Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KMF.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I am sixty and you're listening to The Conway Show
on demand on the iHeartRadio.
Speaker 3 (00:06):
App AMS six.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
It is the Conway Show, all right, ding dong. Earlier
today I was invited to MC the LAPD Traffic Division
Awards for the year, which is nice. You know, it's
nice for them to think of me going there, and
I present awards to the best cops in the valley,
(00:35):
and well, I will tell you who they are at
six o'clock, maybe what the arrested you or giving you
a ticket or whatever. But the Valley Traffic Vision, there's
six divisions for LAPD in the valley. When I was
growing up in the San Fernando Valley, the valley was
one division. I think I'm pretty sure it was just
(00:56):
the valley.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
It was. We were still two on three.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
The whole city was two one three, and the valley
was one division. And then you had some other divisions
in Los Angeles. But now there are six divisions in
LA six and Valley Traffic would be the seven. But
Valley Traffic handles all the traffic in the San Fernando
Valley and it's huge and they have the most arrested,
(01:24):
most contacts with well, guys like you and I, you know,
who've done something wrong and they want to pull you
over and talk to you about it, and yet they
have the least amount of complaints. So whoever is running
Valley Traffic, I remember when Andy Nyman ran that thing,
and I think he sends his sense or I. No,
(01:45):
he has retired and they have They do an excellent
job out there. I've been pulled over by Valley Traffic before,
got a ticket for doing an illegal U turn and.
Speaker 3 (01:57):
I didn't fight it. As a matter of fact, No,
I did fight him.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
I went to court because I thought that it was
a legal three point turn and then the cop said, no,
it's an illegal turn, and so I said, oh, I'd
like to go to court and fight it. So they
give me a court date. It was three, you know,
three months later, and I go to court and I
see the judge has a calendar behind his desk on
(02:23):
the wall, and it has fourteen days X out and
the first day where there's no x's was that day
that I was there. And I was the first guy up,
So that tells me he was on a fourteen day vacation,
the judge and I was going to be the first
case he listened to.
Speaker 3 (02:45):
I said, I got no shot, no shot.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
At all, and the cops showed up and he told
his side of the story. I told my side of
the story, and the judge said loser pointed to me,
and I had to pay the fine.
Speaker 3 (02:59):
When I'm I read and it was I didn't like it.
I didn't like it.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
But I will say at six o'clock tonight, we will
tell you who the winners are for the l A
PD Valley Division or Valley Traffic.
Speaker 3 (03:13):
I should say valley traffic. All right.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
The big story continues to be the the Guthrie family.
And I have never in my life seen so much
time dedicated to one story, and almost to the point
where it's it's weird. It's on Fox, CNN, MS now,
(03:36):
It's on two, four, five, seven, nine, eleven. It's on
the front of all the newspapers. Anytime you go to
the New York Times, LA Times, New York Post, California Post.
You know Fox News, it's the lead story, with four
or five stories buried or under the under the lead story.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
Every day.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
You know Jesse Waters, who does a show on Fox
and what time that comes on? I think at I
don't know, five or six o'clock local time. He for
the last for the first four or five the last
four or five days, has done an entire hour on
Nancy and where you know Nancy Guthrie and where she
(04:18):
is with very little new information. And I don't know
when people turn away or tune out, but man, I
think we're getting close, you know. And there's a lot
of people out there who have missing family members who
are not getting any press at all. Missing daughter, missing son,
(04:38):
missing grandma, grandpa, mom, or dad, uncle, rand. There's a
lot of missing people in this country and they get
no press whatsoever. Nothing, And so it's odd how much
attention has been put on this case. But people want
to know. Everybody wants to know. That's why I found
(04:59):
it odd. The guy they pulled over south of whatever, Tulson.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
What city are they in?
