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November 17, 2025 29 mins

Dr. Ray Casciari from St. Joseph in Orange explains that the COVID vaccine has continued to evolve, but this flu season is especially concerning because a mutated “subclade K” flu strain is spreading rapidly. With the CDC offering little guidance and the current flu shot only about 50% effective, experts are warning of a potentially severe outbreak and an unpredictable season. He also covers the new CPR and Heimlich guidelines now being recommended. 

Weather conditions continue to deteriorate, with a fast-moving storm cell pushing toward Lancaster and Palmdale and turning into snow around Wrightwood. Traffic on the 14 from the 5 to the 138 is crawling as Angel reports multiple hotspots. 

The show also highlights ongoing trash problems along the San Gabriel River. 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's camp I am sixty and you're listening to The
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. It is
The Conway Show. We have a ton of rain. We
thought we were done with it on Friday and Saturday,

(00:20):
but it is still dumping out there.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Yes, that's exactly right. And I'm looking at the radar
right now. It's a little after six o'clock, so I'm
gonna give you an instant update on where this storm is. Okay,
here's what's going on. Malibu is about to get whacked
by rain. Torrance looks like there's some drizzle there, but
mostly it's in West Hollywood Beverly Hills. As we speak,

(00:47):
you're getting dumped on. And then as we go north,
Santa Clarita is still getting a ton of rain in
Santa Clarita. And that storm that you guys had in
Santa Clarita about an hour an hour and a half ago,
it's moved up through Lancaster. And fortunately for people in
Palmdale and Lancaster, this is a fast moving storm and

(01:07):
it's not going to stay over or your house very long.
And it's already moved up. It's northwest of Lancaster. That's
where all the heavy, heavy rain is. It's already moved
up northwest off of C fourteen into that area. That's
where the airport is up there, and so Antelope Akers

(01:28):
is in that area. And so you avoided the brunt
of this. But the entire upper desert is getting worked
right now, all the way to Victorville. So be careful
out there in the desert there. You're susceptible to a
lot of flash flooding up there, a lot of it.
And so those are the cells that have come through

(01:50):
right now again in West Hollywood, Beverly Hills, there's a
huge one. One just passed through Burbank and it lasted
for about an hour and you know, tons and tons
of rain. It's still pouring. Yeah, I'm looking out the
window right now. It's still pouring in Burbank. I think
we're getting more rain with this, with these cells that

(02:11):
are coming in between four and seven pm tonight than
we did almost all of Saturday.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
It's huge, huge, right all right.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
One of my favorite guests is your guests are is
with us doctor Ray Kasherry, world class pomonologists out of
Saint Joe's in.

Speaker 3 (02:29):
Orange and he's with us doctor Ray, how you.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Sir, Jim, I'm doing great. You know, it's kind of
refreshing to talk to you when we have a crisis
other than a medical crisis.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
That's right. Yeah, you're the King of COVID, you know,
that's what they called you.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
That's right, the King of COVID. I'm still glad to
not have to worry about COVID as much anymore.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
That's good, I know.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Do you remember at the beginning of COVID you'd come
on with us sometimes for three hours a night.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
It was It was a terrible time, wasn't it. Mean, Lord,
everybody was scared to death. And yes, and we you know,
and honestly, we didn't know as much as we should
have known to try to figure out what to do,
and a lot of people not trusting anybody, and a
lot of really sick people. I mean, our hospitals were overwhelmed.

(03:22):
It was a scary time.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
It was horrible.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
Hey, speaking of COVID, how is the vaccine for COVID
and do you recommend it for everybody or just a
certain age group.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
Well, you know that's a complicated issue now, but let
me give you my take on it. COVID has evolved,
and back when when we were talking initially, I predicted
it would because all these these viruses do, and they
tend to become less and less severe, and that's exactly

(03:54):
what's happened with COVID. COVID now, essentially, for most people,
is basically a cold, and it can be serious for people,
especially people who are old or have immune system compromise,
or you know, are in cancer chemotherapy, or compromise for

(04:17):
some other reasons. But in general, for the average person
and especially people under sixty five, COVID is not a
dangerous illness anymore. For those folks, I would not recommend
the immunization. And I would not recommend the immunization for children.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
Oh so what age for children?

