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. Rain is the
big story, and we have you covered all weekend right
here on KFI. So keep it here on KFI and
you're going to hear all of the updates where it's raining,
(00:22):
where the mud is moving, and so on and so forth.
So the Farmer's Almanac publishing its last edition. That's the
almanac that told you what the weather's going to be like,
and a couple other predictions, how windy, it's going to be,
high load temperature, and they're pretty accurate. And I think
(00:43):
it's just going all digital now. I think they're publishing
their last edition, very last edition of the Farmer's Almanac.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
In the days before the internet, if you wanted to
find out what the weather would be like on a
certain date, I know, I sound like I like wrote
on walls. So if you wanted to know what time
high time would roll in, or which month would be
best to plant your tomatoes, you would consult the Farmers Almanac.
If it sounds a little outdated to look in a
book to check the weather, well, sadly it probably is.
(01:13):
The makers of this American Institution have announced twenty twenty
six will be the final year of publication.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Very very sad. My grandfather loved that Farmer's ALMANI He
read it every day, always looking stuff up. It was
terrific matter the end of an era.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
It was first published in eighteen eighteen, and the almanac
was a staple in American household with folklore and advice
on gardening, fishing, and astronomical events. It used a secret
formula to predict the weather that included sun spots and
lunar cycles, and maker say it had been almost eighty
percent accurate in its two hundred and seven years. I
can remember it being so spot on. A more recent
(01:52):
study from the University of Illinois says it's more like
fifty two percent of guys.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
That's not bad, Rightifty two is not great. Fifty two
percent is not great, Probably true, Probably true.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
No, Yah's basically.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
Like a quarter.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
Was closed to an announcement call you this season.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
We hope to never come.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
They went on to write that although the Almanac will
no longer be available in printer online, it.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
Lives on within you. So go ahead and plant.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Your peas when the daffodils bloom. That was one of
the pieces of advice in there. Watch for the red
sky at night, Sailor's Delight, and tell the grandkids how
granddad always swore by the almanac.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
That's how our story lives on.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
The final edition now available for purchase online and in stores.
And you can probably guess this girl's buying it.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Yeah, it's going to be a collector's item. So if
you can snake one of those, hold on to a
couple of years, you can sell on e Bay for
three four times what you bought it for a farmer's almanac.
Going away. All right, we've got a curfew. We did
a story yesterday and the day before of the violence
violence in Belmont Shore and so what do they do.
(03:09):
They attack the bar owners and make them shut down
early and now because some people can't behave there is
a curfew.
Speaker 4 (03:18):
People who live in Belmont Shore South. Through a Long
Beach City Council meeting that lasted hours.
Speaker 5 (03:24):
The more the public has access to alcohol, the more
potential harms.
Speaker 4 (03:30):
They voice their concerns about safety. The bustling nightlife scene
butts up to a residential neighborhood and demanded a midnight
curfew for bars on Second Street.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Oh, that's the worst. These bars are just barely getting
back on their feet after COVID, and now you slap
a two hour window that they can't sell food or alcohol.
And that's just the wrong move. It's the wrong move.
Punish the guys who are killing people and you know,
whizzing on the street. Punish those people, but not everybody.
Speaker 6 (04:01):
There's really only four bars that operate pas mid nine
until two am.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
Okay, well, then let's keep them open. You know, people
enjoy themselves now. They're in Belmont short one of the
most beautiful areas of southern California.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
The push for this born from a tragedy.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
When we got the news, it was it was a devastating.
Speaker 4 (04:19):
Thirty two year old Jeremy Spears was shot to death
after an altercation at a bar on Second Street on
October twenty fifth. He died in front of someone's home.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
Okay, that's a very very sad story. It's horrible, very tragic.
But it's not the bar's fault. It's the guys that
come in from usually from out of town. You know,
anytime there's a problem in Huntington Beach, it's always people
that come in from that don't live in Huntingdon Beach
that start the problem. This area is not new to Jeremy.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
When we grew up here, I'd.
Speaker 1 (04:52):
Come down here.
Speaker 4 (04:54):
Jeremy's death is the third in Belmont Shore in two years.
Speaker 5 (04:58):
Bars that stay up until two in the morning were free.
Speaker 7 (05:00):
Deaths have occurred.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
Is just pretty egregious to the community.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
But people pushing for a curfew left feeling frustrated.