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Not Phoenix, but Tucson's so yeah, south of Tucson. They
pulled this guy over in some kind of GEP or
SUV and questioned him for two hours and then let
him go. And they thought they had the guy, and
then they said, no, it's the wrong guy. But I
have I have a theory that that is the guy,
(05:29):
or that might be the guy, and they're just lettering
him wander around so they can pick up more clues,
because that guy looks a lot like the guy who
was knocking at the door they found on that ring camera.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
But I will say it was odd.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
The guy that they picked up south of Tucson said
he didn't know who Nancy, you know, Guthrie was, and
he'd never heard the story. I'm like, what, he never
heard the story. He's a delivery guy in Tucson and
he's not heard the story. There are fifteen hundred reporters
(06:03):
in Tucson, Arizona that weren't there two weeks ago. It's
the lead story on every broadcast, the news. It's the
lead story. And everything local news, local newspapers, local TV
news you have to avoid.
Speaker 5 (06:17):
You know.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
It's all over social media too. My daughter and her
friends who don't read the news every day, they all
know all the details about Nancy Guthrie, all of them.
It's everywhere. And for this guy to say he's never
heard the story and doesn't know anything about it. I
find that odd, really really odd. All right, let's check
(06:38):
in with the chip yo, see what he's doing out there.
Look even KTLA sent a reporter out there Channel two, four, five, seven,
nine eleven. They've all sent reporters to Tucson, Arizona to
cover the story. It's the biggest story of the year.
It's the biggest story of the year. And we have
the Olympics going on right now. This story dominates the Olympics.
(06:59):
This is horror for the Olympics. This story's on more
than the Olympics for sure, like by probably twenty times.
It's unbelievable. But let's find out what's going on here.
The latest in the search for Savannah Guthrie's mom.
Speaker 4 (07:14):
In recent days, we've seen investigators combing this neighborhood around
Nancy Guthrie's house. This is her house just behind me. Well,
today they put out the investigators put out a notice
to everyone who lives within a two mile radius of
here asking them for their home videos of any cars
or any people walking by on their cameras and anything
else they think that looks unusual. Between January first and
(07:38):
February second. They also confirm.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
They're just getting around to that now. Twelve days later,
you know, hey, or thirteen days later, hey, can we
look at your videos.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
That they have found some gloves as they've been canvassing
the area around her home.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
So look at this video.
Speaker 4 (07:53):
It makes this a little more interesting. In the New
York Post put out this video showing investigators picking up
a black glove about a mile and a half from
where Nancy Guthrie lives, and that kind of explains also
that two mile radius they're putting out there. Why is
that interesting? You'll see in a moment if you remember.
But let's first talk about something that happened a little
bit earlier today. Look at this video here they put
(08:13):
up a white tint in the doorway area, the front
door of her house. It looks like they're doing that
to block the media from seeing what they're doing.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Yeah, they put up a tent. I don't know what
they're doing with that tent. But I have a feeling
that a lot more people in this country have called
their mom or their dad in the last twelve thirteen
days and ask them do you have a subscription to
your Ring camera or your Nest camera or Google camera
whatever it is? And I have a feeling that these
(08:41):
computer companies are racking in raking in the dollars they
are everybody now is subscribing to the ring camera or
the nest camera, so you can go thirty days back,
you know, because if you don't have a subscription, you
can't go thirty days back. I don't know how they
got these photos and this video, but it is erased
(09:03):
almost immediately. So you've got to subscribe to the camera.
And if your mom or dad has one and they're
not subscribed, subscribe for them. It will be the best
seven or fourteen dollars you'll ever spend in your life.
Speaker 3 (09:17):
Belly, O, does your mom have cameras outside the house?
Does she subscribe to him?
Speaker 6 (09:21):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (09:22):
And I did exactly what you said. I called and
I go, do you have a subscription?
Speaker 3 (09:25):
She's like yes, Oh that's great.
Speaker 6 (09:27):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
She probably thought you meant to like Sports Illustrated or McCalls.