Speaker 2 (04:39):
No age? Oh no, I would not recommend vaccination for children.

Speaker 3 (04:44):
So anybody under eighteen.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
Absolutely, Yeah, brings us to the older folks, or the
immune compromise folks, or the folks who are on therapy
for cancer or have some other debilitating illness, and I
would recommend that those folks talk to their doctor about
that and follow their doctor's orders. I personally have not

(05:11):
gotten vaccinated for COVID this year because I'm with you. Yeah,
I feel that the illness has evolved to the point
that it's the benefits of the vaccine for me personally
are not there, okay, and or I decided not to

(05:32):
do it.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
Now with pandemics that have happened in the past, is
this the path of them where they don't get stronger,
they get weaker over time?

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Well not for influenza, unfortunately. Influenza just keeps circling around
and it can come back and be just as bad
as it was.

Speaker 3 (05:51):
Will we ever get rid of influenza?

Speaker 2 (05:55):
We haven't. No, it just keeps, you know, living in
a reservoirs, animal reservoirs usually, and then it comes back
out of years later and it gets us again. But
you know, the COVID type illnesses are the ones that
tend to evolve over time, right, But no influenza, And

(06:15):
we should talk a little bit about influenza.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
Oh yes, wait, can you stay with us?

Speaker 2 (06:20):
Sure? Okay, this is.

Speaker 3 (06:21):
Great, all right, doctor Rakus. Sherry's with us.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
We're going to put them on hold here real quick,
and then we're going to come back and talk about
the flu and the flu shot and see what he recommends.
But this is one great doctor. If you remember during
COVID and you're you know you're a longtime listener of
KFI and the show. He was on with us every
night calming people down. This is a world class physician
giving you world class of advice for free. You'd be

(06:46):
crazy not to take it and listen. Not to listen
to this man. This is one of the great doctors
in the world and giving you advice for free on
the air here, So please keep it on KFI. Maybe
we can help you go through this season without dying.

Speaker 4 (07:04):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 3 (07:12):
Conway Show. The rain continues.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
You're getting soaked out there in southern California.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
It is about twenty two.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
Minutes after the hour, and it looks like all of
southern California from Simi Valley all the way through Chino,
San Bernardino, Malibu is getting absolutely dumped on right now.
That's going to continue for the next twenty five or
thirty minutes and then all the way out into the
valley into the Enlow Valley lot terrain in Palmdale, Lancaster.

(07:41):
Most of it is west of the fourteen Freeway, West
of the fourteen Freeway but on the east side you're
still getting You're getting pounded as well, but not as bad.
Right wood, there's snow, it's everywhere, so keep it on.
KFI will continue to give you updates. Doctor Raker. Sherry's
with US world class polonologists out of Saint Joe's in
Orange County. So let's talk the flu shot, Doctor Ray.

(08:04):
Do you recommend the flu shot this year? And how
close did you guys get.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Well, you know that all our knowledge comes from the
Southern hemisphere and they get it before we get it.

Speaker 3 (08:14):
Well, we put you on hold, we got we got
a horrible connection. Let me see if we can.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Let's call him back and see if we can hook
up again, because that's looking that irritates me.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
It's got to irritate you. I hit that banging, but
b bang my bang bang bang. It's got to have
a better line. It's got me.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
I got all the way through the break too. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you always the way man. Maybe nobody else was bothered
by it.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
Maybe it was just me.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
No, we were all scrunching our like all right, all right,
well we're getting doctor Ray situated again. Let me tell
you again Malibu thousand Oaks, A thousand Oaks, Calabasas. You're
getting it right now, and it's going to continue. There's
gonna be a big cell come through Calabasas that's gonna

(08:57):
last from now until six fifty five. So you have
another half hour of heavy rain in a Gore Hills, Calabasas,
and then that cell that is hitting Calabasas right now
is going to go right up into I guess, right
up into Santa Clarita is where that's going to end up.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
So a ton of rain.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
It's still happening throughout southern California, mostly west of west
of western southern California, but still on the east side
San Bernardino. You're getting worked there as well. All of
southern California from Santa Barbara all the way down to
Long Beach is getting absolutely drenched right now.

