Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI Am sixty and you're listening to the Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Angel Martinez, I
think we have some good news on the fifteen northbound, Angel,
what do you say?
Speaker 2 (00:12):
What do you know?
Speaker 3 (00:13):
So it's the center divider and the left lane that
are open for travel heading northbound on the fifteen, just
outside of Baker. So that's a little bit of movement.
I was just looking at the backup and it's still
really tough. I'm just calculating it right now, and you're
backing up from Basin Road all the way to just
before the Baker off ramp, and that is about that's
(00:39):
pretty far.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Thank you for You're welcome the calculation. Just calculating her
right now, and it's coming up. Oh, pretty far. And
then you know, not only am I looking at, you know,
the fire that's on there, but people were texting as
they were approaching the fire. And now there's three crashes
on the way.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
To that fire.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
I know.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
I mean, you know, the drive opens up for like
fifty feet and people put the pedal to the metal
right and they're texting, oh hey, I'm moving again. Boom.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Well I'm telling you who's sweating right now, the guys
in the tesla's and the electric cars, because they didn't
calculate for this, and they are going to be angry
and hot as hell when they get to Mandalay Bay
wherever they're going.
Speaker 3 (01:22):
So northbound's still looking at about twelve miles of a backup.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Okay, all right, excellent, all right, Angel Martinez, thank you
very much, thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
All Right, We've got a.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Professor detained in this sweep out at the marijuana growing
firm or I don't know what they do out there,
and I think it's a marijuana growing business that's legal,
and it's huge. Hundreds of people work there, and a professor.
It was rated by the by a border patrol and
(01:54):
ice and all the FEDS that are in town, and
a professor was tamed, was detained from the Channel Islands
University out there, I think Channel Islands State University. And
he said he didn't do anything, and the cops and
the Border patrol said, yeah, he threw a either a
smoke bomb at us or a canister. And so we're
(02:17):
gonna let's find out what happened to this dude, this
professor out there.
Speaker 5 (02:20):
We know that professor is supposed to have a bond
hearing in federal court at one point thirty this afternoon.
Also new details from a federal complaint stating that he
has assaulted a federal officer. So those are still allegations.
He has not been proven guilty just yet. We're gonna
have to see how this all goes. But take a
look at these new images. They were just into our
(02:42):
newsroom and they're coming from that federal complaint. As you see,
these pictures of Jonathan Carvello are from the federal complaint
saying at the Immigration rate he changed his clothes from
a blue floral shirt to a pink T shirt just
moments before his arrest. It states bodycam images show him
using a megaphone to blast a loud siren at Immigration
(03:04):
enforcement agents, and when officers deployed tear gas for crowd control,
the professor first tried to kick a canister, then turned around,
ran back and hurled it at agents, coming within several
feet of their heads. These words shared recently by that
professor at a city council meeting.
Speaker 6 (03:21):
Many of my students are undocumented, and many of their
families are undocumented. It's my responsibility to protect them and
so I've been patrolling the city streets following armed mask thugs. Trump,
but he's doing what and so I've been patrolling the
city streets.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
He's been patrolling the city streets. He's a Professor's going
on with this guy?
Speaker 6 (03:41):
And so I've been patrolling the city streets following armed
mass thugs trying to kidnap my neighbors.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Those comments were in a border patrol. Is what he's talking.
Speaker 6 (03:50):
About, thugs trying to kidnap my neighbors.
Speaker 5 (03:53):
Those comments were from the CSU Channel Islands philosophy professor
Jonathan Caravello at a cameo Rios City Council meeting just
last week, standing up for undocumented students and their families.
But now the professor finds himself locked up. Caravella was
apprehended Thursday during the large scale immigration raid at Glasshouse Farms.
(04:13):
The US citizen was particians like quite.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
An operation out there at Glasshouse Farms. It's huge and
all they do is grow marijuana out there. Man oh man,
what a life that would be. Go to work grow
marijuana all day, you know, sample little during lunch and
head home.
Speaker 5 (04:31):
Was participating in protests at that location when federal agents conduct.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
What if you get a discount, you know, like we
get discounts here on.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
Schwag employee discount.
Speaker 1 (04:41):
Yeah, we get Whenever there's a sweatshirt here that you
know has one arm longer than the other, they'll sell
it to us for half off. I hear at up
at the Kfi store upstairs. I haven't seen anything lately.