Speaker 7 (09:31):
She goes housekeeper, Yeah, I still get that. I'm like, no, no, no, no, no,
no security cameras.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
All right, let's continue.
Speaker 4 (09:39):
How we're going to take a pride that might be
significant is because that front door area, remember, is where
this guy appeared to this person I appeared, I should say,
we don't know if it's a man or woman. They're
masked up pretty good.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
I think we can all tell that that's a guy.
Speaker 4 (09:52):
But this masked person here showed up at her.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
Now we're looking for the pronouns of the guy before
we find Nancy Guthrie. We have to find a nouns
of this.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
Human being.
Speaker 4 (10:03):
But this masked person here showed up at her front
door the morning she disappeared. As you can see in
the video there, not only are they masked up wearing
a backpack, but they have gloves on. So obviously they
want to see if that person might have discarded the
gloves sometime as they were leaving, after they were leaving
Nancy Guthrie's house. Remember, she disappeared on February first, has
not been seen since. Nancy Guthrie is.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
Okay, we got take it break. Welcome back.
Speaker 6 (10:27):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Back and finish up with Chip Yost. He's a great
reporter and he's in on the scene. He's on scene
in Arizona. All right, We're live on caf I AM
six forty more now with Crows.
Speaker 3 (10:44):
Here is the latest.
Speaker 8 (10:44):
UCLA has removed the web page showcasing a professor whose
name is in the Epstein files. Mark Tremo says he
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rain advisory has been issued for all La County beaches
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let's get back to the latest on Nancy Guthrie. Bellio
just told me a really gross term that I've never
heard before. I guess I'm not following, you know, just
(17:51):
every detail of this story. But she said that that
area where Nancy Guthrie, Savannah Guthrie's mom lives is a
get ready for this term. It might be the first
time you've heard it, and it's going to make you
want to throw up. It's going to be gross. All right,
hopefully you're not eating dinner right now. But the area
where Nancy Guthrie lived is a dark sanctuary. They limit
(18:17):
how many lights you can put outside of your home.
What so for security, you can't put these floodlights outside
of your home. So if you're a thief. You know
you like to rob homes. Where would you go first,
to a place where everybody had floodlights around their house
(18:39):
or to a dark sanctuary?
Speaker 3 (18:42):
Hm, the the house.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
Robbers, the criminals playground is the dark sanctuary. I've never
heard that term in my life. It's outrageous. I counted
a couple of months ago how many lights I have
around my house. It's close to one hundred and thirty eight.
There's lights one hundred and thirty eight. Some are low voltage,
(19:06):
some are high voltage, some are solar, others are decorative.
I have one hundred and thirty eight light bulbs on
and around the house every night. Every night, I see
everything going on outside the house.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
I see it.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
If you came to my house, I see you, including
you Bellio. You popped by, you know, drunk and with
John knocking on the windows, you know, wanting to use
the pool, I would see you, or the clay court
or the grass court or the stables, whatever you wanted
to use at my house.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
Yeah, I see you, I see you. I'd see John. Two.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
All right, here, let's continue with Nancy Guthrie. Here's chip
yos with kt ls.
Speaker 4 (19:49):
She disappeared on February first, has not been seen since.
Nancy Guthrie is eighty four years old. She is the
mother of NBC Today.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Oh my god, the recapping that people do. I know
he's got to do it, but you know, for people
that don't know follow the story, but they do it
on print as well. If you know, Let's say you
go to I don't know, New York Times and they'll
tell you some of the details. Then they'll go into
the backstory. She was kidnapped in February first. She's the
mother of Savannah Guthrie. That should be highlighted in yellow.
(20:20):
And for people to know the story can bypass those
two paragraphs because everybody does it anyway. When you start
to read the details, you already know you skip, you
skip ahead.
Speaker 4 (20:29):
But nobody has seen her since that February first state.
It's believed she has been kidnapped. There have been ransom notes,
they're skipping ahead, but still no sign of where Nancy
Guthrie might be. Savannah Guthrie, her daughter, has put out
messages skipping ahead.
