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September 29, 2025 37 mins
Tim talks about the weekend’s football results, his beloved Dodgers, and the New York Mets being eliminated in spectacular fashion. Also, we’ve got the latest on the WeHo Peeping Tom caught pulling down his pants and getting handsy with his, ahem, Sunset Strip. And Heather Brooker is in studio to talk about the shock separation of Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban, and Madonna admitting to feeling suicidal following her split from ex-husband Guy Ritchie. Lufthansa is firing 4,000 people and replacing them with AI. Walmart CEO says that artificial intelligence will affect every job on the planet and eliminate many. 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's if I am six forty and you're listening to
The Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app CAMF
I am sixty. It is the Conway Show, all right,
ding dong. Great sports weekend, Great sports weekend. Oh it's
nice to have a good sports weekend. The Rams beat

(00:23):
the Colts. Watch that on national TV or well local TV,
I guess. And then the Dodgers won. It was Clayton
Kershaw's last game. Is there a Mike open seeming thanks.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
Today?

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (00:40):
There you go? All right?

Speaker 1 (00:41):
Something of doing the show in the bathroom, which, given
what I eat today, might also be a possibility. I
eat like a twenty year old that's not going to
live to thirty.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
You know.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
I just eat, you know, whatever fast food I'm I'm ready,
I just eat it.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
You get those like it looks for the next couple hours.
Oh hey, hey, that's talking back.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
I went to McDonald's last night, ten thirty at night.
I didn't see any other guys my age in line.
You know, they're all done. They're all at Forest Lawn,
you know. But I'm I'm in line and I'm behind
like teenagers in the front. There's a woman in back
who's probably in her twenties. Then there's another van full
of kids. I'm like, ah, this is a kid's game,
and I'm staying in it late, so I'm going to

(01:30):
the end.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
So the Rams beat the Colts.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
That was great off a last minute touchdown and that
was cool to watch. I love watching the Rams win.
Binds me in my childhood again. Dodgers won Clayton Kershaw's
last regular season game as a Dodger. He went I
think it was the sixth inning when he went in, pitched,
got one out, and then Freddie Freeman comes in to

(01:54):
take him.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
Out, and he was very emotional on the mound, hugging everybody.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
And he got a standing over eight in Seattle, which
is wild because Seattle hates Los Angeles like every other city.
You know, We're hated everywhere when the Dodgers play in Boston,
New York, Miami, wherever the Dodgers played, Arizona, Colorado, they're hated.
But he got standing ovation. And I noticed when he
got a standing ovation in Seattle where the Mariners playing.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
The Marriagers have had a terrific year.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Not only did he get a standing ovation, but I
would say eighty percent of The people who stood up
and gave that standing ovation and we're in the crowd
were Dodger fans.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
There were a hell hell of a.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
Lot of Dodger fans that either drove up or you know,
flew up from Burbank or Lax or Long Beach or
Orange County, wherever you flew from. Maybe San Diego and
you flew up for the game, maybe for the whole weekend.
Maybe you've got in there Friday and you saw Friday's game,
Saturday and Sunday's game, or maybe just enjoyed Seattle on
a Saturday and then went to the game on Sunday.

(02:57):
But I got to tell you, if you're a Dodger
fan and you travel to watch the Dodgers and you
make noise in that stadium, I.

Speaker 2 (03:06):
Love you, I really do.

Speaker 1 (03:08):
I love that kind of commitment that you fly to
another city to watch these Dodgers and rub it in
the locals faces.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
I absolutely love.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
That full stadium of Dodger fans in Seattle. And so
the Dodgers are going to be in the playoffs that
starts tomorrow. I think first pitch is six o'clock and
they're going to be playing the Cincinnati Reds.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
It's like Gold School.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
It's like nineteen seventies again with the Reds coming out,
so that'll be great. And then the two teams that
I really enjoy watch losing, and I enjoy these two
teams losing about as much as I enjoy the Dodgers
or the Rams winning. And they are the New York
Mets total collapse this year and the San Francisco forty

(03:55):
nine ers.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
San Francisco forty nine ers.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
I believe that game was in Florida and flew across
country to have their ass is handed to them in Florida.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
That was great. And then the Ryder Cup. Who cares?
Nobody cares about the Ryder's Cup or the Ryder Cup.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Nobody, you know, outside of the fifteen people that go
or you know, fifty thousand people that go whatever. But
typically nobody cares, you know, because you can't you don't
really understand the scoring on how you know they keep scoring?

Speaker 2 (04:25):
What's a half a hole? What's a full hole? You know?