I guess the seamstress. The new seamstress they've hired is
pretty good. But they used to have hats that the
logo was not centered, or one sleeve was longer than
(05:03):
the other one in a sweatshirt. And instead of thirty dollars,
we can get that for fifteen. That's kind of a
cool deal.
Speaker 7 (05:08):
They thought they were being cute back in the day
when they misspelled more stimulating talk radio, and they made
it more antimulating.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
I thought they did it on purpose, you know, to
sell the show. And they're like, nah, somebody just screwed up.
But you have a Kfi Did you get that the
KFI story or KFI backpack?
Speaker 2 (05:23):
Yes?
Speaker 8 (05:23):
I did.
Speaker 7 (05:24):
As a matter of fact, it's one of my favorite
things I own. I'm not a big backpack guy, but
this is really nice, good quality.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
It is nice. It all the time.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Do people stop you and ask you, hey, what's your
relationship to KFI?
Speaker 7 (05:34):
I have gotten that from time to time. Yes, walking
around Clairemont, it's it's vicinities. Yes, that's great, man, that's cool,
spreading the word. Yes, yeah, absolutely, that's what you gotta do. Yeah,
that's right, that's right.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
All right. Let's get back to the professor who's been arrested.
Speaker 5 (05:50):
Was participating in protests at that location when federal agents
conducted the operation. His supporters, including faculty colleagues, are denouncing
this arrest as unlawful in their own words, and demanding
his immediate release. They maintain Caravello was exercising his constitutional
right to peaceful demonstration when that situation escalated.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
He is just.
Speaker 9 (06:13):
Such a gentle person and an amazing colleague, and he's
a passionate speaker. But I could not imagine him him
being in any trouble.
Speaker 5 (06:26):
But today Caravello remains confined in oscillation.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
You got to expand your imagination because he's in trouble.
So when you say you couldn't imagine he could be
in trouble, now your imagination needs to be expanded a
little bit.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
Because he is.
Speaker 9 (06:43):
Him being in any trouble.
Speaker 5 (06:45):
But today Caravello remains confined in oscillation. That's over at
the Federal Detention Center downtown. His attorney says, he's been
held like a high risk offender. Federal prosecutors paint a
different picture, however.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
Yeah, I know that you're going to pick up on that.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
They spin people in the lockup if you're a professor
and they put.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
You on a big spinning wheel.
Speaker 5 (07:06):
But today Caravello remains confined in oscillation.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Oscillation, yeah, oscillation, du yeah, find it. He's confined in oscillation.
Find in oscillation. That's over at the Federal Detention Center downtown.
His attorney says, he's been held like a high risk.
That'd be great if that was one of the words
that that kid said his whole life, and his mom
and dad never corrected him.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
You know. It's like when we go to the park
and we put.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
On that thing, we go on the oscillation thing, and
and then my mom sometimes we get in trouble. She
keeps us in oscillation and all the parents are like, Ah,
that's so cute. And then gets a real job and
they's like, oh, mom never told me it's wrong.
Speaker 5 (07:44):
Federal prosecutors painting a different picture. However, US Attorney of
California posted on an X to clarify the situation, stating,
Carvello wasn't kidnapped, but arrested for a lection.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
That's not the Caravello worked here. That's a different Caravello.
It's a different girl, is it okay? I hope not
all right? Just just checking, just checking.
Speaker 5 (08:02):
Wasn't kidnapped, but arrested for allegedly throwing a tear gas
canister at officers.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
Now facing those serious federal charges.
Speaker 5 (08:09):
The clash between demonstrators and federal agents became very violent,
leading to multiple arrests. The raids contained more than three
hundred undocumented immigrants, including at least fourteen miners working illegally.
Well his attorney's saying that the professor at the time
was shielding students.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
All right, that's uh, we'll find out.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
You know, if that guy gets out, what chargers are
going to be thrown at that professor.