Speaker 3 (20:42):
We know that too, A little.
Speaker 4 (20:44):
Video of her mother with her kids, just reminding everyone
that they are still hopeful that we'll be able to
see their mother again. In the Guthrie family not the
only ones, of course, they have a lot of support
here in the community. Savannah Guthrie started her career here
at a local NBC station in Tucson, or early in
her career worked at the local NBC station here, and
(21:04):
yesterday that NBC station put up a banner in support
of the family.
Speaker 18 (21:08):
We're worried about Nancy and savannahs from Tucson. We feel
like we know here, so I just wrote bring Nancy
home and prayers for her family, because it's all over
the news and I'm very concerned.
Speaker 19 (21:22):
We're hopeful and we are praying daily not only for
Nancy's safe return, but for the Guthrie family that they
feel all of the love and prayers and support they do.
Speaker 3 (21:35):
There's a lot of it in Tucson now.
Speaker 4 (21:37):
The FBI has been getting a lot of tips to
follow up on following that video of the masked person
in front of her house that they put out earlier
this week. They say within about twenty four hours of
that video being put out, they had more than four
thousand tips. A lot of tips they're following up, but
you can see they're still asking for more information, still
trying to figure out who this person or people are
that might have kidnapped Nancy Guthrie from now recording here
(21:59):
and Tucson. I'm Chipy host katty La five new chips.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
All right, when we come back, we will get into
the security systems, what to get, where to place them.
We are now all going to get cameras. If you
haven't bought into it yet, this story is going to
push you over the finish line and you're going to
get for your mom or your dad or your kids.
Everybody is now going to have a camera, everybody, And
(22:27):
if you don't, something's going on with you.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
I get it. If you can't afford it, I get it.
I totally get it.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
But if you have any you know, any extra money
at the end of the month and you don't get
a camera outside your front door, where are you spending
that money?
Speaker 3 (22:42):
Where? All right? We're live on KFI. Oh by the way,
spoiler alert.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
The men's hockey team, the men's Olympic hockey team represent
the United States played earlier today and I'm going to
give you the score in five seconds four three two one.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
They won. They won.
Speaker 2 (23:04):
They had two goals taken off the boards in the
first period, and they came. They were tied one to
one at one point and they beat I think it's Latvia.
I think they beat him five to one. I think
that was the total. So great start for the US
men's Olympic team in hockey, and that's going to be
(23:25):
a you know, a great series to watch. So keep
your TV on for USA men's hockey and you might
recognize if you're a hockey fan, you'll recognize about eighty
percent of the names on that team. But kick dass today.
I think it was close to forty or forty two
something like that. By the second period. They had thirty
seven shots on goal, which is huge. It was just
(23:47):
a you know, basically murdered this Latvia team.
Speaker 6 (23:51):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (23:58):
All right, the Nancy Guthrie story. The silver lining might
be that you your mom or your dad, or your
grandmother or grandfather might be more secure now because you
have been proactive, went out there, bottom cameras, bottom the
subscription and you're keeping an eye on mom and dad,
especially if they're in the eighties and living alone. That's
(24:20):
a recipe for disaster on a lot of levels. Whether
they could pass out, they could excellently leave the burner on,
burn the house down, they could slip in the bathtub
and drown or bleed out.
Speaker 3 (24:35):
Godness is depressing.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
But you've got to get the video cameras for mom
and dad or your grandmother or grandfather. Hey, look, we
have Valentine's Day coming up on Saturday. What a better
gift that says I love I love you. What's better
than a security camera with a full subscription. I'm just
saying mom and dad had love that. So if you
(24:58):
still get mom and dad a Valentine and stay gift.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
I don't know if you're there, but get mom and
dad on this, like Bellio did. Ballio called her mom immediately,
made sure she had the subscription and made sure she's
got the cameras because she didn't want anything happened her mom. Bellio,
does your mom live in a dark sanctuary?