Speaker 3 (09:39):
All right, Doctor Ray's back. Whether it's doctor Ray, you Beck.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
I'm back.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
Oh it sounds yeah.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Yeah yeah yeah. So anyway, the southern hemisphere got hit
pretty bad this year. The flu was bad, and uh,
you know, we made a guess and what we did
is with influenza A H one, N one and H
three and in the vaccine as well as influenza B
pretty good. Guess fifty effective in the southern hemisphere, and

(10:09):
you say not bad. You know, sure. The only problem
is one of the H three N two viruses mutated,
So if that particular virus is the one that's transmitted
to the northern hemisphere, it's going to be less than
fifty percent effective up here. But it's wise to get

(10:33):
the flu shot anyway. And here's why. There are multiple
studies that show that even if the vaccine is not
one hundred percent effective against the flu, your odds of
fighting the flu are much better if you get the vaccine.
In other words, the likelihood that you'll get severe disease

(10:55):
is much lower. And interestingly enough, there's fifty reduction in
the likelihood that you'll have a flu bad enough to
consult a physician if you get a flu shot. Even
if the flu shot you get doesn't get the virus.
So what it does. What the flu shot does is

(11:17):
sort of a general wake up call for your immune
system and it gets things kind of juiced up to
fight infections throughout the winner. So absolutely get a flu shot,
and there's you know, if enough of us get it,
we'll do really well in the United States. Oh good.

(11:37):
If a very small percentage of people get it, we're
going to have a really bad flu season. That's just
kind of how it goes.

Speaker 1 (11:45):
Right, And from what I understand from you and other
top shelf doctors, the flu shot may not prevent the flu,
but it might prevent the serious flu when you do
get it.

Speaker 3 (11:56):
The degree of illness.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
Absolutely, yeah, absolutely that even if if we guess wrong,
but you get the flu shot, the likelihood that you
will wind up with a severe illness is dramatically reduced,
actually fifty percent and truly important to get it.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
And how long does it take once you get the
flu shot? Can you give it two weeks before it
fully kicks in?

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Yeah, ten days to two weeks to kick in. And
you know, for your listeners, you know, I'm always I'm
honest with you. I just get the flu shot. I
personally got the flu shot.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Yeah, And I was skeptical. But then I was at
my doctor's office and she said would you like the
flu shot? And I felt like I was embarrassed to
say no. I mean because she recommended it. She went
through med school. Why would I tell her no? And
she said to me, I recommend it. I would feel
foolish to say no to her.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
Well, there you.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Go, so.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
I think you made the right decision. And I don't
know your doctor personally.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
That's right, that's right, all right, doctor Ray. It was
so great to hear your voice again. Please come back
with us more often. We'd love having you on. You
really saved a lot of lives during COVID, and you
calmed everybody down and the majority of us made it.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Hey, David, it's always great being on and I enjoy it.
Say a load of Sharon for me, and I'll talk
to you guys again.

Speaker 3 (13:21):
You got it.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
Thank you, doctor, all right, Doctor Ray Cascherry one of
the great doctors in the world. Man, that guy was
a trooper. He came out with us every night. He
worked all day in a busy hospital hospital during COVID,
and then you come on the phone for sometimes three
hours a night and never ever asked for anything in return.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
Nothing.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
One of the great men I've ever met in my life.
And he took Bellio and I for dinner at that
crazy Italian restaurant that we went to, Marscapon. Yeah, Mosca Pones.
That was some mealhn, Bellio.

Speaker 3 (13:59):
It was delicious. Yes, all right, we're live on KFI
watching this rain.