Speaker 10 (08:32):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
When I was you know, my dad had six kids,
and so when you have six kids, you are and
a mom that's yelling at everybody. You got some nervous
stomachs in the house, And occasionally you could hear one
of my siblings fart, and my dad would always sing
(09:02):
the take me out to the ballgame, because every fart
sounds like the first note of take me out to
the ballgame. Shoot, here me out to the ballgame. And
so I'm in the airport bathroom in Portland, a little
buzz on, and I hear a guy in the stall fart.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
He goes, he goes, and I go.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Me out to the ballgame, and I can see him
laughing his ass off.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
The guy singing to his fart. That is fantastic.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
But now every time I hear one, all I think
is that first note of take me out to the ballgame,
Me out to the ballgame, at whatever level, it is,
like me out to the ballgame. The only other song
you can do that with is the Wizard of Oz Somewhere.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
Over the Rainbow, Where over the Rainbow.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
That also sounds like the big The first note of
any fart is the equivalent to that note of that song.
But THO as the only two songs I could think of,
I can't think of any other songs.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Me out to the ballgame or huh.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
But the the the somewhere of the rainbow I think
is class here for some reason. And I think yeah,
and I think the the take me out to the
ballgame is seasonal. I don't know if you can get
away with it. In the middle of January. February got
to be in the baseball season and knocked that out.
All right, We've got some other news going on here.
We hate to say this, but there's a bened death
(10:32):
in a meat grinder. Oh man, I think those and
you know what are those things called that that chew
up branches and trees small tree wood chip. Yeah, those
are the two that I got to think are pretty
quick ways to go and you know, in them depending.
Speaker 2 (10:56):
On which end goes in. Yeah, but I.
Speaker 1 (10:58):
Always thought there should be a k over those things
where you know, you can't or at least have a
tether on you where you can't get sucked into it. Well,
there's there's usually like a like a like a grate, yeah, right, exactly,
like a grid.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
There should there usually is.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Right, But a guy, you know, he's wearing a you know,
a sweatshirt. It's got a string on it to tie
it and he's enjoying his life and then bang it
gets caught in the.
Speaker 7 (11:23):
They want to be able to put the huge, just
wide branches in there with no obstinctions. They want just
ease of use.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Man, it's got in there, and it.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
Doesn't look like a lot of the guys with the
wood chippers are also into rules and following safety protocol.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
Looks like they just want to get home. Just throw
it in. I don't care.
Speaker 7 (11:40):
It's right, those feathers that just spit out, I don't care.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Yeah, exactly. But this one is a meat grinder, a
meat grinder. This poor guy, you know, that's a wrap
on him and a meat grinder.
Speaker 4 (11:52):
A horrific story here in our breaking news investigating from
police the death of a nineteen year old employee who
fell into a meat grinder. Vernon police say a sanitation
worker was cleaning an industrial meat grinder when he fell
inside that machine, then somehow turned on. The incident happened
(12:13):
at Tina's Burrito's factory on East Vernon Avenue around nine
thirty last night.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
The workers wit, where was it?
Speaker 4 (12:20):
The incident happened at Tina's.
Speaker 2 (12:22):
Burrito's, Tina's Burritos.
Speaker 4 (12:24):
Tina's Burrito's factory on East Vernon Avenue around nine thirty
last night.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Is that a frozen burrito? Or is that a restaurant?
I've not heard of Tina's Burritos.
Speaker 4 (12:34):
Tina's Burrito's factory on East Vernon Avenue around nine thirty
last night. The worker's identity has not been released pending
family notification. The incident appears to be an accident, but
it remains under investigation. The California Occupational Safety and Health
Administration will be investigated.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
Oh what a horrible way to go or maybe not.
I don't know. It's quick. You know, there's no pain
there at the end.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
It's man, when you know that you're going, you know,
the shoes in your you know, pants are caught.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
And there you go and.
Speaker 3 (13:10):
You Over the weekend I saw this video and it
was this guy that ran out onto a tarmac and
ran around a plane whose engines we were all fired up.
They're on, they're ready to go. And the guy ran around,
but it was it wasn't moving yet, but the engines
were on. The guy ran underneath the plane and around
(13:31):
and he jumped into the jets.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Is that right? Got sucked in? Huh? You know, you
see that occasionally on.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Aircraft carriers where a guy gets sucked in but he survives,
you know, he gets blown out the other way and
he's got a headache, but.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
He makes it. Oh boy, but this guy didn't make it. Hunh.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
It looked like he jumped.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
Oh suicide, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
And all the crew on the on the tarmac were
just like, oh, it's turning around, bending over. They're just
like witness, you know that's happening to somebody.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
That is the absolute worst worst, All right, quick update Angel.
