Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's caf I Am six forty and you're listening to
the Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Can if I am.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Six four It's Conway Show in two to one out
at Dodgers Stadium, Toronto. Two Dodgers one and I think
the fourth inning, maybe the fifth looks like the fourth.
They're in a commercial break. Katerina's Club. We've been doing
this for I don't know, fourteen years or so, raising
(00:31):
money for Bruno Serrato and his charity, Katerina's Club to
help feed kids who are going to bed hungry. That
should never happen in this country. And Bruno does an
unbelievable job serving I don't I think it's probably two
million meals or more by now makes fresh pasta and
(00:51):
sauce every night for these kids. I can't imagine anybody
in southern California that has done more for these kids
than this man. And he was just featured on Channel
two News over there at cbsk Cow. Let's find out
what's going on with Bruno Serrato.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
Food banks and nonprofits are becoming a lifeline for struggling families,
and as millions of Californians are bracing to lose access
to their EBT SNAP benefits.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
I heard a stat today that EBT and SNAP and
food stamps that there is one out of every eight
people in this country relies on food stamps or some
kind of public assistance. That's forty five million people. Forty
five million people in the United States rely on these
(01:39):
programs for all their food, or at least a good
portion of their food.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
That's incredible.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
One local organization is asking for help to help others.
Chef Bruno Serrato is the owner of the White House
and also runs Katarina Club that's a nonprofit that feeds children.
Serato says they've been feeling the demand in recent days
and he believes it's a direct ripple effect of families
losing federal food assistance.
Speaker 4 (02:04):
He says they feed.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
Children Monday through Friday throughout La and Orange Counties at
more than one hundred and thirty locations.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
Wow, one hundred and thirty locations. Holy smokes, like government
shutting down.
Speaker 5 (02:15):
We don't know that every day there's more people in
the Strito doesn't have the money for food, and they
know that Bruno feeding children, that feeding family. That means
they caught me up, then you get some food for us.
And I'm a guy who always say yes for people
who's hungry. Like my motto is no child sugule.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
To bed hungry.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
Serato says demand has spiked, the nonprofit is rushing.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
To fill them.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
Oh I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Serato says demand has spiked. The nonprofit is rushing to
fill that demand and currently feeds five thousand hungry children
every night.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Wow, five thousand meals a night. There are a lot
of people that might lose their benefits over the next
couple of days or next week or so. There's another
organization in Burbank that does a sensational job. It's called
b TECH Burbank Temporary Aid Center, and Barbara Howell is
the chief executive officer. Edward Stapleton runs the pantry and
(03:15):
the facilities, and they do an outstanding.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
Job at b TECH.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
So if you live in Burbank and you've got some
extra food in the cabinet, or you want to buzz
over to your grocery store or Walmart or Target, they're
looking right now. They need hearty soup. I was told today,
chunky hardy soup like that Progresso soup or Campbell's chunky
soup denty moore, Yeah, maybe a little denty moore. Yeah,
(03:44):
dig dong with ed denty moore. So if whatever the
charity is, if you feel charitable, this is really.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
The time people could use it.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
We're coming up on the holidays, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and there's
a lot of people. There's forty five million people who
rely on food stamps or some kind of aid.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Forty five million people.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
You know, I did the quick math here today and
this is going to make you probably pissed like it
did me. But the high speed rail from LA to
San Francisco is about one hundred and thirty billion. We
had thirty billion stolen from us during COVID from the
Unemployment Department. We have twenty five billion dollars that's just missing.
(04:30):
God only knows where that is. So we're close to
two hundred billion dollars. Two hundred billion dollars that's been
wasted in the state of California because that high speed
rail is a waste of money.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
A waste of money.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Okay, if they took that two hundred billion dollars and
they gave a check to every man, woman and child
that lives in California, every single human that lives in California.
If the State of California just gave you a check
instead of high speed rail, instead of the homeless money
that's missing, instead of thirty billion dollars stolen from the
(05:10):
Unemployment Department, every single human being that's alive right now
in the state of California, you would have gotten a
check for five thousand dollars. Family of four, twenty grand,
family of ten, fifty grand, fifty thousand dollars, You your husband,
(05:31):
or you and your wife.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
And I don't know, eight kids.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
There are people out there like that, fifty thousand dollars.
