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April 18, 2025 41 mins
Amy King hosts your Friday Wake Up Call. ABC News chief investigative reporter Josh Margolin opens the show discussing the Florida State University shooting that left two dead and 6 injured. ABC News State Department reporter talks about Ukraine/ Russia peace talks, mineral deal, and Iran nuclear negotiations in Paris. The House Whisperer Dean Sharp is back on Wake Up Call for another edition of ‘Waking Up with the House Whisperer!’ Today, Dean talks about the magic of makeovers. Scott Carr from Bloomberg Media joins the show to give a stock market update. The show closes with ABC News entertainment reporter Will Ganss with the ‘Entertainment Report.’
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to KFI AM six forty wake Up Call
with me Amy King on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
KFI and KOST HD two Los Angeles, Orange County.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
It's time for your morning wake up call.

Speaker 4 (00:21):
Here's Amy King.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
And it's not just any wake up call. It's your
Friday morning wake up call. April eighteenth is the day.
Amy King is the person that's me. But you're here
to start your day and get a jumpstart on the weekend.
I don't know about you. I'm going to Disneyland, yep,

(00:46):
haven't been for I don't know two weeks.

Speaker 5 (00:48):
You're dressed for it.

Speaker 6 (00:49):
You're dressed for it.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
I am dressed for it. I have my Spirit jersey on.
I'm ready to go. And it's because it's the last
weekend of the Food and Wine Festival at California Adventure
and and we got some of those the little sip
and saber passes that you buy and then you kind
of it's basically you're buying coupons ahead of time, and
we got to go use them because it's over.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
So there's seemed to be eating.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Absolutely so we'll be doing that later today. But here's
what's at hand. For right now, because we got a
lot to get to. Here's what's ahead on wake up call.
A re sentencing hearing for Eric and Lyle Menendez has
been postponed indefinitely. Defense attorney Mark Gergos is expected to
seek to recuse the DA's office from the case in

(01:33):
a motion's hearing that's now scheduled for May ninth. UCLA
students and faculty have protested on campus after an international
grad student was detained at the US Mexico border. UCLA
officials say the student was detained by Customs and Border
Protection Wednesday night while trying to cross the border from
Mexico into the United States. The son of a sheriff's

(01:57):
deputy's been arrested for allegedly killing to people and injuring
five others on the campus of Florida State University. The
FSU police chief says the twenty year old shooter is
a student at Florida State and used his mom's gun
in the shooting. We'll get the latest on the shooting,
more about who did it, and if we have any
answers to the ever present question of why, with ABC's

(02:20):
Josh Margolan. That's in about three minutes. The US and
Russia have been talking about the possibility of peace in Ukraine.
In Paris, ABC Shannon Kingston's going to join us to
let us know if the US is ready to give
up on talks. That's at five twenty. Everyone loves a
good makeover, right well. The host of Home, Dean Sharp,
joins us to give us some tips on how you

(02:41):
can do it to your house. That's at five thirty five.
And then at five point fifty ABC's Willgans is going
to join us to tell us about what he calls
the sweetest movie of the year, and I don't think
it has to do with Easter chocolate. Let's get started
with some of the stories coming out of the KFI
twenty four hour newsroom. The Menendez brothers resentencing hearing has

(03:01):
been delayed indefinitely, which means the hearing that was scheduled
for today has been canceled.

Speaker 7 (03:07):
D A.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
Nathan Hawkman wants the brothers to remain in prison because
he says they haven't shown remorse for murdering their parents.
The defense says the brothers were sexually abused by their
father and the mother knew about it. Lyell and Eric's
lawyer has lashed out at the DA because of a
delay and the brother's resentencing hearing.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
Defense attorney Mark Errago says Elie County DA Nathan Hackman
is so biased against the convicted killers he'll follow motion
to have the prosecutor removed from the case. Hawkman says
it's not biased, just facts from the nineteen ninety six
murder of the Menindez parents in Beverly Hills.

