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December 4, 2025 30 mins

Kids’ slang keeps evolving, with terms like “cooked,” “low-key,” and “sus.” Now there’s a new cryptic phrase: “6–7.” Meanwhile, heating bills are expected to rise, and experts shared tips on how to keep costs down. 

A shooting at the La Brea Tar Pits shocked the city, and in another disturbing incident, criminals were caught rummaging through a child’s bedroom. Fires were widespread today, including an electrical blaze at a Woodland Hills high-rise. In West Hollywood, the community is split over a proposed homeless housing project. 

Conway took a tour to see firsthand how Chef Bruno feeds children every day, continuing his long-standing mission of generosity. 

And during crosstalk with Mark Thompson, they discussed Chef Bruno’s close friendship with Sophia Loren, reminisced about child stars, and Tim revealed he had a “radical lisp” as a kid that required time at The Learning Center.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to the
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Some of
our local mountains are starting to open up for ski season.
Bear Mountains Summit opens I think tomorrow or for this weekend.
So you get up there and I enjoy the snow,

(00:21):
even though it's man made. According to Bear Mountain, that's
better than the real stuff. So never heard that before,
but I guess that's true. That's what they say. Man
made snow is better than that real stuff, that crap
that comes down from the heavens. Let's talk about the
Google searches. What was the top search for twenty twenty five.

(00:46):
Let's find out what you guys are looking for all day.
It's cool now with you people out there.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
We're looking at those searches that had the biggest increase
from twenty twenty four to twenty twenty five. See what's
unique about this year. That top trending search this year
is Charlie Kirk. That was such a huge news moment.
And then after that we have some more pop culture trends,
so K pop, Demon Hunters and La Boo Boo.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
I'm probably responsible for that one single handed half of.

Speaker 4 (01:12):
Them in the at least half loam.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
What is that is that? That doll that la boo boo?
I think that's what that is, right, la boo boo,
or that little stuffed animal.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
I'm probably responsible for that one single.

Speaker 5 (01:24):
Handed half of them in the at least half loom.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
Okay, Well, when it comes to news, what were the.

Speaker 5 (01:28):
Top five searches?

Speaker 2 (01:29):
So in news it looks like folks are really dialed
into what's going on in the government. That top search
is one big beautiful bill act that's followed by a
government shutdown and then again Charlie Kirk assassination.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
Okay, so people trying to keep up with the big
topics that we're covering here. And what were the top
five most searched people?

Speaker 5 (01:47):
Okay, the number.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
Here we go Charlie Kirk again, and it's going to
be quite a downer for these two ladies back at
the studio.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Okay, the number one, so these are living people. The
number one slot there goes to Zorn Mumdani, the mayor
elect New York City. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
Really interesting.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
You know when we look at the global list, he
also takes the top ten. So it's interesting to see
how people around the world are looking at local politics
in the United States. You then have some folks connected
to Charlie Kirk, his alleged assassin, his wife. On the
fifth spot. There we have Pope Leo, the first American pope.
Lots of folks in the US excited about that.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
That's so what I'm looking at these lists. A couple
things jump out to me that I want to ask
you about.

Speaker 5 (02:28):
So the first thing.

Speaker 4 (02:29):
Is that it's I'm interested in how the lists are
kind of calculated, because if Charlie Kirk is number one
on one list three and then you know, kind of
falls down the list on the others, how is that calculated.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
Yeah, we see Charlie Kirk showing up across many lists.
Of course he's the top trending search. You're not seeing
him on that people list because we separate living people
and passing, so he's over passings list, right, But folks
associated with him also show up on the list, So
you can tell that people continue to come back to
Google Search to get updates on that story, and that

(03:04):
drove of additional searches.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
What's also interesting to me is like people are interested
in some super serious topics and then some fibulist things.
We just had K Pop Demon Hunters.