But if it's just you and your wife, or just
you and your partner, you and your bed partner, you
and your lover, you know, maybe it's a husband a wife,
it's two wives, two husbands, undeclared wife and a husband,
an undeclared husband and a wife a thropple. I don't
(05:56):
know what you got going. Whatever you got going, that's
ten thousand dollars per couple. They could have been just
given to you instead of these stupid projects. And five
thousand dollars goes a long way when you're homeless, long
long way, all right, Dodger Stadium update. Dodgers one Toronto two,
(06:16):
two to one Toronto. And we're in the top of
the fourth inning, top of the fourth inning at Dodger Stadium.
And this game is about an hour old and we've
already blown through four innings. So this game is looking
like two and a half hours last game last night,
six hours and forty minutes, six hours and forty minutes,
(06:41):
six to forty great number. And we'll say Shoe Aotani
is still pitching for the Dodgers. A full stadium. If
the Dodgers come back and win this game, Toronto will
have to beat the Dodgers three straight games, three straight.
Very difficult to do with this lineup. So so we'll
see Toronto two Dodgers one at Dodgers Stadium. It's time
(07:07):
for Dodger baseball, all right. We'll keep an eye on
the game for you so you don't have to. We'll
give you scores all night long. KFI AM's like four,
it's Conway Show. We're keep an eye on the Dodger game.
It's still two to one Toronto at Dodgers Stadium. Bottom
of the fourth inning, two outs, man on first for
the Dodgers.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
It looks like a full house out there.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
Again, six fifty six thousand people, almost all of them
dressed up in Dodger blue or Dodger jersey. And you
can't really even tell. Even if somebody is wearing a
Toronto hat or Toronto jersey, they're also blue. So everybody
out there is dressed in blue. And I imagine there
are a lot of people, you know, a lot of
(07:50):
money in Toronto. Imagine a lot of people came down
from Toronto to see these three games. And the tickets
are very expensive out Tany's pitching tonight. I think the
cheapest ticket was for seven hundred dollars for like the worst,
you know, seat in the house. And the inning is over,
So go to the fifth two to one Toronto, top
(08:11):
of the fifth inning, and what a sunset in Los Angeles. Man,
These people that come out from Toronto, they must not
want to go back. They come out to LA. The
stadium looks immaculate, beautiful. If they're not staying downtown, if
they're staying in you know, somewhere in the vicinity, they're
probably at a beautiful hotel and think that LA.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Is just the greatest place in the world.
Speaker 6 (08:34):
How cold do you think it is right now in Toronto?
Speaker 2 (08:38):
Year that's great? How north it is?
Speaker 1 (08:41):
Yeah, I would say Toronto right now is forty five degrees.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
That would be my guess. Nope, what is it?
Speaker 6 (08:48):
No, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (08:49):
That's a note for me. Let's see what it is here.
Let's see a.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
Tierronto temp right now. All right, the temperature in Toronto
right now forty nine degrees, forty nine degrees and it
is going to be partly sunny. Forty three is the low,
and then on Thursday and Friday forty three, forty two,
(09:16):
forty one. On Saturday thirty nine degrees. Next Tuesday, fifty
three is the high. Thirty nine is the low. So
you're absolutely right.
Speaker 6 (09:26):
Anybody visiting here for the games from Toronto's probably no
chance they want to leave.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
Ye, especially now this week where it's ninety out. You know,
if they have the money, they're they're coming out.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
You know, they say there's.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
One hundred thousand people that move to La every Rose
Bowl every New Year's You know, they're up to the
rast and snow. They've got the money and they like
warmer weather. Older people like warm weather. If if it
was up to the old people, there would be much
more global warming.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
They love that.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
If you're ever going to see your you know, grandparents
or your mom and dad in a in a nursing
home or retirement home, it's always one hundred and five
degrees in their room.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
They love it.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
My grandmother was in a retirement home slash nursing home
for last, I don't know, a year of her life,
and you walked in it was it literally was ninety
five degrees in her room, and the whole place smelled
like vitamin farts. Everybody's on way too many vitamins and
everybody's farting and it smells like one big vitamin fart.
(10:29):
And they have this cat, and they have another one
up in Washington as well.
Speaker 2 (10:35):
Maybe this is a thing.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
But in this retirement home they had a cat and
it was a wild cat, but they fed it and became,
you know, domesticated, and it lived in the retirement home
and the cat would go from room to room to
visit people. And if the cat stayed in your room,
you were next. That cat was one hundred percent right.
(10:58):
If that cat stayed in your room and jumped on
the bed and warmed up to you, you had hours
and then so long, so nobody want that cat.