Speaker 8 (03:37):
The nineties fact are the ones that we're pointing out
have continued all the way to this present day.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
The judge says he'll hear the recusal motion on May ninth,
along with considering whether to admit a State Parole Board's
risk assessment report that Hawkman was given, but the other
side and the judge weren't. Michael Monks KFI.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
News News brought to you by Simper. Solaris Lawyers have
released a new video they see shows the exact moments
SoCal Edison's equipment sparked the deadly fire in Altadena. Cafi's
Mark Mayfield says the video presented yesterday was made from
footage shot by Fortney fourteen witnesses.

Speaker 9 (04:11):
Flashes of light can be seen at a decommissioned call
Edison Tower near Eaton Canyon, then Moulten material is shown
moving downhill. Drybrush under the tower started burning twelve seconds
into the initial witness video.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
An attorney claims Edison botched the deactivation of an idle
power line, which led to the fire. In January, a
motorcycle rider's been shot and killed by police in Newport Beach.
Cafe's Daniel Martindale says it happened during a traffic stop
last night on Pcach Your.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
Whole Hospital in Newport Beach.

Speaker 10 (04:42):
Police say the suspect became uncooperative during the traffic stop.
He was rushed to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
It's unclear what exactly prompted officers to open fire.

Speaker 1 (04:52):
Police did not release other details about the shooting. They
also didn't say if the rider had a weapon. Tens
of thousands of music fans are expected to head to
Indio for the second weekend of the Coachella Valley Music
and Arts Festival. Performers this weekend include Lady Gaga, Travis Scotton,
Post Malone. They're actually headlining Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Senator Bernie

(05:14):
Sanders made a surprise appearance last weekend a lot of
people complained last time about waiting for hours in long
lines just to get into the camping area. Festival organizers
say they've added more tool plausas for this weekend's event
to avoid a repeat of those waits. We shall see.
Let's say good morning to ABC's Josh Margolan. Josh, can

(05:36):
you give us the latest stone what happened yesterday at
Florida State University with that mass shooting.

Speaker 5 (05:43):
Beautiful day, early early summer in Florida and a gunman
that twenty years old suspect, according to police, right near
the student union, squares off and fires. There's no clear
We don't clearly know what the motive was. As of yesterday,
they said they were still looking for it. We know

(06:05):
the suspect has a history of mental problems, mental challenges ADHD,
he had been medicated, He was the subject of a
really protracted, ugly custody battle between his biological parents. But
we don't know what all led to this occurring yesterday

(06:26):
as classes for the semester are starting to wind down
at one of the biggest universities in Florida.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Do we know, Josh, was he on medication at the time.
You'd said that he had been in.

Speaker 5 (06:37):
The past, so that information is not known, and it's
not entirely clear whether we'll know that for sure because
of privacy rules. So the first thing is the gunman.
The suspected gunman was shot by police after refusing to surrender,
was injured. He will survive, not like threatening injuries, so

(06:57):
there will be a prosecution going forward'll be charged. So
I don't know if we'll know that that type of
medical information because that type of stuff tends to be
closely held for somebody unless they die in these incidents.
But we do know he has a history, and we
also do know, interestingly, it's a terrible point of interest

(07:21):
here that his stepmother is a career shriff's deputy in
that community, and that one of the guns allisuedly used
in the crime yesterday was one of her weapons that
she had gotten from work.

Speaker 1 (07:34):
Okay, and so that was the stepmom and officials have
already come out in support of the deputy. Could she
be in trouble because her son got her hands on
the gun even though he's twenty, He's.

Speaker 5 (07:44):
Not a kid, right, So the question will be it
was not the gun that she actually uses day in
and day out. Right now. It's a buyer service weapon.
There's a routine in a lot of law enforcement agencies
where people have a service weapon and their agency wants
to get them a new one, upgraded or something where

(08:05):
they're allowed to keep the older weapon or buy the
older weapon because gun owners tend to like the comfort
of a weapon they've used for a while. So this
was hers. The question always is and this is no different.
How did the alleged shooter get the weapon? Was the
weapon properly secured? That will definitely be part of the investigation.