Speaker 6 (03:11):
Yeah, because people have different opinions and lives.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
We had Labuobu.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
But then there's also some very serious criminal cases that
are surfacing.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
I see what singer.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
David there on the list, as well as Charlie Kirk right.

Speaker 2 (03:24):
It really runs the gambit, and it is fun to
look at those pop culture searches that people are thinking
about K Pop Demon Hunters. You see them over and
over over again on the Top Songs list, very popular.
I like looking at some of the slang terms people
searching for.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
Why are kids saying this? And the number one seven?

Speaker 2 (03:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (03:43):
Six seven?

Speaker 4 (03:44):
Yeah? Were there any other words that I need to
know for my eleven year old at home?

Speaker 2 (03:48):
Yeah? You know, we keep seeing searches like sigma number.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
That's fine, all right, let's talk about our heating bills.
We are going to get stuck. It's going to be
very cold this winter, that's the adiction, and your heating
bill is going to go up. Like everything else here
in California. Once it goes up, it never comes back down.
So be ready, be prepared to pay more.

Speaker 7 (04:13):
And as people have been ratching up those sermocets, they've
probably already been noticing that the costs are higher.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
Get this.

Speaker 7 (04:18):
This is a stat that comes from the ENEADA. They
say that this year, heating costs across the entire season
are going to be almost one thousand dollars nine hundred
and seventy six dollars. That is almost seventy dollars more
expensive than it was last year, which has a lot
of people wondering, well, for the same cost to heat
my home, why is it getting more expensive?

Speaker 6 (04:35):
Right?

Speaker 1 (04:35):
First off, a lot of these power.

Speaker 7 (04:36):
Utility companies are doing grid maintenance and upgrades. That's costing money.
But also AI data centers, it's taking a lot of
strain off the grid that is making prices go up.
In addition to the price of natural gas as well.
I should point out that heat via electricity is also
very expensive, up about ten percent compared to twenty twenty four.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
So it's just getting more expensive across.

Speaker 4 (04:56):
Roath lead to AI they say, is right, okay, So
what can people do if they want to kind of shave.

Speaker 7 (05:00):
Some of the costs, Yes, avannab, Well, there are a
few things that people could do. If you love me
when I said during the summer, you want to keep
a thermostat closer to seventy eight degrees, where.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
You oh my god, you got to be kidding me,
seventy eight. I would be furious at seventy eight.

Speaker 7 (05:13):
Seventy eight degrees. Where you're gonna love me when I say,
during the winter you want to try to keep your
home somewhere closer to sixty eight degrees.

Speaker 5 (05:19):
Don't get mad at me.

Speaker 6 (05:20):
Get mad?

Speaker 1 (05:21):
Okay, sixty eight is fine. I can live with sixty eight,
not seventy eight.

Speaker 7 (05:23):
Though the me get mad at the US auto market.
It's the Department of Energy that's suggesting that.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
But again, you know it's odd. In my house. I
can tell when the house is any temperature above seventy three.
I can if it's seventy four. I can tell you
that in the house. For some reason, I don't know
the one sense in my body that can always tell,
and it's always right. It's not what day it is,

(05:49):
it's not what time it is. It's not you know,
weather prediction. It is the inside temperature of my house.
If it goes to seventy four, I instantly know it instantly.
Now look at the thirst that yep, seventy four to
seventy five and they're saying seventy eight. Keep your house
at seventy eight. That's crazy talk.

Speaker 7 (06:08):
There are other things that you can do if you
don't want to really adjust the thermist that you'd like
to have your home at. You can replace and clean
that filter. That's a way to make sure that your
furnace is really operating at the most efficient that it
can CeAl your windows and doors.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
Also, lower your water.

