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May 18, 2024 28 mins
A Tesla driver careened out of control and slammed into a family's garage in Burbank, no one was seriously hurt. Tim got pulled over for taking his seatbelt off and closing his door / Crozier got pulled over for not having a front license plate. GUEST: Susan DeMarois joins us to discuss Older Californians Month. Skid Row Running Club is changing lives step by step. Athletes who are visually impaired have been able to take part of America’s favorite past time thanks to “beep baseball” / Changes from Visa mean Americans will carry fewer physical credit, debit cards in their wallets / Disney Pixar Fest give away.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you'relistening to the Conway Show on demand on
the iHeartRadio app. Let's see what'sgoing on. There was a Burbank crash,
you know, if you're familiar withBurbank, Buena Vista and van Owen,
that's where the train tracks are there. And van Owen goes right across

(00:21):
east west across the valley and itstops at Buenavista. So you can take
van Owen forever, you know,from I don't know to Panga. You
stay in van Owen forever, vanOwen, van Oaen, van Oen.
Then Bang, it stops at Buenavista. And if you don't know that,
if make a left or right,if you're going eastbound on van Owen,
you don't know that. Bang rightinto a guy's home, right into his

(00:43):
garage, and happens on a regularbasis. Guy's been living there since nineteen
seventy eight. He says, happenedlike ten times. Guy, you know,
missus the turn and flies right intohis house. Well, it's happened
again. Buena Vista and van Owen, very very dangerous intersection right there.
I came home right away. WhenI got home myself a Tesla. Oh

(01:04):
my garage. The Tesla was comingup van Oh on a road that literally
ends at North Buena Vista. Youhave to make a wright left. But
clearly this Tesla took the third option. You know. You know what's amazing
is Tesla is the only car.And I have a theory that it's it's
political. You know, people don'tlike the conservative politics of Tesla, and

(01:25):
and and so they constantly mentioned whena Tesla is either on fire or Tesla
crashes into something like you would neverhear this story and say a Saturn crashed
into that house or a dots Inright, do they make Dotson anymore?
I don't think they make Dotson anymore. Didn't Dotson become Nissan? Yes it

(01:47):
did, yes, okay, Butyou would never hear, oh, you
know, we're here at this youknow, on Buena Vista and van Ohen
a Pontiac slammed right into this house. You never hear that. It's just
the Elon Musz. People either loveor hay Elon Musk. But you never
hear like, oh, we're sittinghere and all of a sudden a nosemobile
crash right into us. Never hearthat but it's always they always mentioned Tesla,

(02:08):
Tesla, Tesla. Ah something oddabout that you have to make a
right or left, But clearly thisTesla took the third option. A dangerous
position to be in for those livingin these few homes at the intersection.
Most of the time is at night. Grunk drivers they don't see that.
It's there's a dead end. That'sright, dead end there, and you
got to turn left or right orelse you're going into a guy's living room.

(02:30):
But in the morning accident, Idon't see a lot, but they're
driving. There's a lot of driversdriving too fast here. According to Burbank
Fire, two women and a smallchild. We're in the Tesla and we're
taken to the another Tesla. Reference. Man, this guy's really into the
guy's car. The child. We'rein the Tesla and we're taken to the
hospital to be checked out. Therepairers are already underway on the damaged home,

(02:51):
but those who live here fear it'sonly a matter of time before something
like this happens again. All right, I saw the damage to the garage.
Here's the question, do you thinkit costs more to fix the garage
or more to fix that tesla.I think it's a pick them on this.
I think it's a toss up.Good point. Yeah, I don't
know. Yeah, I agree withyou. That's that's a lot of damage.

(03:14):
But that car was wiped out,wiped out. Gotta make that turn,
gang, gotta make that turn.There she's sitting in the driver's seat
when that thing comes to a restand you're facing down the ground and you're
and everybody's heavy breathing. What justhappened? What just happened? When people
I won't know how many people werein the actual seat belts. Yeah,
I imagine a lot of people.You know what I'm laying against the inside

(03:37):
of the windshield. I gotta stopdoing this though, because I uh a
friend of mine, uh woman namedsam or Samantha, she got a ticket
for this. But you know,when you're in a in your car and
you're parked on the curb, youknow you're doing you know you're running into
a business or you know, gettingI don't know, going to a clean
or is ever. You're parked ona on a street and you're on curb
side parking. When you get inyour car, if you're in a like