Speaker 1 (04:28):
Are they playing best ball? Is it one on one
or is it a team sport? Nobody really knows, and
so you just sort of watch it and you feel
like an idiot that you don't know how to score it,
and then you move on. But the New York Mets
eliminated from postseason was really, really satisfying. I gotta tell you,

(04:50):
growing up a Dodger fan, to see the Mets eliminated
on the last pitch of the after one hundred and
sixty two games brought me a ton of pleasure.

Speaker 4 (05:01):
They were supposed to be the big team after last year. Yeah, well,
based the next up and comer team. They had the
best record in June. You know, by June of this
year they had the best wretch.

Speaker 2 (05:11):
They were carrying it through.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
It's like twenty or twenty two or twenty three games
over five hundred and then they collapsed, and it was
an epic collapse.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
And they usually do it in Miami.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
I noticed that, you know, they fly down to Miami,
all the ex New Yorkers, they all flood the stadium
and then they watched a radical collapse that happened again
for nothing, in a game that they had to win
to get into the playoffs. They lost four to zero,
four to zero, and the Mets are eliminated.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
I think we have some audio on this, and we
see if this is it. Here, let's see let's see
if this is audio here and look, if you're a
Mets fan, I know this sucks, but I've been a
Kings fan for a long time, so I've had my
share of complete collapses.

Speaker 5 (05:58):
Cool here, of course, you can get Lindor and Sodo
on you can get Alonzo. The plate is the tying wrong.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
Cautal collapse.

Speaker 5 (06:09):
Third basement, Paulie playing it on the grass against Lindor.

Speaker 6 (06:13):
I don't know why.

Speaker 5 (06:15):
He pulls one on the grounded chance for two to
second one first double play and the Mets agonizing three
and a half month of her motion collapse.

Speaker 7 (06:29):
It is complete a.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
Clap and the announcers are just speechless. They can't believe
what they're seeing.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
It is.

Speaker 1 (06:49):
That's the sound effect of the team circling the toilet.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
It is unfathomable that this action of talent lines up
outside of an expanded playoff system.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
And these are the guys that the Mets are paying.

Speaker 4 (07:08):
That actually just sounds like perfect hitting in October, the
Halloween and dark.

Speaker 8 (07:13):
And like oh the gloom and doom, the fall enters
and this team is dead, and these announcers are being
paid by the Mets, and they're like, we can't believe it.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
We're what we just saw us.

Speaker 5 (07:25):
Up outside of an expanded playoff system. After having the
best record in baseball for the first two and a
half months of the season, everything goes wrong over the
last three and a half months. The Mets find themselves
on the outside looking in, and.

Speaker 2 (07:45):
They're all here shaking their headland completely peatland. Somebody knows
what to say. Here we go.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
Players are about as stunned as the fans.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
Not Dodger fans. Dodger fans aren't stunned at all.

Speaker 3 (08:12):
I think a lot of the players felt as though
this day would never come, but they'd be able to
turn it on at some point.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
And not have to endure this.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
But they weren't able.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
To do that.

Speaker 6 (08:24):
Well, you got you got a Marlins seeing star. Sorry
Ron that in two thousand and seven, two thousand and eight.
We don't have to remind Met fans that have done this.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (08:35):
The Mets side also went down to Miami in two
thousand and seven, two thousand and eight and lost there
on the last day to be eliminated as well.

Speaker 6 (08:43):
They took two out of three here. The Mets took
the series they're in. They didn't do it. So the
Marlins once again do the Mets in and this has
got to be just so heartbreaking and disappointing for the players,
not for.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Doctor fans, But they didn't get it done.

Speaker 5 (09:03):
Two thousand and seven, two thousand and eight, twenty twenty five,
the Mets get brilliant pitching in Game umber one hundred
and sixty one to put themselves in position, but are
unable to seal the deal in the final day of
the season and fall to the Marlins, who knocked them
out of the postseason yet again.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
You were talking about the twenty one games over five
hundred the Mets started. For the first two months of
the season. Their starting pitching was the best in baseball,
but through injuries and inconsistencies, they ended up being a
starting pitching staff that could not get to the fifth inning,
which led to an exhausted bullpen. Their defense went in

(09:41):
the tank in the second half, and he ended up
with none of that working at a top heavy lineup,
and that's all you had left there.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
You go, all right, it's over. No October surprise for
the Mets. Sorry gang, A lifelong Kings fan, I've been there.
It's sting, but we'll get him next year. Comets, we'll
get him next year, or all the great players will
bail off that team and you'll go through a fourteen

(10:11):
to fifteen year rebuild. That's the direction it looks like.
So sorry, we've been there before. Now you're there. It sucks,
I get it, all right.