People are wondering what's going on with that fifteen you got.
Speaker 3 (14:13):
It fifteen north before Baker scene of a big rig
fire and it's the center divider and left lane that
remain open for traffic to squeeze through.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
Delays are still just a nightmare.
Speaker 3 (14:24):
Backing up for about twelve miles all the way from
Basin Road is.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
Forty backing up. Everyone taking forty and then getting on
the one ninety five or ninety five.
Speaker 3 (14:35):
Let me let me, let me check that it looks
like the forty actually looks good, and then the ninety
five looks good as well.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Okay, yeah, the ninety five will put you in Boulder city,
I think, or you know, Mission Hills there, and then
you got to backtrack and get into Vegas.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
Yeah, both the forty and the ninety five are looking good.
The delays that we were just mentioning, backing up for
about twelve miles will take you less than an hour
to make your way through.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
Okay, and it's only one hundred and twelve. So if
you're an electric car and you got the AC off
so you can save you know, juice, it's one hundred
and eleven outside, probably one hundred and forty five in
the car.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
So what is your what does your friend call watching
the electric cars swallowing up to the sweaters?
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Yeah, I was in I was in Las Vegas and
we're I think we're a classy place, a circus, circus,
and he says, hey, goes, let's go to to Mandalay
Bay and check out the sweaters. I don't know what
that is a guy's wearing sweater?
Speaker 2 (15:36):
He said.
Speaker 3 (15:36):
No.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
As we get in a cab, we go to Mandala Bay,
we get a couple of drinks. We're sitting outside. It's
one hundred and five degrees. I said, what is this?
He goes, just watch, just watch, and literally ten minutes later,
a guy pulls up with his wife and his kid,
an electric car and they get out and everybody looked
like they just got out of the pool.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
Everybody's sweating their ass off.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
And what happens is guys don't think they can make
it to Mandalay Bay, so they shut the air conditioning
off for the last thirty miles and everybody is in
a hot box where it's one hundred and thirty degrees
and they their first stop is Mandalay Bay and they
get out and man, everything is soaked, pants, shirt, jacket,
everything is just soaked and used to and like every
(16:16):
fifteen minutes it happens, like another ten minutes goes by.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
Hey another sweater. Look at this guy.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
Wow, this guy's got his wife and his two kids
and everybody's soaked everybody, and everybody's pissed, you know, because
there's nothing that irritates you more in the world than
sitting in a car it's one hundred degrees out and
you don't have air conditioning. It can drive the most
patient person, the most patient you know, priest or you know,
teacher or grandmother to a homicidal one in a heartbeat.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
It's the absolute.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Worst, and that's why I always tell everybody, and Angel
is the only one that's really sort of taken me
up on this, and maybe the word will spread and
more people can use this advice. On a hot day,
never honk at anybody with their window open, because that
means they don't have air conditioning and they are about
to snap, and you might be the person they snap on.
So if you see a car driving around on a
(17:07):
degree on a day where it's ninety five plus and
they have their windows open, the guy doesn't have AC
he said no to the dealership, or it busted out
and he didn't get it fixed and he's livid.
Speaker 10 (17:18):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
I was watching TV a couple about a week and
a half ago with my wife and this guy this
advertisement comes on and my wife reaches for his cell
phone and is going to buy this thing, and she.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
Never does that, she never buys anything she sees on TV.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
I said, what is this and she goes, it's some
kind of care kid, and it really has a treatment
in it for when you go on vacation for forty
common and serious illnesses. Because when you go on vacation,
you might be in a country or in a part
of the world where you can't get medication, or they
treat you with I don't know, like a medicine man
(18:02):
comes in and it does some voodoo on you or something.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
So I she said, I said, wait before you do it,
let me see if this is on the up and up.
I did some research and I discovered it is. But
I want to have this guy on, Peter Galuley to
talk about this because I look, my wife never buys
any of this stuff. Peter, you got to sale out
of my wife and that's impossible.
Speaker 8 (18:23):
Peter, How you, sir, I'm great, Thanks for having me.
