Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on De Maya from
KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Stopway go back through it.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
This is the five oh five News Whip.
Speaker 4 (00:24):
Yeah, yes, here we are at five oh five the
News Whip. And what we do is we get the
crew an option to talk about something that maybe we missed,
something that maybe is happening in your local neighborhood, something
we got to spend more time on, or I don't know,
just something cool that's happening in town. And I just
(00:45):
did the math during the break our own Michael Krozer
lives in a house that's four times bigger than the popes.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Something odd about that.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
It's not sacrilegious, but right on the doorstep the pope.
It lives in nine hundred and seventy two square feet.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
By the way, he lives in an apartment.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Well he chose to live humbly.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Okay, who Krozer?
Speaker 5 (01:16):
Not Krozer. He has three fireplaces.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
And the pope has none. Right, you know what, I
think Krozer.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
Is the pope.
Speaker 5 (01:28):
Because he has more square footage.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
He's better off than the pope in a lot of ways.
I am now, yeah for sure, now, but man, oh, man,
who were just laughing and going to heaven?
Speaker 3 (01:38):
I know that. I'm sorry. Sam blew it, he blew
it early.
Speaker 6 (01:46):
I'm okay, I'm okay. I already accepted my lot in life.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
Okay, you're still digging, man, And I don't play with
fire like that. Man, I don't know. I always think
there's going to be a heaven. I hope, I hope
to get there. All right, let's do the news whip here.
Let's start with Sam. He's never been with us before.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Sam. What's going on out there? Bob? Not much?
Speaker 6 (02:07):
I saw a story out of psychology today. You know,
I'm a mental health professional on the side. I guess
AI romantic and sexual partners are way more common than
you would expect.
Speaker 3 (02:20):
Wait, say it again.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
Who is AI? Artificial intelligence romantic and sexual partners?
Speaker 3 (02:25):
Okay?
Speaker 6 (02:26):
Now, it's a study from Willoughby, Carol Dover and Hakala
sampled three thousand people, young adults and adults over thirty
and found that one in four young adults use AI
to fulfill their sexual and romantic needs.
Speaker 3 (02:40):
Wow, how does that mean physically or emotionally?
Speaker 6 (02:43):
Emotionally sexting or just having like romantic conversations?
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Things? Like that. I don't know how that can go wrong.
Speaker 6 (02:51):
Thirty over thirty percent of men have had have had
romantic interactions with AI, twenty three percent of young women,
twenty seven percent of adult men, and twelve percent of
young women viewed AI adult content. This is what I
found most interesting within the report was that there was
(03:11):
a similar report from AI Systems that said forty two
percent of people felt that AI programs are easier to
talk to, thirty one percent felt that AI understands them
better than real humans. Great, So that's kind of where
we're going. And obviously the correlation that they're starting to
know is that there's higher rates of depression amongst people
who use AI for meeting their romantic or sexual needs.
(03:33):
Higher rates of depression. Over half the guy's surveyed, over
sixty percent of the women surveyed had higher levels of depression.
So it's oh, absolutely, and loneliness. It doesn't talk about
causation or anything, but it definitely says that, you know,
people may be likely to cope with their depression or
loneliness by engaging in that.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
Let me ask you a question. Though you're a psychiatrist
or psychologist psychologist, I don't sling medication. Okay, does I
heard that pornography can change the human brain?
Speaker 3 (04:03):
Is that true?
Speaker 6 (04:04):
Human brain actually like stops forming at twenty five? But
I mean you can talk about the similar kind of
thing with like porn and porn addiction on a similar wavelength.
Is can you consider addiction porn addiction? Well, people who
it's different for everybody. It's what causes distress for that
individual person. For some people and maybe one time viewing
(04:27):
it caused that level of distress. What do you distress
that feeling of like they're doing something wrong and they
aren't like they're having an actual mental health problem.
Speaker 3 (04:37):
The psychological problem, that's crazy.
Speaker 6 (04:39):
And for some other people it may be like you
know a person that I remember mentioned climbing Mount porn
And for some people the addiction is like they have
to see escalating behavior to reach that same feeling. And
it depends on what is disturbing for that individual person
for them to reach that level of distress.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
All right, Belly'll let's go on to you.
Speaker 5 (05:02):
Okay.