Speaker 2 (10:20):
We're live.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
Dodgers, on the other hand, are going to the playoffs
and they start tomorrow at home right here at Dodger
Stadium at six pm. That is going to be a
great series. We're live on KFI. Oh sorry, man, I apologize.
I guess when you said cash, you meant to the
cash giveaway.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Right, I thought you wanted to borrow money. It was
coming in to lend you money. All right. Here, we
have one thousand dollars that you could win.

Speaker 9 (10:44):
Here's how we do it. Now your chance to win
one thousand dollars. Just enter this nation wide keyword on
our website cash.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
That's cash cash.

Speaker 9 (10:54):
Enter it now at KFIAM six forty dot com slash cash.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Howard by Sweet Games.

Speaker 9 (10:59):
Accident a try if you're hurting an accident, Winning is everything.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
Call the winning attorneys at Sweet James. One eight hundred
nine million.

Speaker 9 (11:05):
That's one eight hundred nine million or Sweet James dot com.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
Go to the website I Am six forty dot com.
Slash cash the keepers cash, everything's cash, you can win cash.
Cash is great, but it's not everything. It really isn't.
I think that the happiest families I knew growing up
I were families that were just getting by.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
That's true story.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
Every almost almost every family I knew that was totally
loaded was had the most problems, most problems by far.
The people that had mom and dad working and just
getting by paycheck to paycheck. They were all the kids,
always the kids with a sense of humor, a sense

(11:53):
of great manners, great storytellers, great you know, sense of humor.
And you had to develop a sense of humor when
mom and dad were always arguing about everything. And so
money's not everything. It's nice, but it's not, you know
all it's cracked up to me.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
All right.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
We have the Dodgers starting Tomorrow's Heavy Dodgers, Moman Heavy Dodgers.
That's gonna be a great series, hopefully Cincinnati versus the
La Dodgers. And that'll start tomorrow at six pm. So
give you a couple hours to take your life off
of life's most interesting guys that we're that we're filled

(12:35):
with here in LA and one of them is this
Peeping Tom.

Speaker 2 (12:39):
I don't know how Tom got involved.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
I don't know how, you know, we decided that that's
going to be the name Peeping Tom, and maybe it
caused some people not to name their kid Tom, although
I get I see a lot of Tom's. You know,
this Tom is a pretty still a pretty big name.
But we got a peeper in WIHO and he's looking
through windows and these you know, opening doors, and it's

(13:02):
a matter of time before they arrest this fellow for
doing that.

Speaker 10 (13:06):
West Hollywood residents say they've caught this man stalking, peeping,
pulling down his pants and touching himself inside a number
of apartment complexes.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
Wow, wonder what radio station he works for? You think
it's AM or FM?

Speaker 2 (13:19):
Got it? I bet it's maybe FM. Maybe he's an
AM guy.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
I don't know, but man, that's a description of a
radio guy for sure. This is the description of every
radio guy.

Speaker 10 (13:29):
Keeping pulling down his pants and touching himself inside a
number of apartment complexes.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
Yep, that's a radio guy.

Speaker 10 (13:36):
Over the last.

Speaker 5 (13:37):
Seven or so years, he's been seen at the bus
stop on Fairfax in Santa Monica outside the CBS building
down Fairfax.

Speaker 10 (13:44):
He'll often be arrested and cited, but soon returns and
continues harassing neighbors who fear he could act on his
threats of violent.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
Okay, so that's his thing, right, everybody's got their thing.
That's his thing. It happens to be illegal, and a
lot of people don't like it, and so he's very
hard pressed to get out there and enjoy himself.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
My thing is the track. It's legal. I like to go.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
I don't feel like I have to do it in shame,
and I don't have to do it in secret. It's
just my thing. Everybody has their thing. Maybe you collect cars.
Maybe you're a hiker, maybe your snowboarder, you collect cars.
You're like Jay Leno who collects, you know, cars, and
that's his thing, and you know that's what he loves
to do. Well, this guy loves to do something that

(14:30):
a lot of other people think is not right. So
he can't really sort of ever get his groove on.
And it's really hard to get friends to go with you.
Like I can get friends to go with me a
the racetrack.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
No problem.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
I don't think I can get friends to go with
me and look through windows at people I don't know.