Speaker 6 (05:07):
That's very disappointing to not have our voices heard as residents.
Speaker 4 (05:10):
The city council didn't even discuss a curfew.
Speaker 8 (05:13):
And the data is clear on that that if you
change the bar howers, limit them, you're going to result
in less crime, less debts, less impact to the community.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
And well, then just shut them down completely. I mean,
if that's you know, if that's the you know, your philosophy,
then shut down all bars in California. Then you'll have
less shootings. Just shut everything down.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
Instead, businesses will voluntarily close at midnight for the next
thirty days, and the city council will gather data and
meet to come up with a safety plan in the
next forty five days.
Speaker 6 (05:45):
It makes me feel like the bars are in chudge,
you know, and we had a good proposal on the
table and all it took was the businesses to go
meet with Christina Dugan behind closed doors and say no, no, no,
we got this.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
And people who I still don't understand why people are
freaking out in that area. You know, it's a very safe,
family oriented area. Those bars have been open for some
of them for thirty forty to fifty years and it's
only recently that they've had a run of crime, and
to shut everything down is just it's just the wrong move.
(06:20):
It's the beginning of the end and it's really you look,
if they were doing it in the winter, they could
probably take this, but in the summer they need to
stay open late to make their money. They got killed,
they got hammered during COVID, absolutely hammered, and now they're again.
They're just getting back up on their feet.
Speaker 9 (06:39):
And people who live in Belmont Shore say they have
problems from intoxicated patrons on a weekly basis. They say
they've had drunk drivers crash into homes and other parked cars.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
They're still going to get the alcohol, I mean, you know,
all the grocery stores will still sell it. The liquor stores,
so that's not the problem parked cars.
Speaker 9 (06:58):
And they also complain about a loud music that comes
from those bars and restaurants that stay open until two am.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Yeah, they want the bars out of there, and it's
just a matter of time before the bars disappear in
Belmont Shore. It's too bad. Great area, great nightlife. And
then you know what's next, Seal Beach, and then what's next,
Sunset Beach, then Huntingkon Beach. If these people get their way,
they'll go right down the coast and they'll they'll eliminate
all the bars and all the great nightlife along the coast.
Speaker 7 (07:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
I always wonder about that stuff.
Speaker 10 (07:28):
It's like, oh, they're going to complain about businesses that
are nearby too noisy?
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Were they not there when you moved in? Right? It's
like people complain, you know, they move next to an
airport and they complain about the airline. Never get that.
It is unbelievable. But everybody's so afraid of lawsuits nowadays,
and you know, emails and being canceled and being tortured
on social media, that they cave to everybody, everybody and everything.
Speaker 10 (07:51):
Especially people living almost anywhere in southern California. It's a
rare opportunity that you're going to be anywhere where there
is it going to be businesses or noise.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Right, But you know this is what here, that's what's here, right.
Claremont's a great example of what you just said. They
have an awesome night like nightlife. They got a bunch
of college you know, colleges in the area, and they
know how to control it.
Speaker 10 (08:17):
Things shut down at night and they keep it relegated
to the village. At the same time, they don't have
drive throughs. There's no standalone bars in the entire town.
It's a great old throwback town. Yeah, there's no big billboards.
Yeah right, it's like going to the like nineteen seventies.
Speaker 11 (08:34):
It is.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
It's done a little step back in time, which is
the attraction and the reason why the property values are
so high there. You're done right because you know, the
cops are pretty are very visible at night. You f
up in Claremont, they stepped to you really quick. Yeah,
they let you know. Yeah, if you're thinking about going
out and drinking and driving, avoid Claremont. That is not
your move.
Speaker 7 (08:55):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
They will torture you if you get If they if
you buzz through Claremont with just so.
Speaker 10 (09:00):
They're redoing the police station down there too, so they're
making room together.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
Right they need money, Well I've finished that police station too,
and they're gonna get it from you. So stay out
of Claremont if if you think that messing with cops
is a good idea, not a Claremont no not, how
to you do it? Close? I rely on KFI six
to forty. Keep an eye on the rain again from
tomorrow until Tuesday. Lots and lots of rain and you
want to make sure that you are on top of it.
