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July 2, 2025 33 mins
Chief Operating Officer, Abbie Moore oversees direct-to-consumer digital solutions that improve the lives of pets and the people who love them. After 18 years of senior leadership at Adopt-a-Pet.com, Abbie joined Petco Love in 2022. Image recognition to return lost pets. // The Middle TV show. Shark 16’ Great white comes close to fisherman in CA. Gummies and the trending brands  // In California, the taxability of gummies depends on whether they are considered a food product or a candy. Food products are generally exempt from sales tax, while candy is typically subject to it. Conway’s gummies story // Another fight on a flight, this time on Frontier Airlines 
#PetLove #Petco #Pets #Dogs #LostPets #Sharks #FrontierAirlines #FightonFlight 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's kf I AM six forty and you're listening to
the Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Tonight,
the Dodgers take on the White Sox at Dodgers Stadium.
First pitch is at seven to ten pm. Listen to
all the Dodger games on AM five seventy LA Sports
and stream all the games on iHeartRadio app keywords AM

(00:21):
five to seventy LA Sports. Get ready for the Fourth
of July with Haffey thirty two thirty two to forty
ounce Premium B Francs thirty two thirty two to forty
ounce Premium B Francs at selected varieties seven ninety nine

(00:42):
at Smart and final with your digital coupon. There you go.
That's a cool deal. Haffey is the best best hot
dogs in LA. All right, we have a very special
guest and we haven't done this before. Her name is
Abby and she's with Petco Love. Abby Moore. Abby, How

(01:04):
are you?

Speaker 2 (01:05):
I'm doing great? Kim, How are you good?

Speaker 1 (01:07):
You're the chief operating officer over there at pet Go
Love tell us For people don't know what Peco Love is,
I know you're associated with Peco What is that all?
About Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Petco Love is the nonprofit arm of Petco and we
do a number of different things. We give out life
staving grants to animal welfare organizations all over the United States,
including many right here in California, and we do other things.
We do free vaccines, and we support animals and the
people who love them in many, many different ways. And

(01:38):
one of the key things that we do is we
have this piece of technology called Petco Love Loss that
uses image recognition technology to reunite lost pets.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
Oh that's great, you know because sometimes you know, if
a pet is chipped, maybe the chip's not working, or
you know there's a different address on the chip or whatever.
But how does facial recognition with dogs work and how
accurate is it?

Speaker 2 (02:02):
So it's very accurate, and we're just about to launch
a whole new upgrade to our AI system that uses
about five hundred and twenty seven different data points to
match photos. So basically the way it works is if
you lose or you find a pet, and we know
that July fourth is coming up, and the sound reality
is that a lot of people listening may experience this

(02:25):
in the next few days. If you lose your pet,
go to petcoloveloss dot org and you'll upload one photo
and then we're partnered with almost every animal shelter in
the United States, including all of the LA County and
LA City animal shelters, and we're integrated with neighbors by
ring and next door. So if you upload a photo

(02:48):
of your pet, we will be searching all of the
animal shelters and all of those other platforms as well
as reports that we're posted directly to pet co Love
Loss to make your to make the match for you.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
And don't you have a tremendous success story of a
dog that was lost and found or was lost hundreds
of miles from home.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Oh my gosh, yes, Ziggy, So this just happened. This
is an incredible story. So Ziggy's mom, who lives in
Long Beach, was on vacation in a town called Watsonville,
which is about twenty miles south of Santa Cruz, and
she was visiting family. Someone left the door open and
Ziggi bolted out the door. She was heartbroken her obviously,

(03:31):
I mean, we know what it's like to love an animal,
and imagine that animal out there wandering the streets, your
beloved dog. So she uploaded to pet Co Love Loss
and then searched for days, did not find Ziggy and
had to go home to Long Beach every day checked
pet Co Love Loss, hoping for a match. Five months later,

(03:53):
she got an alert from US that Ziggy had been
brought to the Santa Cruz County Animal Shelter and so
they had it an amazing, wonderful reunion. But I mean,
imagine the release five months later.