(08:28):
They've already said it. They've come out in favor of
the stepmother, the sheriff's deputy, which is pretty standard among
law enforcement to say that she's got a good record
and well regarded, and we don't have any reason to
doubt that. But they will want to see where was
the gun being kept in the home. Should the step

(08:50):
son have had access? A history of mental challenges could
conceivably preclude somebody from getting access to handguns, So they're
going to want to look at all of that.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Okay, And the two people who were killed yesterday, I
had seen that they were not students.

Speaker 5 (09:11):
Right, so they are not students. The question, very key
question that we still don't have answers to just yet.
Hopefully we'll have more today. Were these people that were
shot killed at and injured, were they targeted or was
this a random shooting? And that's going to be critical.
We don't know. We do know that the two people

(09:33):
who died tragically were not students. Are they support staff?
Are they cafeteria staff, maintenance staff, faculty administrators, We don't
have that information. This occurred near the student union, so
we all know how a student union operates. There's going
to be restaurants, and there's going to be maybe a
fitness club inside, and there's obviously going to be maintenance personnel,

(09:55):
and professors are floating in and out, and administrators are
floating in and out. So fairly, you know, densely populated
portion of a big campus.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
Okay, And so what's next. They're going to probably scour
social media and try to figure out what happened, because
you said he stopped, squared up and started shooting.

Speaker 5 (10:16):
Right, So that's been going on since yesterday. He does
not seem to have a that big a social media presence.
There was some They will obviously be trying to piece
together his final hours and days. Who did he interact with?
They have his vehicle, so cars have a wealth of
information now because they're so high tech. Where did he go,

(10:37):
who did he talk to? Was there some type of
triggering event? You know, we've seen in the past that
triggering events could be anything from a small blow up
at home with the parents, could be financial problems, could
be a loss of a job. I mean, this is
all just hypothetical, but these are the kind of things
they're looking at. They so they want to see what

(10:57):
all led up. Now, remember that in a lot of cases,
especially with people that are in severe psychiatric crisis, a
triggering event to them might not be a triggering event
to us, because you and I are thinking, you know, logically,
and have linear thought, and so a small slight would

(11:17):
not lead us to shoot people. But they want to
figure out what all went on, And in so many
of these cases they find two things. One is that
the breadcrumbs are there, so when they look back they
can see what occurs. Two that they often find that
it's not just one thing, that there could be a
ramping up, so one thing on top of another thing

(11:40):
on top of another thing, and you add in some
type of small flight or triggering event, and then you
have the explosion.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Kind of like the straw that broke the camel's back,
exactly right. ABC's chief investigative reporter, Josh Margolan, thank you
so much for the information. Appreciate it. Have a good weekend.

Speaker 5 (11:59):
Have a great weekend.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
Let's get back to some of the stories coming out
of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. A federal appeals
court has rejected an effort by the Trump administration to
block in order directing it to facilitate the return of
the man from Maryland who was deported to El Salvador
by mistake. The court ruled the administration was trying to
claim a right to stash away residents of this country
in foreign prisons without the semblance of due process. That's quote.

(12:24):
Ki Abrego Garcia is a citizen of El Salvador. He
was allowed to meet yesterday with Maryland Maryland Democratic Senator
Chris van Holland, who went to the prison where Abrigo
Garcia is being held. Before the meeting, Van Holland had
complained that he and his staff were not allowed to
enter the prison. After the meeting, the president of El
Salvador posted a photo of Van Holland with Abrigo Garcia.