Speaker 11 (14:50):
Unfortunately, I don't think it's as much of a group
activity spectator sport as it is kind of an individual.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
It's a solo act, Yeah it is, but it's it's all.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
So you know that's you're a psychologist or a psychiatrist, Sam.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Psychologist, I can't I can't give anybody a medication.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Okay, So you're a psychologist, so you you've probably dealt
with people who you know their thing is maybe not
legal and not really you know, I'm celebrated in modern society.
How do they how do they you know, serve as
that part of their need or how do you try
to talk them out of it?

Speaker 2 (15:26):
It all?

Speaker 11 (15:27):
I mean, obviously the big thing here is consent. What
they're doing is violating other people's boundaries, and that's where
it crosses the line.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
Right now.

Speaker 11 (15:34):
You can try to talk to them about, you know,
the factors that lead them up to that kind of thing,
and like, you know, if there was any kind of
history of some kind of abuse that it doesn't necessarily
have to be abused.

Speaker 2 (15:46):
But is there any flipping this guy around or is
he always going to do this?

Speaker 11 (15:50):
He has to want to flip around more than anything
that you've seen, for example, the Burbank butt sniffer. He
keeps going back no matter what you try doing.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
You know, look, I might be a little too lenient
with the butt sniffer. I'm a I.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
Hate to say this, but I don't know where the
victim is in that crime.

Speaker 11 (16:10):
With the butt sniffer. Yeah, well, it's a matter of consent.
People don't necessarily like having their butts sniffed.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Okay, but look if if somebody if you're in a
bookstore in Burbank and somebody sniff your butt, would you
call the cops or we just like, you know, give
it a what the you know Jesus Christ and walk away?

Speaker 2 (16:25):
I know me, I would be more like what the.

Speaker 11 (16:27):
But if I know that this is somebody who's been
on the news for doing this really, then I would
be more likely to be like, excuse me, cops.

Speaker 1 (16:34):
Look, I understand if it's a twelve year old, a
thirteen year old girl, a fourteen year old boy, I
get that being really pissed. But if a guy's at
a bookstore, give me a sniff or two, I just
turn around and go Jesus Christ, sound like you're upset.
Nobody sniff your butt at the bookstore. That hasn't happened yet.
I guess we'll see what my real reaction is.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
All right. Back to this peeping tom in West Hollywood.

Speaker 12 (16:54):
I unfortunately encountered him on public transportation where he began
to stalk me to the bill and after threatening me,
I got a message from my neighbor.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
Okay, now he's into threats. Now he's crossed the line that.

Speaker 12 (17:07):
He was on his camera in front of my door,
was rope in his hands.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
Oh bobo, it's going on with this guy. Something else's guy.

Speaker 10 (17:14):
We've blurred his face for the time being because he
hasn't been formally identified by law enforcement and hasn't been
charged with a crime.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
Doesn't this guy know that every single every home has
like nine hundred cameras on. Every time you do anything,
you're gonna be on camera.

Speaker 10 (17:30):
However, people are corroborating his unwelcome visits on the next
door app and say his sightings seem to be escalating.
He always has an open container can of beer with him.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
Definitely a radio guy. Now can of beer with him? Yeah,
I look, I don't let me eliminate that. I'm going
to edit that out. Okay, edit that out because alcoholics
already take a big shot and I don't want to
pile on escalating. He always has an open container. Yeah,
of course, it just an open container. We don't know
what's in the container. I edited out escalating. He always

(18:03):
has an open container.

Speaker 13 (18:04):
Yeah, of course the can of beer, which he's had
it in every other.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
But now let me ask you something. You think that's
this guy goes low end beer. You think it's just
you know, like just why I can't he pick my life?
I don't think he's going like top shelf German import.
You know this, This guy doesn't smell like he's going,
you know, like a fifteen dollars a six pack. I

(18:31):
think he's just barely I mean it's barely.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Beer, you know.

Speaker 10 (18:34):
Ring Ring Vague La la K says the peeping tom
was spotted in her who apartment is recently his last weekend.

Speaker 13 (18:42):
He opened the screen door, which also looks but he
opened it and then he looked like this inside you know.

Speaker 10 (18:49):
The whole where is up the Ring residents or hoping
that law enforcement can do more to prevent the prying
eyes and violations of She.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Called it a ring ring camera. Yeah what Yeah, she
called it. You know, everybody has a ring ring camera.
So somebody didn't correct her, and they thought that was funny,
so they let her do it.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
Now she's on the news saying a ring ring.

Speaker 10 (19:12):
Camera, eyes and violations of privacy.

Speaker 5 (19:16):
You know, it's the safety of a lot of the
women and people that.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
Live around here.

Speaker 5 (19:19):
It's just it seems like it could be a potentially
dangerous thing.

