Episode Transcript
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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. It's Conway Show. Dodgers will begin the game
in four minutes. Three minutes from now, four minutes opening pitch,
(00:21):
and we'll have scores for you all night long. It
should be a great game should it's perfect weather for baseball.
And if the Dodgers win, Phillies go home. Dodgers have
a big champagne celebration again. Seems like they do that
every couple days. But they gotta win. If you open
the door just a little, that could be disastrous. So
(00:46):
go Dodgers. Dig dong with these Dodgers. All right, there's
a bomb threat in Tarzana. Seems like a fairly safe
place to live. What's going on out there. That's a
bad news for I used to live in Ursay.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
This is in Tarzana where there's a possible explosives investigation
under way.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Scott Riife is in their seven. Scott, Yeah, Philip Acley and.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
The bomb squad just responded right now. They just got here.
But LAPD officers have been shutting down a portion of
Receipta Boulevard in between Burbank and Ventura Boulevard right at Clark.
It was a follow up investigation earlier this morning, around
ten thirty. They came across something and they don't know
what it is. It could possibly be an explosive and
because of that, they're actually shutting down some of the
business heres of the synagogue. On the bottom of your screen,
(01:28):
we can show that to you. They've evacuated that area.
It's unclear to us exactly where the object is. We've
been looking for it, we haven't found it yet, but
Receita Boulevard is shut down in both directions. They're shutting down.
Some of the businesses fill back up and push into
the Sharkis. It looks like the Sharkis has been evacuated.
And then up a little higher there you see the
bomb squad units. They just responded a one but ago
(01:49):
so maybe right in there we'll start to take a
look around, but right now they don't know exactly what
they're dealing with. The bomb squad has responded. Venture Bulevard
is opened, you don't have to worry about that, but
receivtab Bulevard's closed in both directions. Between Bank Boulevard and
Venture Boulevard, so there will be some extra traffic congestion
in the area.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Okay, Recita is it's a very busy area if you
live in Tarzana. That's where Gelson's is, Bee's Bakery, Morts
Delhi and that's a very extremely busy area. Sharky's is
out there and hopefully it's uh it's back up opening again.
That was earlier today. All right, there was a there
(02:26):
was a story here, oh I know. It was the
marriage licenses. Everything is more expensive in La than it
was even like an hour ago. You know, parking fees
are going up, meters are going up. Everything, trash that's
going to go up the next couple of days, if
that's you know, okayed, And it's just it's more expensive
(02:49):
to do everything in l in LA, in southern California,
and now marriage licenses. But La County is going to
pause the fee increase because of the backlash. Sour backlashes
do occasionally work.
Speaker 4 (03:03):
All suend right here, okay, and we'll have our couples
send right here.
Speaker 5 (03:05):
Dallia Kueba shows us how she performs weddings in the
lush garden of Tina's wedding chapel in Van Nuy's.
Speaker 4 (03:11):
We can have up to forty eight gifts.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
The family owned business has been forming unions here for
more than three decades.
Speaker 4 (03:17):
It's all positivity everything.
Speaker 5 (03:19):
It's all smiles that love not felt, she says. By
her and a group of wedding efficients and notaries about
the prospect of seeing marriage license fees in La County
go up, she says, not only would business go to
other counties, but their wedding party, the photographers, the local caterers,
all the people who make nuptials happen would suffer too.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
We have a bartender that we always contact and Flora's
just there's so many people that can get affected.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Yeah, everyone's affected. Everybody is is. It's expensive as hell
to do anything.
Speaker 5 (03:50):
Confidential licenses were estimated to increase nearly threefold.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
Eighty five dollars is understandable. Twitter and crin dollars can
put us in a business.
Speaker 1 (03:59):
Wow, they're going to go from eighty five to two
and twenty dollars for a marriage license. It's a piece
of paper.
Speaker 5 (04:05):
Notaries tell us these licenses are given to the marrying couple, only,
reducing the ability for people to get a hold of
some of their personal information, especially.
Speaker 6 (04:13):
These days with identity theft and being you know, in
the public eye. It gives them a very good shelter
from being exposed to all that praisiness. It's also important
for people who are you know, domestic violence survivors.