Speaker 7 (05:03):
Chipotle Mexican grill is taking its popular burritos south of
the border. The Newport Beach based Fasual Fast casual chain
has announced that it is expanding into Mexico in a
partnership with AlSi, a leading restaurant operator in Latin American Europe.
The first Mexican Chipotle is expected to open in early
twenty twenty six. However, specific locations were not released. Chipotle
(05:26):
will try to attempt to succeed where other US based
Mexican food chains have failed. Taco Bell famously tried to
expand into Mexico, come first in the nineteen nineties and
again in the mid two thousands, only to see its
last Mexico location close in twenty ten. Their inability this
is Taco Bell's inability to gain traction in Mexico was
(05:48):
chopped up to pricing issues a perceived lack of authenticity,
including menu items that didn't translate.
Speaker 4 (05:55):
Especially well yeah, I mean, well, you know, I saw
a video on YouTube where they were giving these people
from Mexico Taco Bell for the first time, or Deltac
or something like that.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Yeah, and they couldn't believe it. They're like, what the hell, Well.
Speaker 5 (06:09):
What did they give them?
Speaker 3 (06:11):
I don't know, I.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
Think it was just tacos and you know, I don't know,
like Taketo's or something, but it was like got almighty please.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
Yeah, this should be interesting.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
All right, let's go with Angel Martinez. What's going on
out there by me?
Speaker 5 (06:27):
All right?
Speaker 8 (06:27):
So if you we all love sleeping and we all
love we love money also, and so you're in luck
because the European Space Agency is running an experiment as
part of its Vivaldi three campaign, and they're paying volunteers
five thousand dollars to lie down in containers that resemble
(06:49):
these waterproof lined bathtubs, like those isolation tanks for ten
days to help stimulate the effects of earth we sleep
for under late. Well, you gotta lie down for ten days,
oh I see, okay, and stay in that position for
ten days in that in that container, layup for me.
(07:10):
So they're doing that too, explore the effects of space travel.
So the study takes place. You've got to get out
to France to head over to the space clinic first
of all, and then you'll lie in this fixed position
with only your head and arms above the water, and
you can't even get up to go use the bathroom.
(07:31):
They'll just trolley you in so that you maintain that laydown.
Speaker 4 (07:36):
Posture Number three's got to go again. I'll get them,
you know, that's I just looked it up. You're right,
and they take you have to put one of the
things you have to put into your measurements ever in France.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
So I just set my measurements to France.
Speaker 8 (07:55):
Y'all, y'all, it's happening.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
Yeah, it's all right, all right, that's great.
Speaker 4 (08:01):
Angel Martinez Crosier batting clean up again.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
For the first time ever, humanoid robots have joined human
runners and a half marathon took place in China over
the weekend on Saturday in Beijing. The twenty one robots
were in various sizes between four and six foot. All
the requirement was they had to run on two legs,
just like humans. Some of them, some of the tech
companies and some of the universities that actually that were
(08:26):
participating to bring the robots in, they decorated them up.
One had distinctively feminine features and could wink and smile
while running. Another wore boxing gloves. Some robots struggled from
the beginning. Only six of the twenty one made it
across the finish line. One fell at the starting line,
and then they eventually got up and took off. The
crash into a railing that had giant like propellers that
(08:46):
used almost like an air one of those those swamp
air boats. And the winning robot ended up finishing with
a time of two hours and forty minutes for a
half marathon. It needed its battery changed three times during
the race, so we don't have I have to worry
anytime soon about robots out running us. The winning human
came in about an hour and two minutes.
Speaker 3 (09:06):
I saw that.
Speaker 4 (09:07):
I saw them put take one of the robots that
fell apart. They took him and put on a stretcher
and removed him. It was a real human being.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
Some of the really small ones, like the four foot
four foot they looked like little kids.
Speaker 3 (09:19):
Yeah, exactly, all right.
Speaker 4 (09:21):
That's cool robot marathon that we had, Sleeping for Money
with Angel Martinez Chipotle, going to Mexico with Bellio and
Ai Sexual Partner with Sammy. That was a great whip
around a ding dogs.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
Conway Show.