Speaker 13 (19:22):
I come back late at night and I'm very worried
that I will run into him.

Speaker 12 (19:29):
He seems to know where to go and we'll come
back to the same places.

Speaker 10 (19:32):
And the Sheriff's department says it is well aware of
this situation and is asking anyone who might encounter this
man to document and report it to them.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
All right, well, keep an eye up for this guy.
Heavyset guy looking at you. He's got beer with him,
so he's got you know, he's got He's probably a
nervous guy. You know, he's probably shows signs of being
nervous around people. Heavy set dude. I can't tell where
these white lacks hispanic from the shots that I saw,

(20:02):
but it is concerning. It is concerning. You got kids
out there. If you don't have kids and you're just
a single guy, this doesn't worry you. But if you
live alone, if you're a woman, or if you got kids,
then it does. So hopefully they catch this guy and
put him back in the radio station where he works.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
He's definitely radio. Okay.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Nothing screams radio more than guy drinking, following and peeping.
That's what you got to That has to be on
your resume to get a job here at KFI. You know,
if you don't peep enough, they'll throw you out.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Sir, you're behind you, you're peeping, get back to it.
You have no peeping history here? Wait a minute, Am
I reading this right? No peeping tom history? No, I
got none. Well, you're not going to fit in here,
thank you, but grab your coat. Good night. You're just
not iheard quality. Yeah, you're not us all right. Relyve
on KFI.

Speaker 9 (20:54):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
I am six forty. It's Conway Show. Don't forget the Dodgers.
Man Heavy Dodgers going to the playoffs tomorrow at six o'clock.
So get your tickets and slide into the stadium early.
It's a six o'clock start and there's gonna be a
lot of traffic. There's gonna be fifty six thousand people
just like you going to that game. Heather Brooker is
with us our Entertainer Report.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
How are you. I'm good, Nice to see you.

Speaker 7 (21:24):
Always happy to be here with you.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
We do this every Monday. Are Wendy Williams Update? How's
she doing well?

Speaker 7 (21:29):
She's still with us and still struggling with a bless her.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
There's a lot of people worried about Wendy Williams.

Speaker 7 (21:35):
It's really sad to watch what's happening to her.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
My favorite Wendy Williams episode was with Adam Carolla. He
went on and they sort of mixed it up and
it was it was fun to watch.

Speaker 7 (21:47):
Do you like watching it when people fight or does
it make you uncomfortable? You like seeing people go at it?

Speaker 2 (21:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (21:52):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
I like it when look.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
I don't care that you know Madonna's got a new
album out or that I don't know, I you know,
name any actor you know, Stephen King has a new
book out or whatever. That doesn't interest me. What interests
me is when two people sit together and they instantly
hate each other.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
I enjoy that.

Speaker 7 (22:12):
So you were a big fan of like all those
talk shows in the eighties where they were yeah road Chair,
that's right.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
Yeah, that's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Okay, So you I noticed that Nicole Kidman and Keith
Urban have broken up. That's like that was like Hollywood's
greatest marriage.

Speaker 7 (22:27):
I was on the phone with my best friend when
we got the news.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
Really, it's really I was here when I got the news.
Richie said, Hey, Heather Burker's coming in and talk about this.

Speaker 7 (22:36):
I think it's really sad. I think collectively the overall
feeling of what's happened here is people are sad. They've
been together for nineteen years. The reports initially come in,
they have kids. They have two kids. The reports from
TMZ initially coming out, we're saying that they've been separated
since early summer. They live in Nashville, and I think
they also have property here in LA but they also

(22:58):
mostly live in Australia because they're both Australian. Okay, so
they've apparently been separated for quite some time. She's devastated,
he's moving on and whatever. Happened between them doesn't seem
to be repairable. At this point, they're just separated. There's
no word on when they're actually going to get a divorce.
But they do have two kids, and then of course

(23:19):
she has two kids from her previous marriage. Really okay,
so she has four kids.

Speaker 13 (23:23):
You know.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
I looked at her.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
There was an interview with her, and I couldn't tell
whether she was happy or said. Her face is no
longer has reaction.

Speaker 7 (23:31):
Now you listen to me. We're not going to talk
about ladies' faces. She's a beautiful woman, but I will
tell you this. I have interviewed her a couple of times,
and really she is so kind. But she is she
is genuinely. You know how, sometimes when you're interviewing somebody
or talking with somebody, you can tell that they're off
somewhere else or thinking of somebody.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
Got accused of that.