Speaker 1 (04:06):
Can you imagine what it's like, Abbie. Because I know
you're an animal lover, you have to be when you're
working in the job that you are, But can you
imagine being on vacation where you're hundreds of miles from home,
your dog goes missing, and you put off your return
home to look for that dog, and there at one
point you've got to get in the car and drive home.
That's got to be one of those heartbreaking things in

(04:26):
the world.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Oh are you kidding me? I can't even imagine. I mean,
it's bad enough to lose your pet when you're close
to home, but to lose your pet in an area
that you know they're not familiar with and you have
to turn around and drive home, Oh as heartbreaking.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
I don't know how you do it, I think I
would quit my job.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
I might stay with you, you know, but you know, I'm
just happy that it has such a happy ending.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
That is fantastic. So where do people go and should
they take a picture of their dog and upload it
to the system in case anything happens.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
That is a great idea. We always encourage that, especially
with Fourth of July coming up. If you go to
petcolovelost dot org, scroll down a little bit, click register.
It is free, it's super quick, it's totally easy. We're
very protective of people's personal information. There's no risk, upload
a photo of your pet, quickly register, and then if

(05:21):
the unthinkable happens, all you have to do is click
one button. We activate the listing and start scouring all
of the listings in the animal shelters and on neighbors
by ring at nextdoor in our own database to help
you get your pet home and the same thing if
you find a pet.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Right, Yeah, exactly. I imagine with the invention or the creation
of AI, it's made things much easier, much faster as well.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
Yeah, you know, in some ways it has, and we're
really happy that we have this technology, but there are
some problems that it really helps to solve. One of
them is just the fact that when you lose a
pet and you're panicked, there are so many different things
that you can do, and there's so many different places
online that you can choose to post your pets, and

(06:07):
so what do you do first? Right, And that's why we,
you know, we felt it was really important to create
this universal database where it doesn't matter where you start
your lost or found pet journey, where you post the pet,
We're going to get that pet into this database and
use that photo to compare to all the other photos
in the database and help you get your pet home.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
That's such great technology. When I was a kid and
we lost a dog or a cat, it would be
me and my brothers, my mom and dad just putting
up signs in the neighborhood for you know, four or
five days. That was the That was the maximum we
could do.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
That's all you could do. And you know, we really
like to say that we are now the virtual telephone pole.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
Yeah, that's great, all right, petcolovelost dot org. Is that right?
That's right, okay, petcolovelost dot org. It is really important,
especially around July fourth, a lot of pets get freaked out.
And if you lost a pet and you didn't do this,
kick yourself in the in the bum. So do this.
Take a couple of minutes to go to petcoloveloss dot

(07:06):
org and put enter a picture of your pet, and
you're gonna be thrilled when you get it packed. Abby.
I really appreciate you coming on. You're welcome here anytime.
Anyone who loves pets and dedicates they're lives to it
like you have, You're welcome anytime, any day.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
Oh, thanks so much, Tim, I appreciate all right.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
Abby Moore, which is a great name. Abby is the
name of our dog. How about that? Abby Moore? And
I often say that to her, you know, when she's
eating or have a treat. Abby wants some more weird?
Huh weird? Do you have a brother named didn'ty?

Speaker 3 (07:40):
No?

Speaker 1 (07:41):
The brother is Johnson Juanso. All right, we gotta take
a break. Dodger is starting in less than an hour
fifty seven minutes away Dodger Stadium. Clayton Kershaw is going
to get his three thousand strikeout tonight. Hope you're there
to see it live. We will be.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
You're listening to Tim Conways, You and you're on Demyan
from KF I am six forty.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
Hey bellion yeat. Damn they put the bust in back
or is it gone?

Speaker 3 (08:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (08:12):
They pulled it around back. Oh man, a heart attack.
I thought they left lout.