Speaker 4 (09:37):
We're live on KFI KFI Am sixty. It is the
Conway Show. Well, we've got some news report here. There's
a United airline that flew from lax to Chicago this
morning with no fires, no tires fell off, there was
no fight in the cabin and it didn't flip upside
(09:57):
down on landing, So because that's news, made it without
any of that crap. A lot of lot going on
with flights, you know. The latest one was the Delta
flight they caught on fire. It seems to happen a
lot Delta Airline engine catches on fire, and now everybody
(10:18):
is with the slides.
Speaker 9 (10:19):
This plane was leaving Orlando heading to Atlanta.
Speaker 6 (10:22):
We know.
Speaker 9 (10:23):
The fire started just after eleven o'clock this morning, and
the tailpipe of one of the planes two engines. The
type of plane this is, according to Delta, is an
Airbus A three thirty. Basically, this means this was a
really big plane. Two hundred passengers on board, ten flight
attendants and two pilots, all of whom were evacuated by
sliding off of this plane.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
And those slides are expensive. I think it's four hundred
thousand dollars for each slide, and so they don't like
to blow those suckers up unless they have to, and
now they got to repack them, and they're expensive, very expensive.
Speaker 9 (10:56):
We also captured some people coming down off of the
stairs and fire crews were just making sure there weren't
any trouble spots and any more issues on this plane.
We did get a statement from Delta. They say, quote,
we appreciate our customers cooperation and apologize for the experience.
They say, nothing is more important than safety, and Delta
(11:16):
teams will work to get our customers to their final
destinations as soon as possible.
Speaker 4 (11:22):
Well, okay, so if it was coming from Orlando, then
chances are probably spring breakers late spring breakers. But families
that went to Disney World or Orlando Universal Orlando probably
spend three, four or five days there having great time,
and then one final ride when they got to Atlanta.
(11:44):
The slide, the airline slide one more it's on them.
It's a free one. It's a freebie. You get to
grab your backpack, your laptop, your headphones, and then right
down the slide, right under the runway, and that'll be
memory for you. Remember that for a while, probably the
(12:04):
rest of your life, you know, especially if you're a
kid seven, eight, nine years old and you're jumping out
of a plane onto a slide, you remember that. I
don't know what's going on with flying, but it seems
like a lot. There's a lot out there, all right.
We talked about this story earlier over in Reseda. I
don't know if that's Tarzana or Resieda. It's on Victory
(12:25):
and Reseda. I think that's Reseda, but I might be
a little bit of Tarzana. I don't know where Tarzana ends,
but I remember going to that park when I was
a child, on Resita and Victory. We used to go
there and feed the ducks. We would buy a loaf
of bread from Lucky's or Fazzio's or I don't know, Gelson's, Albertson's.
(12:46):
We got it a market, oh sorry, and we would
get a loaf of bread and then we'd go feed
the ducks, and the ducks enjoyed it.
Speaker 3 (12:54):
We enjoyed it. So when my.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
Daughter turned three or four, I wanted to take her
to the same park that I went to as a kid,
same experience. So we went to a Vond's, We got
a loaf of bread, drove over to the park there
Resita and Ventura, got out, walked towards the pond where
all the you know, the fish are and the ducks,
(13:18):
and we were attacked by about one hundred ducks and
geese and I don't know, all kinds of crazy, big birds,
and they attacked my daughter because she was carrying the
loaf of bread, and we ended up just throwing the
bread and running back to the car because they were crazy.
And so I thought to myself, man, everybody, even the ducks,
(13:41):
have gone crazy.
Speaker 3 (13:42):
In La.
Speaker 4 (13:43):
Everybody's aggressive. Everybody has turned aggressive. I even find myself
doing it. You know, I think we've all turned into
New Yorkers. You remember when New Yorkers used to come
out and visit in the nineteen sixties or seventies, how
aggressive they were. You know, hey, they're New Yorkers, right,
we've turned into them. We're all aggressive now on the freeways,
(14:04):
in restaurants, everybody's aggressive.
Speaker 3 (14:08):
And I don't know what happened. I don't know what
it is.
Speaker 4 (14:11):
Maybe we're all, you know, wound little tighter because of
how much money we don't have as a society, how
much is taken in taxes. Things we pay for that
our parents didn't have to pay for. My dad never
had to pay never paid a cell phone bill in
his life, didn't have a cell phone growing up, and
when we were kids, we didn't have cell phones, didn't exist.