(09:27):
And our rain reports tonight are being brought to you
by roof Buddy. Phone them up eight sixty six ninety
five Buddy, or go to roofbuddy dot com. It's Conway Show.
Speaker 12 (09:35):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Conway Show is something that we all have in common.
Everybody listening right now. You grew up with pennies, and
maybe that was the first thing you collected, old pennies.
You've had a ton of experience with them. Everybody knows
that they like you, always look for the whek back
the older pennies, maybe saved them in a jar. That's over.
(10:06):
Pennies are going away, they're moving on, and they're going
to disappear rather quickly.
Speaker 5 (10:13):
For the US mint today. After producing it's very last penny.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
That's a wrap, the last penny, and we're done.
Speaker 5 (10:20):
Cameras were president at the facility at Philadelphia for the
printing of that last penny. It comes after an executive
voter from President Trump. Due to high minting costs, after
two hundred and thirty eight years in circulation, the one
cent penny actually costs nearly four cents to mint. The
penny has grown irrelevant in today's economy. Back in nineteen
seventy three, excuse me, seventeen ninety three, by the way,
(10:43):
a penny could get you a biscuit, a candle, or
a piece of candy.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
Ah, right, Well, those days are over. A lot of
people have storage units. You know, you keep crap in there.
You don't have enough place at home, No, not enough
space at home. And it's just a waste of money.
You know, it's crap you should throw away or give away.
But you're spending one hundred and fifty bucks a month
two uord and fifty bucks a month to keep it
(11:08):
in a storage unit that you never go to ever,
ever go. We had a storage unit when we lived
in Tarzana, and we had it I think for two years.
I think we went twice or three times, and then
I just cleared it all out, sold everything or gave
everything away. And that was a huge relief to finally
shut that down. It was one hundred and twenty nine
(11:30):
dollars a month for nothing but storage units. How safe
are they? You know they're in the middle of nowhere.
There's a lot of in North Hollywood, in North Burbank,
But is your stuff safe in these units?
Speaker 7 (11:44):
Storage units? Looking for loot when suddenly he trips an
alarm and then discovers he's being recorded. He frantically grabs
a bag full of expensive tools and makes his getaway.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
Out.
Speaker 7 (11:56):
Owner Charles Lewis says he watched the theft play out
on his phone in real time.
Speaker 8 (12:00):
There was a masked guy in a ball cap going
through stuff in our Sworde unit.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
It dawned on me, we're getting robbed.
Speaker 7 (12:08):
He quickly called the cops, but the thief was long
gone when police arrived. He says the robber made off
with forty thousand dollars worth of equipment.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
Wow, that guy's got forty thousand dollars worth of equipment
in a storage unit. Who does this?
Speaker 8 (12:24):
We put a new lock on the storage unit and
then thought that was it.
Speaker 7 (12:29):
But get this. The very next morning, I.
Speaker 8 (12:32):
Wake up, like seven point thirty in the morning.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
Alert, he's back. Same guy's back.
Speaker 8 (12:37):
More motion in our storage unit, and the criminals had
come back.
Speaker 7 (12:41):
That's right, the nervy thieves returned. This time it was
his partner. The total take seventy five thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
Ex We'd say.
Speaker 7 (12:50):
What many of us don't realize is that most storage
facilities are not legally responsible.
Speaker 1 (12:56):
In the event of a break in. Yeah, I think
most people get that. You know that you out there
on your own.
Speaker 7 (13:01):
That leaves you on the hook if your belongings are
ever stolen. They're also not required to report every break
into the police, which means that your storage facility could
be a hotspot that thieves keep coming back to and
you would never know it. Addie Heidner is a travel
nurse and had stored all her belongings in this storage
(13:21):
facility outside Denver, all her furniture, all her clothes on
she says she didn't know the facility had fifty five
break ins last year.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
It's been a huge impact financially and overall has truly
impacted my life.
Speaker 7 (13:37):
In the course of a week, her unit was hit
three separate times.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
God almighty, fifty five units robbed in that facility and
hers banged on three times in a week.
Speaker 7 (13:49):
Total loss of eighty thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
Who has that much in storage? I mean storage is
for an old TV, an old dresser. You know that
your grandpa had before where he passed away. But eighty
thousand dollars worth a crap and a storage unit? I mean,
who does this?
Speaker 7 (14:06):
This was all they left behind her mattress, Oh, and
a bunch of coat hangers.