Speaker 6 (11:08):
It was the the movie Doctor Sleep, which was a
it was a sequel, but it featured exactly that.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Oh is that right? What was the name of the
movie Doctor Sleep? Oh that's great. I got to check
that out. Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
Look, these dogs and cats, they do have a sixth sense,
you know that we don't have. They know when there's
trouble like for like, for instance, we have Ernie was
one of my favorite dogs of all time. We had
to put him down about a year year and a
half ago, and but he was one of the dumbest
dogs in the world, just that, one of the dumbest
(11:45):
animals ever. Bid everybody angry as hell, you know, mean
to our other dog, just a really sour disposition. Yet
every single night at ninety five nine fifty, he would
start barking and go to the front door and wait
(12:06):
for me to come home. Every single night, ten minutes
before I got home, he would go to that door
and sit at that door waiting for me to get home.
Every night, and Jen knew when I was coming home
because you would hear the dog scratching at the door
or sitting at the door or barking at the door.
I mean, how did that dog know that? That dog
can't tell time, but he knew it. He knew it,
(12:29):
and they do. They have a wild you know sense
that we don't have. And Angel talks about all the time,
you know, what, dog's going crazy. I always thought a
great app would be called like crazy Dog, and you
know you're on the app, that's right, And if your
dog goes crazy, you press the crazy button. And enough
people do it, they know there's a big earthquake coming.
(12:50):
You know, if like all of a sudden, five thousand
people hit that button because their dog's acting crazy, hold on,
that's the best alert ever because that'll give you a
couple hours before it actually happens.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
But that's fantastic. Yeah, but dogs do that. I'm sure
all have does that as well.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
You know, you're a dog when you know before there's
you know, somebody comes to the door before there's an earthquake,
they sense it.
Speaker 7 (13:11):
Oh, absolutely, And so does my bird. My bird is
even more sensitive I think than the dog.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
Is Is that right?
Speaker 7 (13:19):
Yes, yes, it's like he'll fly off the cage and
it's usually because there's a an earthquake someplace close by.
And they pick up on the waves that travel through
the ground that we may not even feel.
Speaker 2 (13:33):
Yeah, that is it is unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
Well, you remember that tidal wave, that tsunami that hit
Southeast Asia over Christmas. I think it was two thousand
and four, but they killed two hundred and fifty or
two hundred and sixty thousand people. It literally a day
or day and a half before that tsunami hit. All
(13:56):
the animals ran for the hills, and people didn't understand
what was going going on.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Dogs, cats, you.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Know, zebras, cows, foxes, whatever, coyotes all ran for the
hills and people are like, wall, what's going on?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Why are all the animals running for the hills.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
They would literally run out of the city and run
for the hills, and then a day later it gets
wiped out by a tsunami. All right, speaking of animals,
we come back. We've got a rat problem in southern California.
We'll tell you where it is when we come back.
We'll keep you in suspense over the commercial break. I
know you're probably saying, oh, that's easy, it's downtown La.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
Well maybe not, maybe not, maybe not.
Speaker 6 (14:37):
By the way, real quick, that Doctor Sleep movie it's
a sequel to The Shining. Actually, so was Stephen King written,
and yeah, it's the whole premises that there's a cat
named Israel in folks home that goes into their rooms
at night and as soon as they yeah, they indicate that,
oh yeah, they're gone.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
Yeah, that's funny because it happened to my grandmother's retirement home.
And my wife's great great grandmother also had a cat
up in Washington, and I don't know if that cat
would do the same thing, but they know that it's
almost over, and they would sit in a room and
try to comfort, you know, the person where they left.
(15:12):
Crazy man, Great Animals, Man, Great Animals. All right, Real
Live on KFI AM six forty.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
KFI AM and six forty. It's Convoy Show. Hey, we
just did a look ahead where you know, we tell
you what's going to be on the show tomorrow. I
found a great article. If you have a high end apartment,
right you're spending four or five, six, seven thousand dollars
a month in your apartment building. There's something going on
in your apartment building that's also going on in really
(15:45):
low end Did this guy just sit home run? Oh
from last night? They got to stop doing that. They
got to stop showing highlights during a game from last
night and not put a disclaimer on it that this
was from last night, not tonight. All right, so it's
still two to one Toronto. Anyway, getting back to this,
if you have a high end apartment, you're spending seven
(16:08):
eight thousand dollars a month. There's something going on in
your apartment building that's also going on in low end
apartment buildings. And I'll tell you what tomorrow what it is.
