Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to the
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app KFI AM
six forty.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
It's Conway Show. Mark Thompson's Yes.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Thanks everybody, well please, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, one
come on please, I'm oh man, buddy.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
I don't I feel like i'm you know, like you're
an ex street walker and I don't want to talk
to you about the hooker business. But you are an
ex weatherman, yes, and so I'd like to ask you
about what's going on today.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
I have absolutely no idea. Okay, looked at anything? Okay,
all right, so you could.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Tell me that it was one hundred and three on
Saturday in the valley, it's now sixty five in Burbank.
What's the swings? Well, we didn't used to have those swings.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
No, we did, we did, we did, Yes, But this
is a recent scene. I don't remember any of them
as a child. This is this.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Is going from one hundred and three to sixty three.
Speaker 3 (00:55):
When I was a weather guy on every night, I
used to hear this all the time. We've never had
a weather pattern like this, never had wins like this. Right,
I've lived in this area thirty five years, you've never
had on that, And I go back to the year
prior and their wins were just as bad.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
I will tell you that we've never had wins like
January seventh in southern California.
Speaker 2 (01:10):
I think that that is true. Yeah, I think that.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
One hundred percent. Yeah yah yeah, man. I lived through
some windstorms, but nothing like I'd agree with.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
That at sea level.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
I mean, you know, you'd get gus like that in
the and you get sustained wins even in the hut,
not for three two days, no exactly, and it's not
at sea level.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
You just don't get it. Yeah, that is true.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
And if you had any kind of damage to your property,
you could not complain publicly or to your friends or
family or anything, because everybody lost their home. Oh absolutely,
Like if you had a tree go down, you can go. Ah,
you're not gonna believe this. Yeah yeah, I got lost. The
fight is and I think a tomato plant you can't
do that. Sure, you know you got to quiet, you know,
you got to be quiet because these people are really damaged.
(01:48):
So Adam Carol is coming on at five point thirty,
you know, Adam Corolla, right, I love Adam Carolla, and
he has a series that he's doing where he goes
out and he talks to the guys that are are
in charge of cleaning up some of these sites in
Malibu and Pacific Palisades and Altadena, and it's great.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
It's great.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
He's the only guy in Hollywood that can go out
and it's funny and can talk to these guys about construction.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
And you know what he's doing and knows the stuff,
and he's the only guy in Hollywood could sell a
show like that.
Speaker 2 (02:17):
I mean, I'm trying the right guy doing it. So
where can I see that show?
Speaker 1 (02:20):
You got to go to Adam Kroller's podcast.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
I see.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
And then the videos are there a series of like
seven of them, and I've watched every one of them.
There's a new one today a guy named Glenn who
is clearing out three lots in Malibu or somewhere around there.
And I just sit there and watched it for like
twenty minutes. I was laughing, and my wife it was
early in the morning's like six o'clock in the morning,
and I was laughing, and you know when you laugh,
(02:44):
you shake the bed. And my wife's like, hey, hey,
I'm trying to sleep, and they're like, well, you know what,
it's sort of bordering on nuttiness to condemn somebody for laughing.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
But okay, I'll give you that. I'll give you that.
Yeah right. There was nowhere else in the house to
watch the video.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
I could have gotten up, but I was. It was
nice to sit in bed and just watch the ideas.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
And there was no place. Oh she could sleep, she
got it.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Could have moved on, yeah, I could have moved on
into it. We have another we have a like a
downstairs office slash room. We could have set up a
blow up mattress.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Down watching videos right now, go downstairs.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
Has anyone ever gotten more than eight straight minutes of
sleep on a blow up mattress? It's you're right, it's
atom might. It's like the cheap man's waterbed. Remember waterbeds?
Speaker 2 (03:27):
So you old?
Speaker 1 (03:28):
Yeah, yeah, My buddy Matt McDaniel and his brothers, Dave
and Pete, they all had waterbed.
Speaker 3 (03:33):
I feel like you're the kind of guy who would
have worked at a waterbed store.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
Is that not right?
Speaker 1 (03:37):
I take that as a compliment. I was not the
waterbed guy you.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
Would have done well, don't get me wrong. I was
the Futon guy.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
Okay, but I in a water in a waterbed store,
and a guy who owns a waterbed his whole bedroom
smells like an indoor pool.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
As you still have to chlorinate it.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
You still got to you know, make sure it's you know,
if there's any pinholes, you got to you know, repair
those pretty quickly. You know, I know, people sleeping on
water and it was couples.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
Oh yeah, you know.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
I mean so every time you sneeze, it's a tsunami.