Speaker 1 (14:12):
And who has an old mattress? Don't you just get
rid of it unless you're like a pack rat style.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Pretty much everything that you can imagine that you accumulate
in a lifetime.
Speaker 7 (14:22):
Aw, So what can you do to keep your storage
unit safe?
Speaker 1 (14:25):
Don't get a storage unit.
Speaker 7 (14:27):
Experts say you should look for a storage facility with
a gated entrance that requires a special access code unique
to you. For added security, use a heavy duty lock
and install your own camera and it's open preps.
Speaker 13 (14:43):
Can't they just hop the fence anyway.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Yeah, it's easy to get into these storage units and
nobody's around, And everybody that goes to a storage unit
looks like a suspect anyway. Everybody walking around, whether it's
your unit or not, everyone looks suspicious. And it's usually
the old couple that lives on campus that doesn't care
either about what's going on. And I always thought that
that was odd, you know, I think I think luck
(15:08):
has really done a number on you. When you and
your husband or you and your wife are living at
a self storage facility, it's got to be lonely, and
you've got to wake up every every morning going what
the f happened? How did we get here? How the
hell did we get here? But they're not safe. They're
(15:30):
just not safe, ma'am. And I would not keep eighty
thousand dollars with a crap in a storage unit. That's outrageous.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
You know.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
I have a feeling that there's some kind of insurance
fraud going on in some of these places where they
say they have eighty thousand dollars where the crap it's insured,
then they call the insurance company Insurance County rights in
a check and they never had anything we're even close
to worth eighty thousand dollars. There's got to be some
kind of scam going on here or people just dumb.
Speaker 11 (15:58):
You know.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
There's also that possible as well. All right, we'll keeping
eye on the rain Friday, Saturday, the heavy rain days,
and then all the way till Tuesday. It's going to rain,
So keep it on KFI for your rain reports all
weekend long. It's Convoy Show.
Speaker 12 (16:13):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (16:19):
A week from Friday. We are going to be out there,
hope it's not raining. We'll be down in Orange County
in your Belinda Belly will be there. Crozier Angel. We're
trying to get Steph Fush out there. What's the word
on him? Is he coming back sometime soon? Say again,
stephsh coming back?
Speaker 13 (16:39):
He he is hopeful.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
When I last spoke to him, he was hopeful, like
mid December, just time to take vacation.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Yeah, he said, yeah, he had asked if he could
take a Christmas week off.
Speaker 13 (16:53):
He did.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
Yeah. Where was his accident? Was it in May?
Speaker 13 (16:57):
August?
Speaker 1 (16:58):
August middle of August.
Speaker 13 (16:59):
Huh was August?
Speaker 1 (17:01):
We all we almost lost him, that is true. I
mean when the highway patrol showed up, they thought that
whoever was in that car died. It's horrible.
Speaker 13 (17:12):
Yeah, and he made it and thought his arm was amputated.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Oh my god.
Speaker 13 (17:17):
If not for Jonathan and Kenyatti and Paul.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
Yeah, those are sweet dudes, and the and the one
woman that didn't want to be identified. Yeah, they saved
that man's life.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
And we are going to be in your Belinda, So
how about that as a transition, Yeah, next Friday. First,
how far do you live from yr Belinda? I'd say
like fifteen twenty minutes. Yeah, okay, so this is perfect
for you.
Speaker 13 (17:45):
I'd like us to stay there, Okay, is that possible?
Speaker 11 (17:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Maybe we can move the show to the White House
and do it there every now I wanna Yeah, I
don't know if he wants it, though, why wouldn't he.
We're lovely down in that basement. Oh that base great seller. Yeah,
that's beautiful down there. But that's a beautiful room that
he probably has, you know, expensive meals that he sells
out of that room. Well, should they do that on
(18:09):
the weekends? During the week, we'll be there. Yeah, well,
can come.
Speaker 13 (18:12):
Dine with us? How cool would that be?
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Okay, I mean you know how you want to take
that on.
Speaker 13 (18:21):
Let me see, I actually can.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
I'm not doing anything at midnight, so I actually can
start working on that belly.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Al has got a lot going on. She has She's
taken a class of some kind. She's dealing with her mom.