(14:33):
So it's one thing that he'd have to pay for
He also didn't have to pay for streamers. It was
no streaming when I was a kid, and he saved
all that money. Houses were one hundred and ten thousand
dollars back then or less a lot more or less.
You can buy a house in the valley for forty
to fifty grand, and now they're all over a million dollars.
(14:54):
So we're all stressed because every dollar we may leaves.
You know the guy that won, Rory McElroy, is that
his name, Royal mclroy. He won four point two million
dollars winning the Masters last weekend week Aldgo yesterday. Four
point two million. Well, after taxes, he got one point
eight million. They taxed him on it because he was
(15:18):
in Georgia. He had to pay federally like forty two percent,
and then he had to pay five percent because he
won the money in Georgia, so he was up to
almost fifty percent in taxes, and so four point two
million went down to less than two million. So it's
not just people are making twenty bucks an hour that
you're getting screwed on everything. It's rich guys too. Everybody.
(15:43):
Almost everybody is broke. People are making I have a
friend who's an accountant, and he said his typical client
is a male and a female, both working, making two
hundred and fifty thousand dollars each year. And he said
they're living paycheck to paycheck. Everybody has money issues except Krozer.
(16:06):
Krozer's knocking it out. Krozer lives in three thousand, seven
hundred square feet with three fireplaces. All right, well, whatever
it is, it's it's three or four times bigger than
the pope. Your your lifestyle is better than the popes.
You are the pope of southern California. You're a wife
and kids many a wife.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
That's right, that's right. Hey, do you think there'll be
a female pope this time around?
Speaker 4 (16:29):
Oh no, no, they're not there yet, not this time,
nor didn't that will happen in our lifetimes.
Speaker 3 (16:35):
No, you don't think so. They're pretty strengted over there.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Has there ever been a woman that's been a part
of the conclave, much less even been considered?
Speaker 4 (16:43):
Oh I don't think so. Yeah, you would think that
women would make a bigger issue out of that. You know,
it is twenty twenty five. Yeah, you know, maybe of
the planet. Yeah, time to you know, slide some perfume
in there, ladies. Yeah, a ladies get in there, but
they haven't conquered that yet.
Speaker 3 (17:03):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (17:04):
I don't know how the Catholic religion is keep they
keep stiff arming women, you know. I don't think are
there any women priests in the Catholic Church. I think
there are, I don't.
Speaker 3 (17:15):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
That's when he gets into the whole breaking it down
to which part.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
Yeah, that's true, yeah, but certainly not a pope. So hey,
look Crozian, I have a shot at being a pope.
He be a angel, your chance in that's right? Sorry, Angel, Bellie,
you got no shot? Man, You're done all right? Why
is that because you're a woman.
Speaker 5 (17:40):
But Angel does have a shot.
Speaker 3 (17:42):
No, it said she has no shot. I don't think.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
Something we don't know?
Speaker 5 (17:48):
Yeah, is there something we don't know?
Speaker 4 (17:52):
The directions going your way, bab just the question coming
from Burbank to the lung Beach.
Speaker 5 (18:06):
Well, I'll let you know as I can.
Speaker 4 (18:10):
I'd be very proud of you if if you or
Belly O change sexes.
Speaker 3 (18:14):
I really would, oh, because look.
Speaker 4 (18:17):
I'm a gambler in life, but these guys are real gamblers,
you know, because you're gambling that you're going to be
happier adding a wiener or cutting a wiener off. Those
are real gamblers. I'm serious. Those are the guys that gamble.
I play at the track. I don't gamble. I never
(18:38):
think to myself, Hey, maybe if I bet my wiener
on the eighth race, I'll be happier.
Speaker 3 (18:43):
I don't do that. I'm not there yet.
Speaker 8 (18:45):
Do you have to have us a Do you have
to change genders to to add or subtract that?
Speaker 10 (18:52):
Well?
Speaker 11 (18:52):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (18:53):
I mean, look, if.
Speaker 4 (18:55):
The people who change genders are are are doing it
to be happier, don't you agree that they're not happy
with the body they're in, so they're gambling on the
fact that they're going to be happier changing genders. Those
are real gamblers. I am one percent honest. I'm a
I'm a d bag player. I'm not a gambler. Those
(19:16):
guys and gals are gamblers. I respect them more than
anything because they're laying it all on the line.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
Man, they're going for broke.