Speaker 7 (23:51):
She's one of those people that's right there with you.
She's listening to what you're saying. She's always been very,
very nice to me, and I think collectively, people like
if this couple who has everything, big movie star, big
country star, kids, the house, if they can't make it,
where's the hope for the rest of us.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
Right, that's right. You know I noticed that she's in
every movie ever made?

Speaker 13 (24:13):
Is that y?

Speaker 9 (24:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (24:14):
She says very famously recently, the reason she does so
many movies and so many projects each year is because
she wants to keep people working. She wants to keep
she knows. She knows she's a big star. She knows
if she's attached to a movie, it's gonna get made.
So she agrees to make a lot of movies because
she knows it's going to mean a lot of jobs. Now,
whether that's true or if that's a prance or who knows,

(24:36):
but it's good in theory.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
I think. Right there's any any talk of her getting
back together with Tom Cruise.

Speaker 7 (24:43):
Oh my gosh, Why did I know you were going
to ask me that? Why did I know you were
going to ask me that?

Speaker 2 (24:48):
Anything out there?

Speaker 7 (24:49):
I don't think so Listen. There is a very famous
paparazzi picture of her when her divorce papers were finalized
from Tom Cruise leaving the lawyer's office, basically jumping for joy.
She is, so she is smiling from ear to ear,
and it was like, remember she came out and she
said she can finally wear heels.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Now, like, wait, you couldn't, oh, I see because he
was He's so short.

Speaker 7 (25:10):
So I don't think she's going to go back. I mean, listen,
they both had very busy schedules. He's a very busy musician.
She's a very busy actress. You know, there's possibly some
like distance that grew there. You know that happened sometimes.

Speaker 13 (25:23):
You know.

Speaker 7 (25:24):
Brian our news editor, he is Australian, and basically he
said the whole country is in mourning right now because
they are the couple of Australia and so it's a
very sad news.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
But you know, couples, do you know, have a tendency
to you know, separate and you know fall not out
of love, but I mean, have you know they have
other jobs, especially when both of them are so busy.
Like I saw a couple this is about maybe fifteen
years ago at New Year's I took my wife to
Jerry's Deli. We're gonna go to Jerry's Deli before we

(25:57):
hit a big New Year's party. And I saw this couple,
probably their fifties. They sat down, they ordered appetizers and drinks,
then they had their soup. Then they had their meal,
and then they had dessert, and then they had coffee,
and they never said a word to each other. Yeah,
I noticed that, and I think they'd be much more
honest with everybody at Jerry's Deli if for the hour

(26:18):
and a half that they were there, they were punching
each other in.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
The face, Because you can just feel that's more honest
than them coming out and just not talking to me.

Speaker 7 (26:27):
How long have you been married?

Speaker 2 (26:28):
It'll be twenty three years. I got to get this right.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
Hold on, yeah, you better get this twenty two or
three twenty two ers? Okay, Well for twenty one, it'll
be twenty two years next year.

Speaker 9 (26:40):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (26:41):
So when you go out to eat, is there any
fis flying?

Speaker 10 (26:45):
No?

Speaker 2 (26:45):
I enjoyed my wife nowadays more than I did back then. Really,
I really do. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (26:51):
You guys have settled into like a comfort with each other.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
And she really makes me laugh, and that's important.

Speaker 7 (26:56):
Do you sit on the couch on your phone, like
separately looking different things on your phone?

Speaker 1 (27:01):
That's well, Look, I only live with those two. They
are on their phones the whole time. My wife and
my daughter. I don't even think they know I'm home,
you know, And I've noticed that.

Speaker 2 (27:11):
You know, women can.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Multitask better than guys, oh for sure, with one major
exception the cell phone. If a woman's texting or reading
a text, she is not listening or talking to anybody
else in the world.

Speaker 7 (27:25):
I feel like I've sort of perfected these because I
can watch a TV show, watch my phone, and be
on my computer at the same time, and I do
all the time. My husband is like, how do you
do that? I don't know why I do that. I
enjoy maybe or the outlier then because I like to
feel I'm like, I'm I feel like I need to
be connected and you know, be in the mix and everything.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
So and then one more story in the news.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
I think it was, oh yeah, Madonna said she was
suicidal when she broke up with with Richie with the
guy Ritchie.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
Yeah, I think that suicidal.

Speaker 7 (27:59):
That's you know, when you're in love with somebody, you know,
you never know what feelings may bubble up. Also too,
like it's that was another very high profile marriage.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
You know, it's touch a high profile marriage.

Speaker 7 (28:11):
It is because everything you do, everywhere you go, how
you parent your kids, whatever choices you make, is under
scrutiny all the time.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
That's correct.