Speaker 4 (14:06):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
Am six forty.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
It's Conway Show. Bad news for Lancaster, Palmdale. A new
radical cell is over your head. It's there's a lot
of yellow, which means heavy, heavy rain. Then there's some
red and orange. So if you live in Palmdale or Lancaster,
you are absolutely getting drenched right now. And that's a major,

(14:39):
major cell, so be aware of that. It's going towards Lancaster,
Palmdale and Lake Los Angeles, and it's going to last
for quite some time. It's turning into snow in right
Wood at the base of right Wood and the mountains
up at Crystal Lake and Big Pines, that's all getting

(15:01):
snow right now. But this is a major, major large
cell stretches up probably fifty to seventy five miles wide
and right over the heart of Palmdale right now six
thirty nine, Yeah, and at six forty five, that entire area,

(15:23):
the entire valley is going to see an inch to
an inch and a half per hour. But that storm
is fast moving. It won't last that long. More Park
and thousand Oaks. You're feeling it out there as well.
The north part of the valley. All that rain that
just came through Burbank and Altadena is headed out towards

(15:43):
Palmdale as well. So this's going to be challenging for
Palmdale tonight and the high Desert. A lot of rain
and nowhere for it to really go the ground. There's
a lot of sand out there, a lot of hard soil,
and it doesn't soak up quickly, and you're going to
have flooding in Palmdale and Lancaster.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
A lot, a lot of it, So be aware of that.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
You know, if you've got kids that are coming home
late from traffic or late from school, caught in traffic
and they're sort of panicky because they have not seen
this kind of rain and maybe their entire life. But
this is a big deal for the Antelope Valley, major

(16:30):
major cell over that area right now, and you have
to be aware of that.

Speaker 3 (16:36):
You've got to be aware.

Speaker 5 (16:37):
Over the last several hours, we've seen that light to
moderate rain. Ventura County of course getting at first. I'm
moving through parts of West la and through the San
Fernando Valley, Orange County starting to see a little bit
of rain for us right now, some heavier rain about
to make its way into the area. Seeing Gabriel Mountains
and also parts of the inland Empires starting to see
rain moving through. But notice how you get little pockets

(16:58):
of dry patches as well. Continue to see conditions like
that over the next couple of hours. So the flood advisory,
no surprise, it's been extended through six o'clock. The reason
this is in place is because this is where we're
seeing those rainfall rates close to a half an inch
per hour. The ground is already saturated, there is nowhere
for that water to go, so we're seeing that flooding occurring.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
Yeah, a lot of flooding out there.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
And I would be shocked if Palmdale and Lancaster don't
see a lot of the roads over filling up and
maybe even some big streams that have been created by
the storm crossing over the roads and making them virtually impassable.
So if you're taking if you're going to Las Vegas

(17:39):
or I don't know, to Utah, whatever you're leaving early
for Thanksgiving, I would probably not take that road across
the desert up there, the high desert. I would probably
stick to, you know, the ten and then going up
the fifteen, because that's going to be very, very tough
to get across tonight, and it might be dangerous as well.

(18:03):
There's a lot of rain almost the entire Annala Valley,
you know, from Lake Los Angeles, Courtz Hill, Palmdale, all
the way out to Victorville. It's just absolutely drenched out there.
So be aware that what was that?

Speaker 6 (18:18):
Angel I haven't seen the fourteen this slow in a
long time, not just this slope, but for an extended
stretch of traffic, Like right now, you're backing up from
the five all the way to the one thirty eight.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
Wait, from the five to where the.

Speaker 6 (18:36):
One thirty eight, Oh is that right beyond Acton just
before Palmdale.

Speaker 3 (18:41):
Yeah, all right, yeah, that is. That's tremendous.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
Where else do we have major problems in southern California.

Speaker 6 (18:47):
Well, so it's really tough on the five out of
Irvine from the one thirty three delays all the way
to almost Colgrove in Santa Clarita, and then the home
Pass is just becoming really dense. I have to check
this out to see what's going on here on the
fifteen northbound. But I am seeing delace from Sierra all

(19:08):
the way to the one thirty eight, but quickly it
just became very dense, So it looks like there might
be something cracking up there.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
You know, you're right, I'm looking at the four or
five right now northbound on the full four five. It
starts at the one eighteen, and there's no relief. There
might be a mile or so relief when you get
into you know where Lows is up there on top
of the hill. But then after you hit that, there's
traffic all the way, almost all the way out to Ponddale.

Speaker 3 (19:36):
That's got to be an hour and a half, two hours.

Speaker 6 (19:39):
Yeah, it's I mean it's always slow out there, you know,
but never as far out as the one thirty eight.