Speaker 20 (25:20):
She does not.
Speaker 7 (25:21):
Golden allows lights, and they.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
Should allow lights. Lights are safety. Lights are safety around
the house. All right, let's find out what security camera
you should get, where you should put it.
Speaker 3 (25:31):
The whole deal. Here we go.
Speaker 21 (25:33):
Since the release of these chilling images from the night
of Nancy Guthrie's disappearance. Authority say tips have been pouring in.
How often is video a breakthrough for investigators?
Speaker 22 (25:44):
There is video everywhere. Video surveillance has become a critical
element for law enforcement in helping solve crimes.
Speaker 21 (25:51):
Images the FBI recovered from Nancy Guthries' Google Nest store
bell camera providing critical clues.
Speaker 22 (25:58):
Using the rim of the arch al with the tiles,
experts will be able to get his height, weight, and
shoe size almost exactly.
Speaker 21 (26:06):
Nationwide, concerns about crime and safety are the main reason
many homeowners install cameras around their properties. In fact, according
to a recent survey, nearly eighty percent of US homeowners
say they own some type of security camera.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
That's a lot because these cameras have been around for
a very short period of time, and already eighty percent
of the homes have them. Adam Crawl said something great,
very smart. He said, once these video cameras started to
be installed everywhere, at home, at work, at restaurants, casinos, everywhere,
he said, he thought that crime would go down because
(26:41):
everybody's on video. And he said that didn't happen. There's
still a lot of crime. We just get to see
it all and we see it all the time.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
Everybody.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
If you own a business and you don't have security cameras,
what's going on with you? I don't know any business
that doesn't have security cameras.
Speaker 21 (26:58):
Including the most popular doorbell cameras. Widely used brands include nest, Ring, Arlow,
and Blink, which all offer cameras that record video and
alert homeowners to sound.
Speaker 2 (27:08):
It wasn't that the name of the characters on Puff
and stuff? Wasn't that exactly the name.
Speaker 21 (27:14):
Nest Ring, Arlow and Blink?
Speaker 3 (27:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 14 (27:17):
Or no?
Speaker 3 (27:18):
That was the bananas? Were the banana banana splits?
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Yeah, that's exactly the name of the four bananas on
the banana splits.
Speaker 21 (27:27):
Nest Ring, Arlow and Blink.
Speaker 3 (27:30):
Yeah, Banana Splits.
Speaker 21 (27:31):
Which all offer cameras that record video and alert homeowners
to sounds and movements at their door through an app
on their phones.
Speaker 23 (27:38):
When you think of these cameras, think of it more
as not just someone ringing your doorbell and it presses record.
You can set motion detection, you can set alarms that
go off.
Speaker 21 (27:49):
Prices for the cameras can range depending on a variety
of options. WI Fi enabled cameras tend to be easy
to put up in more affordable, costing anywhere from about
fifty to three hundred dollars, but experts say they can
lose signal. Hardwired versions usually offer a more stable connection
and don't require charging, but can be more difficult to
install and cost hundreds more. You could also opt to
(28:12):
pay a monthly subscription fee from as low as four
dollars a month all the way up to twenty five
dollars a month features like long term video history and storage.
And Tucson investigators face to huge challenge trying to recover
video from Nancy Guthrie's Nest camera that have been disconnected
from the home's Wi Fi. Officials were eventually able to
(28:33):
access the footage through back end systems.
Speaker 23 (28:36):
I recommend to everyone to get at least a camera
for every major entrance to your home.
Speaker 22 (28:41):
I'm sure a lot of people are wanting.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
To put care.
Speaker 2 (28:43):
Can't you hear that? That's a great tip. Listen to
this again. I know sometimes you listen half assed, so listen.
This is a big tip, very important tip.
Speaker 23 (28:49):
At least a camera for every major entrance.