Speaker 5 (04:27):
Alan Katz has been uniting couples at the Cute Little
Wedding Chapel in Long Beach for twenty two years. Alan
spearheaded a campaign that includes Dahlia and others. They spoke
out at a recent Board of Supervisors meeting and he
says he met with the La County Registrar Recorders Office
last week.
Speaker 6 (04:42):
We had to stand up and really put our voices
out there.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Man, what LA is so embarrassing? Where you know, the
people are just starting off in life. When you get married,
you're you're probably broke or close to broke. If it's
your first wedding, you know, your first marriage, because you're
just you know, you're young, you don't have a house,
you probably live in an apartment. You're saving up all
(05:05):
your money to try to put some kind of down
payment on a house, and then they turn around and
they screw you on the on the licensing. Instead of
eighty five dollars, it went up to two hundred and
twenty dollars and it and there's no shame, you know,
the city of la is never you know, they never
feel shame that they're trying to take every last dollar
(05:27):
from you.
Speaker 5 (05:27):
Those United voices seemingly heard. The County Register Recorder's office
tells NBC Form it has pulled the proposal for further
review one day before it was to be voted on.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
Oh that's great, that's great. Yep. Your voices can be heard,
you can have it, you can make a difference, and
for now there are no new fees.
Speaker 4 (05:45):
Sometimes we don't we feel like we're too little and
the government isn't gonna pay attention. But the fact that
they did and we were voicing our concern made a
difference is really beautiful.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Good for her. I think she's the one the lady
owns that Tina's love house. I think it's the name
of the church in Van Eyes or Tina's wedding chapel.
Speaker 5 (06:05):
Certainly is, and she and Allan said that they are
very grateful. Now, the group says they want to continue
discussions with the county because while they may understand that
there might be a need for an increase in fees,
They just want to be part of the process. As
for the Register's office, they tell us that marriage service
fees have not been updated in a decade, and any
new costs would help offset rising wages, inflation, and technology updates.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Please, it's eighty five dollars for a piece of paper
and they should be free. They should encourage people to
get married and give them to you for free and
a certificate too. I don't know. Winchels, a traveling dog
California dog, reunites with the owner after being found in Chicago.
In Chicago, no good.
Speaker 7 (06:47):
I was like, surely this is wrong. So I was
honestly in disbelief until I truly saw the pictures of
him there at the police station.
Speaker 1 (06:55):
You imagine that you lose your dog and you think
it's gone. Every time you see dog that looks sort
of like yours, you stop and look at it, Hey,
is that my dog, And then it just eats you
alive that you don't know what happened to your dog,
Like belly. You know, you're a great example. God forbid
if one of your dogs got out and it was missing. Yeah,
everywhere you saw a dog that looked like moose or mays,
(07:17):
you would stop, yeah, of course and look like, hey,
is that mine? Is that mine? The worst feeling, it's
the worst, absolute worst. Damn. Well, this lady got her
dog back and it was in Chicago.
Speaker 7 (07:29):
So that's when I was like, Okay, that's my dog.
Speaker 3 (07:31):
I found him.
Speaker 7 (07:32):
Never in a million years said I think you would
be in the suburbs of Chicago.
Speaker 8 (07:35):
Tierra Babcock from northern California has reunited with her dog
Opie after he got lost and was found over two
thousand miles away.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
Wow.
Speaker 7 (07:43):
We had a bad storm come through in July and
he got scared and we were looking for him, and
he got out, and we thought that maybe he just
went to the neighbor's house or something like that.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
By the way, that's her husband playing the guitar in
the background. I think I know why the dogs.
Speaker 7 (08:00):
July and he got scared and we were looking for him,
and he got out, and we thought that maybe he
just went to the neighbor's house or something like that,
and he ended up going further than that and ended
up at the local gas station. That's the last place
that he was seen I had kind of lost hope
because it was three months.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
How about they get to Chicago, and I just.
Speaker 8 (08:21):
Ad my heart.
Speaker 7 (08:22):
Didn't think that he got hit by a car or
had died or anything like that. I just had a
feeling that somebody had him, and at that point I
was just hoping that he was, you know, be loved
and getting all the attention that he deserved.