Speaker 3 (19:46):
Yeah, that is absolutely crazy.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
And then the ten Freeway coming out of Santa Monica
right after the four five, that's solid red all the
way to downtown. And then even beyond, I mean, if
you're taking you know the ten across you know La,
you know, Alhambra and West Covina, that's slow all the
way out almost to the fifty seven.

Speaker 6 (20:07):
Yeah, well, even beyond the fifty seven delays that take
you all the way into Ontario. So if you're you know,
head now to the Ontario Airport, it's going to be
pretty slow all the way too. I think that is
the street is at Euclid right around there it opens up.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
I don't know if you're seeing this, and maybe you
know the fourteen, but it looks like this southbound fourteen
maybe they're doing construction, is closed up there just north
of Lancaster.

Speaker 6 (20:35):
Yeah, it's been. It's an ongoing project that's been along
that southbound side for a while. So it's it's not
the whole freeway that's closed, but it's just some long
term restriction.

Speaker 1 (20:47):
It is a mess, an absolute mess. All right, trash,
we have time. We'll come back and do this. We'll
talk about the trash in the San greg Gabriel River.
I know we've been promoting that all night, but we've
been very busy. We'll come back and talk that. We're
live on KFI Am six forty. If you're out in
the Anlo Valley, please be careful. It is a tremendous
amount of rain happening right now and we'll continue for

(21:10):
the next half hours. So we got the same storm
you're going through. We got it about an hour ago
in Burbank, and I'm telling you it's a lot of rain.

Speaker 3 (21:18):
Please be aware of that.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
It's Conway show Man. This rain doesn't stop. It just
doesn't stop. And everybody's feeling it right now. We just
got a lot of it in the San Fernando Valley
and I'm looking at let me see, let me stop.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
This radar at six what is it? Six fifty?

Speaker 1 (21:50):
All right, so stop it at seven at seven o'clock,
Lancaster Palmdale is still getting worked on Thousand Oaks Malibu.
You're gonna get another sell if you can believe it
or not. It's right off the coast and it's going
right towards Malibu, right in the heart of Malibu, and
it's going to commit at seven fifteen, so you got
about twenty five minutes there. Then as we go into

(22:14):
San Berndina Riverside, there's going to be there's a huge
cell right now over Norco moving towards Fontana and that's
that's another you know, half inch to an inch per hour,
and fortunately the storm is moving quickly up to Victorville.
That entire pass the fifteen freeway. But the big story

(22:35):
right now is Lancaster and Palmdale. You're getting yet another
helping of radical, dense rain.

Speaker 3 (22:44):
Radical.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
Let's see how it looks after let me see seven
point thirty. All right, let's go at seven fifty. Okay,
now this is at seven fifty, so about it. One
hour from now, you're still going to see it in
Langcast Palmdale, but Torrance is going to be relatively dry.
Hermosa Beach, Torrents, Lomita Signal Hill, Long Beach area that

(23:10):
you're going to dry out a little. You're going to
be you know, a little drizzle here and there, but
not none of these major cells are coming in over
those areas. Something might pop up, but right now I'm
not seeing anything. But at seven point fifty, Santa Clarita
is going to get drenched again. It's you're going to
get another radical cell coming through Santa Clarita. And so

(23:34):
it just doesn't stop. San Bernardino at seven fifty and
one hour from now, lot of rain there, and again
the big story is is California City, Lake, Los Angeles, Lancaster,
all of the Aneloe Valley, a tremendous amount of rain,
a lot a ton of rain. All right, let's talk

(23:56):
about the where all this trash is going from the rain.
I guess we could. I don't assume it's going right
into Long Beach. Long Beach must hate us. Long Beach
must hate the valley and hate the city of La
because all of our trash is thrown in the La
River because people can't behave and then when it storms
and it rains, it all goes into Long Beach and

(24:17):
they have to deal with it. They should file a
lawsuit against everybody who doesn't live in Long Beach because
that's where all this crap is going.

