Court. On a lighter note,
I think that I've had influence on mayorbas for the
last since January seventh, when the fires exploded here in LA.
She's been using this term that I have never used
and I've never heard in Angelina's. Over the weekend, she
(17:35):
was at some kind of event and she said, this
is to benefit all the people of Los Angeles.
Speaker 4 (17:41):
How about that?
Speaker 9 (17:42):
What do you think the demon m is supposed to
be for Los Angeles.
Speaker 5 (17:46):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
I think it is the people of Los Angeles. I
don't think there is one. I think New Yorkers is fine,
and then I don't. I think it drops off after that.
You know, I don't remember another city where you refer
to somebody like chicagoan you know.
Speaker 4 (18:00):
That's the thing.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
Yeah, I have to you know, clevelanders, detroits, you know,
putting an er at maybe at the ers at the
end of it. But Angelino's is odd. I've been here
for long, my entire life, and I've never heard anybody
say this. Yeah, on Saturday night I went out with
I went out to dinner with three bodies. Oh yeah,
who'd you go with?
Speaker 4 (18:18):
Oh? Well, you know me and three Angelinos.
Speaker 5 (18:21):
You just never hear.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
And now she's using people of Los Angeles. You might
have had that influence. I think I did.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
I don't think she listens. I think somebody in your
staff does.
Speaker 9 (18:31):
Oh, there's definitely a city hall people who listened to
KFI a lot.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
There's a lot of people listening to KFI. Oh yeah,
Tim Lynn, who's a good friend of mine. He said
he was on TV with KTLA for sixteen years and
it was recognized once he comes on the show twice
a year, and he stopped ten times, you know a
year agoing, Hey, you're on the Convoys show.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
It doesn't get bigger than us.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
It's great, it really is much thanks for coming in
my pleasure, all right, Michael Bok seven to nine pm,
the hottest weekend show on radio, number one in Los Angeles.
I know it doesn't admit that he's a humble guy,
but he's number one in LA at seven to nine pm.
Speaker 8 (19:05):
So to me, you're listening to Tim Conway Junior on
demand from KFI Am six forty.
Speaker 2 (19:12):
An active shooter in New York City in Manhattan. That's
a big story that's still sort of not breaking. But
they're at least one guy's been shot, and so you know,
another thing to worry about, anther thing going on in
this world. Active shooter in New York City with a
(19:36):
long gun and they're looking for the guy. He's shot
at least one person. And as we get some details,
we will lay that on you. But it's you know,
it's it's all part of this crime wave, you know,
crime in America. They keep telling us how it's down,
(20:00):
are down. You know you can feel safe again, but
if you live in la you don't feel safe at all.
You don't feel safe getting gas at night. You don't
feel safe if you live in Encino or Sherman Oak
Studio City, Woodland Hills. You know, it's just there's there's
just a sense that l A is sort of falling apart.
(20:20):
And on the other side of the hill in Beverly Grove,
there's a rash of people stealing tires off of cars
and trucks. So I don't know, you know, where this
all ends, but it doesn't seem to be slowing down,
which is proof that these that these guys are who
are watching or are you know, watching people's homes and
(20:44):
stealing from them. They're not watching the news, or they
don't listen to KFI, you know, which I don't. I
don't blame them, you know, there's uh, you know, a
lot of fun bad news out there. And but if
I was in the stealing game, I would listen to KFI,
and I would listen to to TV watch TV news
as well. Well, let's get back to the shooter. Here
(21:04):
in New York City. It's a guy at fifty second
and Park Avenue with a long gun and he's a
mischief maker, mischief maker in Manhattan.
Speaker 11 (21:16):
We have breaking news now out of New York where
a shooting has been reported in midtown Manhattan.
Speaker 4 (21:21):
This is a live.
Speaker 11 (21:22):
Look from the scene. A police officer and another person
we're shot on the street at fifty second and Park Avenue.
Speaker 12 (21:28):
Yeah, this is live video right now and from my notes,
I believe this all occurred within the hour, just about
one hour ago. We do not know the condition of
the victims, but this live camera that we have, we
have seen dozens of people over.
Speaker 7 (21:42):
The past few minutes.