Speaker 5 (08:18):
No, no, no, no, just everybody's getting on right now. So
we we we gotta get ready.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
But don't but don't let them leave without us.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
They're not leaving without you. They might leave without me,
but they're not leaving without you. Well that's happened before,
has it really?

Speaker 1 (08:34):
Yeah, it happens a lot.

Speaker 6 (08:35):
You know.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
I'm just I'm like that. I'm like that that. You
ever see the Shoes the show The Middle, Yeah, it's
a great show. Yeah, it's a great show. And Sue
was was always ignored. Yeah. I mean she went into
her teacher conference. There's one of the kids she was
like a teenager in high school, and then she went
in for a teacher parent conference at the end of

(08:58):
the year and the teacher's like, oh, I'm sorry, are
you in my class? And She's like, I sit right
in front row, right in front of you, and I
say hi to you every day because I just can't
see it. Yeah, nothing, huh are you sure you're in
this class. I've had you for two years. I've been
saying right here for two years, Sue. Heck, she's like,
I just don't have anything here. Maybe it's me. Sorry, Darling, Sorry,

(09:23):
that was a great show in the middle. That was
a beautiful, beautiful show. All Right, We've got a lot
going on. The Dodgers are taking on the Chicago White
Sox and Kershaw is going to get his three thousand strikeout,
three thousand strikeout tonight. That's gonna be a huge round

(09:44):
road applause at Dodger Stadium. So what's the weather gonna
be like there? Dodgers stated, if you're going or are
you just hanging out here because you have the night
off because you're not working tomorrow because you're taking the
day off. What's the weather like?

Speaker 6 (09:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (09:53):
Tell you?

Speaker 8 (09:53):
How could I not be here? All that going on?

Speaker 7 (09:56):
Kershaw like to face the Dodgers for like twenty years now.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
Oh I like that music. I mean, Alice Rains is
coming up.

Speaker 7 (10:01):
And going for it, Like you said, a major, major record.
Only at the twentieth pitcher in all of Major League
Baseball history to have three thousand strikeouts, it's got to
happen tonight and what kind of weather will be like
tonight for Dodger stating well as the great Vin Scully
to say, it's time for Dodger Baseball, and the.

Speaker 8 (10:15):
Weather certainly cooperating.

Speaker 7 (10:16):
Whether it's a beautiful summer night, our boys of summer
are going to have seventy two degrees with that first
pitch by Kershaw at seven little after seven pm, seventy
two a gorgeous night, then down to about sixty five
or so at the end of the game when we're
savoring yet another Dodger victory, and the cool of a
la knight settling in as we patiently wait in the
parking lot to leave Dodger Stadium. But I'll tell you

(10:38):
what the whole idea of being that it's going to
be such a big night, I mean like it was
gonna be big anyway with the young Modo Bobblehead night.
But now you're looking at an absolute history making night
with that history maker Clayton Kershaw, number twenty two, mister
Kay himself going for it tonight, and it's very very exciting.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Oh that's great, that's tonight at Dodger Stadium. I know
we've been talking about a lot. But it's a big deal,
big big deal, all right. If you're in San Diego
over the weekend, you have to be aware that there's
a massive, massive shark in the area.

Speaker 5 (11:12):
In San Diego, a fishing boat had an encounter.

Speaker 9 (11:15):
To remember, group of fishermen got a close look at
a massive great white shark. Fly Fishing Captain Dustin's surgeon
sent this incredible video to our sister station in San Diego.
He says the sighting happened on Saturday and the waters
above La Joya. One of the anglers had just took
the smaller blue shark when they estimated.

Speaker 8 (11:35):
Sixteen foot oh.