Her mom's got a private thing going on. She also
is going into business on another level. She takes a
workout class. She's into yoga now hot yoga. She's all
(18:53):
over the place.
Speaker 13 (18:54):
I've been a little busy.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Yeah, very busy. Anyway, we're coming to your Belinda. We're
gonna be there Friday week from this Friday, November twenty first,
from four to eight pm. We're extending for an hour
so people can come on down and we have free
food samples and giveaways, plus special gift bags for the
first two hundred and fifty people that show up, So
(19:16):
you probably don't have to be there right at four
to get a gift bag. May help, but I think
there'll be some left Tony.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
We're also going to have raffles every half hour, one
hundred gift cards White House, Anaheim White House gift cards
and some Seacrane radios to raffle.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
Oh oh that's great, okay, and raising money for Katerina's Club.
Speaker 13 (19:37):
Yes, this will kick off our annual pastathon.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
I love Smart and Final. You know there's two Smart
and Finals within like a quarter mile from one another
in Burbank. There's one on Burbank and Hollywood Way. Oh yeah,
and then if you go south there's another one on
Hollywood Way and Burdugo.
Speaker 13 (19:54):
Lucky.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Yeah. I have two Smart and Finals within two blocks
of each other. I enjoy them. So the Pastathon Friday
next Friday, Orberlinda Smart and Final in New Orba Linda
two to one five zero zero. Yourber Linda Boulevard two
to one, five zero zero, Orba Linda Boulevard right off
the ninety one. You'll see it there, and so come
(20:17):
on down, be nice to hang. You know, right before
the holidays. Everybody will be down there and enjoying themselves
and talking about the Farmer's Almanac that's not around anymore.
Speaker 13 (20:26):
And the US the Pennies penny.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
That went away, the rain that we had, and storage units,
oh yeah, the Vegas Buffet that's not happening anymore. The shutdown,
the old old news of the shutdown, Christmas trees? Do
you buy a real wine?
Speaker 4 (20:44):
That's right?
Speaker 13 (20:45):
Probably talk about that, that's right.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
YouTube TV in their battle with Disney. We'll go through
it all. So buzz on down there, all right, we
got to take a break. We're gonna have rain reports
all weekend long, and on this show. They're being brought
to you by roof Buddy. So call eight sixty six
ninety five, Buddy, call my buddy Levi at Roofbuddy or
Roofbuddy dot com. Roofbuddy dot com.
Speaker 12 (21:08):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
Rain is the big story. It's right now on almost
every TV set when you're watching local news. Pasadena could
get up to five inches of rain through the weekend.
Woodland Hills four point three inches. A lot of rain
is coming in twenty percent chance tomorrow, Friday, a ninety
percent chance Saturday, one hundred percent chance of rain, one
(21:40):
hundred percent that you don't get hired than that. So
the highs are going to be in the low sixties
tomorrow seventy two, but after that sixty three sixty two,
sixty two sixty one. A very cold weekend, very wet,
cold weekend is ahead of us, and so you got
to keep it on KFI to get all the updates
(22:02):
on the rain that is coming in. It's going to
be a lot, and there's storms coming in. Malibu is
going to be affected obviously a lot of possible mud
and mud slides. Let's go back here and listen to
Danny Romero talk about this rain coming in. This is
going to be a significant storm. It wasn't supposed to
(22:24):
be this big. It was supposed to be initially just
Thursday and a little bit on Friday, and they've updated
that to go from Thursday through Tuesday. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
Monday and Tuesday. We could get six straight days of
rain here in southern California. So if you know anybody
who's an outdoorsman who's living in the La River and
(22:47):
you may want to give them a shout out to
jump out over the next five days, or they could
be washed all the way down to Long Beach. And
it happens every time we get a big storm. People
get caught up in the l ver and then you
see the swift water rescue by La County Fire or
La City Fire having to go in and get these
(23:08):
lads out, and that'll probably happen again for this storm. Well,
let's get see what's going on. Danny Ramier here. I
know we played a little bit of this earlier. We've
got to get as much information as we can on
this rain.
Speaker 11 (23:20):
Six and San Clementy sixty nine.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Certainly, let me back that up here. I didn't start
in the beginning. Hold on, wait a minute, let me
put some boom in.
Speaker 11 (23:27):
You can see things during the rain that's in play.