We're still working on it. Belly is trying to get
another article to confirm it, and she's at the apartment
desk right now.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
You're still working on that bellio. Oh yes, I love it. Okay, excellent,
all right.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
Downtown Los Angeles is if you if you guess that's
where all the rats are. Ah, you're right, You're right,
Downtown LA. Millions of rats.
Speaker 8 (16:39):
Down laps the place.
Speaker 5 (16:43):
That's running around like.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
O the town residents in the city of Los Angeles.
I still get freaked out. You know, have a lot
to say about rodents roam in the city. I mean
I've only seen a couple of rats here and there.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
No rats.
Speaker 9 (16:56):
I think it's mostly roaches more than rats.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
Not a brag, not a real big brag. It's like,
oh no, it's not a rap problem. It's just a
roach problem.
Speaker 4 (17:05):
Some we're not surprised to hear that. According to yelp,
la is America's TEMpl root and hontspot. Do you hear
that La is America's tembl route and hontspot on top
ont la is America's tel rout and hantspot.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
Marka's top or top hotspot for rodents. So dang dong
with these rodents, rats the size of ponies.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
Downtown with boy Yelp searches for road and services than
any other city.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
I grew up in la and I will say that
there is a rat problem out here downtown.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
That's whe they're at.
Speaker 4 (17:35):
They're like munants.
Speaker 6 (17:36):
They're like cat.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Size, that's right. They are the size of small little
Shutland ponies.
Speaker 4 (17:42):
Unans, they're like cat size. Others were convinced the Empire
State would take that title. I've been to New York
and they're everywhere.
Speaker 10 (17:50):
I don't know why we're reviewed that much when New
York literally they live and breathe there.
Speaker 2 (17:56):
Yeah, but you know, Home Depot is smart. Lowe's is
smart too.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
They keep a couple of ailed cats around and maybe
you've seen them in the plant department at Home Deep
oh yeah, or a yeah, at Loew's or at Home Depot.
Speaker 6 (18:09):
I'm going to go visit them.
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Yeah, there's three.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
Of them, I know what, the one in Burbank, the
Home Depot, and then there's two of them at Low's
and they're somewhat friendly.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
You know, you can pet them.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
I don't know their names, but they're two at the
Duett Center in Burbank as well. Just wild cats that
walk around all night and they keep all the rats
out of there.
Speaker 9 (18:29):
Doesn't Disneyland do the same thing with cats? I believe
so I know that. Yeah, I heard the story about
the cats of Disneyland.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
And they keep the mice away.
Speaker 9 (18:38):
Yeah, and I'm getting the thumbs up from Nicky So
apparently the story spread to Australia.
Speaker 2 (18:42):
Wow, yeah, or she wrote the story here.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
You think they want to keep some of the mice
at Disneyland, like maybe Mickey here maybe maybe maybe maybe.
But anyway, downtown Los Angeles filled with rats.
Speaker 4 (18:56):
But it's not just rats around the city streets. Theyw
the pipes and that's how they get in Enrica. Gonzalez,
who owns E G, Wrote It and Smoke Testing, is
a pest control technician who services the LA area. He
says as cooler weather rolls in, rats, mice and other
creatures will look for warmer places like your own home
because the clime is changing right now is more winter,
(19:17):
so they look for shelter. According to yelp, demand for
pest control professionals have surged nationally with twenty one percent
year over year increase in rode in searches on yelp.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
That's big.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
Twenty percent increase in one year is huge. So what
about Irvine, Bellio? Do you have rats in Irvine? Are
they loud or they toss them out?
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Plenty of them over the planet.
Speaker 4 (19:39):
So what can you do to prevent these pesky critters
from entering? Go outside your property, look for any holes
a quarter or at least if your piggy fits in there,
just get it sealed because these creatures will look for
shelter and they'll eventually get in. It's Anya with a
second biggest route problem in America. According to that yelp
Revere report is not New York by the way, It's
actually San Francisco. The third is New York. So it
(20:01):
looks like alike, Califary residents will need to call those
past control technicians to really solve those rat problems. Creat
life in downtown Los Angeles to night, Rachel Evor.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Gone all right, Rache Leragne with the rat problem. Not
a big mystery, not a big surprise that there are
rats in downtown Los Angeles. Still out at Dodgers Stadium, Shoeotani,
still pitching for your Los Angeles Dodgers. Toronto two Dodgers won.