Speaker 3 (04:16):
Well, you also that we're going to have the sort
of this new, wild, intimate experience on these beds in
the rear, you know, just because it's a new surface.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
I don't know, well, you know, the old waterbeds.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
I don't want to make this whole segment about waterbeds,
but I'm sure Crozier's had some experience in selling them
or you know, stealing them or something.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Take that as a couple of that.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
But in the old water beds, it was just one big,
huge envelope and you filled it up and that was it. Well,
they discovered that that wasn't good because the waves kept
going on forever. If you literally, if you if you
moved your elbow to be waves for twenty minutes, back
and forth, back and forth. So then they put these
dividers in there, much like an oil tank, like these
(04:54):
trucks that carry gasoline, they're not just one big tank.
They're dividers in there so that doesn't slash around and
tip the truck over and burn people alive. So they
started putting these dividers into the water beds, and then
that wasn't enough, so they put in compartments that were
separate from each other. And then all of a sudden
they got to, well, why don't we add stainless deal
(05:14):
springs in there as well, Like, well, we're back to
a mattress, you know what.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
We should take the water out and then put that
right in place. Right, Yeah, some insulation, all right. I
remember when they had the baffling because of what you're
talking about, the wave effect, So they put in this
like baffling. It was just these I mean octagonal kind
of things that went in there to kind.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
Of, oh yeah, the water from slashing around. So you're right.
Speaker 3 (05:41):
There were all these kind of discoveries they were making
and improvements all along the way.
Speaker 1 (05:45):
And then some guys got into putting you know, you can,
like it wasn't led, but there was some kind of
light that was encased in waterproofing. You'd throw that in there.
That's cool, that's cool. I don't know how much more
you got to impress her, you know, not only having
a waterbed but lighting it, you know, putting it, lighting
it up like Universal studios.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Yeah, by the time you've gotten there, you probably don't
need to do all the hard pedaling that you know,
maybe the bike rides over by that.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
But I will tell you this, all my.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Friends who had waterbeds, huge studs, oh, huge SUTs. I
don't know which came first, the waterbed or the studley.
Speaker 3 (06:21):
I'd say the studliness. Those guys are all gonna do
well anyway. They don't need the waterbed.
Speaker 5 (06:26):
You know.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
It's like, I don't know which came first. But all
my friends who made millions and millions of dollars, they're
all super super horny guys, and I don't know what
came first, the money or the horniness. I think the hornings.
I think that drive not only sexually and personally, but
also drive you know, converts to business, you know, I mean, yeah,
(06:47):
that aggressive yeah, that aggressive drive to get chicks and
to get money. That's a drive that I don't have.
Speaker 3 (06:55):
Well, I always hear about that, you know, the addictions.
You heard the Tiger Woods had a sex addiction. In
a lot of the rockers, like Steven Tyler, such addition,
et cetera. I'm thinking they're just guys who have a
lot of money and are famous, and so they just
have a lot more opportunity than the rest of us.
I don't think there's anything special about this addiction.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
Maybe I'm wrong.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
I know there's a huge in fact, could act Adam,
you know, and doctor Drew, his pal, Doctor Drew talks
about the fact that there is a legit sex adiction.
So maybe so, But it just seems to me it's
just guys with a lot of opportunity.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
Doctor Drew is great.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Doctor Drew came in and he used to come out
with us a kali sex and he would commit. He
always say, I'm gonna get you one day. You're gonna
be in my facility one day.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
I know, I know it.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
And I thought, okay, that's a compliment to me that
I've stayed out of those facilities, those rehab places for
as well as I have.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
But I and then I stopped.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
I said, hey, buddy, aren't you working nineteen to twenty
hours a day? And he said yeah. I said, isn't
that kind of an addiction? Oh, I never thought about it.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
Very well, played very well. He was addicted to work. Yeah,
he would.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
I mean he would literally get off of his show
with that, Adam, was it all love line?
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Yeah, love line?
Speaker 1 (08:02):
And he would literally get home at midnight and be
asleep by ten after twelve.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
Sure, he's one of those guys.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Yeah, you know, and then he get up at five
in the morning and do it all over again.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
I think he had triplets.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
So he had three sons.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
I believe they were triplets, and so that'll keep you busy.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
Yeah, and the guy looks great, I know, I know,
he's a good looking dude.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
All Right, we got to take a break.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Adam Krall is coming on at five thirty, and I
think Doctor Shrump is coming on with us as well.