Speaker 4 (19:24):
They're putting all of it on the table and and
sometimes they get there, sometimes they don't, but they gamble.
Speaker 3 (19:32):
I'm very proud of that crew. I never get down
on the transsexuals.
Speaker 11 (19:36):
Man.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
I think they're I have more respect for them than anything.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
They are the real gamblers in this world, real gamblers,
all right.
Speaker 3 (19:44):
Relyve on KFI.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 3 (19:53):
KFI AM six forty. It's ton my shelf.
Speaker 4 (19:55):
We have a shooting at Exposition Park, so that's not good.
Let's find out where and the circumstances around their shooting.
Speaker 12 (20:04):
This happened at about four point thirty at a major
interception here on Exposition Park, just off of Western Avenue
and Expo, right next to Bauchet Learning Center.
Speaker 5 (20:13):
That's the high school.
Speaker 12 (20:15):
Now there are two victims. Their conditions are known at
this time, but the first victim is a boy just
fifteen years old.
Speaker 11 (20:22):
This forties.
Speaker 12 (20:23):
Now at this point, the motive is unknown, but police
have a big description of who they are looking for
and the search is here from Exposition Park. In news
chapter four, I'm Aleana Marino.
Speaker 4 (20:34):
Ah another bad, bad you know, Black Eye for Los Angeles.
It's one story after another after another, and we're gonna
have the Olympics and the World Cup. We're not ready
for anything. Nothing We're not ready at all for anything.
Guys shooting at helicopters. Guys, I'm robbing stores, home and
(20:59):
vai Asian.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
Just not ready. We're not ready, all right.
Speaker 4 (21:06):
Speaking of not ready, some people have six figure incomes
and they're struggling with basic necessities like food.
Speaker 3 (21:15):
Food.
Speaker 13 (21:17):
Forget the image you may have of people who are
hungry in America. Hunger is now as mobile as this
food bag serving a line sixty deep in Connecticut.
Speaker 11 (21:27):
Being under financial stressed takeaway?
Speaker 3 (21:30):
What do you say here?
Speaker 13 (21:31):
The image you may have of people who are hungry
in America, Hunger is now as mobile as this food
bag serving a line sixty.
Speaker 4 (21:39):
Deep, and a food bag serving a line mobile as.
Speaker 3 (21:44):
This food bag serving a line. I think he meant
this food line serving a bag.
Speaker 5 (21:49):
I think he meant food bank.
Speaker 13 (21:51):
Oh made mobile as this food bag serving a line.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
Oh that's it is food bank. Yeah you called it
food bag? All right, Well you know I've done.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
That sixty deep in Connecticut.
Speaker 4 (22:01):
Sixty people who are all making good money being under dog.
What she meant bing dog? She forgot the other part
of that, right, isn't that she was trying to.
Speaker 14 (22:13):
Do bing dog? Bing dog? Baby under financial stressed, Oh, she.
Speaker 3 (22:20):
Said, being yeah, oh, maybe we can change it. Being
bong bing bong an.
Speaker 14 (22:28):
I know under financial stressed takes a lot of time,
a lot planning sometimes.
Speaker 13 (22:33):
Take Chandra Kelsey grocery shopping on a tight budget for
her family of five.
Speaker 11 (22:38):
It's whatever's on sale.
Speaker 13 (22:40):
Food insecurity eats at her a lifelong trauma.
Speaker 3 (22:44):
You remember going to food backs.
Speaker 11 (22:46):
What was it like the first time I did it?
I cried.
Speaker 15 (22:49):
To be in a position where you are doing okay
and then you lose everything the next day.
Speaker 3 (22:54):
It's the worst. My my wife grew up.
Speaker 4 (22:58):
If I should told that story on the air, I
guess it's fine. She grew up on government food. You know,
government would pot they would give them cheese, ice cream, food,
and she'd have to go down every week and get
the food out of the food bank and bring it home.
And she said, the government cheese and the government ice
(23:23):
cream are the best she's ever had in her life. Yeah,
like they knock it out with the dairy. I got
the tickets, I got the stamps, the green stamps. I
didn't get the food itself. Yeah, we had something different,
We had green stamps growing up. But that's where you
go to the grocery store and they give you if
you spend one hundred bucks, you get like twenty green stamps.