Speaker 4 (18:26):
Jim.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
So this is tell us what obviously we'll talk about,
you know, getting the flu and getting sick on vacation,
which sucks. But this is the wellness company and this
is a kid. Not only did my wife want it,
but Matt our producer I just found out during the
break he also bought one himself.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
What is in this thing and why do people need this?
Speaker 8 (18:47):
It's truly it's taking the country by storm. Tim. So
we have eight prescription medications. This is a no Walmart
band aid box. There are prescription medications made out to
you the purchaser, by our fifty state licensed doctors and
sent to you by a fifty state license pharmacy, and
they treat thirty different common conditions, something that you know
you're going to get over the next couple of years.
(19:09):
Cold clues UTI's we have it all covered. And really
the best time to treat any of these conditions is
in the first twenty four hours of experiencing symptoms. Otherwise
you're gonna get hung up in bed for days or more.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
Right, and when you're on vacation, you don't know the area,
you don't know what your urgent care to go to
or would doctor to go to, and you don't you
feel like you're on a different planet.
Speaker 8 (19:32):
Never mind that you might not even speak the same
language that's right as the doctor when you're on vacation.
We've had a ton of people come out of the
woodwork really saying that they were saved, saved by having
one of these medical emergency kiss in their suitcase because
it has everything from motion sickness to traveler's diarrhea. I mean,
food poisoning happens all the time and travel, especially when
(19:53):
you're in a strange place, eating strange food. Don't let
that ruin an expensive vacation that you paid all this
money for and took time off from work.
Speaker 2 (20:00):
Right.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
And I also love that doctor drews associated with I
think that guy's one of my favorite guests, one of
my favorite people I've ever met.
Speaker 8 (20:08):
Doctor Drew is an instrumental in designing these as part
of our Chief Medical Board, and we have a kit
for multiple scenarios, everything from respiratory viruses to travel to
first aid with things like an EpiPen, really life saving
medications that everyone's to have in their home.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
You know, it's amazing that nobody up until now has
ever done this. I mean, to have that, you know,
just that sense of you know, security when you travel,
that you have that with you is terrific.
Speaker 8 (20:34):
It really is. And I think we've just seen a
land shift in the American consumer after the COVID nineteen pandemic,
when people really wanted to take their health into their
own hands. Right, And this is really what we're all
about and allowing people to do. I mean, you have
a medicine counter at home, but nobody has medicine in
the medicane cabin we're allowing them to do that.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
It's an urgentcarekit dot com and what is it? What
does it run? And how quickly can you get it?
And the whole run.
Speaker 8 (21:03):
Yeah, so they start at two seventy five and upright,
we have a kit for, like I said, almost every scenario.
You can go on there purchase it right away. You
still have a two minute questionnaire. After that, the doctor
will review it right to your prescription and it'll come
from our pharmacy within a week or so.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
And it stays it's you know, shelf stable for a while.
Speaker 8 (21:27):
Absolutely. Yeah. So most medicines are shelf stable for at
least a year. And if you use a medicine, no problem,
we'll give you a replenishment. You can go back on
our site an order one.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Oh that's great, Okay.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
I got to get one because it seems, you know,
I talked to doctor ray As Sherry. He's a pullmonologist
out of Orange County, and he said that if you
go on an airplane, the chances of you getting a cold,
a respiratory illness or some kind of like you know,
just the household cold or about thirty eight percent.
Speaker 2 (21:58):
And he recommends more.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
And he also recommends when you get off a plane
to take all your clothes off, shower and throw those
clothes into a hot washer and dryer.
Speaker 8 (22:09):
Absolutely, there are more antibiotics prescriptions written every year than
there are Americans. So it's just a matter of times
that you need one of these medicines, So why not
have an events.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
Yeah, it's really a great idea, and it's and it's
legal to carry with you internationally or nationally.
Speaker 8 (22:24):
Percent these are real prescriptions from a real pharmacy, written
out in your name and.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
It and most of the people are probably you know,
calling because they you know, they do experience getting you know,
sick on on weekend trips or on a cruise especially. Look,
if you're on a cruise and you're taking a three
to four week cruise and you get sick, the chance
of them having the medication on board are probably pretty slim.
Speaker 8 (22:50):
Absolutely, absolutely, And we make it even easier than that,
tim We actually have a guidebook that comes in every
kit that literally lets you look up your symptoms and
match the medication and the kit basking.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
So it's literally like you're, you know, you're you're your
own pharmacist.