Speaker 9 (11:37):
Great white lazily approached the boat. The big shark made
a few casual passes near the fishermen and then just
swam away. Juvenile white sharks are common in the shallow
waters of southern California. Encounters with these larger adults are
more rare.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Thankfully sixteen feet. Imagine swimming out in the ocean and
a sixteen footer runs right next to you. The chances
are they're probably not going to bite you and kill you.
I'm going to need a bigger boat, Yes, that's right,
but you can't take a lot of bites from a
sixteen footer with those razors sharp teeth. I don't know
who's swimming in the ocean anymore. It's either filled with

(12:15):
human feces or sharks. I mean, where's the attraction with you?
Which one is it? Do you like the feces? Are
you going in for the feces or the shark? Which
one are you going in for? Which one do you like? Most? God,
people are still swimming in the ocean. Unbelievable. All right.
There might be a cannabis tax, a new tax, a

(12:35):
weed tax. There's a lot of people enjoy weed, they
like edibles, and now you're going to be paying more money.

Speaker 3 (12:40):
The trip to the dispensary is costing cannabis customers more
money because of a state wide tax hike that went
into effect yesterday on July first, and here in West Hollywood,
a local rebate expired yesterday on that same day, driving
costs even higher in this community. It's a high that

(13:00):
some customers and businesses say is hitting them where it
hurts most, their wallets. Of course, we could take it
to the video and tell you that California's legal cannabis
market just got more expensive. Starting July first, the state's
excise tax on marijuana products rose from fifteen percent to
nineteen percent. Wow, that's a jump authorized by a simply

(13:21):
built one ninety five.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
That's a big deal. You know, it's going to send
a lot of people back to buying weed on the
black market in somebody's you know, guest house.

Speaker 10 (13:31):
Seems pretty elementary and common sense, right.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Yeah, yeah, you charge twenty percent and the guy who's
selling out of the guest house is twenty percent cheaper.
Why wouldn't you do it? Because it's not illegal for
him to sell it? I don't think, or maybe it is.
I don't know. I'm not in the weed game. I
don't know what's legal or not. But if you're gonna buy,
what does an ounce.

Speaker 11 (13:49):
Of weed go for? Stephfush? What is a good ounce
that we'd go for? That's a good question. I don't know,
because I'm a gummy guy. Okay, yeah, so I'm not sure.
Are the taxes going up on gummies as well? In general,
it's expensive to buy in any you know weeds place
like Medmen and you know those places.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
Yeah, it's very expensive. Yeah, what is it? What is
the good gummies out there? What a the ones you like?

Speaker 12 (14:13):
Uh?

Speaker 11 (14:14):
I think they're called like not co Captain, they were
called I forgot what their name. I haven't had him
in a while. Is just the result of them, probably
oh Camino, Oh Camino comino gummies?

Speaker 1 (14:28):
All right, how many can you down to get to
before you get high?

Speaker 11 (14:32):
During the pandemic, I would have about fifty milligrams. Now
I'm down to fifty milligrams a week, no a day,
not for the night, like to knock me out. Now
it's of course now it's like ten fifty milligrams.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
Yeah, so I it's sick.

Speaker 11 (14:51):
They give you a hundred milligrams each gummies is ten,
so i'd have about five to six. And now since
I'm like out in doing stuff again, I'm a little
bit more active.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
So it takes a lot less to take you down.
Were you taking them to sleep or to just you know,
enjoy yourself, because I mean we were locked in the
house or something to do.

Speaker 11 (15:16):
And so when it got to the end of the day,
normally you've had a full work day, sure, but now
we sat on the couch all day. So I'm like,
all right, what do I do? And so yeah, it
made shows funnier. Oh that's good, more fun, and then
it would knock me out.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
What is the high?

Speaker 7 (15:32):
Like?

Speaker 1 (15:32):
Is it like you're more talkative or you're more secluded
you wanted to spend time by yourself or with other people.