Dodgers had two games to one after that unbelievable finish
(20:33):
last night with Freddie Freeman hitting a home run in
the bottom of the eighteenth inning. They played two full
games last night at Dodgers Stadium. If the Dodgers do
come back and win this game, which is entirely possible,
Toronto will have to win all three of the remaining games,
and one of them will be in La. So if
(20:54):
the Dodgers win tonight, they can wrap it up tomorrow
at home. It's a pretty big feat to come back
tonight and then to win tomorrow. But if it's possible.
If they do, they will win at home. I think
for the first time in decades decades. All right, we'll
keep an eye on the Dodger game for it. It's
Conway Show. We're live on KFI six forty KFI AM six.
(21:18):
It is the Conway Show, keeping an eye on the
Dodger game. The Dodgers are down two to one in
the sixth inning, so they've got to turn this around
pretty quickly. If the Dodgers win this game, they are
one away from repeat repeating in the World Series. Woo wait,
(21:41):
all right, we'll have scores for you all night, all
night long. There was a scaring Burbank. My wife told
me about this this afternoon. She said, there's a hand
gridade found at a recycling center. I'm like, oh, that's
a pretty big news. I'm sure they're handling that getting
everybody evacuated. Turns out it was a DoD I believe,
(22:03):
but still it's a wake up call. It's a wake
up call, and anytime you see something like that, everybody scatters.
Speaker 8 (22:10):
This morning, the discovery of a hand grenade led to
the evacuation of Burbank recycling center. Police responded around seven
thirty this morning, after an employee found the hand grenade
on the sorting conveyor belt. The La County Sheriff's Department
explosives team also responded. People were asked to avoid the area.
Around nine thirty, Burbank Police determined the device did not
contain any explosive material. Everything was reopened shortly after.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Excellent, excellent, excellent, all right, our crime report today. A
woman attacked in broad daylight walking in her neighborhood, and
we go to Hollywood for some of these details.
Speaker 11 (22:44):
We talked with that woman earlier today and she's still
healing from the attack.
Speaker 4 (22:48):
She says.
Speaker 11 (22:49):
The person who attacked her is still on the loose,
and she's now worried to just be out in her
own neighborhood.
Speaker 4 (22:58):
This video was taken just minutes after.
Speaker 11 (23:00):
Candy ten Series says she was attacked by a random
stranger in the middle of the day while walking on
Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood.
Speaker 10 (23:08):
I was shocked. I was shocked. Like Lycia is shocked
and terrifying.
Speaker 11 (23:12):
She tells us the man was holding shoes and a
plastic bag, and that's what she says he swung to
hit her with.
Speaker 10 (23:19):
There was something inside like very heavy.
Speaker 11 (23:21):
It was near the corner of Sunset and Bronson just
before four pm.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
Last Okay, Sunset and Bronson very popular area and another
reason not to take out of towners to Hollywood Boulevard.
When I was growing up in the San Fernanda Valley
and we had uncles, aunts, cousins, grandparents come out, they
always want they always want to see Hollywood Boulevard. Hey,
let's go to Hollywood Boulevard. And we were more than
happy to take them to Hollywood Bulevard walk around for
(23:46):
a couple hours.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
They enjoyed that.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
Now somebody wants to see Hollywood Boulevard, they're on their own.
You don't take them there. You don't drop them off.
If they want to run a car, they can go
see it on their own. But don't drop out of
towners on Hollywood Boulevard. They it is not safe, it's
not clean. There's too many crazy people around, and they
you're risking their lives. I don't know anybody that when
(24:12):
they have out of towner's come in nowadays, they drop
them off at Hollywood Bulevard. We used to do it
all the time, just drop them off, pick them up,
four or five, six, hours later, not anymore.
Speaker 11 (24:21):
It was near the corner of Sunset and Bronson, just
before four pm last Wednesday that Tenseiri says. The incident
happened not far from where she lives. The blow left
her with a large cut above her eye, as well
as other cuts and a badly bruised lip.
Speaker 10 (24:34):
This thing never happened to me in my life. I
never got an attack before.
Speaker 11 (24:39):
Surveillance video from a nearby business shows Tenseiri walking down
the sidewalk just moments before the attack happened. She says
she'd never seen the man before in her life. She
filed the police report while at the hospital being treated
for her injuries, but investigators say they haven't yet identified
a suspect in the case.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
Yeah, it's gonna be tough, you know. There's so many crazies.