Speaker 8 (23:07):
It's your urgent care at home.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
That really is a great idea.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
I urge everybody to get when it's urgentcarekit dot com.
And I did some more research and I found out
you were with that coology and that guy's the best man.
That guy doesn't represent anybody but top shelf people.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
So how long you've been doing this?
Speaker 8 (23:24):
We launched these kids a little over a year ago
and we've just been stunned by their popularity. And really
it kind of I think should be the central part
of every home in America. Anyone can benefit from everyone, right.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
And it's not just traveling.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
But you know, if you get caught in you know,
like the electricity goes out, or you know, you get
like these you know, this incident on the fifteen free
wherever you're stuck for five or six hours, maybe you
have to slide to the hotel room because you missed
a plane. There's a lot of different areas when you
travel that you're not in control of. And if you
get sick, you know, that's the word first thing in
(24:00):
the world is getting sick outside of your house or
your bedroom. You always just want to be home, and
this is a little piece of home with you.
Speaker 8 (24:08):
Not only that, TIM think about all the natural disasters
we faced over the past year. I mean the fires
in California, the floods in Texas. I mean, these are
people that did not have access to never mind medicine,
but electricity. You could even call a doctor if you
needed one. And we've had countless people who have written
to us after buying a kit. We had one woman
that actually was in the middle of Hurricane Barrel last summer.
(24:29):
She lost power for a week and it was one
hundred and three degrees outside. If she didn't have a kit,
she could have died. She had a very severe too. UTI.
So it's just it's a heartwarming for us to see
these success stories and know that we're actually saving lives.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Well, I look, if you got matt Our producer and
my wife independent of each other, trying to buy one,
you're onto something.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
My wife doesn't buy anything nothing.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
I appreciate you coming on urgentcarekit dot com.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Is that right?
Speaker 8 (24:57):
That's correct?
Speaker 1 (24:58):
All right, urgentcarekit dot com. I can't I'm stunned that
nobody in the history of this country or the world
has come up with this before.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
You guys, stunned. Thank you, Yeah, appreciate it, all right,
thank you? Very much, Peter Galuley.
Speaker 1 (25:12):
It's an urgent care kit that has prescription medications, so
when you get sick on the road, it's happened to
all of us. You have some peace of mind. Urgentcarekit
dot com. That's a cool guy. And I'm buying one,
my wife's buying one. I know matd has one.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
We're gonna get one for Steph Foosh and everybody. We're
all getting them. We're getting them Steph Fush. Whether you
like it or not.
Speaker 10 (25:34):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (25:41):
There are a lot of videos going on going around
the Internet of people promoting products or businesses that is
not really them.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
I saw one the other day.
Speaker 10 (25:56):
Who was it?
Speaker 1 (25:57):
I thought, I think it was Tom Hanks, and you
could tell it was a fake. It was done pretty
cheaply promoting a product that then you do some further
research and he's not involved at all. But in the future. Look,
we're at the very beginning stages of AI and this
is only going to get more difficult to tell the
(26:17):
real celebrities who are endorsing products from the fake celebrities.
But it seems like everybody is being attacked, even Elmo.
Elmo on Sesame Street, you know, disgusting posts made of Elmo,
and people have a lot of time on their hands.
There's a lot of creative people out there and they're
(26:39):
attacking Elmo. And that's when you know we're at rock
bottom where Elmo from Sesame Street is getting whacked.
Speaker 2 (26:48):
Unreal. Let's find out what's going on here?
Speaker 11 (26:50):
Elmo social media is hacked. A series of graphic posts
containing anti Semitic language and criticisms of President Donald Trump
appeared on the Sesames Street character's official X page, as
seen in widely circulated screenshots and respond Sesame Workshop, the
nonprofit organization behind the long running series, issued a statement
(27:10):
condemning the profanity written posts, which have since been deleted.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
What the Hell's going on where they're tacking Elbow.
Speaker 11 (27:16):
A spokesperson for the company, taels NBC News July fourteenth, quote,
almost X account was compromised today by an unknown hacker
who posted.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
And what does Elmo have an X account?