Speaker 3 (28:52):
To your home.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
At least one camera for every major entrance to your home.
That includes French doors, g garage doors, patio doors, front doors,
back doors, side doors, sliding glass doors, anytime anyone can
get in.
Speaker 3 (29:07):
Camera's ahoy.
Speaker 22 (29:08):
I'm sure a lot of people wanting to put cameras
in now, So where should they place them so they
get the best use out of them?
Speaker 3 (29:14):
Of course, where the people are robbing you from.
Speaker 13 (29:16):
Of course you want to make sure nothing is obstructing
the view, right, like an overgrown branch or plan. Typically,
when it comes to doorbell cameras, there's our place four
feet up, but if you have flexibility with your camera system,
experts recommend doing eight to ten feet up. That's high
enough where it's out of easy reach from a criminal,
but low enough to get those really fine details if
someone were to come into the home. As for Nancy
(29:37):
Guthrie's disconnected camera, authorities at last check still have not
been able to locate it, but so important they were
able to track down the visuals.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
Yes, yes, yes, the visuals, and that's what we need.
We need more visuals from these people, more visuals.
Speaker 20 (29:51):
Nest ring Arlow and blink, Yeah, I think that was
the I think that let me find out if that's true.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
You remember the Banana split, John.
Speaker 19 (30:17):
Overhead Banana bus show, show me.
Speaker 2 (30:27):
That's their names right there, they went through all four
names show right here.
Speaker 20 (30:35):
That's right, that was that was their name, nest Ring,
Arlow and Blink.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
Wow. Man o man, what a coincidence, What a coincident.
Speaker 6 (30:44):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from k
f I A M.
Speaker 3 (30:48):
Six forty anymore.
Speaker 2 (30:51):
On Nancy Guthrie and the missing person, Uh, Savannah's Mom.
Speaker 3 (30:56):
We will have that for you immediately.
Speaker 2 (30:58):
There's usually one big piece of evidence or one big
piece of news that comes out between four and seven,
and so we will have that for you, although on
Tuesday we may not be here for that because we're
moving the show. We're going back to the old stomping
ground six to ten pm. So the show on Tuesday
(31:19):
will start at six and it'll end at ten pm,
and we can do a lot more fun things between
six and ten pm, more remotes, more music, lighter you know, topics,
and also.
Speaker 3 (31:35):
We've gotten belly O.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
I don't know if you know this, but obviously you've
been in radio a long time, yeah.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
Super long time.
Speaker 7 (31:43):
I don't know about that.
Speaker 3 (31:45):
But yeah, well okay, whenever like Krozier thirty eight years.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
Okay, well yeah, Crozer's got a couple of years on you.
But when you change a show, there's always fifty percent
of the people like it and fifty percent of the
people that hate it. I have only seen zero negative comments.
They might be out there, but I've not seen them.
So on social media, texting, email, you know, press reports,
(32:11):
I've not seen any negative stories. I've only seen positive
and people say, oh, I can't wait for you to
get back to six to ten pm. The show is
a lot better, is a lot more fun. It's a
lot Funnier's a lot more interesting, and that's great. That's
a great way to start, BELLYO.
Speaker 7 (32:26):
The only ones that I saw were the people that
were bummed because they drive home between four and seven
to listen. So I suggested listening to the podcast Conway
on demand.
Speaker 3 (32:35):
That's right, or get another job.
Speaker 7 (32:38):
I don't know if they could do that, but I
think Conway on demand is a good option.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
I think getting another job might be easier, you know,
a second income. Yes, get off at six o'clock instead
of four o'clock and you'll enjoy yourself. All right, A
lot of kids, a lot of Generation Z the gen
z er is out there. They don't want their driver's license.
I can't believe this. My daughter, I think she was
(33:03):
eighteen when she got hers. I think eighteen, eighteen and
a half something like that. But man, when I was sixteen,
I turned sixteen on October thirteenth, on my birthday, I
was at the DMV at seven thirty in the morning
and they opened up at eight. I was waiting in
line to get my driver's list. I couldn't wait to
get it. Failed my first one, but nailed at the
(33:26):
second time. I went back, which was the next day.