Is that right, Doctor Crupp?
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Sorry?
Speaker 1 (08:30):
Shrump is horse racing. Trump is the space guy, Doctor
Irwin crup Sorry, doctor, if you're listening, you know I'm old.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
I'm getting old.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Doctor Irwin Crupp is coming on the ninetieth anniversary of
the LA observatory will be.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
Oh, that's so cool, and he is great. I just
love you.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
We've had him on the show a few times before.
I mean he's just always always delivered.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Yeah, he's terrific.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
So the Grifflet Observatory turns ninety tomorrow or today tomorrow tomorrow? Wow,
ninety years old? Man, oh man, nobody's around to I
remember that. I imagine you'd have to be ten. You know,
now you're one hundred. You don't remember that. You remember
anything now, So he'll talk about that. I guess there's
some festivities going on at the Observatory.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
All right, we're live on KFI. Adam Crahll is coming
on at five thirty.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Oh, work out his series, and he's going to be
in Bellflower. That's what we're promoted on May twenty fourth.
He's going to be in Bellflower doing a big concert.
So go out and look at that. And doctor Krupp
come on, Erwin Krop.
Speaker 6 (09:32):
Loving it, Edwin Sorry, sorry god, wow, Erwin Shrup You
are really I booted both of his names.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
You know what, what's he gonna do? Stop coming on.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
Open with an apology.
Speaker 1 (09:56):
They're banging on him on all these other stations.
Speaker 2 (09:58):
And we've coming out irving crup. Yeah, we're gonna get
your name right. But we figured out you don't really.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
Have a lot of options when it comes to, you know,
doing media, so we kind of got screw it.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
We'll just say whatever we want. We got Corolla's name right.
It's a star. The guy from the interments are yeah,
you've got he's got options, but you don't.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
It's so rude. It's incredibly rude. I really and I
love the guy. Yeah, I absolutely love that man.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Amazing.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
He's one of my favorite guess if I would put
him top three guests of all time?
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Sure on the show.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Yeah, doctor Ray, doctor Krupp, and doctor Drew. I think
of my three doctors, my top three doctors.
Speaker 7 (10:36):
Okay, you're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from
kf I am six forty.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
Thompson's here, Monks is here. How are you, Sarah?
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Good afternoon, guys.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
But you you seem to embrace the electric or wood
shop side glasses, you know, the side protective glasses.
Speaker 8 (10:58):
Is that something you've had for one? Can I give
you a uick story? Very quickly? I ordered gogles. I
order them online and I typically order through the same website.
I just went through and clicked on what I thought
was the same thing. I always click on the type
of frame for this particular pair that you're mocking. Fairly fairly,
it said safety inquiry. Oh these are safety So I
(11:21):
was like, yeah, I guess that's what I get.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
And they show up.
Speaker 8 (11:24):
With these side shields on them, and now you're addicted
to it. Well, now I've taken up a little welding.
I do a little welding. It is interesting. Look, yeah, honestly,
I've never gotten more compliments on class.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
So now it's just at the right and so you're
gonna stay with that. You can't take them off, but
you're gonna order again now.
Speaker 8 (11:50):
And I am actually on my to do list is
to order glasses today because it's that time of the year.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
Eyes breathe, Yeah, your eyes can breathe. Well, they breathe greatly.
Okay again, right, okay, the menendi freaks. What's going on
with these?
Speaker 8 (12:04):
I can tell you, as far as I've heard, no
one is more nervous about their potential release than you.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
That's right, and rightfully so.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
And John Callbelt he's a little nervous too, Yeah, because
he used to do fry the menendi I know in
a segment.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Every day, and now I work with you guys, so
I'm a little nervous.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
One of the big things to just chill you out
on it is they're trying to establish whether or not
these guys could kill again. Should look like if they could,
if they would act out again, Well you should be
involved in the trial because they're trying to prove that
they're that they're a safe crew, that they if you
let them out, everything's going to be cool.
Speaker 8 (12:34):
Isn't that One of the things that well, what I
need to prove is whether these side shields protect shotgun
blasts if they come this way.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
But here's just what happened today.