Speaker 8 (08:34):
Used social media to the.
Speaker 7 (08:36):
Best of my ability and had joined a lot of
the lost pet pages for Oregon and Nevada and California
and posted to those hoping maybe somebody whoever picked him
up would eventually see that post and contact me.
Speaker 8 (08:48):
Last week, do Page County Animal Services near Chicago received
a new dog.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
We received a dog from my task at police department
that fortunately had a microchip.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Oh good.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
Let us know that when they scanned that dog, the
registration for that chip went back to somebody in California.
Did not believe it at first, who was calling her?
She thought it was a scam.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
What a great story. This is all right, We'll come
back and finish this up. How the dog. How they
found the dog in Chicago from northern California. That dog
ended up two thousand miles away and we'll find out
how that happened. We come back. Dodgers are underway at
Dodgers Stadium. Is that what's going on? I think? So
go Dodgers, all right, relyve on CAF. I am sick
(09:29):
forty more Amy. It is the Conway Show and this
is again another Dodger day. So we'll have scores for
you as they come in. For the score, I should say.
And then we have that story that we did that
we started in the last segment. Maybe remembered it. You know,
the dog that got away from southern California and ended
(09:54):
up in Chicago. How the hell did that dog gets Chicago?
But look this it's a great story. It's a great story.
And this happens you know, inside edition? Tell you is
this an inside edition story? It might be. They're the
kings of these stories, the inside Edition they do story
was it? Yeah, I get it, I get it. It's
(10:15):
the story about the alligator the golfs an alligator that golfs. Yeah,
look it up. Look it up. Anyway, So this dog
leaves southern northern California ends up in Chicago. How'd that happen?
Let's find out all together.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
When they scammed that dog. The registration for that chip
went back to somebody in California. Did not believe it
at first who was calling her. She thought it was
a scam because she thought, how did my dog get
all the way from California to Illinois. And it wasn't
until she realized police were involved, that County Animal Services
was involved, that she's got only goodness, this was the
(10:55):
call I've been waiting for. It, Wow, she was.
Speaker 1 (10:58):
Can you imagine getting that call. Your dog's gone for
three months. You think the dog has been hit by
a car or somebody else just took him, and he's
living with another family, and you're sad every day. Every
day you wake up, you're sad every morning, you know,
go to work, you're sad when you're lunch and dinner,
and holidays and the dog's birthday. You're always sad because
you know what happened is dog. And then you get
(11:19):
a call that that dog is in Chicago and it's alive,
and it's as well and it's coming back to you.
That's got to be the happiest day of your life.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
She was over the moon to hear that he was safe.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
I was in pret disbelief.
Speaker 7 (11:34):
If I'm being honest, because that was a really long
ways away from Hope, and I was like, surely they
just miscanned it or you know, transposed to number, and
it wasn't. Actually, my dog sent me a picture and
it was him.
Speaker 8 (11:47):
Ope arrived wearing a collar with another name on it.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
I always love to believe in the good of people,
and I think sometimes people find pets and they don't
realize that they weren't doneed. Maybe they do have an
owner looking for them, and maybe somebody just picked him up,
brought him here, was trying to keep him as a pet.
Speaker 8 (12:06):
When Sierra got the call about Opie, she immediately booked
a flight for Chicago.
Speaker 7 (12:10):
He was so excited. He was jumping all over me.
He was making all these cute little noises, and it
just it felt so good. I was crying.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
Wow.
Speaker 7 (12:18):
Kind of embarrassing to have the staff of the shelter
there to watch that, but it was just a good
moment and it was very hardwarming at lots of happy
tears in that moment. I mean, microsiping literally made all
the difference. I wouldn't have found him if he wasn't
in my microschips.
Speaker 8 (12:34):
The pair headed home and made up for lost time into.
Speaker 7 (12:37):
A little bit more of a scenic route. Since I
was already that far away from home, I figured we
might as well see something, and we made a couple
of detours.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
We went. This is like a movie, you know, This
is almost like at the store behind it. It's like
a it reads or tells like that, like it's a screenplay,
you know. And I think it would be a good
kid's movie. I think it's a classic idea. I maybe
it's already been done. You know, wasn't Benji about this?