Speaker 7 (06:22):
Heater temperature to one hundred and twenty degrees. A lot
of people tend to keep it at one hundred and
forty degrees. It's a little bit too hot that it
needs to be. And also, if you have south facing windows,
keep those curtains open. It's a freeway to get heat
in your apartment.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
And there that's a good tip. That's good tip. A
right welcome back. We do have some crime in Westwood.
It was caught on a baby cam. How scary is
that a baby camera caught a Westwood a criminal in Westwood.
We'll talk about that. Also, we have the shooting in Lebrea.
Update on that for you as well. If you live
in earshot of Lacma the museum there, you may have

(06:57):
heard shots earlier. We'll tell you what happened. There lots
more to get to, including also a fire in Woodland Hills.
We'll got someone else coming in right though. I don't
know is uh at Dean tonight. I don't think Dean's
on with us tonight. Is Deanon with us? I don't
think he is. I think he's not. Is that correct?

Speaker 6 (07:16):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (07:16):
For his reads okay, or for the reachs okay, a
real live But because he was with us on Tuesday,
I think yeah.

Speaker 6 (07:23):
For commercial, Yeah, he's coming to make money and split.
I think he's going to Disneyland or California Adventure.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Is what's going on.

Speaker 8 (07:30):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am sixty.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
It is The Conway Show, all right. If you heard recently,
I mean earlier today, I should say there was a
shooting near the Librea tar Pits. Let's get some details
from when we understand it may have just been a
woman who got a little sideways and started shooting a
gun in the air. So another thing to have to
worry about here in Los Angeles.

Speaker 9 (07:58):
Happened at the park where that's attached to the tarpets.
According to LAPD wanted to show you this cruiser because
we just saw LAPD take that suspect into custody.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
They just put them in.

Speaker 9 (08:06):
The back of that cruiser in handcuffs right now, to
show you the area that we're talking about. Fortunately, no
one was hit by gunfire. But here is where we
were talking about. And this incident actually caused the Tarpits
Museum to be closed for the afternoon on lockdown. So
it's not clear if they're going to reopen now that
the suspect has been taken into custody, but the park
and the museum have been closed because of this. There

(08:28):
was a partial closure on Wilship Boulevard here on the
Miracle Mile as well. But again, nobody hit by gunfire
and that person has been.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Taken into custody. Live at Skyy caliber Hip. I've Desmond Shaw,
all right, Desmond Shaw out there. Woman shooting in the
air and that's a very popular area, the tar Pits, Lacma,
the Grove is in that area, very busy area. Shouldn't
be shooting a gun in the air. Cops will paul
you off. And that's what happened, all right. A burglar

(08:54):
caught on a baby cam, you know, the cameras you
set up to make sure you're you know, you can
check on your baby while you're in bed and seeing
that the baby's okay. Crime criminals caught on the baby camera.

Speaker 10 (09:08):
A baby cam captures a brazen burglar going through a
child's room in Westwood. First, he scours the closets, then
does a quick glance around before walking away without anything
and leaving that room basically unscathed. However, it was a
completely different story in the parents' room where he turned

(09:29):
things upside down.

Speaker 5 (09:31):
Yesterday, when we came.

Speaker 11 (09:32):
Back from work, we saw that the home was a
whole mess, especially the bedroom, the master bedroom, and the closet.

Speaker 5 (09:40):
Everything was just out and it's a total mess.

Speaker 10 (09:42):
The resident too, is too afraid to be identified, says
the masked man. Somehow broke into her Ashton Avenue unit
around eleven forty five Tuesday morning and still all of
her wedding jewelry.

Speaker 1 (09:54):
How about that eleven forty five in the morning. You know,
burglaries when I growing up were always done at night.
Always now around noon, you know, while everybody's at work,
buzzing in taking all your crap.

Speaker 10 (10:08):
Around eleven forty five Tuesday morning and still all of
her wedding jewelry on Giving Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
The guy's doing this, he's turned into a taking Tuesday.
It's Giving Tuesday. The guy got it exactly wrong.

Speaker 11 (10:24):
We have a baby monitor camera in the kids' bedroom
that we got a footage of someone who entered the home.