Speaker 8 (12:41):
Just moments ago, the defense says we have no more witnesses,
and the DA says we have no more evidence to present.
The judges called for a short break. So right now
in van Nis, this thing is still going on. They're
just on a short break and we'll see whether they're
done for the day or if they're going to come
in and talk some more. I don't know if both
sides will have some sort of closing argument situation. The
(13:03):
news some of the news that was made today is
the fact that we might hear from the Menindez brothers
finally during these persons. And the way this will work
is both the mark Ergo side, the Menindee side, and
the DA side will make their last little impressions on
the judge and then the Menindez brothers will have the
right to speak should they want to, without being cross examined.
(13:25):
Is that crazy ant there with that ff haircuttish either?
The typical people were all there, including one of the wives.
Oh really, yeah, Eric married? I think they both they're
both married from prison prison.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
That's probably the best way to keep a marriage together, Tim,
keep one of the two incarcerated one of the couple.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
So if you know who should be really nervous is
the ant and the immediate family because they only kill
family members so far, so far, exactly right. I mean
that they're radio hosts. Well not yet, not yet. They
haven't put radio hosts on that list yet. Well, look,
there was there was Wouldn't that be odd? Wouldn't that
be really ironic? If he gets out and he wipes
out like more family members and they're like, ah, sorry,
(14:06):
we didn't mean it. You know that aunt was abusing us.
Speaker 8 (14:09):
Well, it is a it's not a zero chance for
them to get out one and according to the Parole Board,
it's not a zero chance that they'll reoffend in some way.
They are a moderate risk, not a zero risk, not
a high risk, a moderate risk. Their attorney, Mark Gergos,
also made some news today that he hopes will enhance
their ability to get out. Here's part of what he
(14:30):
said today.
Speaker 9 (14:31):
Yes, I to answer the question was are we pushing
for them to be released without a parole hearing. Yes.
What we are pushing for under the statue is a
recall of the sentence, a re sentence. That is meaningful modification.
That's the statute. The meaningful modification would be that they
(14:55):
are a get convicted of a lesser included offense, which
would be voluntary manslaughter, which by the way, half of
the first jury voted for and time served.
Speaker 8 (15:07):
So he's saying, let's change what we try to do
originally with a resentencing on the murder charge, and let's
ask to be resentenced on a voluntary manslaughter charge. What
that means is they would not have to also go
to the parole board in order to be released, and
if they are resentenced on voluntary manslaughter. They could be
released based on time served.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
Do you think Mark Garragis is nervous that they're going
to kill him.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
He's probably more nervous about any checks clearing. I mean,
how much money get these guys?
Speaker 3 (15:35):
This is very interesting. That's exactly what I want to
ask you about Garatgos heavy hitter. How do they afford him?
I thought about this today because I mean, he's clearly
doing a lot of work on this, and he does
love talking to the media when he takes these very
profile cases, So you get a sense of the guy.
I mean, he's not a cheap attorney. That family is money, Yeah,
they've got money. I mean the Menindaz family, the brothers
had money. They still to inherit a lot of money
(15:56):
when they got killed. Exactly well, I mean certainly was
one of the prosecutor said back back in the nineties
was this was a motivating factor. But there's going to
be money to mate on the other side of this, Yeah,
brother podcast, there's going to be a lot of opportunities
before they.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
Kill again and go back.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
Now at the point is so Garagos also takes this
because it's a high profile case. As you were saying,
and it helps his profile as well.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
That's right. So maybe if.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
You can kill your you know, shot shoot your mom
in the face, go out and reload the parking lot,
and then shoot her again, and then and not shed
a tear over that you're going to kill again.
Speaker 8 (16:30):
That's what Da hawkman says. He hasn't said they'll kill again,
but he said, look, I mean, come on the nature
of this crime, that this just does not speak to
some people that were suffering some sort of abuse and
and suddenly needed to defend themselves. This was premeditated, It
was awesome, and they have not shown remorse or taken
(16:51):
respect in some.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
Cold blooded stuff.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
Man, When as she crawls away, you blow her away
again having reloaded, come up.
Speaker 1 (16:56):
And then when they do kill again and you go
to the funeral, like I sort of knew this was coming.
Look at that poor end. She got wiped out, wiped out.