(12:48):
He wrote on X again in his words, kilmar Abrego
Garcia miraculously risen from the death, camps and torture, now
sipping margaritas with Senator Van Holland in the tropical Pairaradise
of l Salvador. Yemen's Houthi rebels say air strikes targeting
the rose Isa oil port have killed seventy four people

(13:09):
and wounded almost two hundred others. In a statement, Central
Command said US forces took action to eliminate a source
of fuel for the Iran backed Huthi terrorists terrorists to
deprive them of illegal revenue that has paid for Hoothi
efforts to terrorize the entire region for over ten years.
The Trump administration is asked the IRS to revoke Harvard's

(13:31):
tax exempt status. The request follows President Trump freezing more
than two billion dollars in federal funding for the Ivy
League University because it has refused to comply with Trump
administration policies on DEI, merit based admissions, anti Semitism, and
other issues. Tax Exempt status prohibits organizations from engaging in
certain political activities. A man wearing a security guard uniform,

(13:57):
has been arrested for allegedly stabbing a man he was
arguing with at a Metro rail station in Pasadena. The
man attacked was stabbed several times yesterday on the pedestrian
bridge leading to the Sierra Madre Villa station. Senator Chris
van Holland from Maryland's been allowed to meet with the
illegal immigrant who mistakenly got swept up in an ice

(14:18):
raid and was sent to a prison in El Salvador.
His attorneys are fighting to force the Trump administration to
facilitate his return to the US. The administration so far
saying he's not coming back. Christians around the world are
observing Good Friday, today, marks the crucifixion of Jesus Christ,
ahead of his resurrection on Easter Sunday. Stock markets are

(14:39):
closed for the Good Friday holiday. Today. At six oh five,
it's Handle on the News. A judge has ruled that
Google is operating an illegal ad monopoly. What could that
mean for Google? Let's say good morning now to ABC's
Shannon Kingston. Shannon, the Secretary of State, Marco rub Ruby,

(15:00):
Special Envoy Steve Whitcott, and Keith Kellogg all in Paris,
not to see the Eiffel Tower, but to talk about
ending the war between Russia and Ukraine.

Speaker 8 (15:12):
That's right. They wrapped up that round of talks today,
Amy and by all measures, things went pretty well. The
main focus was really getting the European allies up to
date on the latest US framework for a peace deal.
But before he left France, Secretary of Rubio he said
that basically the US is going to have to move

(15:32):
on soon unless they see some action. And now his
comments come as officials directly involved in the talks. Everyoney
just mentioned and the President himself have grown increasingly frustrated
over the kremlins apparent lack of commitment to reaching peace
in Ukraine and refusal back down from effectively unmeetable demands
like sanctions relief that would involve the US and all

(15:55):
of its European allies as well.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
So interesting that they're saying they might just walk instead
of continuing to try to hammer out a deal. And
so far does it appear that Ukraine is kind of
on board with most stuff and Russia is the one
that's resisting or is there resistance on both sides?

Speaker 8 (16:14):
You know, it's mostly aimed at Russia here to kind
of dial up the pressure, of course bringing Ukraine along.
It's also important. Rubio did say that, of course the
Ukrainian representatives are going to have to head back to
Kiev and Blalok to Ukraine's President's Lenski make sure he's
on board here. But really, you know, things have been
going a little bit better than they were at least

(16:36):
a couple of weeks ago with Ukraine. We're also seeing
progress towards a mineral deal with the country. The President
said yesterday he expects that to be signed in this
upcoming week, but of course negotiators are still hammering out
some details on that end, okay.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
And then to refresh everybody's memories, I mean, what does
Ukraine get for giving the US access to go in
and mine rare earth minerals, which of course they're going
to be worth you know, millions and billions of dollars.

Speaker 8 (17:03):
Well, of course, if you ask the Trump administration, Ukraine
gets the opportunity to pay back the United States for
all of its support through the years of this war.
But really what this is about for Ukraine as security guarantees.
They say that this economic partnership having American investment interests
is going to guarantee that any peace agreement reached is

(17:27):
upheld going forward, because you know, to put it, put
it in an idiom, it's that the US will have
a dog in the fight that economic stimulus it gets
from this kind of mineral deal.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Okay. And then there was also some talk that there
was some discussion about Iran during this trip to Paris.
Did that happen?