(04:00):
most people are in LA. Youdrive away and you put your seatbelt on
as you drive away. Everybody doesthat. You know, you get they
should give you for the first hundredfeet to do that, but the cops
don't. If the cops see youpull off that curve and you don't have
a seatbelt on, you're getting aticket for that. And happened to a
friend of mine and she got aticket for it. Guys, and uh,
little ticky tac. You know,I understand the cops having to clean

(04:23):
up accidents where you know, akid's body is, you know, stroke
over three lanes on the four five, and that affects them. I get
that, But that was a thatseemed like a little ticky tech. I
got a ticky tac ticket. Iwas stopped at a at a red light
and I noticed that my my passenger'sside car door. The red light was

(04:46):
on, so that door was open. So at the park at the street
light, I put it in thepark, I took my seatbelt off,
I leaned over and shut that door. And as I shut the door and
I got back out of my seatto put my seatbelt on, a cop
was on a motorcycle sitting right there, and I got pulled over for that
and I said, I was justI was literally grabbing the door and pulling

(05:09):
it and then you pulled me over, and and I'm getting a ticket for
this. He says yeah. Andthen and then I'm and I guess,
I guess. I said, oh, that's that's really Uh it sucks.
And he's like he didn't like that, and he hit me right in the
head with a billy stick. Hitthe head, cracked me in the head
up. I got a I gota ticket once for no license plated on

(05:29):
in the front of the car.And uh. I went through an intersection
and I saw the cop sitting atthe intersection and he pulled out, came
behind me, and that intersection alsohad cameras, like speed cameras, light
cameras, and he pulled me overand he says, uh, you know
why I pulled her. I waslike, not a clue because I know
it wasn't red or even yellow.And he goes, yeah, front license

(05:50):
plate. I said, wait,you're sitting there on an intersection that is
a red light camera and you pulledme over a license plate. There's a
lot of people that don't have frontlicense plates. Yeah, a ton of
people I said, are you kiddingme? I pulled the uh, don't
you have something better? I certainlywasn't gonna get out of the ticket at

(06:10):
that point. Cycler had the greatestline, uh, and our office often
referencedeclics this funny smartest guy ever meant. We got pulled over. He was
driving and cop pulled this over andthe cop says, you know why I
pulled you over? And Secon hadthe greatest response. He goes, well,
officer, evidently I did something youdidn't like. He thought that was

(06:31):
funny. Give him a pass onthat. Yeah, give him a pass
because I've never heard that before.That's funny. It was kind of a
a funny response. I got pulledover in North Hollywood and I didn't get
a ticket at that time, butI got pulled over and the cop says,
don't text and drive and I saidI wasn't. He goes, you're
lying and I said, I said, but I how did you know?

(06:54):
Because you couldn't see in my carbecause I keep the phone really down low
when I'm texting. And I saidyou couldn't see. That's good, so
it goes down even further. Yeah, yeah, that's how I get avoid
tickets, but more crashes. ButI avoid tickets. But I said,
how do you know I'm texting?He goes, well, you're driving west,
it's five o'clock, the sun's inyour eyes, your sunglasses are on

(07:14):
top of your head, and yourreaders are over your eyes. You tell
me what you were doing. Isaid, okay, I would have just
said, you don't know, man, I could have been moving my junk
or something moving my junk. That'sright, that's right, that's uh.
I'm going to try that next time. You should. You should. Can
women do that at work? Womencan't do that? Although that's an interesting

(07:39):
response from a woman. Hey youknow I'm pulling over here. I was
moving my junk off a cer.I think the woman would have a better
chance of getting off on that casewithout getting a ticket than a dude.
She said that, yeah, Idon't. I'm still scared when I get
pulled over. And my grandfather said, you know, when you're getting older,

(07:59):
when you're no longer scared, you'repissed, Like when my grandfather got
pulled over. God damn it.Why mother, rather than dying got you
a're going crazy? But when youI get pulled over, I'm still nervous.
It is that weird, you know, get a little hot. Yeah,
I just I just hope I haveall the information with me and you
know, I hopefully you know,this doesn't turn into something bigger. I