But look at this what you're seeing. Here's a lot
of moisture showing up that's on the ground right now,
or they should say not hitting the ground zones virga.
And that's going to be the rain that you're gonna
feel much later when it does hit the ground. And
quite a bit still coming our way. So we're gonna
be tracking all that for you. On the temperatures. We're
gonna stay fairly out here. And they see the cloud
cover widespread, so seventies in Lancaster, Palmdale, Victorville, there Cooer
(23:51):
on the coast right now. Sixty six and San Clementy,
sixty nine for Long Beach, sixty four in Santa Monica,
sixty five for d Dondoby. So here's not going to
set up for its next couple of days or so.
We'll see some rain moving in late tomorrow, the clouds
building more and more today and into Thursday, and then
by Friday.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
Now we're gonna start.
Speaker 11 (24:08):
Seeing the really heavier rain. And we're talking about some
pretty good amounts one to two inches on Friday. And
that's kind of just the beginning because there's still more
to come we head into now Saturday. Now we got
more intense rain building up Saturday Friday. More so on Saturday,
more rain headed on. So flooding could then be a
concern for US over southern California.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
And we also have road closures or restrictions. SR twenty seven.
Anybody familiar with SR twenty seven, better known as its
name to Panga Canyon will be closed to through traffic.
So California's to Panga Canyon from pch to Grand View
(24:52):
Drive will be closed to the public at ten pm Thursday.
They might actually close it before if this first wave
is longer than they anticipate, but right now, Tabanga Canyon
is due to close from pch to Grand View Drive
on at ten o'clock on Thursday ten pm Thursday in
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anticipation of rainstorms Thursday night and into the weekend. Caltrans
will reassess daily and share updates. You can go to
a quickmap DOTCA dot gov, but we'll give it to you,
so you have to do that. Evacuation warnings issued for
La County Burnscar areas as well. Evacuation warnings have been
(25:36):
issued for several burnscar areas in the Los Angeles County
area as officials prepare for this heavy rain and possible
mud slides. The warnings will go into effect Thursday at
six pm and will last through Sunday at eleven am.
The burnscar areas include Bethany, These Canyons, Eton, Bethany Palisades, Hearst, Kenneth, Sunset,
(26:03):
Franklin Bridge, and Lydia. So Lots and lots of rain
coming in the beaches and mountains of southern California. Expected
to see rain delays and cooler temperature. Rain days and
cooler temperatures due to the storm expected in the region.
Rain is expected to in both areas, obviously, the ocean
(26:27):
and the Mountains to be pretty heavy Thursday evening into Friday.
The rain could also linger into next week. It looks
like Saturday is going to be the biggest day for
the next week when it comes to rain, Saturday is
going to be the wildest. So if you have any plans,
maybe an outdoor wedding, or you're doing anything Saturday, maybe
(26:49):
you're playing golf, for tennis, I don't know what you do,
you are probably going to have to change your plans.
If you expected to spend Saturday outdoors, that's not going
to happen. There's gonna be a lot, a lot of rain,
so be prepared and keep it here on kfive. We
will have rain reports for you all day Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
(27:14):
Monday and into Tuesday, and then once the storm leaves,
we will be out in your Belinda on Friday, a
week from the day after Tomorrow, November twenty first, four
to eight pm live broadcast Smart and Final in your
Belinda two to one five zero zero your Blindo Boulevard
right off the ninety one Freeway. We'll be broadcasting live
(27:35):
from Smart and Final, taking donations in store for the
KFI Pastathon, and we'll be there eight pm. We'll have giveaways,
food samples and special gift bags that Belly is putting
together for the first two hundred and fifty people that
show up. Two hundred and fifty people. But anyway, we're
(27:57):
in for a lot of rain and you got got
to keep it here on KFI. Once the rain's gone,
maybe you can listen to a little music, but if
you live in the Burns Scar area, you've got to
keep it on KFI. This could save your life, your
family's life. Who's coming up next here? Ronner? Who's on tonight?
I believe it's Chris Merril, Chris Merrill. All right, dig
(28:17):
Dong with that guy ding Dong, Chris Merrill, Roner, the
whole crew right here next. But keep it on KFI
for those rain reports. All weekend long, we're live on
KFI AM six four Conway Show on demand on the
iHeartRadio app. Now you can always hear us live on
KFI AM six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday,
(28:39):
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.