Speaker 7 (24:25):
Yeah, just behind me is one of the many flood
control channels that helps direct rain water to the ocean
during a storm. But as we've seen in many storms
in the past, it's not just storm water that ends
up when someone litters here in La Palma. That trash
often ends up in the Coyote Creek riverbed, which during

(24:46):
a rainstorm can then take it on about a nine
mile trek all the way down to the San Gabriel
River and into the ocean at Seal Beach.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
That's right, that's the waterway between Seal Beach and Long
Beach and it goes right. It's right on the border
of Seal Beach and right on the court, on the
border of Long Beach Belmont Shore, and all of that
crap goes right into the ocean. And it's not you
know what happens is you know, you'll hire a company
or hire a guy, I should say, and he's gonna

(25:20):
remove trash from your backyard. And quite often that guy
at two o'clock in the morning goes to the La
River and overboard it's in the La River, and now
it's in Long Beach. And the people of Long Beach
and Seal Beach have got to be absolutely tired, sick
and tired of all the trash coming from La and

(25:41):
ending up on their beautiful beach.

Speaker 7 (25:43):
As we documented in twenty twenty three, much of that
trash in debris can then get washed back up onto
the beach. Now a study is underway about things that
can be done to try and stop the trash, oh God,
from ever getting that far.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
All right, let's find out why we're going to solve
this problem.

Speaker 8 (26:02):
The San Gabra River behind me Brisdan. Just in twenty
twenty four, Loan is over four hundred tons of trash.

Speaker 7 (26:10):
Some of the things being looked at include using a
trash interceptor like this one in Marina del Rey or
like this one being used in Newport Beach. They're also
looking at using strategically located booms, nets and other devices
along the different river beds as well.

Speaker 8 (26:28):
The counties funded the feasibility study, which should be coming
out in about month. They've identified so far seventeen locations
along the river that we can have these trash tracks.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Why are they waiting so long? You know, this should
have been done in the nineteen seventies.

Speaker 8 (26:44):
Our interceptor, the sizes and all that are also in discussion.

Speaker 3 (26:49):
How much it costs.

Speaker 8 (26:50):
In the end though, is really is just trying to
get funding in a collaboration from La County to an
Orange County and the different cities along the Saying Gaba River.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
The problem with that is that one side of that
river when it reached the reaches the ocean is Long Beach,
LA County, and the other side of that river is
Seal Beach, which is Orange County, LA County on the west,
Orange County on the east, And so it's not all

(27:21):
happening in one county. So you have to have coordination
between the two counties to wipe this out.

Speaker 7 (27:26):
Now, the study alone will cost about four hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
As to how much study and study we've studied it,
there's trash.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
Let's get it out.

Speaker 7 (27:35):
The solutions suggested will cost and who will pay for them, well,
that will all have to be worked out for now.
Reputting here in the Palma, I'm Chip Yost, katt LA
five meets.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
All right, we are going to see you at the
remote on Friday. I think Chip Yost is coming by,
and I think Tim Linn is coming by as well.
Two people you're probably familiar with. Obviously Chip Yost on
KTLA and also we play a lot of his reporting
here on KFI. And also Tim Lynn, who used to
come on with us quite often, who flew the helicopter

(28:05):
for KTLA. He might be popping down there as well.
So we're gonna be in your Belinda at the Smart
and Final on your Blindo Boulevard two to one five
zero zero, your Blando Boulevard. And that's gonna be four
to eight pm this Friday, hopefully hopefully it's not raining.
We're gonna be at Smart and Final. There's gonna be food,

(28:26):
there's going to be samples. We're gonna have gift cards
that we're giving away, and I'm auctioning off a bunch
of stuff that just sits in bins in my garage,
Awards and pictures and stuff like that that I would
never put up in my own house, and so we're
gonna be auctioning them. There's going to be no bottom

(28:46):
if there's gonna be no minimum. So if you want
to offer a penny, it's yours. If nobody offers two pennies,
that particular item is yours. And there's about sixty fifty
sixty items, and some of this.

Speaker 3 (29:01):
Stuff is probably worth a lot of money. Maybe I
don't know, maybe not, But.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
Anyways, that's gonna be Friday, this Friday, four to eight
pm in your Belinda Smart and Final right off the
ninety one.

Speaker 3 (29:12):
We will see you there.

Speaker 1 (29:15):
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now you
can always hear us live on KFI AM six forty
four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime on
demand on the iHeartRadio app

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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