Speaker 8 (17:49):
That's right, That was really kind of like a side
dish here if Ukraine was the main course. But negotiators
here from American delegation, they're talking to the European allies
who have always played a very key, very central role
in negotiating with Iran. And that's another front where the
Trump administration is expecting to see action and they want

(18:10):
to see it fast. I just think that the patients
here has already warmed in with Iran. Some more talks
will happen this upcoming weekend in Rome.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
In Rome, okay, And at this point it still just talks.
We're not to the point where we think we're going
to get a deal.

Speaker 8 (18:30):
You know, we know that doesn't seem to be directly
in the offing here. Anything could happen, but at this
point yes, they're just warming up to each other.

Speaker 1 (18:40):
Okay. ABC News State Department correspondent Shannon Kingston, thanks so
much for the info. We appreciate it. Thank you all right,
have a good weekend. And amber alert's been issued in
Riverside and San Bernardino Counties for an eight year old
girl less seen in Desert Hot Springs. Authority say they
believe Nova Landeros was taken by a man named Oscar

(19:02):
Landero's not clear how they're related. The girl was last
seen last Thursday night on Ostrella and Mesquite Avenues in
Desert Hot Springs. She's four foot five, about sixty pounds,
with brown hair and brown eyes. Oscar Landeros is thirty
three years old, five to eleven, about two hundred pounds.
He may be driving a gold two thousand and nine
Toyota Tacoma truck. UCLA students and faculty have protested the

(19:26):
detention of one of the university's international grad students at
the US Mexico border.

Speaker 9 (19:31):
UCLA officials saying the student was detained by US Customs
and Border Protection on Wednesday night while trying to cross
the border from Mexico into the United States. UCLA Vice
Chancellor Mariosako confirmed the detention on Thursday night.

Speaker 1 (19:45):
Ky if i's Mark Mayfield says US Customs and Border
Protection did not confirm the student was being held. The
Anaheim Chamber of Commerce is shutting down.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Orange County's most populous city, with two major sports teams,
more than one hundred and fifty hotels, and about fifteen
thousand bills. Businesses, including Disneyland, won't have a Chamber of
Commerce now. Interim Chamber President and CEO Jerry Jordan says
the Chamber's been unable to recover since the fraud and
corruption scandal three years ago involving then Chamber president Todd Ahmant.
Several businesses left the chamber after that scandal. A vote

(20:15):
next week will determine how to shut it down. Mark
Ronner KFI News.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
A sixth horse has died this year at the Los
Alamitos Race Course. A three year old Philly named Non
Compliant was hurt while galloping early yesterday morning and has
since died. She was trained by legendary horse trainer Bob Baffort.
Farm Workers, migrant or otherwise are closer to being a
thing of the past.

Speaker 11 (20:40):
Researchers in Japan had developed a navigation system that allows
agricultural robots to move between crop rows as they pick
stuff as small as strawberries. The farm bots use way
points in lasers to get close enough without damaging small
scale farm crops. Current systems are much more expensive, use
less reliable GPS and special markers on the fields, and
they can't get to those smaller spaces. Farmers are looking

(21:02):
more to automation as rural population's age and tighter immigration
policies make finding labor harder. Michael Krozier KFI News.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
On one hand, I think that that's so cool, and
the other hand, I go, you know what, pretty soon
nobody's gonna have a job.

Speaker 4 (21:14):
Our job's lost. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
The National Park Service is waiving entrance fees to sites
like Yosemite and Sequoia National Park to celebrate National Park Week.
People can visit any of California's nine national parks for
free Tomorrow, April nineteenth. This only covers entrance fees, not
other costs for activities like camping and voting. National Park
Week runs across the country until Sunday, April twenty seventh. Okay,

(21:38):
guess who's entering the Star Wars Universe woo.