Speaker 11 (27:26):
Quote? Almost X account was compromised today by an unknown
hacker who posted disgusting messages, including anti Semitic and racist posts.
We are working to restore full control of the account oh.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Oh h Walker to seventy three.
Speaker 11 (27:39):
Elmo was the subject of another social media frenzy in May,
after Trump signed an executive order to cut federal funding
to PBS and NPR. Sesame Workshop later struck a partnership
with Netflix to continue production of the series. After the
cuts were made, a post surfaced on LinkedIn indicating that
the perennial three and a half year old was out
of work. However, Sesame Workshops subsequently confirmed that the post
(28:01):
was merely a parody. The company said in a statement
to Deadline at the time, quote, Sesame Workshop and PBS
have shared commitment to using the power of public television
to bring critical early learning to children across the country
for more than half a century. We have been proud
to partner with them to bring Sesame Street's beloved characters
and research based curriculum to families nationwide.
Speaker 2 (28:23):
It's getting rough out there. When they attack Elmo. Emo
needs a social media pep that's pretty good.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
Maybe that's you doing all this grab Yeah, just talking
to his peeps, talking to his peepes. I say, that's great, man,
you can do that. You want to do that?
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Boy it.
Speaker 7 (28:50):
My sid used to have The principle at the Sids
Elementary School used to have me come in and do
their morning announcement.
Speaker 2 (28:55):
Oh that's great, Oh that's awesome.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
That is a cool dude, no thinking, Maybe this is
you doing all this?
Speaker 8 (29:05):
All right?
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Chimps on trend How is it possible to chimps follow
trends like human beings?
Speaker 12 (29:12):
All right?
Speaker 2 (29:13):
Also, it's not just.
Speaker 12 (29:13):
Humans, science suggests chimpanzees also follow trends. Isn't this great?
Please hold your jokes. Glenn Walker came up to me
while I was working on the story and goes, you
know what they say, you see monkey do?
Speaker 2 (29:26):
That actually sounds like Glenn Walker. You know what they say?
That sounds exactly like Glenn Walk. Right, you know what
they're saying. You know what they're saying.
Speaker 12 (29:34):
You know what they say, you see monkey do.
Speaker 8 (29:39):
Walk away?
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Oh man, yeah, well he's right, he's right. It's very funny.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
Glenn Walker is one of the anchors on KTLA and
Channel five. I've never heard anybody do a Glenn Walker
impersonation ever.
Speaker 12 (29:53):
Before The story comes from a sanctuary from chimps or
four chimps rather, in Africa, workers notice chimps doing things
that they learned from other chimps for no other reason
than that the other chimps were doing them.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
They were doing it to fit in.
Speaker 12 (30:06):
The copying was a sign of social acceptance, and it
actually relaxed the chimps. And so, if you're curious, the
latest trend that trimps at the same chimps excuse me,
chimps at the sanctuary are engaged in is not lebuobus.
It's not.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
Latex skin looking.
Speaker 12 (30:24):
It is dangling blades of grass and sticks from their
ear holes.
Speaker 8 (30:28):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
You know, there was a I went to Oregon over
the last past week and there was a carnival up there,
one of those local carnivals. I think it was a
county fair, and I didn't see it. It wasn't I
had to fly home. But next week, I think, is
the the orangutang that fights people and you can pay
ten bucks and go in and fight the orangutang.
Speaker 2 (30:51):
And I saw that.
Speaker 1 (30:52):
Nate Burghetsky Burghetzky talk about this. You rarely see these anymore,
you know, back in the seventies, it was everywhere you
go to a you know, a state fair, and there's
an orangutang that fights people and Nate had a great
take on it. He said, of the thousand guys there,
nine hundred and ninety five of them thought about fighting
(31:12):
the orangutang to pay to fight the orangutang. But if
you get a group of one thousand women, no women
ever think of fighting the orangutang.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
It's something in our dna that.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
We just want to go and pay when we get
drunk to go fight the orangutang. And the orangutank kicks
the crap out of everybody, like one with one hand
tied behind his back. He just kicks the hell out
of and you pay to do it. You pay to
fight the irangu tank. Oh that's classic.
Speaker 2 (31:40):
All right.
Speaker 1 (31:40):
Well, we're live on KFI AM six forty Conway Show
on demand on the iHeart Radio 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 iHeart Radio app.