Speaker 5 (10:29):
And I also noticed that all the stuff on the
floor was a lot of it was like jewelry and
stuff that I have for my wedding.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Oh my god. You know what, You're never really the
same after your house gets robbed. Our house was robbed
when when I was younger, and my mom was never
never felt safe in that house. Afterwards, you really lose
the trust in the house when somebody, some stranger comes
through and just tears it apart.

Speaker 10 (10:54):
And they were missing besides the precious jewels, she tells us,
he also went after her cat.

Speaker 5 (11:00):
We had a little bit of cash, not too much.

Speaker 11 (11:02):
They took that cash, but it was clear they were
looking for cash because they've removed the whole that mattress
and a lot of suff in the closet. But fortunately
we didn't have too much cash. We like opened up
all of that, you know, all the makeup stuff.

Speaker 10 (11:12):
Not only are her and her husband heartbroken that their
wedding jewelry has been stolen, but the whole family has
been left feeling on edge.

Speaker 5 (11:21):
I mean this is very terrifying.

Speaker 11 (11:22):
Yeah, you know, my son is very little and he's
very scared.

Speaker 10 (11:26):
Now she's now on a mission to help police catch
the culprit.

Speaker 5 (11:30):
It's very violating.

Speaker 11 (11:31):
I mean, I'm very stressed, but I'm using all that
stress to just get the word out and hoping that
someone can help find identify this person.

Speaker 1 (11:39):
It's happening everywhere all the time. A fire in Woodland Hills.
Let's find out what happened. They are three injured in
a high rise fire.

Speaker 12 (11:47):
For this fire at a Woodland Hills high rise building.
It happened just after seven thirty this morning on the
tenth floor of the building on Canoga Avenue. Just sound
the victory. We're told the fire was electrical. Firefighters had
to starewells who access the flames. They were able to
contain the fire in about thirty minutes. Cal Osha is
now investigating.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
All right, there was a fire invents one in tarzan
Or Woodland Hills. The shooting at Lachmun, a guy breaking
into a house in Westwood it's busy. We throw a
lot at you in Los Angeles. If you just if
you've come into the country from another country, or perhaps
you're visiting for the holidays, please be aware that LA

(12:29):
is super, super energized right now. Lots going on, lots
of people, a lot of action, and you've got to
be aware that. You know, maybe you're in a rental
car right now and you're listening to a KFI. That's smart.
You're doing a smart thing by a lot of action
in Los Angeles, a lot of action, and we hear

(12:51):
we do it every single day. You know, whether it's
the shooting you know Lebrea tar Pits, or you know,
the parents getting killed out in SeeMe Valley by their son,
another shooting or stabbing of parents in Tarzana in Sino area,
or this fire in Woodland Hills. There's a lot and

(13:11):
now West Hollywood there's concerns over a homeless facility in
West LA. They do not want this in their backyard.

Speaker 5 (13:19):
A room divided.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
They are not stupid, and you're talking to us like
we're idiots.

Speaker 8 (13:25):
We are not idiots.

Speaker 13 (13:26):
On one side, the neighbors who live in West LA
they are out furious at the other side, made up
of La County representatives working on the West la Armory
interim housing project.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Here we go putting public housing, perhaps Section eight housing
in West Hollywood, and they're going to fight it.

Speaker 3 (13:47):
We say you cannot come indoors after eleven o'clock.

Speaker 13 (13:50):
That means they do stay outside doing whatever they do.
Those are so full of the is the contentious discussion
forcing security to escort one woman out of the room.
The three story shelter is in the works to go
up on Federal Avenue near the West la Via Medical Center.
Design plans featured dorms.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
Okay, where is this federal? What are they say?

Speaker 13 (14:13):
The three story shelter is in the works to go
up on Federal Avenue near the West la Via Medical Center.
Design plans feature dorms for one hundred and sixty seven men, women, couples,
and pets, along with storage space and a new parking structure.

Speaker 6 (14:28):
Okay, well that's not West Hollywood, that's West la or Westwood.