Speaker 6 (21:46):
I know.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
Brian Gosling, free time Oscar nominee made the announcement yesterday
at a Star Wars convention in Tokyo. He says the
new film is called Star Wars Starfire. It's going to
be directed by Sean Lovey, who just had a worldwide
hit with Deadpool and Wolverine.

Speaker 4 (22:07):
Interesting.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
Star Wars Starfighters schedule to hit theaters in May of
twenty twenty seven. I'm on board for this.

Speaker 4 (22:14):
I like everything Star Wars.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
I mean, some people complain about series, certain series and things, but.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
Because the movies are horrible, but I still love them.

Speaker 4 (22:21):
Oh exactly.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
Yeah, No, I love it, and I love that Ryan
Gosling's joining the Star Wars universe. That's fun. Tonight the
Dodgers are taken all the Rangers. They're in Texas. The
first pitch goes out at five o'clock. You can listen
to every play on every game. AM five seventy LA
Sports is the place to go. It's live from the
gapin Motors Broadcast booth. You can also stream all the

(22:45):
games live in HD on the iHeartRadio app. The keyword
AM five seventy LA Sports Go blue. The re sentencing
hearing for Eric and Lyle Menendez has been postponed indefinitely.
A May ninth motions hearing has been set to address
a state Parole Board report on whether the brothers would
be a danger to the public if they're released. No

(23:07):
new resentencing date has been scheduled. The State of California's
filed the lawsuit against the US Department of Education. The
lawsuit claims California schools could lose nearly two hundred million
dollars in pandemic relief for kate to twelve schools that
has already been allocated. Attorney General Rob Bonta says the
Trump administration overstepped its authority again when it cut the funding.

(23:30):
The La RAMS are taken over La Fires Air Operations
Base in Van Euy's temporarily. Team president Kevin Demoff says
it'll be the RAMS base for the NFL Draft, which
gets underway next Thursday. Themof says it's one way the
NFL can express gratitude to first responders for their work
during the wildfires in January. The RAMS have the twenty

(23:52):
sixth overall pick in the first round. Let's say good
morning now to mister sleepyhead. The host of Home on KFI.
Our house whispered Dean Sharp morning.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
Dean, good morning.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
So glad we could connect with you because we got
to talk makeovers. I always love a good makeover, but
we're going to take it beyond our faces and go
all the way to our houses.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
Yeah, you know, uncertain times, that's kind of where we're
at right now, and a lot of people not knowing
where to go with their money. And there's been a
change in the wind. People are wondering, is this the
year to do my remodel? Our price is going to soar,
our tariffs going to affect the prices of materials, And

(24:34):
I'm getting that question a lot, and the simple, simple
answer is don't know. And so as a result, we're
helping folks spend their time and attention for those who
want to move forward with certainty on the makeover. And
the difference between a makeover and a renovation and a
remodel is some money money really, I mean when you

(24:57):
think remodel, what we're really literally taught talking about is
moving around bones on the house, and there's a lot
of money.

Speaker 7 (25:04):
In the pad.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
A renovation is taking what's there and giving it a refresh.
But a makeover is the most potent and yet least
expensive approach to your house, and that is changing colors,
changing materials, and without having to move around major elements.
And something that a lot of people look over at

(25:27):
times is how powerful a makeover can be in changing
the vibe of the house and if you know how
to approach it, it can really have a big impact.
So that's what we're spending the weekend, focusing on the makeover,
the magic makeover.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
The magic of makeovers. And you're going to be covering
everything from bathrooms to bedrooms, to living rooms to kitchens
and even whole house projects and looking through some and
the exterior too. Some looking through your list and I'm like, oh,
I've done that. Oh my mom did that to her
house in the bathroom. There are some things you can
do that don't cost a ton of money, but are

(26:04):
really going to update the look. Like instead of having
that whole mirror that covers the wall, bring that up
to date, how.