Speaker 12 (21:43):
During the commercial break, you see right there on the
right side of your screen coming out of the building
with their hands up getting to safety, evacuating from this building.
Sources telling ABC News that the suspect fled into the
office building. The suspect apparently killed himself on the thirty
third floor. We are now learning the office building on lockdown.
We are told lots of people work in the building
(22:05):
are sheltering at place calling nine to would have won
that building.
Speaker 7 (22:09):
This is important.
Speaker 12 (22:09):
Does contained Blackstone and NFL headquarters.
Speaker 4 (22:13):
Well, Blackstone is a big target.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
A lot of people blame Blackstone for a lot of
the mayhem all of the world, but if you're not
familiar with New York like I am. I was born
and raised there. I grew up there. I worked on
Wall Street for some time. I worked for Major League
Baseball and the NHL, you know, so I really know
the joint. This is a little bit south of the
(22:37):
Big Well, south of Central Park. I'm on Park Avenue.
And for people familiar with New York, this is two
blocks east of Central Park and about seven blocks south
of Central Park. And there's some you know, it's Rockefeller
Centers around there, and you got the Fox News their
(22:58):
headquarters is around there as well, the big Lego stores
in that area. And that's a real touristy area, that
whole that whole area. You got Times Square, which is
just literally I mean a you know, three four blocks,
if you go two three blocks, four blocks east and
then five blocks north, that's where this is. And you
(23:22):
know Grand Central Terminal is right on that street. It's
only about i'd say about six blocks south of where
that of where the shooting happened. So there's it's Manhattan,
it's summer, a lot of tourism, and an s load
of cops. The the amount of cops they have in
New York would make you sick if you lived in
(23:45):
If they have the same amount of cops in LA,
there'd be no stealing anywhere. There's eighty eight hundred sworn
officers in LAPD, give or take one hundred eighty eight hundred.
In New York City there are thirty seven thousand cops.
I think that number is right, thirty seven thousand cops
(24:08):
in New York City.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
I'm gonna ask.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
I'm gonna ask my computer right on my phone right now,
how many cops are in New York City.
Speaker 4 (24:15):
Let's see, we get a number here.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
How many police officers are in New York City. And
the number thirty six thousand, four hundred thirty six thousand
cops in an area that's probably about a third of
the size of Los Angeles. Thirty six and a half
(24:38):
thousand cops in New York City. That is incredible. I mean,
what is that for more than four times? If the
police force out here expanded by four times, I heard
four cops for every sworn officer, that's how you get
to thirty six thousand. So if there's any more information
(24:59):
coming out of New York, we'll have it for you.
But a guy walking through a very touristy area of
New York City in the summer. Is a big, major
breaking news story. As a mater of fact, let's go on.
Let's put on Channel four here real quick. They're just
doing a news update here on Channel four. A police
(25:20):
officer is among the two shot in New York City.
So we'll crank up the volume here and you see.
Speaker 13 (25:26):
See the work that the gunman was armed with an
assault rifle, and in fact, we have seen video of
someone with an assault rifle walking across the plaza, perhaps
the lobby there. Police officer was hit when he opened fire.
Also a bystander was struck. We're told this is still
an active shooter situation right now. Police not releasing much
(25:48):
more information, and we really don't know the extent of
the injuries, but we do know two people were hit,
one of them a police officer, the other an innocent bystander.
Will continue to follow this breaking news, all right.
Speaker 5 (25:59):
And we will.
Speaker 4 (26:00):
Well.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Thank you, Colleen Williams, our colleague over there at Nbcunior.
Speaker 8 (26:05):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am six forty.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
We have a quick update for you with the gunman
in New York City. There's a guy who is on
the loose in the middle of New York in the summer,
where it's crowded as hell with tauris, and a guy
decided to bring out a long gun and create a
living hell for the cops and for all the people,
(26:31):
the tourists, the workers, the employees, the residents. He's going
through New York and he's already shot a cop and
some other individual.
Speaker 14 (26:41):
It's not good when we hear confirmation of what we
can also visually see on the screen that multiple agencies
from multiple jurisdictions, the state, the FBI, the NYPD, the
MTA police all on the scene. I saw a number
of FDNY vehicles as well. It tells you that there's
a kind of a full scale mobilization happening.