Speaker 9 (13:05):
Aren't they all? Ben You Come Home? Ben You Go Home?
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Hasn't been done a million times last season? Yeah right,
although all the every dog movie ever has been this,
Tim Tim has been done one hundred times. A christ
I didn't know.
Speaker 7 (13:18):
I'm sorry, it's too badly International Park and then popped
into Mount Rushmore through a small portion of the lower
loop of Yellowstone.
Speaker 6 (13:26):
Probably.
Speaker 7 (13:27):
You know, he's well traveled enough now he'll be content.
Speaker 9 (13:29):
With saying off.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
The dog's gonna want to leave again.
Speaker 8 (13:32):
They still haven't figured out what Opie went through for
three months.
Speaker 7 (13:36):
If only he could talk, that's what I keep saying.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
That way, Yeah, no kidding, you're you're talking about it.
You're a billionaire. If that dog could talk, man oh man,
you would be on every show. You get huge ratings,
you have your own talk show.
Speaker 7 (13:50):
You know, me and my dog, If only he could talk,
That's what I keep saying. He's had a heck of
a road trip, and I'm sure he has a heck
of a story to tell.
Speaker 8 (13:57):
But they hope his story will remind others to make
sure their animals are micro chipped.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
You know, I wonder crows if if dogs keep evolving
and we treat them like family members, if eventually they will.
Speaker 9 (14:09):
Speak, like there's an evolution that's going to take place.
Speaker 1 (14:12):
I think so. I think it's happening. Really, I swear
Old Moose is talking. Really, your dog is talking. He's
talking like it's happening. He's like like a lawyer, or.
Speaker 10 (14:26):
He's not that Scooby Doo talks.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
No, he's like defending criminals.
Speaker 10 (14:31):
I think he could with a little work with What
does he say? He is just like kill? It almost
is like sounds like he says here or where?
Speaker 1 (14:41):
Really? Yeah, no, it's happening. We we are our dog
Ernie did something really stupid in our art. Bet it's me,
my wife, my my daughter. Is like a Sunday morning,
my daughter had climbed into our bed and we were
watching TV and and I said to Ernie, are you crazy?
(15:05):
Because he did something stupid. I think he bit my wife,
like right in front of me, just you know, I said,
are you crazy? And all three of us heard that.
What I'm about to tell you, he said, this is
how it went. I said, are you crazy? And Ernie said,
I don't know. See even Ernie was talking.
Speaker 11 (15:25):
Have you have you heard the videos of the dogs
saying I love you? No here I got this one
hold on. But to me or just in general.
Speaker 8 (15:36):
I love you, I love you.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Good girl, Bellio please, we're trying to listen to the video.
Speaker 9 (15:47):
It's funny because it sounds like you too.
Speaker 12 (15:50):
I love you, I love you.
Speaker 10 (15:54):
I love you.
Speaker 6 (15:56):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
You know it makes sense. Dogs were, you know, outdoor
in the wild for thousands of years, ten hundreds of
thousands of years, and now we treat them like family members.
I think they're going to evolve, and I think they
will start talking, and that is not going to be
good for dog owners because that will be telling the
secrets of the family to other dogs and other strangers
(16:21):
and other people like you wouldn't believe what's going on
at this house. You know, first of all, they give
me this crap out of a bag called, you know,
puppy chow. It's the worst crap in the world. But
this woman beats the hell out of this guy every night.
She's threatening with a gun. I saw it. I swear
to you. I saw it right before I took a dump,
(16:42):
right near the door. I saw it. I saw it. Man.
But they're gonna out a lot of people once they
start talking, and I think they're on their way. What
do you think, Sam, you're a psychologist, you think they're
going to eventually evolve like that? I don't know. I
don't work with animals. I will say this.
Speaker 11 (16:58):
If you ask my dog Marley a question, if he agrees,
he will nod his head.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Is that right?
Speaker 11 (17:04):
Oh yeah, wow? Yeah he's he. He will answer questions
for you. You should open up yours. Sorry.