Uh bellio, are you then come back the next day?
I went back the next day. You know, I almost
uh well, it's kind of embarrassing. But on my driver's test,
I took it a Vanayzed DMV. And if you're familiar
back with the Van Eyed DMV. In the late seventies,
(33:46):
there was a train that ran through the middle of
the valley and it was on Chandler and it went
all the way to Burbank, and so the train track
was elevated by about three feet. There was a ramp
up to it. Then the train back in a ramp down.
It's about three feet. I didn't see it. I hit it.
And on my driver's test, Mike exam, I got air.
(34:11):
All four wheels, all four wheels left the ground a
bang bang, and I could I saw the clipboard and
his pen get air, and his hair sort of, you know,
floated around and I remember landing, you know, like the
dukes of hands.
Speaker 8 (34:26):
Oh you're talking about the actual driving test.
Speaker 3 (34:28):
Yeah, the driving test. I got it. I got air.
Speaker 2 (34:32):
Yea, We're in the air. This is not good. And
it felt like it lasted for an hour. I looked
over like, oh, this is really bad, right, I said,
did I just failed? And he goes, oh, I can't
tell you to the end. I said, look, we can
save each other time. He goes, you definitely just failed.
You got air, You got air? How did you how
(34:54):
did you pass? You're in the you're you're in the air.
I said, okay. So drove back to the DMV. I
got out. My mom was standing there and my mom said,
how'd you do? And the driver, the you know, the examiner,
what do they call those guys, the test giver, the instructor.
(35:14):
He said, uh, he said he failed. He needs about
six months of heavy training before he can get his license.
Heavy training, and I thought, oh, that's insulting. I've been
driving illegally since I was fifteen. And I went back
the next day with my dad. My mom wouldn't go
with me. She goes, I'm not going with you. You
need more drivers training, like a please don't always side
(35:35):
with the with the with the strangers. And I went
with my dad the next day got my license and
I ran into that guy, the instructor, in the parking
lot and I go, hey, buddy, I passed, and he goes, well,
good luck, young man. Three days later totaled my mom's cat.
So that guy at the last laugh totaled her car.
(35:58):
But kids aren't into it, Belly. Did you get your
license immediately when you were sixteen?
Speaker 3 (36:02):
No, I have a similar story.
Speaker 7 (36:04):
I also failed my first time.
Speaker 3 (36:06):
Really couldn't wait to go.
Speaker 7 (36:07):
My dad took me down. You know how they have
the two lights at the railroad track. I thought I
didn't need to stop at the first one, so I
inched up and that's where I failed. And when I
got back, my dad was like, how to go? And
I started crying.
Speaker 16 (36:23):
Oh no, I know.
Speaker 7 (36:24):
It's so sad, but I went back the next day
and passed it.
Speaker 3 (36:27):
Good for you, Good for you.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
Well, these kids, they don't want their license, Man, what's
going on with them?
Speaker 24 (36:33):
Back in nineteen eighty three, half a sixteen year old's
already had their license. In twenty twenty two.
Speaker 3 (36:38):
I was just saying, I respiring. Is this andy reining room?
Speaker 24 (36:41):
It is less than a quarter. It's not that gen
Z says that they're too cool to drive. In some
cases they are scared, which is wild because cars have
never been safer. You've seen a car from nineteen eighty three.
Speaker 15 (36:54):
Oh no, seat Belgian not then back on the back seat.
Speaker 24 (36:57):
They got a koozi for your beer, right up there
next to the four on the three on the tree.
Speaker 2 (37:01):
Yeah, right with the ashtray too. Everyone has a lighter
and an ashtray.