Speaker 14 (14:32):
The problem we have primarily with this is that there's
no requirement that those individuals, while they're residing in this project,
that they have to engage in some sort of sobriety
or Rehabilitating Program.

Speaker 13 (14:45):
LA County's Department of Health Services Housing for Health Program
will run the center twenty four to seven with roughly
fifty staff members to provide resources to help transition the
temporary residents into permanent housing.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Good luck. There are a lot of expensive homes in
that area, and the people who have expensive homes do
not want these facilities near their home because that's why
they paid so much for their home. If they didn't care,
if they lived around homeless, then they would have gotten
a studio apartment out on Kester and Sherman Way. Sorry

(15:20):
for people who love out in Kester and Sherman Way,
but that's a reference that I use because I used
to live in that area and it's wild. In that area.

Speaker 13 (15:31):
There are many encampents that are on both sides of
the four or five freeway.

Speaker 7 (15:34):
The only reason that we're able to get those in
canvas expressibly resolved is by having places for them to go.

Speaker 13 (15:40):
The shelter will service unhoused people in area five on
this map, which includes Malibu, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, and
Culver City. According to the County, the armory was transferred
from federal to state ownership in nineteen fifty seven, and
the county says it got authorization in twenty twenty to
use it for the purpose of helping the homeless.

Speaker 1 (16:00):
And I'm here to tell you that we still oppose it.

Speaker 13 (16:05):
But many insist an eighteen eighty eight deep requires the
land to be used to serve veterans only.

Speaker 6 (16:12):
I believe that any other use would still be illegal.

Speaker 13 (16:17):
The forty eight million dollar project was approved by the
Board of Supervisors back in twenty twenty two. Neighbors say
they still need more time and reassurance that the shelter
will be a success before the county breaks ground.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
Okay, well, if we had any hope that the county
could operate a facility like this, then we could sleep
at night. But we don't. We know that the county's
going to come in. They're going to put a bunch
of homeless people there, they're not going to regulate it,
they're not going to keep a close eye on them,
and they're going to be wandering around those very expensive
condos and very expensive homes in that area. It's going

(16:53):
to happen. It always happens that way. They always commit
with good intentions, with a lot of guarantees. A lot
of talk about safety and protocol and how they're going
to keep an eye on everybody, and then it turns
into a third world. And that's what's happening in Westwood,
So good luck with that. It's happening everywhere.

Speaker 8 (17:16):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 6 (17:22):
Yes, we'd like to thank everybody that came out to
the White House.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
Was that just yesterday or two days ago? Two days
ago we did this and raised over one point one
million dollars for the pastathon to feed those kids who
are hungry ninety two pounds of pasta and sauce. And
I was given a tour by a young lady there
named Myris, who showed me where they make the pasta

(17:51):
and how much work goes into it every day. And
that's those people are the real deal. Every morning, somebody
comes in at four thirty or five o'clock, preps the pasta,
makes the sauce, and it's simmers and boils and I
don't know simmers again for three hours. They don't do

(18:13):
it half assed. They don't just throw forty jars of
ragoo in there. They constantly taste the pasta and the
sauce to make it perfect, to make it right, and
then they feed these kids. Four vans go out every
single day loaded with hot pasta meals, and those kids
eat those meals and they love it. Bruno said when

(18:37):
he goes out occasionally with the van, he said, everything,
everything is eating. There is nothing left. There is not
a single noodle left at the end of those dinners,
and all those kids are happy. They're smiling, they're upbeat,
they're clapping, they're singing, they're yelling because they got a
great meal.

Speaker 15 (18:57):
Well, you know a lot of people donated pasta sauce off.
But I'm wondering with the money that they that they
take in where they have to purchase the pasta, assuming
it's not handmade there, do they change up what kind
of pasta they get.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
Yeah, it's a good question. I think you know, a
lot of it is donated. You know, there's a lot
of the gorilla pasta donates a lot, and I think
they get some consistency. And I don't think they make
them the fresh stuff. I don't think.