Speaker 10 (17:11):
Tim always gets choked up when he talks about dogs
talking what that was?
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Yeah, he's choked up about this. I'm very choked him.
I don't know. We gotta take right. I's my my throat.
Speaker 6 (17:26):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
KFI AM six forty is Conway Show Quick Dodger score
update for you. Dodgers are playing the Phillies and the
score in the middle of the second is Philadelphia is zero,
Dodgers is zero, So zero zero at Dodgers Stadium. Door
Dash has a new way to deliver that they're rolling
(17:55):
out in Phoenix. But every time they roll one of
these things out, it always comes to La or Southern California.
So we have to know what's next in food delivery.
What's going on with food delivery because everybody uses this stuff.
There's a new bot on the streets when great hunger
meets great innovation.
Speaker 12 (18:14):
Dot door Dash's first commercial autonomous delivery robot rolling out
around Phoenix.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
At just one tenth the size of a car.
Speaker 12 (18:22):
DoorDash says, this all electric bot can travel up to
twenty miles per hour on sidewalks, bike lanes, and even
roads using built in navigation tech like GPS, radar, lighter
and cameras.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
This is the future, you know. I mean, if you're
an Uber driver and you're driving food around, I would
start opening up the books and looking for another gig.
Because eventually you're going to be replaced.
Speaker 12 (18:47):
Dot stands at four feet six inches tall, but don't
think that it's cute. Headlights means it can't do the
heavy lifting. At three hundred and fifty pounds, the company
says Dot can carry six large heats boxes or up
to thirty pounds at once door Dash co founder Stanley
Tang saying Dot was built out of necessity, adding you
(19:09):
don't always need a full sized card to deliver a
tube of toothpaste or a pack of diapers.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
That's right, that's right. The smaller the better.
Speaker 12 (19:16):
But Dot is in the first robot delivering out on
the mean street.
Speaker 9 (19:20):
Bavy Ride's robots scoot along under ten miles an hour.
Speaker 12 (19:23):
Avy Ride partnered with uber Eats to bring robo deliveries
to three US cities last year, and surf Robotics has
some too, like the ones NBC followed last year in
Los Angeles, now rolling out in Chicago.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
Krauzer, do you use food delivery you and gen get.
Speaker 9 (19:41):
Doordashes is our primary.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Yeah, and I've had pretty good success with it. You know,
I've never had anyone. They never screwed up the order
or later and they go have you had bad luck.
Speaker 13 (19:54):
I get, yeah, real, I'll get missing items or screwed
up items, and they usually pretty good at right defying
a refund you the money or credit the account or
something like that.
Speaker 9 (20:03):
But yeah, it happens.
Speaker 1 (20:04):
Yeah, ye, But I don't think it's really door dashers follow.
I think the restaurant.
Speaker 13 (20:08):
I generally don't blame it on DoorDash. No, no, no, no,
I don't know that I've ever said that I could
blame it on door Dash.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Yeah. I used it during COVID God, I would say
four or five six times a week, and now I
might use it once a month.
Speaker 13 (20:21):
Yeah, we don't use it that infrequently, but maybe once
every week or two or something like on the weekends
where it's just like I don't feel like I went
anywhere right, and you've already.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Had a couple of drinks. You don't want to risk
a duy, don't want to head out right, you don't
plow into anybody, don't.
Speaker 13 (20:35):
Want to walk into that kitchen and make something that's right,
that's exactly right.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
But man, is that when that doorbell rings that is
a happy time at the house.
Speaker 13 (20:43):
Oh yeah, when you're in the mood and you're sitting there,
you hit that send and you're just like checking every
three seconds.
Speaker 8 (20:50):
This way.
Speaker 9 (20:50):
The driver's waiting, drivers there waiting is it ready?
Speaker 1 (20:53):
Get it ready?
Speaker 13 (20:55):
And I really get pissed when they have other that
they're dropping off before mine.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
I know I'm the same way.
Speaker 13 (21:01):
Because I'm like the I'm because of where our home is.