Then you go turn the green stamps in. Is that
(23:45):
the same thing?
Speaker 3 (23:45):
What did you turn those in for?
Speaker 4 (23:47):
You go to like there's a place called green Stamps
on Supulvta and Burbank that's still there.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
No, it's not there anymore.
Speaker 4 (23:53):
This is a by gone just billion years ago, but
used to you know, go there and for like two books,
which was a thousand stamps, you could buy like I
don't know, like a chair and a table or something.
Speaker 3 (24:06):
It's always like box stocks.
Speaker 4 (24:08):
Yeah, like a ping pong tables, like seven thousand stamps.
Speaker 3 (24:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (24:12):
They had blue chips stamps.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
Yeah right, that's what. Yeah, that's what it was blue
chip stamps.
Speaker 4 (24:17):
And we'd collect them and we'd have to lick them
all and put them in the books, and you know,
you get a big stamp worth ten or a small
stamp worth one, and then you go turn them in.
Speaker 3 (24:26):
And I remember my mom went.
Speaker 4 (24:28):
With us and we thought and we were like, hey,
can you get a bad bitten set or I don't know,
maybe like a pool table or because we had a lot,
we had six kids.
Speaker 3 (24:36):
Can you get a ping pong table?
Speaker 4 (24:38):
She got a card table with four card chairs for
her friends to play bridge on when they'd come over.
Like all that we save, we licked, you know, a
million stamps. You know, we all got our lungs are
filled with that glue. And she's like, oh, I think
I'll get a card table and chairs from my bridge
friends who will smoke downstairs, and then all the smoke
(24:59):
will go up to your bedroom at night.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
You'll love it. You'll love it. Those are the s
and is that what they are?
Speaker 13 (25:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (25:04):
Right, yeah, s and g right, yeah, yeah, that was right. Yeah,
that's right. Did you your dad smoke in the house?
Not cigarettes? Oh he smoked weed though.
Speaker 4 (25:15):
Oh yeah, man, My mom and dad used to smoke
in the house and they'd have a party over, like
and they'd have Lucy's out, you know, on the table.
They'd have like a bowl of single cigarettes. Yeah and
so and so people be smoking downstairs, and all that
smoke would come upstairs where we're sleeping, and I remember
my clothes. I would go to school the next day,
my clothes would smell like cigarettes. And my teacher's like, hey,
(25:36):
what's going on with you? Timmy in third grade. You
smell like cigarettes. I said, My mom and dad had
a party at the house, and they said, what they do,
blow smoke on you all night? No, their friends were
smoking outstairs, all came up to my room. Let's just
get into math. What are we doing today? English? What's
going on here?
Speaker 11 (25:55):
Tumbling?
Speaker 3 (25:57):
Scary? Yeah, it's horrible. I mean, this woman makes a
hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker 13 (26:00):
A year, and yet you'd never suspect need has lived
with his family.
Speaker 11 (26:05):
Household income is roughly two people working full time. Sometimes
I work two jobs.
Speaker 10 (26:13):
How can you make one hundred and fifty thousand dollars
and be food insecure?
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Easy? Easy, easily.
Speaker 15 (26:21):
That's not what you bring home after taxes. You know,
we have mortgage insurance. We've got one kid on their
way to college, one in college. Something as small as
a thousand dollars expence could throw things off significantly.
Speaker 11 (26:35):
This one's crazy looking.
Speaker 6 (26:36):
On and off for a debt.
Speaker 3 (26:38):
You talked about her kid.
Speaker 11 (26:40):
This one's crazy looking.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
It sounds like it sounds like my mom.
Speaker 11 (26:45):
This one's crazy looking.
Speaker 3 (26:46):
Yeah, his name is Timmy.
Speaker 6 (26:47):
On and off.
Speaker 10 (26:48):
For a decade, Kelsey has relied on help from Connecticut
food Share, the state's largest food back She and two
of her children now give back by volunteering here.
Speaker 4 (26:59):
All this food and those kids are properly raised, you know,
volunteering at a food bank.
Speaker 10 (27:05):
She and two of our children now give back by
volunteering here to.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
Plug those kids.