Speaker 4 (26:11):
Do you do that exactly? So you know, you might
have a nineteen seventies or nineteen sixties circa large frameless
mirror that's sort of plastered across the wall above the
vanity in the bathroom and you know, which is fine
and if you love it great. A lot of people
are like, I don't know about this thing, but what
do I do instead? Well, that mirror can be removed,

(26:33):
and mirrors from a glass shop not that expensive. Also,
sometimes you can remove the mirror and preserve it and
have it cut into a smaller mirror and then a
frame placed around it, replace it in place, so that
now we've got a full sized mirror framed that has
this modern contemporary look to it, as if you've just

(26:57):
hung a framed mirror on the wall.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
Okay, I love I love that. A lot of these
projects that you have, I'm like, oh, my mom has
done that to her house, so when I go home,
I always am watching for stuff that she's done. Here's
one we're moving over to the living room that I
actually did. That a fireplace, I think is one of
the most fabulous things you can have in your house.
But sometimes they are really dated and ugly. But you

(27:20):
can update it and what I did, and you can
tell me whether this was a good decision or not.
Was I painted my fireplace and I retiled the hearth myself.

Speaker 4 (27:32):
Oh yeah, it's a fantastic idea. Fireplaces are a funny thing.
I mean they were designed to be the centerpieces of rooms.
A lot of people find them in the way, and
a lot of folks, I would say, I think the
current number is like eight out of ten homeowners don't
really use their fireplace, and yet it's there. And the
point is, if you're not going to get rid of it,
which of course is expensive, then acknowledge the fact that

(27:56):
it is something to look at, that it's a show piece,
that it's a view piece, and yes, tile over the hearth.
Paint the firebox. And when people say paint, When I
say that, people are like, what do you mean? Paint
the firebox. You know you may have dated, stained, sooty
ugly firebrick inside the firebox. Go down ten dollars worth

(28:18):
of high heat barbecue paint at the hardware store will
allow you to paint out the entire firebox so that
it's black dark, doesn't show any soot stains anymore. And
yet if you decide to have a fire in there,
it can handle that heat no problem. And it's like
a jeweler's cloth behind a jewel And even if you

(28:38):
don't use the fireplace, find something to put in there,
a bouquet of flowers, a pile of fire wood. I mean,
the list can go on and on and on, but
use the fireplace for what it should actually be, which
is a visual showcase of something most of the time
when we're not actually using the flames.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
Yeah, and I can tell you from my personal experience,
it made a world distance. I did do the firebox,
plus I did the front, the facade or whatever you
call it, and the hearth, and it was just like
the whole room like was lit up and it looked
so much better. It was it was just and it
was a quick fix. It wasn't easy. It took a
weekend and it was great.

Speaker 4 (29:15):
Yeah, and that's the point of the makeover. A little
elbow grease, just a tiny bit of money invested and
a big change.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
Okay, and then one last one before I let you
go in the kitchen. I love this idea. And that's
just putting some lighting under the kitchen cabinets.

Speaker 4 (29:33):
Oh yeah, I mean, and I think everybody understands that.
It's just that that most people are waiting, like, oh,
I'll do that when I replace my kitchen cabinets, because
that's an expense and it's probably really expensive, and I
don't want to mess with that with my existing cabinets.
But the fact of the matter is LED lighting. We're
in the golden age of LED strip lighting. And if

(29:55):
you just take a peek online, you'll realize that strip
lighting comes in role and self adhesive roles. It is
so inexpensive and it looks so good. I'd yet to
have somebody say to me anything other than, oh my gosh.
If I realized that it was as inexpensive as it is,
I would have done this years ago. And so take

(30:16):
a look windows shopping is free. Do your research. You'll
find that some of these moves you can make right now.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
Absolutely I love it and your whole show this weekend.
Your shows this weekend are going to be focused on this.
And those were just a couple of the really easy
quick fixes. There's so many more good ideas, so be
listening this weekend six to eight on Saturday, nine to
noon on Sunday. The show is called Home on KFI.
Thank you so much to our house whisper Dean Sharp.