Speaker 15 (19:24):
I'm just wondering if they change out the type of
like fusili spaghetti.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
Ai. I saw the it's a mixture of all kinds
of noodles.

Speaker 15 (19:32):
All right, and so I look it interesting and fun.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
They have five you know those those storage bins you
buy at Costco. They're black with the yellow top. Oh yeah,
they have five of those filled with pasta. Wow. So
that's twenty seven pounds of pasta per bin. And they
have five of those bins, so it's one hundred and
thirty five pounds in just pasta. And then they make
that sauce and there they have a taster that you know,

(19:59):
keeps seasoning and keeps putting in more, you know, either
you know, tomato sauce or tomato paste or another jar
of sauce until it's perfect, until it's perfect, and then
they send that out in four vans every day to
feed those kids.

Speaker 15 (20:13):
If you want somebody making you pasta, you want these
guys making you pasta, even if it's not like fresh
made pasta.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
That's right. Yeah, yeah. Because I had a meal from
Bruno is very nice to give me four meals to go,
and I pulled over and ate one of them on
the gas station right outside of Anaheim. I like, and
I got home and I finished another one, and I'm

(20:39):
gonna eat another one tonight. It's really the best food
in town. It really is good. That White House restaurant,
the Italian Steakhouse. Oh, it's a good, great, great food.
So get on out there if you can, just to
enjoy the food. It's sensational and a great restaurant. To
the atmosphere in that restaurant, it's spectacular. All right, we're

(21:00):
live on KFI. Will come back and wrap it up here.
This is the big Disney California Adventure party for iHeart.
There's a lot of listeners on coasts that are going,
some listeners here that are going, and I know Krozier
is going. Right after this newscast, you're headed out.

Speaker 6 (21:18):
I believe.

Speaker 4 (21:18):
So.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
Yeah, good for you, buddy, giant stud. But anyway, tonight
that party you're still going. I think I'm going. I
get my wife to go. She has to work tomorrow
and do some stuff, and I'm gonna try to throw
her in the car and slide down there. Let's go, Ben. Yeah,
it's gonna be a beautiful night. Weatherwise, it would be
great and be a little cool, nice and chili. But
no rain. It rained there one year, Oh my god,

(21:39):
I remember that. Yeah, it was a I enjoyed that.

Speaker 8 (21:42):
Though you're listening to Tim Conway Junior on Demya from
KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
It's gone way show. Mark Thompson is in the house.
Nice to see you, buddy, Tim. You were terrific at
the cut around. It was a lot of fun, buddy.
I'm glad you showed up for that.

Speaker 6 (22:01):
Really was terrific and the goals were extraordinary. I thought
they were kind of dream like a million dollars, you know, right,
I did too. I thought maybe three hundred thousand, you know,
and we I just got the updated figures this morning.
I'm sure you saw them also over one point one million.
I know, it's incredible. It is unreal. And ninety two
thousand pounds that chef Bruno said he can make four

(22:23):
or five meals out of one pound a possible. I
heard him say that to you.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
Yeah, that's that's that doesn't happen at my house.

Speaker 6 (22:29):
He told a story after we were done there. He's
kind of hanging out. He told killed a couple of
guys that one now that might have might have been
a different table. He told a story about like hanging
out with Sophia, Lauren and her brother, and I guess
really her brother is his pal. I didn't know that,

(22:51):
like talked to him all the time. I think a
lot of people in his life he does. I mean,
it's just a whole other side of Bruno.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
He's got a he's always talked about his brothers and
everyone's going to Italy all the time.

Speaker 6 (23:02):
Yeah, that's exactly where they went for Sophia Lren's ninetieth birthday.
She's ninety one, I'm still alive, and I think he
said she's living in Geneva now. But anyway, she had
a ninetieth birthday in Italy and he brought his sister
and he was saying that he didn't tell his sister
that they were going to meet and be in the

(23:22):
presence of for the birthday of Sophia Lurent. He just
told her it's something special dress up. He kind of
played it down turn and then the sister just melted.
I mean she was like almost unable to stand up
when she realized she was going to meet Sophia Lurent.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
Was it in Italy?