Speaker 10 (27:09):
That's great, all this food, and it's still not enough.
Speaker 13 (27:13):
Nationally, more than fifty million people based like this one
here in Connecticut.
Speaker 6 (27:19):
That's one eight people.
Speaker 16 (27:21):
They're your neighbor, they're your friend, they could be your family.
Speaker 3 (27:24):
Able to qualify.
Speaker 13 (27:25):
Jason Jakobowski, Connecticut food Share CEO, told us demand for
their food jumped twenty three percent last year.
Speaker 6 (27:33):
Wow.
Speaker 13 (27:33):
He expects another double digit increase this year.
Speaker 10 (27:37):
Are you seeing more people with higher incomes who need
your help?
Speaker 3 (27:41):
One hundred percent.
Speaker 16 (27:42):
Many of them come to us and say, I donated
to you for years, and I never in a million
years thought I would have to use this service. What
has changed a lot of economic unpredictability. They're scared about
their cost of living is going to go up to
They're scared about what the price.
Speaker 13 (27:57):
Of eggs is going to be. Kelsey's scared about her job.
She works as a program director at the Yale School
of Public Health.
Speaker 3 (28:06):
Yeah. Man, it is tough out there. It is tough.
Speaker 4 (28:09):
I went to last night with my wife, daughter and
my sister to not North Ranch Wood Ranch Wood Ranch. Yeah,
And when the bill came, I gave the guy three
credit cards. I said, hey, keep bumping these and see
if we can get to the finishing line here. And
he laughed right, And I was like, that's actually true
(28:31):
because these are all gift cards.
Speaker 3 (28:34):
And my wife is just mortified. She's like, Tim, please
got almighty.
Speaker 4 (28:40):
It's always something with you, you know, you always have
enough money for the track. But when we go to dinner,
it's like, hey, see if you can bump these three
credit cards and get to the finish line. The waiter
thought it was funny, so we had a laugh quiet
ride home.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
But it was worth it. It was worth it.
Speaker 4 (29:00):
Live on KFI MO KF I am six forty. It's
Conway Show. What's that song to get lucky? Don't good lucky?
Speaker 2 (29:10):
That punk?
Speaker 4 (29:11):
Okay La Kings play tonight their first game in the
twenty twenty five, twenty four, twenty twenty five NHL Playoffs.
That'll begin at seven o'clock tonight. I think it's seven
maybe seven thirty at Crypto dot com arena. I'll be
(29:32):
watching that on TV and the Kings are a goal
and a half favorite, which is odd. I also noticed
that Byfield is in Las Vegas. The odds on Buyfield
scoring the first goal of the game are thirty to one.
That's a great bet. Hey put ten bucks on that
he scores the first goal. He get three hundred bucks
(29:53):
in your pocket. That's a sweet deal. A lot of
people are turning the homes into a home shopping network.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
Bellio would just explain this to me.
Speaker 4 (30:04):
Bellio, I think this is the greatest audio you've you've
ever created for the show.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
Really, yeah, I really do.
Speaker 4 (30:10):
Home shopping because I watched some of these home shopping
networks H and I, and I'm like mesmerized.
Speaker 3 (30:18):
I watch him for hours.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
I very rarely buy anything, but I keep looking at
all the products that they have and I love it.
Speaker 3 (30:24):
You know, especially this guy that that taller black guy.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
On the weekends on Home Shopping Network or QVC. He's
great in the kitchen with David. Yes, that's right, and
he does his happy dance when he when he when
he does when he tastes something that's great, and he
spins around, snapping.
Speaker 3 (30:48):
He calls his.
Speaker 4 (30:48):
Happy dance, Happy dance, and I always but the one
thing I do look at like the other night, I
think it was two nights ago, they were selling steaks
and you need to get tense stays for one hundred bucks,
one hundred, twenty bucks, whatever it was. But they had
grilled like twenty steaks, and I'm thinking, man, they should
have a homeless shelter next to this place, so when
(31:10):
they're done grilling the steaks, I could just give them
to the people who were hungry. I don't know where
all those steaks go. I don't know what happens to them,
but man, those look like really great steaks. But now
people are turning their home into home shopping networks.