(08:20):
keep question in my head, whatdid I do? What can I have
done? What did I do?What can I have done? Yeah?
Have you ever been driving though?You're doing like eighty and a coup pulls
it behind you and lights go on. You go, oh, I'm done.
You pull over and he pulls overthe guy in front of you.
That's a touchdown. Yeah, that'sa touchdown. Man, that's a home
run. You go fast, yousee the light, You're gone god,

(08:41):
and you know there's nothing you cando about it. And he goes past
you. Yeah, goes past you, like, oh man, I'm gonna
stop speeding. Ten minutes later,you're doing eighty five again. We'd never
learned, never ever learn You're listeningto Tim Conway Junior on demand from kf
I AM six forty. We havea lot of things that are pitched to

(09:01):
us. You know, a lotof charities, a lot of movements,
a lot of petitions, you know, close the zoo, heal the Bay
the whole run and we have wepick and choose. But I wanted to
talk to the people here because thisis a really important issue for me,
and it's the older it's the OlderCalifornians month, and we're going to get

(09:24):
to it as soon as we giveaway one thousand dollars. Here you can
win a thousand bucks. Here wego. Now your chance to win one
thousand dollars. Just enter this nationwidekeyword on our website cash. That's cash,
c a sh Edit it now atkfi AM six forty dot com slash
cash powered by Sweet James Accident Attorneys. If you're hurting an accident, winning

(09:46):
is everything, call the winning attorneysat Sweet James one eight hundred nine million.
That's one eight hundred nine million orsweet James dot com. All right,
go to the website. You wina thousand bucks. The keyword is
cash. Go to k if IAM six forty dot com slash cash.
The keyword is cash. So it'sgoing to be very easy for you.
And we did that for the OlderCalifornians. And Susan's Weather, Susan to

(10:09):
Morris, is that right? That'srather turn Susan's mic on there so you
get as close as you can tothat mic. There you go, all
right, So welcome to KFI.Nice to see you and you too,
Thanks for having me today. Whatis Older Californians Month? I've missed that
in the past. Well, themonth of May, we are celebrating eight
and a half million Californians you aresixty or older, all right, and

(10:33):
all of their contributions over many decadesand all that they bring to our state.
I love it. I think wesaid this last week, or I
said it last week. I wasborn and raised where I have a tremendous
amount of respect for people who areolder than me and almost zero for people
who are younger than me. Isn'tthat wild? Like if I find out

(10:54):
somebody's older than me, I willgive them anything, the time of day,
respect, open the door for them. Fout out somebody's younger than me.
Scraw up, straw up. Allright. So aging in California,
it's a big deal. We're living. Are we living longer or shorter?
We are living longer. Half oftoday's five year olds will live to be
one hundred, is that right?Half? Half? Oh my god,

(11:16):
what a pain in the ass.Half of these people are going to be
one hundred. Oh that's wild.Are you have to be sixty plus?
Really to be? Uh? Youknow the older Californians older Californian you said
they're eight million in California. Thereare And by twenty thirty, which isn't
too far off, one fourth,twenty five percent of our state will be
people sixty or older. Okay,so we're planning for that now, all

(11:39):
right. And I'm sort of inthe group. I'm you know, getting
close to the group. And we'vehad a terrific party for about one hundred
years, and now the kids aregonna have to pay for it. And
I say, sorry, that's allI can do. You know, I
can't help it. Sorry, butwe had a nice run, haven't we.
I mean, people are in theirsixty seventies and eighties. I enjoyed
it. Which I would never goback to being fifteen or sixteen right now?

(12:03):
Never? No, would you doit? No? Do you know
about the happiness Bell Curve? No, tell me about it? Well,
these are the best years of people'slives. Wait, so what's the best
years of people's lives? Very earlyin life through the teen years and then
stressors of life, working raising children, finances, paying off student loans.

(12:28):
And then as you get closer toretirement your children move away. You have
more leisure time, so you havericher relationships, more social connections. Oh
that's cool. But the only downfalleverything hurts. You wake up and everything
is on fire. You know,your arms, your legs, your head,

(12:48):
your you know everything. You can'ttaste anything. It's a nightmare,
all right, Older Californians wont startthe conversation with your family if you have
an older Californian. And I don'tknow if sixty, I consider people who
are sixty very young. Still,I would say seventy, maybe eighty.
George Carlin used to say that eightyto ninety is not a good decade for