It's kind of furthest away from almost any place we order,
and there's always going to be people in between us. Yeah,
this past weekend, the the door dasher had like at
least two people between us, and I was.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
Like, I get pissed too. When I know he's picked
up my meal, he's coming to the house and he
takes a wrong turn. I'm like, buddy, that's going to
take you another two miles go that route. You got
to get back on track.
Speaker 13 (21:27):
Before like ways and the digital apps, and it got
really good. People used to go to the street behind
our house thinking that that was where our house. I say,
you stick to people all the time, and they would
text us through the through the app, going.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Oh, can't find your house the rong side. Do you
wait for the guy to leave and then pick it
up off the porch?
Speaker 13 (21:46):
Aluly, I want no face tilling anybody. I don't need
them to see me. I don't need to see them.
I don't want it influencing my intake of food. If
I don't like who they are.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
I'm with you one hundred percent. I don't want to
see who that person is. I don't I have an
ey contact. I look through the people. As soon as
that guy gets out of there, I grab that.
Speaker 13 (22:04):
Meal, and I do kick in a little bit extra
on the tip. I don't it to a standard. I
give a little bit more.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
Yeah, And I will say this, I would say eight
out of ten times that that meal gets there, it's
all so hot. I don't know how they do it,
but it's great.
Speaker 9 (22:18):
Yeah. Ice cream give you another thing.
Speaker 13 (22:21):
Thankfully, we've got a couple of ice cream places that
are near us, so it's usually pretty good.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
I haven't tried ice cream delivery yet.
Speaker 9 (22:26):
You really got to look at where that where the store.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
Is, right. Yeah, But I always thought that there'd be
a it's a great idea for Baskin Robbins to have
a referra, you know, like when you go to home depot,
you can go to that bank of lockers and open
up a locker and get your product, but Baskin Robbins
should do that with a freezer. You know, there's like
eighteen doors on the freezer and it tells you which
one is yours, and you open up and there's your crap.
(22:49):
You can take it home.
Speaker 13 (22:51):
We get a handles there. A Handle's ice cream. It's
fun and we got handles too. It's the best ice
cream there. There's another one that's that's like on the
par with it. It's very like it's a walk up
to the wind type things called Brewsters, and they've been
expanding more and more. And there's one near Claremont and
Rust too, So we kind of alternate between handles and Brewsters.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
I go with my daughter to Handles in Burbank all
the time. It's been over for like, you know, four
or five months.
Speaker 9 (23:11):
If you can find a Brewsters, give them up that way.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
That's bruces better than handles.
Speaker 9 (23:16):
They're they're equivalent, if not Brewsters a little bit better.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
Handles is a newer ice cream place for the valley.
I think how long has Handle's been around here? Just
the one in Upland has been there for I want
to say decades. Oh my gods.
Speaker 13 (23:28):
And they have so many different kinds of flavors and
ways that they can put it together. Bruces is more limited,
but fantastic.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
I had never heard of Handles before until it opened
in Burbank six months ago, and my daughter and I
go there two or three times a week.
Speaker 13 (23:42):
When you come out, when you come out this way,
like my way, you're stopping in the wind of Handles
or even hit that Brewsters.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
I remember that Brewsters, but Handles. It's like an old
fashioned ice cream places. There's no seats or anything. You
just take it and you leave, walk up to the window, right,
you walk up to the windows, snow in the line.
You can't go inside. There's always a line. And once
you get up there and you get that ice cream.
Man is that beautiful?
Speaker 9 (24:06):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (24:06):
It Calabasas. It has some little indoor area. Oh they do.
Speaker 11 (24:10):
Yeah, it's not bad. I've been going there with my
kids for a while now. My kid always wants to
go when I pick them up from school.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
I had never heard of that place. Three months, you know,
six months whenever they open up. Fours Delicious, never heard
of it. But man is that good? And it's a
lot of ice cream for the money. Yes, yes, huge scoops.
Speaker 9 (24:26):
Yep.
Speaker 13 (24:27):
They do shakes, and they do different flavors. They do
banana splits, they do all the stuff that you remember
they do, like the freezes and all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
I get a pint and usually knock it off. It's
like a pig.
Speaker 13 (24:39):
And they got like traditional flavors, even like kind of
obscure flavors.