They made her hair look a little better though in
the casket. Thanks for coming in, Bob, always a place,
all right, Nice to see you, man. Saturday seven and nine,
seven and nine with Monk Sanfety.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Guard local welder.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
All right, nicely, I don't want to ask him about
it because I didn't know what was going on.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
Nowhere to the clubs. It's good, it's hot. He was
wearing ski goggles. A lot of people couldn't sell that look,
but you can. It's sexy. Really.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
He looks like he said, leaves here and goes to
the slopes. He's working on, you know, mammoth or something.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
I love the explanation. I clicked on the wrong thing
and they sent me and I can't return them.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
He's like me, It's like I didn't return them because
I was too lazy. I needed to work in that day.
So I'll wear him for five years.
Speaker 7 (17:52):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KF
I am six forty.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Mark Thompson's here and one of my favorite guests is
a guy named doctor Edwin Kropp, and I love this guy.
He's been coming on us for a long long time.
I've learned more from him than I think any other
guests on the show, maybe doctor Ray, Doctor Ray and
doctor Krupp.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
And he's with us, Doctor Crupp, how are you, sir?
Speaker 5 (18:16):
I'm well and I am learning a lot again just
because I'm on the show with you.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
Buddy.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
Wow, I love your enthusiasm for space. There are some
listeners who don't understand how you and I have such
an affection for space, but we do. We do, And
I just love how vast things are. I love that,
you know, the next closest galaxy to us, we're moving
towards them at I think it was fifty million miles
an hour, and we'll never see that happen. It's because
(18:43):
there's so much space between us and our next galaxy galaxy.
Speaker 5 (18:48):
We are not going to see that happen. But it
is going to happen. The nearest big galaxy, the Andramata galaxy,
about two million light years away or so, and it
nonetheless is headed on a collision course with us. So
if we stick around long enough, we'll have friends.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
What what that look like when these two galaxies look up?
Speaker 5 (19:08):
You know, the effect on the Earth in particular isn't
such a big deal, but you would see something sort
of like an extraordinary milky way, or part of it
bright almost like it depends on when you pick it up.
It's sort of like a great big thumb in the
sky where you're seeing part of this galaxy as it's
(19:29):
approaching us. And then when we mix it up together.
You're just seeing stars all over far more than we're
used to. Of course, that's if you turn all the
lights of the cities up so you can see them.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Is it true also that you could never see the
edge of space because the the universe is expanding faster
than we can see it.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
Well, the universe is expanding, and it is expanding extraordinarily rapidly,
and we do not even know that there is a
what the actual limit is. It could be larger than
as far as our largest telescopes can see. But the
other thing that really gives us trouble in this realm
is that there is no actual edge. It's not like
(20:13):
we're in a big room and the universe is expanding.
The universe itself. It's space that's expanding.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Oh I see, okay, so that it may expand forever.
Speaker 5 (20:25):
Right now it looks like it's going to be forever
and then some because the universe expansion is accelerating and
we don't even know what's causing that. That's just been
a discovery of the last few decades, and it's one
of the big problems in astronomy.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
Doctor krap Can you put this to bed for me?
I've read some information online, and I don't want to
get political because I don't know your politics and I
don't want to know them. But I heard that on
Venus and Saturn and urineus or if you're in third grade,
urin is a are warming up?
Speaker 2 (21:00):
Is that true?
Speaker 5 (21:02):
They could be warming up? But I don't think that
that that has any kind of irrelevance to what we're
talking about with respect to the climate on the Earth.
There are changes that go on on other planets all
of the time, and the kinds of changes that may
occur there, in part are related to the Sun. But
of course a lot of the changes that take place
(21:24):
are very local effects that begin with the Sun that
have to do with the environment, and the gases in
the atmosphere are one of the key elements. But since
you brought up politics, I should just make sure that
it's clear. The only isn't for me is astronomism.
Speaker 3 (21:40):
Oh, you're the best, nice doctor. If I could talk
to you scientists to scientists for a moment. Sure, I
like to sometimes say things that are brash and courageous.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
You know this, Tim, and I believe the uh.
Speaker 3 (21:52):
I believe doctor Krupp that there is no reasonable way
to explore in a man and spacecraft Mars.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
A lot of talk about going to Mars.
Speaker 3 (22:04):
We're gonna go, We're gonna We're gonna get everybody on
big spacecrafts and move every bit to Mars.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
I think literally it will.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
It could never happen, even for a small group of
people to go to Mars.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Am I right or wrong?
Speaker 6 (22:17):
Well?