Speaker 6 (23:37):
Yeah, in Italy. She's a big deal in Italy, Oh God, yes,
and you know huge here.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
Yeah, So what's going on with the Big Show tonight,
you do anything special we have?

Speaker 6 (23:48):
Were you ever a child actor at all?

Speaker 1 (23:50):
You've got a couple actors I.

Speaker 6 (23:54):
Had.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Maybe I was. I was on like a bit. Well,
my dad had a show in the nineteen seventies and
I think I was seven or eight and I said
one like one line.

Speaker 6 (24:05):
It was kind of like that was your big Roun
Howard moment. I was either going to turn into Opie
on Mayberry or it was going to turn into I
won't see you again for twenty years.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
Well, I had a radical lisp. I couldn't say my
r's or s's as a kid. Oh wow, And I
was a mess. I do to learning Center, which is
in the valley every every Tuesday and Thursday after school.
While my friends were skateboarding having fun, I had to
go to the learning center to learn how to talk.
I couldn't even talk. That's extraordinary. My teachers couldn't understand me.

Speaker 6 (24:36):
Did other kids in the family have similar lists?

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Yeah, we were all a mess.

Speaker 6 (24:40):
Yeah. No, it's speech impediments.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
Though no, nobody had a speech impediment. I did have
a brother that was a little active, little hyper, you know,
moving around a lot. There's a lot of that, but yeah,
I have video of it too. When I was a kid,
I was like, when did your start to sound? I
mean I sounded like, oh, like a like an alien.

Speaker 6 (25:01):
But that can also be one of those things where
like if you break through, everybody's gonna be talking like that.
They're gonna go I want a kid like Rada, like
the kid.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Like the little Conway kid. Yeah, that's not the way
my dad mom saw it. They're like, we gotta get
fixed this. This is a horrible way to go through life.

Speaker 6 (25:16):
So two actors are going to come through. They're in
the Christmas Carol, which is, oh is that right? A
production of Hollywood. Well they're they're one of them is
playing screwge. The other one's actually an actor director, and uh,
it's pretty exciting. Jesse Corty is the name of the
I mean again, Jesse Corty is someone that doing on
Broadway the voice of many Disney characters.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
They weren't in the original movie.

Speaker 6 (25:39):
The original movie people are I think most of them
I've passed away. Yeah, but but these you know, so
that that opens the door for others, you know, that's
the good the beauty of.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
Did you ever see that movie The Christmas Carraer. Oh
my god, of course I don't get it. Yeah, I
saw it, and I just like, I don't get this thing.
Why everyone loves it, everyone enjoys it. I just I
just kept looking at my watch. Well, when did you
see maybe four years ago?

Speaker 6 (26:05):
Okay, I think I think that might have something to
do with it.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
I think, yeah, on an airplane.

Speaker 6 (26:11):
Did you see the the mister Magoo version of it?

Speaker 1 (26:15):
No, there's a mister McGoo.

Speaker 6 (26:17):
Oh my god, yes, and it's great.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
I'd love to see that.

Speaker 6 (26:20):
Jim Backus plays, you know, mister Magoo as Scrooge.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
Oh really yeah, Oh, I'd like to see that christ Parents.

Speaker 6 (26:30):
It was so the One Eye Sid. It's so dark
and it is dark, dreary. It is horrible. But that
was sort of the time, right. The idea was that
it was really a time when people had to, you know,
scrape together whatever they could just to be able to
feed themselves day to day. It was a time of pestilence,
and you know, people were dying from all kinds of

(26:52):
illnesses that we didn't see anymore, and so there was
that kind of bleakness. I think you're right. And then
so the Christmas Carol is all about like this one
family with this poor kid, who's you know, who's what
are you saying now otherwise able?