Speaker 7 (28:20):
I can't imagine having that level of pressure. What's it like,
tim as a as a.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
Celebrity, It's pretty U daunting, is very tough. I I
got to take you, I throw you off. I'll tell
you a quick story about something happened over the weekend.
When I go to Starbucks and to get my wife,
my daughter, myself a drink on I think it was
Sunday morning, and I have a pet peeve.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
You know, we ordered and then we go pick it up.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
And if somebody, if three or four people are standing
at the counter, I can't see over them and around
them where my drink is. I'm like, you know, hey,
where am I? And so the rule is you go in,
you look, and then you back off, back away. Some
more drinks come, and then you come in and you
and then you back off.

Speaker 7 (29:00):
Yes, these are the rules.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
These three people didn't know it. And there was one
guy standing off, you know, off to the side. He
knew it.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
And I said to him, I said, hey, buddy, I said,
you're the only guy. And I said loud enough for
the other three to hear, You're the only guy in
the Starbucks that knows the rules.

Speaker 2 (29:14):
And you know what he said, he goes dig dong with.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
Then it felt like an a hole like those three people,
you know, like I shouldn't have said that, but you know,
people need to know the rules. And Starbucks, you don't
sit at the counter with all those things. Back away
from the counter.

Speaker 7 (29:29):
That's right. These are the rules. We don't make them,
we just follow them.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
Yes, all right. I have a Brooker where are you
on social media?

Speaker 7 (29:35):
I met the Heather Brooker on Instagram? Also you can
listen to my show entertain Me with Heather Brooker on
the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (29:42):
And what about stand up? When do you go back
and do that?

Speaker 7 (29:44):
I have two shows coming up, thank you for asking.
I have one coming up on October eighteenth at the
ice House. It's called Home by nine, but it doesn't
start till nine thirty, so okay figure that out. And
then the other one is going to be on October
thirtieth at the ice House with Drew Lynch, comedian Drew Lynch,
who is very very funny.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
You know, I'm uncomfortable telling you this off the year,
so i'n tell you on the air and then you'll
have to deal with it. But you have a very
pleasant voice and an upbeat voice. I've heard that from
other people and we'd love having you.

Speaker 7 (30:11):
Thank you always love to be here.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
Okay, now get up, all right? Bye?

Speaker 1 (30:15):
So she goes Heather Broker. Everybody, it's Conway Show K
five AM sixty. It is the Conway Show. Ah right, Yes,
Dodgers starts tomorrow in the playoffs at six o'clock, so
that will be cool. Dodgers again in the fall. In
southern California, there's a lot of Dodger fans. Every time

(30:35):
they go play on the road, it is filled with
Dodger fans. So the reason why we talk about it
a lot of those people around, including myself.

Speaker 2 (30:43):
I grew up a Dodger fan.

Speaker 1 (30:45):
I I was seven, I think seven maybe eight when
I went to my first Dodger game and it was
I don't remember who they played. I was pretty young.
First time at the stadium is always a memory for
or the kids will have the rest of their life.
They gave away many bats, you know, those bats that

(31:05):
are like twelve inches long, and I thought it was
you know, it was great to sit there in the
stadium and see, you know, this team that I watched
on TV. Now I'm at the stadium it was a big,
big deal and the best seats in the house, the
very best seats in the house.

Speaker 2 (31:20):
One of the loads. They used to be yellow. I
don't know what they are now.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
They were three dollars and seventy five cents a game,
three dollars and three quarters every game.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
That's changed from what I understand. All right, I Walmart, Walmart,
wake up call and AI? All right, what is this
all about?

Speaker 1 (31:43):
I mean, it's just just every every day we wake up,
we're gonna have something new in our life because of AI.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
I just saw that loof Tonza. You know that German airline.

Speaker 1 (31:53):
They're firing four thousand people over the next year and
replacing everything with AI.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
There are AI, Ritchie, are you with us? You got
a headphones on?

Speaker 8 (32:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Hey, Richie, have you heard of the AI singers and musicians? No,
there's an AI musician and a singer. Yeah, and it's
all AI.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
The person doesn't exist, and they've it's generated over three
million dollars and they're being signed by Hollywood agents and
I don't know what you who you sign because the
person doesn't exist. The software I don't know the guy
that invented it, but he didn't invent it. AI invented it.

Speaker 14 (32:33):
So and how do they perform like you know what
I mean, Like, what are they promoting? Like when they're
on social media, it's just like a robot.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
No, No, I think they they I think they actually
created the woman with AI as well.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
I mean the whole thing is a star type thing.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Yeah, exactly, and that's going to take off, you know,
in the in the future, we'll be listening to AI groups,
a group that doesn't.