Speaker 5 (22:18):
I think you're wrong because you should never say never.
But if you wanted to say this is really really
really hard, Okay, that's the truth.
Speaker 3 (22:27):
Right, So if three relays are before the hard, then
then you're okay with Yeah, right.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Doctor Crub, go ahead, yep.
Speaker 3 (22:35):
The radiation alone, the radiation alone, doctor krap I would
think impossible. It would make space travel to Mars impossible.
Speaker 5 (22:42):
The weight that you've got to put on shielding to
make what's essentially a nine month trip given our current technology,
of course, makes that a very difficult problem to solve.
I actually think the bathing problems over nine months are
greater than the radiation.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
Yeah, I'm with you, doctor. Do you believe we landed
on the Moon.
Speaker 5 (23:03):
Of course, not only do I believe it, I know it,
and I know it.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
We're losing connection with you with you Hello, Tim?
Speaker 2 (23:11):
Tim is Tim is not so sure? Doctor?
Speaker 1 (23:15):
I like that you're the you know your ear ism line?
Speaker 2 (23:18):
What was it again?
Speaker 5 (23:20):
Uh? The only is for me is astronomism.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
Ah, that's great.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
The only one for me is magasm. How about that.
Speaker 3 (23:26):
Now, doctor, Doctor cop if I got again talk to
you scientists to scientists for moment. Uh. The other bold,
courageous statement I'd like to make is based on the
fact that a number of things had to happen as
the Earth was created. I mean, these incredible chemical reactions,
these remarkable evolutionary things that happened over millions of years.
For us to be looking like we are, thinking like
(23:48):
we are, and for this wondrous place Earth to exist,
isn't it wouldn't you say? It would be a pretty
tall order for any planet like this to evolve this
way anywhere where.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
What do you get a weigh in on that? Are we?
Are we a one off? Is this a Goldilocks planet?
Speaker 5 (24:06):
Well it's not so much a question if we're the
one off, but the question is are we the first?
It took the universe roughly ten billion years to get
all of the stuff that the recipe requires together. You know,
you don't just have it all at once, the heavy
elements and such, and we the only fact that we
have that's certain is that it took about ten billion
(24:28):
years to build a planet like the Earth on which
life could form and evolve. So we know it takes
at least that long. And even if it happened a
couple of other times, even more than a couple of
other times. When you're thinking about a universe that's almost
fourteen billion years old, These planets, if they had life
on them, that's intelligent life. That civilization could pop up
(24:51):
and go down and the other one would never know it.
It didn't arrive until maybe a million years later. We're
billing the idea, Yeah, be together is unlikely.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
It's not a Tim Conway Junior somewhere else in the universe,
is what I'm getting at.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
Thank god, doctor ty one.
Speaker 2 (25:07):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Can you stay with us because I want to talk
about the anniversary of the observatory.
Speaker 5 (25:13):
I'd be just the lighter.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
Oh you're the best.
Speaker 7 (25:16):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on de Maya from
KFI Am sixty.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
I just put a timer on that last commercial break.
It was eight minutes and one second, does that mean
that rays that left the Sun when we were talking
to you last just hit Earth?
Speaker 5 (25:38):
They as you said that, that's exactly what I was
thinking that when it started, that those photons left the Sun,
but they're here now.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
Okay, So they made it from the Sun to us
during that commercial.
Speaker 5 (25:52):
Break, ninety three million miles.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
That's how we got to sell these commercial breaks. Yeah,
they don't seem is long that way.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
We're waiting on the Sun's rich.
Speaker 5 (26:04):
Doctor powered advertising is good.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
That's good.
Speaker 1 (26:07):
So I learned this from you and I and I've
always told people this, and I and I'm and I'm
glad that I have it in my brain somewhere that
nobody on planet Earth has ever seen a sunset.
Speaker 5 (26:20):
Okay, that is true. But but we like the illusion, right,
we think we see the sunset, but it's really gone
by the time.
Speaker 1 (26:27):
We see it, right, it's eight minutes gone by the
time we see it.
Speaker 5 (26:32):
Uh, it depends on where you are in the timing year,
because it has to do with the angle and the atmosphere.
But but that's that's that's fair enough. Okay, it's a
few minutes for sure. Yeah, the atmosphere is bending that
light of the Sun, and so after it's gone down,
we still see it because it it appears through the
angle that it's being bent, but it's actually gone below
(26:53):
the horizon.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
Okay, And how fast are we moving as a planet,
because I know we're moving around the Sun, moving around
the galaxy, and the galaxy's moving around space. If you
add all those up, are we moving millions of miles
an hour?