Speaker 1 (27:04):
Yeah, that's right, that's right. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
So I mean, so your heart's breaking for this kid
and then you know, cratchit just just asking what is
he asking for some overtime or alone or I forgot
what the specifics are, but it was it you could
understand as a kid. You could understand it. I mean,
like the the ways in which the story was told,
I thought they were they were understandable.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
You know, what was the movie? Maybe Ronner help us
out on this.

Speaker 6 (27:30):
What was the movie where that kid gets his tongue
stuck to the frozen pole? That? Well, that's a Christmas story,
Christmas story one of Darren mcgavan. Oh my god, I
watched that three or four times. I'm like, I don't
get this either. Yeah, that's what your eye out. Well yeah,
he wants that to bb gun right, Yeah, yeah, that's
John Hughes. Right, No, I don't think that is John Hughes.

(27:52):
What did John Hughes do? Didn't he do?

Speaker 1 (27:55):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (27:55):
He did the Breakfast Club Uncle buck tons of stuff
and he didn't do it. He didn't do the Christmas story.
I'm looking it up right, No.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Christmas Christmas story. I didn't get either. I mean it
just seemed dull to me.

Speaker 6 (28:09):
I mean it's from a Jean Shepherd's story.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
The director was Bob Clark. Yeah, so the actors are coming.
What else is going on in the show. Well, we're
going to talk about you losing all your beds.

Speaker 6 (28:21):
Oh my god, I just can't wipe Its horrible. It's terrible. Yeah,
I got I'm gonna start to go fund and I
wonder how much of that million one I could dip
into in the Cattarinus club. Where do they have that money?

Speaker 1 (28:32):
I've got so wait through the game going on right now.
It is Detroit and Dallas. Are you on the stinking
end of that?

Speaker 6 (28:39):
Yeah? I have the Cowboys cords. Okay, I'm getting three points.
How far are they behind? It's behind by eleven. Huh,
so you're yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
I have Dak Prescott under two hundred and seventy four yards.
He's at one fifty four at halftime.

Speaker 6 (28:57):
So it's gonna be a tough one.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
That gonna be easy. And I also have Jared Goffett
under one under two hundred and fifty two yards and
he's already won fifty three at halftime. I can't, but
so one of those is going to go over, you know,
two fifty two seventy four, two fifty four.

Speaker 6 (29:13):
I had last week Saint bro loss big wide out
to in number of receptions over and in total yardage
receptions over and he was pulled out of the game
in the first six months. Yeah, with an injury. Yeah, yeah,
so it's pretty well scared. That's the kind of holiday season, right.
But as I always say, and I will say it again,

(29:36):
don't gamble any money that you aren't planning on losing.
Tim and I for all the taco gambling, we already
have said goodbye to the money. We are not like
sending the rent money out to anybody. Yeah, but you know,
I respect people like that more than like we're players.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
We're not gamblers. The gamblers are betting the money, the
house money on the horse.

Speaker 6 (29:54):
I don't know if I respect that.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
I totally respect that much more. I am a coward compared.

Speaker 6 (29:59):
To those Oh, I'm definitely a coward.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
Those guys are putting the rent and the car payments
on the outcome of a game.

Speaker 6 (30:06):
I'm just saying that. I mean, I'd be living in
the car if I had to do that.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
I respect that. I really do. I don't have the
balls to do that.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
They do.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
I wish I had it. No, you have the smarts,
No I don't. I wish I could go home to
Jen and say, look, we were moving.

Speaker 6 (30:19):
Yeah, great if you would have spin it that way.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
But it didn't work out. I have much more respect
for that.

Speaker 6 (30:26):
How did this happen? I didn't know one of you,
asked Dak Prescott.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
Exactly all right, Mark Thompson, Ronner, the whole crew coming
up next right here on KFI AM six forty Conway Show,
on demand on the iHeart Radio app. Now, you can
always hear us live on KFI AM six forty four
to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime on demand
on the iHeart Radio app.

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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