Speaker 17 (31:23):
Look at time er ten nine eight seven. I got
nothing with bankers today. As soon as I see a
thousand people, I'm mother do something crazy size eight and
a half brain new golf five seconds.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
Think of it as a high tech twist on home shopping.
Speaker 17 (31:35):
So insteade of us, we keep opening stores. We're like,
how do we give the same experience online?
Speaker 6 (31:39):
With the right personality and products, anyone can become a
pitch person right from their phone.
Speaker 3 (31:45):
I think I can become a pitch Personlly, I.
Speaker 5 (31:47):
Think you would be phenomenal.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
Yeah, I would like to do that.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
Hey, how you doing? This is something my mom made.
We don't really use around the house anymore. Forty dollars
out the door, anybody, anybody twenty twenty sealed bead show,
A guy overside twenty five gone, a guy in Corona
thirty eight dollars, it's yours. I'll stick it the mail,
next product that's about to go.
Speaker 17 (32:08):
Rap it, fire, steal three hours. So how to keep
an audience engaged is super important. Like everyone could sell
the same as Jordan's or shoes or clothes, But I
think the personality is what brings people out there.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
Did you hear that, Bellio?
Speaker 5 (32:19):
That's you.
Speaker 3 (32:20):
Did you hear that the shoes or closed?
Speaker 17 (32:22):
But I think the personality is what brings people out there.
Speaker 4 (32:25):
I think you could do it, Bellio. I think you
can turn your irvine, you know, uh home into a
home shopping network now because you have you have stuff
that you collected when you used to do the Lakers.
Speaker 5 (32:38):
Right, I do have a lot of Lakers stuff.
Speaker 3 (32:40):
What do you have?
Speaker 5 (32:41):
I have a.
Speaker 7 (32:42):
Sleeve that Kobe wore in a game. I've got a
poster that Kobe signed. I've got a lot of box.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
Where's the rest of the shirt? You have a sleeve?
Speaker 5 (32:53):
Kobe always wore a white sleeve over z elbow.
Speaker 3 (32:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (32:56):
Yeah, and he signed it. He signed it yeah to
Sharon No, no, just his name.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
Wow, she could get rid of that.
Speaker 5 (33:03):
I could get rid of that.
Speaker 4 (33:04):
All right, there's one thing. Then we got to shut
the network down. Why just one sleeve and it's over.
Speaker 7 (33:12):
Anyone who follows the Lakers or Kobe. You know how
how special that is.
Speaker 6 (33:17):
Sure you can sell that joke.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
Yeah, you can sell that bike.
Speaker 5 (33:20):
Sweat on it.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
Oh that's right, Kobe sweat on that.
Speaker 4 (33:23):
You could, you could you could literally create another Kobe
Bryant with DNA.
Speaker 5 (33:28):
Oh yeah, maybe that's not for sale.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
But you could get rid of that bike that you
don't use anymore.
Speaker 5 (33:34):
Let's not Delvin closet.
Speaker 3 (33:38):
Come on, Peloton, Peloton?
Speaker 5 (33:41):
Yeah one in the garage used? Which one are you
talking about?
Speaker 3 (33:46):
Which bike do you use?
Speaker 5 (33:47):
Less the one in the garage?
Speaker 3 (33:48):
Okay? All right? How often you use the Peloton?
Speaker 5 (33:51):
Ah? Lately the once a month.
Speaker 3 (33:54):
Okay, that's better than I thought. Oh really, yeah, I
thought it was.
Speaker 5 (33:58):
Never no, no, no, I do use it occasionally.
Speaker 4 (34:01):
Okay, this story's too important to just leave it here.
We got to come back and talk more about this.
Speaker 3 (34:07):
This is the way of the future.
Speaker 4 (34:10):
You turn your home into a home shopping network and
you go out and you get product. You know, somehow
you'll get product. You'll go to secondhand store and buy stuff.
But you can turn it your home into home shopping
network for very little money, and we'll come back, we'll
explain how to do it. This is very exciting for
everybody listening right now, very very exciting. A lot of
people are like, oh, you know, they're calling their friends, Hey,
(34:30):
turn on KFI. We're gonna have a home shopping network.
I'm gonna do this. I'm gonna do this. I relyve
on KFI home shopping Network at home. When we come back,
it's Conway on KFI AM six forty 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
(34:54):
iHeart Radio app.