Speaker 9 (24:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
I get that orange dream sickle and I eat that
whole thing. By the time I get home it is gone.
But yeah, you got to try handles. If you've not
heard of it, there's one in Burbank. They're all over
the place now. Or Brewster as you say, yes, or brewsters. Yeah,
these smaller you know, Yeah, they're really they put a
lot of it. KFI am six forty. It is the
(25:04):
Convoy show. Dodgers zero, Phillies zero in the bottom of
the third inning, so and it looks like the Phillies
don't have a hit the first three innings. Phillies are hitless.
Somebody is pitching a no hitter out there. I think
it's Yamamoto. So that's cool. Hey, if you want an
(25:29):
invite to the big party that we're having at Morongo, well,
it's very simple to do. Go to KFIAM six forty
dot com slash Promotions, or I've made it even easier.
Speaker 10 (25:44):
I've put it on all of our social media platforms
at Conway Show and there's a link to that. So
you just go to at Conway Show pretty easy and
hit the link and sign up WHOA Crazy.
Speaker 1 (25:58):
On all the socials. Well I'm getting to all of them. Okay, Yeah,
that's great. That's easier, so much easier. Yeah, that is easy.
Or maybe people can drive by and you can meet
them in the parking lot and give them tickets. That'd
be easy too. You want to do that. I don't
see that as being so easy, but you will do it. Yes,
I cannot do that. I've been asked not to do
(26:19):
that by management. Here the party six to eight pm
on October eighteenth at Marongo. We have it every year.
It's a great party, and then we all go down
and drink a lot down downstairs, and I'm usually there.
Everybody else goes off and gambles. I sit there at
the bar and I try to entertain everybody, and everybody
(26:40):
goes out and play slot machines or tables. I don't
mind that I might sit around by myself and that's
a cool time. You know, Gary and Shannon won't be
able to make it this year. Gary's going to some
kind of reunion and Shannon is out with the Chargers,
so they won't be there. But I believe Belly, if
(27:00):
I'm not mistaken, I think Bill Handle's going to be
there and Neil Savadra is that right. I don't think
Savedra is going to be there. I think he's trying
to do his show for Nobody told me, oh, I
really love if there. I think he's going to do
a show. That would be so yes. He did that
one time and we got a lot of people standing
(27:21):
around watching a show. Then we all went to change
in our rooms. Then we all went to the party.
It was a big, great day. That was a cool day.
So try to get tickets. I urge you to try
to get tickets. Get in line or sign up, I
should say, and then we randomly pick fifty people. It's
all plus one and you show up and you have
(27:41):
a good time. I'm kfi AM six forty dot com,
slash promotions or go to our social media any other
social media at Conways show and there should be a
link there and you'll get the maybe I'll get an invite.
That'd be great, that would be a cool deal. All right.
The Dodgers again, they're playing at Dodger Stadium, and they
(28:05):
just got a run in the bottom of the third.
I don't know how that happened because I'm not watching
it on TV because the TV station for that game
is not working somehow, I don't know. But the Dodgers won,
not wn, just any one one run and Phillies zero.
(28:28):
And the Phillies don't have a hit in the first
three innings. That is not clutch. That's not what you
want if you're a Phillies fan, not to have a
single hit the first three innings. You had to come
out and like Lions and Tigers and Bears and attack
the Dodgers in the first couple of innings, and they
(28:49):
have not done that. Zero hits. How about that? How
about if that continues six more innings and the Dodgers
end up with a no hitter. How great would that be?
All Right? So we're we're all rooting for the Dodgers.
If they win tonight, they get about a week off
(29:09):
or at least five six days off, and they don't
start the National League Championship Series till next week. If
they lose tonight, they play tomorrow at Dodgers Stadium, and
I think that's an early game. I think that's a
three o'clock start or somewhere around three o'clock. So let's
go Dodgers. Let's get this one. And they're up one
(29:29):
to nothing in the third against your against the dreaded
Philadelphia Phillies. This is a great series, all right, We
got to get out of here. Chris Meryl next on
KFI AM six forty Conway Show, on demand on the
iHeartRadio app. Now, you can always hear us live on
(29:50):
KFI AM six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.