(13:11):
men, and but but I thinkthat that's improving. I think, you
know, I would think that ifGeorge Carlin's live today, maybe you would
change that to ninety to one hundred. But that stat is unbelievable, that
half of kids born today are goingto live to one hundred. That is
wild. What is that from?Is it just better eating? Is it
less meat? Is it better youknow? Inoculations? What is that attributed

(13:33):
to? Yeh, you're right,all of that, all of those things.
Yep. And you know, whenyou talk about people sixty two one
hundred, that's four decades of life. The experience isn't the same for everyone.
Sure, it's not positive for everyone. And you know, many older
adults are struggling financially. You touchedon physical right, you know, and
you know what older people are alwayscomplaining about. And my grandfather, my

(13:56):
grandparents always did this. As soonas they got in the car, first
thing, they're off the air conditioning. Always always too cold for them,
right, always freezing. So thatexplains why older people living in the desert
where it's one hundred and thirty,they love that. My grandmother was in
a retirement home and you'd walk intoher apartment. It was one hundred and
ten and it smelled like vitamins,and you know what, she loved it.

(14:18):
She enjoyed it. I, onthe other hand, thought it was
a little rough, you know.But that's why people older people move out
to the desert. They like thewarm, you know, conditions. If
I was you know, and ifI was in my seventies and daies,
i'd be celebrating global warming. Youknow, you want it warmer, you
want to you know this outside todayis horrible. It's in the sixties.
My grandfather would be complaining all day. All right, where do people go

(14:41):
to? The website to get intothe older Californians month you visit aging dot
ca a dot gov. And asyou know, California is a great place
to grow older and to retire.We have great weather and we have a
lot of resources for older califor Fforniaand you can find them all at that

(15:01):
website. Excellent, Okay, goget old everybody. I appreciate you coming
in, Susan. Nice to seeyou. I hope you do this every
year with you. You're listening toTim Conway Junior on demand from kf I
AM six forty. Have you seenthe story coming out of skid Row?
There's going to start a running club? How about that? How about that
tough cell. You're gonna get aclub of people, a group of people

(15:24):
to run together on skid Row.Wow, man, that's gotta be a
tough you know, you got tobe the greatest you know court what do
they call that? What's the eventscoordinator on a ship called cruise director?
Yeah, cruse director. You gotto be the greatest cruise director in the
world. You're like, Okay,I know you guys are all on barbitu

(15:46):
wits, most of your drunk,a lot of psychotic behavior down here.
I know mentally you're on another planet. But uh, we're gonna put together
a running club. Anybody in You'regonna get up at six am, throw
on your best whatever you got,and we're gonna run. Man. Oh
man, I don't know how you'regonna get this group to stay together or

(16:08):
even form in the first place.These runners are getting ready to hit the
pavements in the least likely of places, skid Row. The surrounding, oh,
they got a police escort for therun skid Row, maybe something else.
I don't know. The surroundings don'tseem to phase them. That's because

(16:30):
many members of the skid Row RunningClub have already lived this experience. Wow,
people don't end up on skid Rowbecause they want to be here.
Okay, three D House of obviouscomments with this guy. We needed that
guy to tell us that, Weneed that guy to say that this experience.
Okay, so we need this guyin our lives. This chap.

(16:52):
People don't end up on skid Row, right because they want to be here.
Right. We all got that whenyou're thirsty, you should get yourself
some liquid. If you're hotter inhell, get into a place where their
conditioning. It's all common sense.We know this. We were born and

(17:14):
raised with this knowledge. One ofthe first things we learned. People don't
end up on skid Row right,because they want to be here. Got
the runners head out in darkness,but a light on their feet, carrying
their purpose in every stride. Theskid Row Running Club was founded in twenty
twelve by La County Superior Court JudgeCraig Mitchell to help break the cycle of

(17:34):
prison, addiction and homelessness. Everyone of these people, at some point
their life had, you know,spiraled out of control, and they are
now productive members of our community.One of those success stories is Rebecca Hayes.
The former drug addict and alcoholic wasliving on the streets of La my
kind of goal. The former drugaddict and alcoholic was living on the streets

(17:59):
of La before the Midnight Mission,and the Running Club changed her trajectory.
Okay, that's cool, all right, She's in the Running Club. They
built me up and they saw biggerthings for my life that I couldn't see
at the time the five mile routetakes the group. You know that actually
is very important. I'd want tobust your balls. That's really important because
when you're down and out and youdon't think you can change, you need