A guy with used in a bag swinging and hitting people.
That's half the people who live in Hollywood.
Speaker 10 (25:04):
They even asked me if I can remember if they
arrested him. Absolutely, I remember, I could remember him.
Speaker 3 (25:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (25:14):
Ken Siri is a working model and says the attack
not only affected her ability to book jobs, but has
impacted her sense of safety and security.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
Oh this is horrible. Horrible. They're attacking the models in Hollywood.
That's not good.
Speaker 11 (25:27):
She said she wants to share her story in hopes
of warning others to always be on alert.
Speaker 10 (25:32):
Since this happened, I was, I'm scared to be out,
to be honest, I'm still processing out feeling and stuff.
And I completely lost confident yeah walking around.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Plus she's a model. He can't have those big gashes
above your eye or a fat lip because it's some
homeless idiot attacks you.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
This is a big deal.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
And we did reach out to LAPD.
Speaker 11 (25:57):
They say they're still investigating this case and ask any
one who might have any information about what happened last
Wednesday in Hollywood around four pm to please contact them.
That's the latest from Hollywood. Lind's opinion at KTLEE five News.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
What an absolute nightmare, right, You're not You're not. You
don't feel safe anymore anywhere in LA. And it's a
numbers game. They can't get all of us by They
got this woman, you know, just minding your own business
and Sunset and Bronze a very popular, well traveled area
and they, you know, come out of nowhere. You've got
(26:30):
to be very careful. You can't be on your cell
phone anymore. I see a lot of people walking down
you know, Hollywood Boulevard or Sunset or Lebrea, and they're
on their cell phone. Man, you are a sitting duck
if you're on your cell phone walking around Hollywood, because
they will attack you. And you know this woman learned
the hard way. But you cannot be on your cell phone.
(26:53):
You have got to have your cell phone in your
pocket or in your purse, and you have got to
keep your head on a swivel and make sure that
you know your surroundings because you could get wiped out.
All right, the sixth, the bottom of the sixth inning
is over. The Dodgers are losing two to one at
the end of the sixth, so you got three more
(27:14):
at bats potentially seventh, eight to ninth, bottom, the seventh, bottom,
the eighth by the ninth and then if Toronto holds
onto this lead, the series is tied two games to
two and the next game will be Tomorrow night at
Dodgers Stadium, start time five oh eight, and then a
day off and then Friday and Saturday in Toronto. If this,
(27:38):
if this goes game seven, man, will that be an
unbelievable number of people watching this watching this series, I
think it's already well well watched. I think they're getting
a lot of great numbers back. But if this goes
to Game seven in Toronto, oh boy, what series?
Speaker 2 (27:56):
All right?
Speaker 1 (27:57):
I keep your fingers crossed. Dodgers have three more chances
to try to get at least one run, and I'm
sure that Andy Reesmeyer will be taken over here in
about five minutes or so. He'll have results and also
updates all night long from Dodger Stadium.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
Also, I'd like to thank Steve and Laurie. Andy brought
this by.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Steve and Laurie own a horse named Madge m Age
and that is what we used to call my grandmother
m A g I Maggie. But this is close m Agi.
And I think that horse won the twenty three twenty
twenty three Kentucky Derby and it paid a lot of money.
I remember that horse paid I don't know, thirty two
dollars to win, and they listened to the show. So
(28:45):
Steve and Laurie they must have some money. Anytime you
own a horse that wins the Kentucky Derby, you are loaded.
Costs a lot of money to get a horse in
shape and to you know, to pay the entrance fees
in to the Kentucky Derby. But if you do win
the Kentucky Derby, your paycheck as the owner, you get
(29:06):
fifty five percent of the purse. So that's probably one million,
eight hundred and fifty or sixty thousand dollars one point
eight million dollars in change for one raise. But I
do remember watching that race. Then they gave Andy a
button to give to me. It say Kentucky Derby one
forty nine, which is twenty I think it was twenty
twenty three, and it won the Kentucky Derby. And that's
(29:29):
really cool. That's a cool deal. Yeah, twenty twenty three
Kentucky Derby. I will wear this proudly and remember my grandparents.
So Steve and Laurie, if you're listening, thanks for the
button and I will wear it proudly. See it Delmark
for Breeders Cup. All right, Andy Reesemeyer next right here
on KFI AM six forty Conway show on demand on
(29:50):
the iHeartRadio app. Now you can always hear us live
on KFI AM six forty four to seven pm Monday
through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app,