Speaker 15 (27:02):
Yeah, clearly, I mean you see it from the images there.
I mean. The problem here is not knowing the details.
It's hard to say exactly. It's hard to say what
not only what happened in terms of the shooting itself,
but also what to tell the public because it's not
clear whether this was an incident that took place isolated
(27:23):
inside of an office building, and whether the shooter remained
inside the building, and whether that shooter is even still
alive obviously presents a very different scenario than if this
was something that a shooting that took place at street
level or outside in public on the sidewalk, in which
case we'd have, you know, a probably more of a
(27:47):
lockdown than what you're seeing now.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
And probably and if you look at any of the
pictures you know from New York, there are probably a
thousand cops in the area. Every car is NYPD, the
FBI is involved. It's it's unbelievable when something happens in
New York how many cops are available to respond.
Speaker 15 (28:11):
You know, a much larger swath of Midtown closed off
to the public.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
So this is happening at fifty second and Park Avenue
for you fellow New Yorkers out there, you know.
Speaker 4 (28:22):
You know what was like a guide did growing up there.
Speaker 15 (28:25):
Yeah, it seems like maybe what we're seeing is something
in a more isolated area and perhaps just in one
of these office buildings. But you know, as you said,
these some of these office buildings are entire cities unto themselves, right,
I mean right, you could have a shooting on one
floor of an office building and that could create havoc
for thousands of people because you've got you know, any
(28:49):
number of firms, whether it's financial firms or attorney's offices,
all you know, jumbled together in one office building, and
if there's an active shooter situation, in the lockdown situation,
it's very hard to make sense of what happened, and
even people inside may not have much more information than I.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Have a feeling this is going to be a trend,
unfortunately in New York, because you have a lot of
the corporate headquarters or New York and when people get
pissed at an insurance company for not paying an insurance
you know, a bill or an insurance claim, and people
get pissed, they're going to attack the guys and the
(29:30):
gals who are on the top of the chain.
Speaker 4 (29:33):
And that's New York City. We saw it earlier.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
With I think the guy's name was Brian Thompson, who
is the head of one of these big insurance firms,
get killed in Manhattan. And unfortunately, I think there's gonna
be a lot more of this because, as Doug Stuckley
used to say, the most dangerous people in the world
are people with nothing to lose. And there's a lot
of people out there right now, even in LA with
(30:01):
nothing to lose. You got nothing going on. Your money's
dried up, your relationships have dried up, your friends have
dried up, and you got nothing going on.
Speaker 4 (30:11):
I see it all the time in LA.
Speaker 15 (30:13):
Those of us on the outside. So again we are
still a waiting confirmation. But you know, based on what
little we know, there are certainly some at least one
officer shot and some others, and we're just trying to
figure out what the circumstance is.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
Okay, we'll keep an eye on that all afternoon, and
then back here in Los Angeles, residents and businesses are
pulling their hair out because of the looting and the
stores being robbed, the home invasions going on in the valley.
Speaker 4 (30:44):
It doesn't seem to be slowing down at all.
Speaker 2 (30:48):
And the cops have press conference after press conference, they
get communities together to fight this crime, and yet you
hear about it every single night.
Speaker 4 (30:57):
And this weekend was the same.
Speaker 2 (30:59):
You know, you wake up on morning and you know,
maybe you didn't look at the news all weekend. You
celebrated how beautiful was the weather outside. It was just
a great weekend. And then you start you know, reading online, Twitter,
social media, where you turn on KFI, where you turn
on the TV news, And it happened again all over
the San Fernando Valley, and it seems to be Studio City,
(31:19):
sherman Oaks, Incino Tarzana and Woodland Hills on this side
of Maulholland, on the north side of Maulholland between Ventura
Boulevard and Maulholland and stretching all the way from Studio
City all the way to you know, eat or West
Woodland Hills up near Calabasas. The entire stretch is being
(31:43):
nailed by these criminals. All right, here's a little bit
of the residents who are fed up with this. They're
just tired of it.