(18:21):
somebody in your life that can convinceyou to change, because you're not going
to do it on your own ninetypercent of the time. You need somebody
to come buy and believe in youand say you can do this and be
sincere about that. And that's verydifficult to find on skid Row. The
five mile route takes the group acrossthe Sixth Street Viaduct to Hollandeck Park and

(18:41):
Boil Heights, and then back acrossthe First Street Bridge. The views vary
from place to place, from cityskylines to street art to make shift tense.
The run ends back where it started. Yeah, the run ends up
at at Central Division. These runnersstart with a single step on skid Row

(19:03):
and end up running farther than they'veever imagined. I just had never been
athletic in my addiction, always gottenthe wave of everything. The Running Club
trains for and runs marathons around theworld. It's documented in the film skid
Row Marathon. Mitchell says the programand Midnight Mission have helped thousands of people
get jobs, secure housing, andstay sober. There is no substitute for

(19:27):
feeling loved by other people, allright, Doctor Avioso's back three D House
of Obvious Comments has been there isno substitute for feeling loved by other people.
That's right, that's right, that'sexactly right, and that's what they
get a dose of three times aweek. Hayes is now a registered nurse

(19:48):
and continues to give back. Thesad reality is that many people relapse and
go back to the streets, butMitchell says they are always welcomed back with
open arms as we all navigate thismarathon we call life. Yeah, it's
tough out there, man, ohman, it is tough out there.
You know it's tough if you thinkabout it. If you're raising kids and

(20:10):
you got to pay your mortgage,you got to pay your insurance, got
to make sure your kids are stayingout of trouble. You got to make
money. You got to watch whatyou say it work, because you get
get fired for almost anything. Nowadays. It's really difficult to navigate life,
very difficult. It throws s inyour face. Every single day. Okay,
that's somebody that I just described whomay be living in Sherman Oaks or
Studio City or San Fernando Valley,who has a home and has a family.

(20:34):
How about living on skid row roundhomeless people every day? How about
that pressure? How about the pressureof any time somebody comes near you or
near your tent, they could killyou or wipe you out. And just
the despair every single night when yougo to sleep on where you are in
life. Man, oh man,I don't know how these people do it.

(20:57):
And when you see a guy whoyou know, the interview occasionally interview
homeless guys and the guy says he'sbeen on the street for fifteen years,
twenty years, I don't know howthe hell that guy has stayed alive.
That is a miracle. It istough to live on the streets, man,
really really tough. All right.At six o'clock, we have,

(21:17):
or about twenty minits from now,we're gonna have tickets to give away.
So somebody's gonna win tickets. Andthat's a that's a big deal. It's
gonna be a four pack of oneday one park tickets at Disneyland Park or
Disneyland, California Adventure Park. Sojust after six o'clock, let's take the
tenth caller and we'll open up thephones right around six and we'll take the
tenth caller and we'll talk to thelucky winner. Somebody listening right now,

(21:42):
you have no idea it's about tohappen to you, but you're about to
get four tickets. That's wild,hey now, and you don't even know
if you think that, you don'tthink it's gonna happen to you. It's
gonna happen to you. Somebody listeningright now is gonna win those tickets.
Might be you, may not be. You probably won't be, but it
could be you. So when weannounced the number, call us up.

(22:03):
We'll take the tenth caller and youcould be going to Disneyland with four tickets.
That's a big deal. That's ahuge deal. You're listening to Tim
Conway Junior on de Mayo from KFIAM six forty. There's a new sport
in town. Sounds interesting. I'dlike to go check it out. Blind
baseball. Thig dong with this sport, that's possible, right, Let's find

(22:26):
out the details. A blind baseballcrack of the bat, the hard charge
toward base, claps in cheers asthe ball zooms downfield. But a closer
look, if you pull out thepinna make this l or maybe a listen,
and you'll see that this is baseballfor the blind. If you think
that sounds challenging, they still usethat term anymore for the blind. I

(22:48):
thought it was a site impaired seeingimpaired, and I don't know, maybe
they're going back to it. Ifyou think that sounds challenging, just ask
a player. Daisy Rosales first heardabout this. I'm a friend and you're
thinking, what it's insane living withglaucoma. Daisy's never let her condition slow
her down soccer, basketball, She'sdone it all. Wow, she's blind