Speaker 5 (27:08):
Well, you surely can get up in that department. If
we just talk about the Milky Way galaxy, it's running
out there at about one point three million miles per hour,
and then everything else between there and us, you know,
adds a different number on it. So, for example, around
the Sun, we're running about one and a half one
(27:29):
point six million miles a day, sixty six sixty seven
thousand miles an hour, so easily. So, but to somebody
who is practically fourteen billion light years away from us,
we're at the edge of their ability to see, and
we're traveling at a speed that is a reasonable fraction
(27:51):
the speed of light. So the speed also depends on
where you are in the universe and who's looking.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
So if somebody was two million light years away from us,
an Androna or andra or androma, whatever you nuts are
calling it. But if somebody is two million light years
away from us and they're looking at us with a
high powered telescope, would they see would they see dinosaurs?
Speaker 5 (28:17):
Uh, they would not see dinosaurs because by two million
years ago, dinosaurs are long gone. They would see except
we'd be infinitesimal. If they could see the surface in detail,
there would be anthropoid okay, running around.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
Let me rephrase that.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
If it was fifty million light years away and they're
looking at Earth, would they see dinosaurs.
Speaker 5 (28:41):
They would have just missed them because the asteroids that
hit us about Give me, give me a number where
we could say dinosaurs. I'm gonna give you seventy million
years ago.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
By the way, are you gonna be a stickler like
this tomorrow at the anniversary because I'm not coming.
Speaker 5 (29:04):
That's our job.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Accuracy, good doctor, so correct, that's so cleasic.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
Doctor. I can't believe ninety years.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
It seems like ninety seconds that the observatory has been there.
Anything special going on tomorrow for the anniversary.
Speaker 5 (29:23):
Sure is all day. In fact, we've been doing stuff
all year and we'll keep that up till the end
of the year. But tomorrow we start with an opening
ceremony right on the front lawn of the observatory. Anybody
who happens to be here, it's going to get the
same happy birthday and probably get a piece of cake
or a cupcake out of it. We eventually moved through
the day to special program in the Leonard Nimoy Event
(29:45):
Horizon Theater, where everybody will figure out how you can
tell the birthday of the Observatory as well as their
own birthday just by watching and looking then at key
things in the sky like the Big Dipper in the sunset.
And then right after that we're going out to the
sunset because we'll have a line laid out on the
terrace for that sunset, even though the suns will have
(30:07):
already disappeared, we'll watch it go down and seeing that
sun down to the horizon. And then we're staying up.
Even later about ten o'clock, the observative will be closed,
but we have a ninetieth anniversary major standstill Southern moonrise.
The moon's doing something that hasn't done for about eighteen
point six years, rising and setting at its extreme positions,
(30:30):
and it just happens to be one of them tomorrow night,
so that'll be on the website broadcast live.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
What year did you buy your Camaro?
Speaker 5 (30:38):
Sixty eight?
Speaker 1 (30:39):
Okay, So if somebody was fifty eight eight light years away,
would they see you purchasing that card?
Speaker 5 (30:51):
Well, let's see if that Yeah, you're right, and in
fact they would have seen my heartbreak because I had
to give up my Austin Healey sprite Afford. I couldn't
afford to keep it running. But the Camaro has been
very reliable. It's you know, it's not only been to
the moon and back, you know, it's it's actually headed
on another trip by now. It's it's got something like
(31:12):
two hundred and fifty thousand times too on it. We're
well over five hundred thousand at least.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
Something's been to the moon, you know what I mean.
All Right, all right, doctor, appreciate you coming on. Happy anniversary, man,
I really appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (31:27):
Just a pleasure talking to both of you.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
Thank you very much, Doctor Edwin. Okay's great man. Go
to the observatory tomorrow and see doctor Crop. But you
got to be with the numbers. You got to be
exact with your numbers. He really is where he will
roll over. He really is exactly. Will them roll over
you if you're not exact with your numbers? Man, I
liked it. I like it.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
I like it.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
Not good for radio, but I like it personally, you
know what I mean. Conway Show on demand on the
iHeartRadio app. Now you can always hear us live on
kay if I six forty four to seven pm Monday
through Friday, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app