Speaker 11 (15:37):
Definitely more relaxed, like you're you're so I would so
if they call it in in the cut, because in
the couch and before, yeah, so good. It would definitely
relax you. And it would give you which wasn't fortunate
for me, but it would give you the munchies after
about forty five minutes, so I had to make sure
to have plenty of snacks on hand. And then yeah,

(16:01):
then anything I would watch that I thought was funny
was about fifty times funnier.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
Like I would watch the same thing. Oh I see, okay,
I used to deal with the Letterman show. I used
to get high and watch The Letteran Show like three times,
and it was like four o'clock in the morning before
I went to bed. But I do remember the enjoyment
of getting high. I just can't get there anymore, and
I don't know why, and it bothers me. I get

(16:27):
too paranoid. Plus I think it all started here when
I had a gummy. I had one on the air here,
and I'll tell you that story when I come back.
I had a gummy on the air here, the last
one ever took, and it would it could have cost
me my job, boy, and it was a disaster. I'll
tell you the story to come back.

Speaker 4 (16:47):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
For about a half hour away from the Dodger start.
You want to get home and watch that, or get
to the stadium if you have tickets. We're talking about
gummy is the the taxes are going through the roof
when it comes to marijuana. And I about ten twelve
years ago, somebody gave me some gummies. They didn't work here.

(17:14):
As a friend from outside of KFON, I saw that
pretty good and they gave me no okay, they gave
me a package of ten gummies and I decided to
take one before the show and it did nothing. Did
three hours, went home, nothing and I called them. I said, hey,

(17:37):
those gummies are pretty weak, and he said, well, how
did you take I said, I took one. He said, oh, well,
you know you drink every night. That's not going to
do anything. I oh, thanks, thanks for that compliment. And
so the next night or two nights later, I took
three and we were on seven to ten PM at
that time, and at seven thirty the it hit me.

(18:05):
The gummies hit me, and the whole building started shaking.
It felt like it was shaking shaking. Yeah, it felt
like the whole building was moving. And I'm like, I
have got two and a half hours left, and now
I'm panicking. I'm sweating, and I'm watching what everyone says,
because I think that everyone is saying every every time

(18:25):
somebody opens their mouth, I think it's something they shouldn't
say on the air, or it's not allowed by the FCC,
or it's racist, or it's anti religion. I'm like, keep
hitting the dump button, like oh angel, oh belly, Oh no, no,
you didn't mean that. You didn't mean that. And then
the buildings, you know, moving again. And then Aaron Bender

(18:46):
was here doing the news and he clicked, he hits
the button, the talkback button, and he says, are you
going to mention this? And I thought he meant mentioned
the fact that I'm on three gummies, And I said,
mention what he said, Tim the building's moving. We just

(19:06):
had a five point eight earthquake, and I'm like, oh,
I thought that was me. He goes, no, it's not you.
Well keep part of you. But it's also all of
southern California. And so we did two and a half
hours of talking about the earthquake. Where the blackouts are
all the fire you know, houses have the ambulance and

(19:29):
the fire trucks station outside in case the fire houses,
you know, collapse. And then every break I called my
wife and my daughter and they were living in NoHo
fourteen on the fourteenth story of an apartment building, and
the whole building was shaking. The chandelier was moving. You
could feel the entire building. It was on rollers and

(19:53):
the whole building moving back and forth. And I called
my wife every break to see if she was okay,
every break and I finally got home. I have not
had a gummy since that was twelve years ago, not
a single gummy, because I can't control it. You know,
you can control your buzz with beer or wine or shots.

(20:17):
You can control where you are, and then you can
eat if you're getting too buzzed and sort of soak
up that liquor. Everybody knows where you are. You know
where you are. When it comes to drinking. You know
that you have to have food in you, and you
have rules. You have to have water before you get
to bed. You can't have any anything sweet before you
go to bed. You can't drink and also have sweets
at the same time. That'll give you a headache, that'll

(20:40):
get you hungover. You can't have a baked potato while
you drink because of all the sugar that's in a
baked potato. Everybody has rules when you drink. But when
you take gummies, what are the rules? I don't know.
And how do you know when you're taken too many
and flip out like I did, not Krozier, but steps
have you ever taken too many gummies where you flipped out?