Speaker 16 (31:51):
Street takeovers used to be all about the stunts and
showing off, but lately they're becoming far more damaging for businesses.
Speaker 9 (31:59):
Certain anti or taking the opportunity to just you know,
take what they shouldn't.
Speaker 16 (32:03):
You know, you're looking at the aftermath of a street
takeover that spiraled into looting and.
Speaker 2 (32:09):
One of the victims, one of the stores that's constantly
a victim of these of these gatherings, of these street
takeovers is the AutoZone. The AutoZone, it seems like every
weekend gets robbed. And if you live in that part
of La the AutoZone has about two or three more
of these left, and then they're gonna leave, and then
(32:29):
you're gonna have to go somewhere you know else O'Reilly
or you know, I don't where you're gonna get your
auto parts. Maybe Target or Walmart. But Target and Walmart
are great, but not for auto parts. You need to
go to a place like AutoZone or Riley that has mechanics.
There they got that big ass yellow book where they
could look through it and you know, give you the
(32:50):
right part and give you the right piece. And you
need these auto places around and they're gonna leave if
they keep getting robbed.
Speaker 16 (32:57):
Sneakers and merchandise litter the ground, surrounded by torn boxes
and shattered glass. Thousands of dollars in goods were stolen
from the warehouse, shoes, sales store, and Wilmington Avenue and
Dilamo Boulevard.
Speaker 6 (33:10):
It's harf a business to recuperate after that, because it's
like they see these angelina's happening and it's like no
one's here.
Speaker 4 (33:16):
To help Angelino's.
Speaker 16 (33:17):
It wasn't the only business targeted in the early morning hours.
They all their mail in theirs.
Speaker 7 (33:23):
I think they're cooked.
Speaker 12 (33:26):
Angelino's.
Speaker 16 (33:27):
Edward Rittana showed up at the Metro by T Mobo
store at South Figueroa and Slawson hoping to set up
a phone plan, only to find the doors locked. The
store was shut down after Benjulino's broke in early this morning.
Speaker 4 (33:41):
Wow, they keep on with this Angelinos with Mara Batz.
Speaker 16 (33:44):
The store was shut down after Benjulino's broke in early
this morning.
Speaker 4 (33:48):
Very inconvenience, so I was trying to go in.
Speaker 16 (33:51):
Sheriff's deputies tracked down three suspective Angelino's after discovering a
stolen package from the WSL store contain a GPS tracker.
Speaker 12 (34:02):
All three Angelino's.
Speaker 16 (34:03):
We're taken into customers.
Speaker 4 (34:04):
Oh, they got three of these guys. Three Angelinos tracker,
All three Angelino's.
Speaker 16 (34:09):
We're taken into custody, and two Angelinos. We're toted from
the scene.
Speaker 2 (34:13):
Fed up, kind of rolls off the tongue. Seems natural,
right to call everybody Angelino's.
Speaker 16 (34:17):
All three Angelino's, we're taken into custody and two Angelinos.
Speaker 4 (34:22):
We're toted from the scene.
Speaker 16 (34:23):
Fed Up Angelinos say something has to change. They say,
too many street takeovers keep turning into looting sprees, and
it's local angelinos that are paying the prize.
Speaker 4 (34:35):
It all over the city, is everywhere. It's not just here,
it's everywhere.
Speaker 16 (34:38):
So again, three angelino's, so we're arrested, but far too
many are on the loose. If you know any information
about these angelinos that happened early in the morning, contact
the lapd or La County Sheriff's Department, Susan And once again,
this is a situation where a lot of times social
media plays a role in getting people to a street takeover.
(34:59):
And then also so some people post they're bad acting too,
their bad behavior. Do we know at this point whether
or not that has turned.
Speaker 4 (35:07):
Up, Yeah, no, it has.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
It has bad actors out there, guys, you know, using
the street takeover to break into AutoZone in this case,
the world or the shoe warehouse, whatever that is. I
were live on KFI AM six forty Conway show on
demand on the iHeart Radio app.
Speaker 4 (35:25):
Now you can always.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
Hear us live on KFI AM six forty four to
seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime on demand on
the iHeart Radio app.