(23:11):
and she's doing a billion things morethan I do. Feel like a loser.
But hitting something flying at her witha bat, then running toward a
beeping base, that's a challenge.One. She's meeting with Gusto this morning
at Pasadena's McDonald Park because because it'sso freeing, I get to run without
actually bumping in sandy people more.Sliding as a home plate is not necessary,

(23:34):
No, but there's definitely a lotof people who do do that.
I imagine, though, if there'san audience that the audience has to shut
the hell up. They got tokeep quiet because the athletes have to hear
the ball, they have to hearthe signal to run to first, second,
third, home where the ball's going. I think the audience has to
be quiet. Isabelle Verilla is puttingtogether what she hopes will be California's first

(23:59):
all women's blind baseball team. Wow, man, oh man, people are
really going for it. That's great, that's terrific. She's not just a
coach for the West Coast Echo,she's also their biggest advocate. I think
it helps them get out of theircomfort zone. And that's probably the scariest
part. Scary but also invigorating,that heart pumping thrill that athletes in every
sport just can't seem to quit.But this, Yeah, I'd like to

(24:22):
see that. I'd like to seeblind baseball and support that. I imagine
though, it's very difficult for thecoach, you know, because part of
the coach, part of the coach'sjob is to motivate your team, and
it's really hard to yell at abunch of kids, you know, and
on how you motivate them. Youknow, one of the ways to motivate

(24:45):
athletes is you yell at them.Very difficult to do that here. But
this is more than just a gameto the players. It's independence and joy.
Running across a field is not somethingyou normally do. I wonder if
you're I wonder if they change thesete. You know, like, keep
your ear on the ball because they'relistening for the ball, right, and
so they keep your eye on theball. They're listening for it. Keep

(25:07):
your ear on that ball. Andmaybe I'll be a coach. Maybe I'd
be a great coach, right,Yeah. Yeah. Kelly Walders whose daily
life usually includes her guide dog,Nugget, but today Nugget watched from the
sidelines as Kelly did something she saysshe hasn't done since summer camp for me
as a little girl. I lovedit. I felt really good. Her
smile says it all. That's great, man. These kids love it.

(25:30):
They love it. We got tosupport. This is blind baseball. Legs
pumping determination, your heart, chargingthrough the unknown, a sense of freedom
as her fellow players clap and cheer, just like any athletes on the field
of play, that is great,man. Good for those kids getting out
there and enjoy themselves. All right, Visa card, You got a Visa

(25:51):
card in your wallet? Things arechanging. Visa has announced new innovations for
its credit cards. One is calleda Visa Flexible Credential. It would allow
customers to access multiple financial accounts througha single card. Another is Tap to
Everything, which would enable people toexchange electronic payments between each other by just
tapping their devices together. Plus,new Visa technologies similar to Apple Pay,

(26:15):
would allow customers to make purchases witha fingerprint or facial recognition. The new
advancements will start to roll out laterthis summer. Credit cards are about to
change. I have a feeling thatour grand kids, maybe even our kids
now probably grandkids, will never havea credit card in their wallet. You

(26:36):
know, it'll all be electronics soon. They'll never have a wallet, they'll
never have cash, they'll never havea credit card. They'll all be living
electronically. All right. Here isthe big moment, ladies and gentlemen.
It's when we have a huge giveaway, and when we come back, we'll
be talking. We'll take the tenthcaller right now. So here's your phone
number. One eight hundred and fiveto two oho one five three four,

(27:00):
eight hundred five two oh one fivethree four, And we're going to be
taking the tenth caller and uh,we're going to be giving away tickets to
Disneyland. So this is a bigdeal if I is going to give you
a chance to celebrate friendship and beyondat the Disneyland resort. Yeah, Pixar
Fest is back now through August fourth. Keep listening to kfi AM six forty

(27:26):
for your chance to win. Youhave one right now, a four pack
of one day one park tickets atDisneyland Park or Disney California Adventure Park.
So we're going to take the tenthcaller right now, very exciting and giving
way these tickets. That's a bigdeal. One eight hundred five two oh
one five three four the tenth caller, it's going to win tickets. Congratulations

(27:52):
in advance Conway show on demand onthe iHeartRadio app. Now you can always
hear us live and k f Iam six forty four to seven pm Monday
through Friday and anytime on demand onthe iHeartRadio app.

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