Speaker 11 (21:01):
Yeah, my idiot ex best friend had some cookies and
she gave me a quarter one and she had she
had the other quarter, and you know, we were just
hanging out. We went to dinner and it was me
and her and a couple of mutual friends and she

(21:22):
couldn't finish and she was like, oh, just have the rest.
This was the first time I ever had any kind
of edible, And she gave me the other two I
swear I was inside out of myself.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
No, is that right? And then we went to go see.

Speaker 11 (21:37):
I forgot what movie was, but I had a lot
of like psychedelic movements in it, and I thought I
was gonna throw up in the theater, so I had
to leave. Man, it was really bad and I was
just like wow. And then I told my other friends
who were more experienced, and they're like, yeah, even the
more experienced people are like no, I'll have like a nibble.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
Wow. And I had three quarters of a cookie. Oh
my god. So did you ever think of taking yourself
or asking somebody to take it? In emergency room?

Speaker 9 (22:08):
Oh?

Speaker 11 (22:08):
Yeah, yeah, I swore everyone knew I was like mess up.
I went to the drug store to get some water
just to like, you know, hopefully wash it out. That
didn't do anything, so I just had to sit there
and like experience the entire high, completely miserable.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
Wow. And yeah, then my dad had to come pick
me up. Oh my god, I know what's what that's like? Buddy?
I know, you know, I again, I don't get especially
since I've had my daughter, I can count on maybe
two fingers, you know, since I you know, I have
times I've gotten high off of weed. But I do
remember I took one hit. I was going to go

(22:45):
to a friend's house and watch a boxing match, and
I didn't want to smoke there because his parents were home.
I was young, I was like eighteen nineteen, and his
parents were home, and his parents wouldn't have approved of that.
So I took one hit. I was living on Dickens
in the valley. One small bongload one and I wasn't
even I didn't even feel it. But I left my driveway.

(23:06):
I turned right on Sepulvida and I'm gonna turn left
on Ventura and I'm in the left hand turn lane
and there's a cop behind me, And I said to myself, Tim,
he doesn't know you're you just took a bong load.
Make this turn successfully. Put your turn signal on, and
just make this turn. Just make this turn. You've got it.

(23:29):
You've got this turn. You've made this turn thousands of times, Tim,
Just make it successfully. And then I hear the cops
honking at me because the green arrow turned and I
didn't see it the whole time. The whole time, I'm like,
just make this turn. You can do it. Just make
this turn. Come on can't you see that arrow? And

(23:54):
I pulled over because I knew he was gonna pull
me over, and he drove by me. I got out
of the car and I walked three miles to that
boxing match, and then my buddy's like, hey, where's your car?

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (24:08):
Like it's on Sepulvida and Ventura, Like why is it there? Like, well,
I thought the house was closer, and I was just
gonna park on the street. I have to pay for
parking because you're three miles away. What do you mean
that you closer? You know, pay for parking. When you
have to pay for parking, it's you know, didn't Sino
got him? My steph when you you said you had
your dad come pick you up. Did you tell him
what happened?

Speaker 8 (24:29):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Yeah, because he's experienced a lot of that in his life.
He did.

Speaker 11 (24:32):
He was born, you know, he was raising the sixties,
so he did all of that stuff. So I don't
mind telling him. I didn't mind telling him, Okay, I
knew he would understand. And it's and it's not like
I was always on the street, like you know, wrecked
in my life, you know.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 11 (24:49):
It was like the first time that's ever literally the
first time that's ever happened, not on the street, so
you know.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
And so he was like, all right, all right, I
got you.

Speaker 11 (24:57):
And then so he just you know, came by and
then they just had a sleep it off. But man,
that was one of the worst experiences. I how long
between that experience and you went back? I don't think
it until it became legal?

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Oh really? So years?

Speaker 11 (25:10):
Yeah, because that was like twenty I want to say,
twenty thirteen, twenty fourteen.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
Yeah, but see, you never know what's in that stuff,
you know. Well, yeah, I also shouldn't have done three.
That's like someone who's never drink and then they drink
of fifth of vodka. Yeah, like it's the same thing.
Did they know you took the three? Who my friends?