Speaker 24 (37:05):
There's also an uber, which we didn't have as kids,
and parent uber. We're parents who are happily driving their
kids everywhere. One woman on Reddit described her son as
a twenty one year old passenger prints. The Federal Highway
Administration says most teens will eventually get their licenses, but
they're waiting longer. Of course, this all used to mean freedom,
but experts say, with less emphasis on real life social life,
(37:27):
they hit bakes driving that right. I guess they are
bas bakes or vapes hit bakes, hit the breaks, the bakes,
it's the breaks. Break sounds like somebody in the graph house.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
So Mark meant to say breaks, and he said bakes,
and Andy thought he said vapes.
Speaker 3 (37:44):
I thought Va. It's like a comedy routine with these two.
Speaker 24 (37:48):
Of course, this all used to mean.
Speaker 3 (37:50):
The young Laurel and Hardys of k t LA.
Speaker 24 (37:53):
But experts say, with less emphasis on real life social life,
they hit bake soon driving that right, I guess they
are bakes.
Speaker 16 (38:00):
Or vapes hit bakes.
Speaker 15 (38:03):
I think they hit the breaks.
Speaker 16 (38:04):
It's the bakes, it's the breaks.
Speaker 15 (38:06):
Break sounds like.
Speaker 24 (38:07):
Somebody in the graphics department might have hit the bake
this morning.
Speaker 3 (38:11):
It was like a retirement home. What bakes? Ah breaks?
Whereas Welma gold.
Speaker 24 (38:18):
On psychologists, as teenagers were really into driving because it
was a way for them to meet up with each other,
book up, drink whatever. And nowadays they're just not doing that.
They're just hanging out at home. But it's so crazy
because even like I mean, it was twenty eighty to
thirty years ago, but when I was eight years old,
I thought, I cannot believe I'm only halfway to being
able to drive. Might have been because I grew up
(38:40):
with a diet of IndyCar fumes in Indianapolis, but it
really was like such an exciting thing to get out
there in the world.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
It's the greatest thing that a sixteen year old could
ever do to get that license.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
It means freedom.
Speaker 24 (38:53):
And now they're like they couldn't care less.
Speaker 16 (38:55):
Well, here's the other thing.
Speaker 5 (38:56):
That the price of insurance, you know, for parent I mean.
Speaker 2 (39:00):
Okay, that is a tremendous cost. My daughter's insurance, which
I'm picking up for because I don't know if she
could handle it for now eighty five one hundred dollars
a year, eight five one hundred dollars a year.
Speaker 5 (39:17):
It actually ends up being cheaper in many cases to
just yeah, send you a kid.
Speaker 2 (39:22):
Oh yeah, you know what's cheaper in many instances, putting
them up for adoption at sixteen, that's cheaper.
Speaker 5 (39:28):
It actually ends up being cheaper in many cases to
just yeah, send you a kid uber wherever the heck
you want, instead of you know, getting the car forum
and paying for the insurance.
Speaker 2 (39:38):
Yeah, plus you know, I understand that if you're you know, young,
and you can uber everywhere, you don't have to pay insurance,
you have to pay have car payments, you don't have
to place the park if you work at a place
that doesn't offer parking, or go to school where it's
really hard to find parking, you know, it might be
the way to go, you know, Uber or lift. Also,
(39:58):
if you're young and you already started drinking, you don't
have to worry about a dui as well. So if
you're sixteen and you're already you know, half in the bag,
you're already bombed every day, that might be a better alternative,
you know, slide into lyft or uber and get around. Yeah,
because driving is extremely expensive.
Speaker 3 (40:18):
Yeah, I've picked up many people who have that DUIs.
Oh yeah, I mean that that's the only option.
Speaker 2 (40:23):
Yeah, it's once you get a dui, your insurance goes
through the roof. I mean, you could be spending you know,
fifteen grand a year on insurance if you can get
it and so uber lyft that's the way to go.
Speaker 3 (40:34):
All right, We're live on KFI AM six forty