Speaker 14 (32:53):
Exist, but in a computer, you know what. I'm curious
how that's going to work. Like at Coachella or all
those music festivals. Remember a few years back, they did
like a holograph of like two.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
B that's right, Yeah, that's all right. So we'll see
how Coachella has already sold out? Yes, are you gonna go?
I don't think so you should go. I'd rather go
to Stage Coach. It's not that I love Coachella. I
love the area, but it's a lot of people. That's
really a young guy's game. You're gonna be in the VIP.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Yeah, I love Bill Fold is the guy that runs
the whole place, and he was super nice to us.
We went down there, My wife and I went down
to Stage Coach about fifteen years ago or so. And man,
that guy bill Fold, who's a friend of Nil Savadra's,
and Neil hooked me up with him, and that bill
Fold treated me and my wife. He had one hundred
thousand people there and treated me and my wife like

(33:45):
we were the only two people there. He got us,
he got a golf cart and drove us around and
spent five hours with us, you know, putting out fires
and making decisions and you know, there's a million things
you got to do when you run and av like that.
Oh yeah, for sure, ma'am. He treated us like we're
the only two people in the world. That is I'll
never forget that, that Bill Fold. That is an outstanding guy.

Speaker 2 (34:09):
All right.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
Walmart and the wake up call AI and how you
can prepare this is a big deal.

Speaker 2 (34:15):
Everyone's going to be affected by AI every day.

Speaker 15 (34:18):
This is jarring coming from the head of America's largest
private employer. Walmart's CEO says that this coming artificial intelligence
revolution will affect every job on the planet and eliminate
many in the process.

Speaker 2 (34:31):
This is a wake up call. You have got to
somehow figure out how to get a job that AI
can't take away from you.

Speaker 15 (34:40):
Though Walmart does expect to keep the size of its
global workforce steady over the next three years at just
over two million employees. The nature of the jobs is
going to change, according to the CEO, and you've probably
had a taste of some of the change coming on
the consumer side. You talk with AI chatbots online, you
use AI search. You might not even even realize this,

(35:00):
but it's happening. And the changes are also happening behind
the scenes as well, and Walmart is far from alone.
The CEO of Ford recently predicted that AI would replace
half of all white collar workers in the US. According
to a World Economic Forum survey of one thousand large companies,
AI is expected to create one hundred and seventy million

(35:21):
jobs across the globe over the next five years.

Speaker 2 (35:23):
Okay, oh, so that's great. Did you hear that.

Speaker 15 (35:26):
AI is expected to create one hundred and seventy million
jobs across the globe over the next five years.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
But kids, if you're in college, you've got to be
aware that when you get out of college, you have
got to be in a position where AI can cannot
replace you. And you got to keep that mind while
you're studying in college so you don't come out of
college and can't find a.

Speaker 15 (35:44):
Job, offsetting an estimated ninety two million jobs lost. We
have already seen some of that data from earlier this
year that suggested job listings for AI specific roles more
than doubled between twenty twenty three to twenty twenty four.
I see these headlines and talk to companies every day.
It is scary, it's nerve wracking. But you can get
ahead of this by starting to learn some of it yourself,

(36:07):
becoming comfortable.

Speaker 1 (36:09):
Yes, I've always said that you have got to teach
yourself about AI, everything about AI. You've got to be
get involved or else this train is going to pass
you by and it's and you're not going to get
and they're not going to turn around and pick you up.
You've got to get into AI. As much as you
want to ignore it, as much as you think you
know it's impossible to figure out, that's not the way,

(36:30):
that's not the way to go.

Speaker 2 (36:31):
You've got to somehow get involved with at.

Speaker 15 (36:33):
Least Chat, GPT and Google and all of these AI
search engines.

Speaker 2 (36:37):
Instead of running from it, run toward it. That's right,
that's right, that's a great saying.

Speaker 15 (36:41):
Engines instead of running from it, run toward it.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
You have to you have to.

Speaker 15 (36:45):
Yeah, you have to adopt it. And a lot of
people are doing that too.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
Yeah. Got to get out there and do that, all right.

Speaker 1 (36:50):
We are live Dodgers tomorrow six pm at Dodger Stadium.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
If you get your tickets, get out there early.

Speaker 1 (36:56):
Is gonna be a lot of traffic for the first
UH Dodger playoff game against this Sinati breatz. It's Conway
Show Live on KFI AM six forty.

Speaker 9 (37:04):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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