Speaker 6 (25:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (25:31):
Uh well they were already pretty baked, so that's why
they were like.

Speaker 8 (25:35):
Yeah, ye have the rest of this.

Speaker 11 (25:37):
And I'm like, okay, cool, I can handle it because
I didn't, like, like Tim was saying, I didn't feel anything,
so I'm like, yeah, it'd be fine then back and
then boom it has like you know, forty minutes later.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
It is hard. My dad was very strict with drugs.
If he caught you with any kind of drug, whether
it's a you know, coke, pot, pills, whatever, you went
to rehab for thirty or sixty days. You got your
choice out of school and you get either thirty or
sixty days in drug rehab.

Speaker 10 (26:04):
I had a roommate in college who had been to
rehab already freshman year in college. He had already been
to rehab like two or three times. Wow, And I said,
did you learn anything? He said, yeah, Man, I know
what to take for what I need. Said, rehab was
the greatest experience.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
I had two brothers who went through rehab, both in
high school. And yeah, my dad was very strict man,
very strict he was. I remember taking going into my
dad's medicine cabinet becase had a headache, and I want
to take some til and all. And I, when it
was cabinet, pulled a bottle out, took a couple of
tail and all and I'm walking out. My dad said,

(26:42):
what are you doing? I said, I'm I just got
some tailan all out of your medicine cabinet. And he goes,
are you sure? Yeah, I mean you have nothing in
there but thyland all. You have tailand all and I
don't know, like like Tweezers or something floss and he goes, well,
he goes, I'm sorry, He goes, you know you can't
be you can ever be too sure? I swell. In

(27:02):
this case, you were because all you have is tile
and all. And if I'm doing drugs, I'm not doing
it in your bathroom.

Speaker 8 (27:08):
What do you think I took out of there?

Speaker 6 (27:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (27:10):
In this case, you when you say you can't be
too sure, in this case, you were definitely too sure.

Speaker 8 (27:14):
You were way too short.

Speaker 4 (27:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
If I'm doing radical illegal drugs, I'm not doing them
in your bathroom while you're laying down in your bed.

Speaker 8 (27:22):
You were too too sure.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
That's right. Can you ever be too sure? You were here?
You were way too sure. You're extraordinarily too sure. You're
out of control, too sure. What it sounds like you're
hide too sure. He sounds like you're high. I'm not
tilt all from your cabinet. What's going on with you?

Speaker 4 (27:40):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
It is the Conway Show. We have another fight on
another flight. This time it's Frontier Airlines. People got into it,
and you know sometimes you argue with people on a plane,
but you try to, you know, calm down and yourself
and not lose control. But on Frontier Airlines people are
quicker to the punch than other airlines. I've noticed that,

(28:11):
and it's happened again Frontier Airlines. A couple of passengers
got into it and fists started flying.

Speaker 13 (28:17):
That Frontier Airlines flight headed here to Miami from Philadelphia.
According to the police report, the victim says that he
was sitting in his seat when that other passenger grabbed
him by the neck. I'd attacked him an alarming sign.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
I like that that lady. What are they doing? They're
fighting at attack them. They're fistfighting, ma'am. I don't know
if you've seen anything like that before in your life,
but they're both throwing fists at each other. It looks
like they're fighting.

Speaker 13 (28:44):
An alarming scene as a fight breaks out on board
a Frontier Airlines flight bound for Miami while it was
still in the air. The plane was abount to land when,
according to police records, twenty one year old as Sean
Sharma was returning to his seat when he allegedly grabbed
another passenger by the.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
You know that those are two rough towns, Miami and Philadelphia,
because you have young people traveling who are very active.
Miami is a hotspot for young people. Philadelphia a lot
of young people, and back and forth from Philly to Miami.
There's a lot of guys that know how to handle themselves.

Speaker 8 (29:23):
The two trading blows. Passengers trapped witnessing the chaos.

Speaker 12 (29:27):
The man sitting behind was making comments to the man
in front, like negative comments. The whole flight and the
man in front went to.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
The bathroom and then it was game on when the
guy got back.

Speaker 12 (29:41):
And when he came back, that's when things started to escalate.

Speaker 8 (29:44):
Sisters Rosa and Regina Gurgley.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
I wonder if they're Catholic sisters or just biological sisters.

Speaker 8 (29:51):
Sisters Rosa and Regina Gurgley. Seeing the scuffle firsthand.

Speaker 12 (29:55):
You could hear just like pounding kind of and like
people talking or yelling, and we could just see two
people fighting and it was almost like kitting the wall
next to it.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
I bet they are nuns, I think when he says sisters.

Speaker 8 (30:07):
Sisters Rosa and Regina Gurgley.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Oh maybe they are real sisters all right, And we
could just see two people fighting and it was almost
like kitting the wall next to it.

Speaker 8 (30:16):
Authorities seeing the victims sustained superficial cuts and declined medical attention.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
We've really got to do more to stop this nonsense.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
I'm with that guy. I'm with that dude right there.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
We've really got to do more to stop this nonsense.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
Yeah, how about a lifetime ban for anybody fighting. Whether
it's your fault or not, you're out.

Speaker 2 (30:34):
This should be treated as seriously as it really is,
and that is disruption in the cabin that could.

Speaker 6 (30:39):
Lead to much worse things.

Speaker 13 (30:41):
Sharma was treated for that cut above his left eye,
taken into custody and charged with battery.

Speaker 8 (30:46):
Bond was set at five hundred dollars.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
You know what they should do if if they were
more into the entertainment world and not into the travel business,
is once they land, they should open up one of
those slides and push those two out there and the
rest of the plane gets to watch them fight right
there on the tarmac. That would be great and put
on TV. I think that'd be a great TV show.
Here comes the two winners on this flight. Now they're

(31:09):
gonna go at it. Well, the guys take the baggage
out of the plane. That's not a bad idea. All right,
there's a Dodger. There's a two year old that's gone
viral talking about her favorite Dodgers.

Speaker 6 (31:21):
She's been saying her favorite players since she's been too
and I never recorded it. I've always just been like, oh,
how cute she knows her favorite players. And she'll walk
around the store saying, let's go Dodgers, And I'm like, okay,
you need to relax.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Amory, who are your favorite Dodge players? The bat Mookie
Bets is the first one.

Speaker 12 (31:39):
The bat fo fool lunch?

Speaker 1 (31:43):
Who poor fool lunch. I think it's Fred Freeman, f
fool lunch. Her tylo oh Tani, that's an easy one.
Her tylo for full here? Who for full here?

Speaker 7 (31:57):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (31:58):
Yeah? Sissy sunin another picture from the Dodgers.

Speaker 8 (32:04):
Who we saw.

Speaker 12 (32:09):
We started putting Dodger gear once when she was born,
but she started watching.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
She mentioned more when she turned two. We were watching
because her birthday is close to like the postseason, so.

Speaker 8 (32:22):
We were watching the postseason, and then she would.

Speaker 1 (32:24):
Ask like, who's that? Who's that?

Speaker 8 (32:26):
So she was very into it, so we just started
naming players for her.

Speaker 6 (32:29):
We went when I was pregnant with her in my belly,
and oh my goodness, she moved around like crazy when
the crowd will go wild. I would just feel her
doing flips and turn So she's been a fastest she
was in the bellyful.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
Her Nandez. That's a great kid, with that kid. All right,
Dodgers are playing in twelve minutes, so turn on the radio,
turn on the TV, turn or slide into the game.
This is gonna be a big night, a huge night
for Clayton Kershaw. They might even stop the game when

(33:12):
he gets his three thousand strikeout. All right, Well, Kelly
next right here on KFI AM six forty Conway Show
on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 7 (33:22):
Now you can

Speaker 1 (33:23):
Always hear us live on KFI AM six forty four
to seven pm Monday through Friday, and anytime on demand
on the iHeart Radio app.

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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