(30:45):
Can't wait to hear more tips.

Speaker 4 (30:48):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
Have a great weekend. Let's get back to some of
the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom.
A memorial service has been held for San Bernardino County
aff's deputy killed in the line of duty. Deputy Hector
Quavas Junior was killed in a crash March seventeenth during
a police chase in Victorville. Video from the scene showed

(31:09):
the patrol SUV split in two. Captain Randy Jerman remembered
Quavs yesterday as a kind person and a hard worker.
He was thirty six years old and worked for the
Victorville station for the past three years. People impacted by
the fire that started in Eaton Canyon are demanding a
formal investigation into State Farm Insurance.

Speaker 10 (31:29):
They say State Farm has mishandled claims filed by policyholders
who lost property in the wildfire. Altadena and Pasadena residents
held a rally on Thursday in front of State Farm's
catastrophe claim tent on Colorado Boulevard. They say wildfire survivors
are in financial trouble after State Farm delayed and denied
a series of claims.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
Hey if i's Daniel Martindale says last week, State Farm
asked state officials to approve a seventeen percent emergency rate hike.
A recent poll show's former Vice president Kamala Harris has
the most support so far if she were to run
for governor of California in twenty twenty six. The poll
of one thousand registered voters, done by Inside California Politics
and Emerson College, included eighteen hypothetical candidates. It found thirty

(32:12):
one percent of voters would support Harris. Democratic rival Katie
Porter got eight percent support. Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco,
who's a Republican, got four percent. The Army Corps of
Engineers is finished clearing fire debris from the Palisades Library.
The completion clears the way for the La County Library
branch to be rebuilt. The Corps finished its work in

(32:33):
six days, twenty four days ahead of schedule. La merbass
Is LA's recovery effort from wildfires one hundred days ago
is on track to be the fastest in modern California history.
The man accused of killing the CEO of United Healthcare
has been officially charged with murder. A for count indictment
was returned against Luigi Mangioni yesterday. The charges are murder, stocking,

(32:57):
and a weapons offense. Mangioni allegedly shot and killed Brian
Thompson in front of a hotel in Manhattan on December fourth.
Tens of thousands of music fans are headed to Indio
for the second weekend of the twenty twenty five Coachella
Valley Music and Arts Festival. Headliners for the second weekend
that include dozens of performers are Lady Gaga, Travis Scott,

(33:17):
and Post Malone. Organizers say they have fixed issues that
led to ten to twelve hour waits for fans to
get into campgrounds last weekend. Let's say good morning to
ABC's Will Gans, our multi platform reporter.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
I like that title me too.

Speaker 6 (33:35):
It makes me feel like I don't know, Beyonce or something.

Speaker 7 (33:38):
It's called the multi Platinum So I'll.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
Take it all right, So Will, I've been talking about
this all morning. You have for us the sweetest movie
of the year.

Speaker 7 (33:50):
I honestly, it was such a surprise and such a delight. Yes,
it's called The Ballad of Wallace Island, and it's like,
you know, it was sort of off my radar. I
think probably just because it's not one of these huge,
big budget movies. There's not any like huge, huge stars
playing a huge role in it. Carrie Mulligan is in it,

(34:11):
but you know, she's just a supporting character here. So
it is a really sweet movie. It's about this like
quirky man who lives alone on this remote island called
Wallace Island, and we find out that he has won
the lottery not once, but two times.

Speaker 6 (34:28):
And what is he doing with his money.

Speaker 7 (34:30):
He is reuniting a couple members of a band that
he loves. Unbeknownst to each other, they had split up
and they haven't spoken in like ten years or whatever,
and he is paying for a private concert for each
of them, and then they show up and realize that
the other one is there.

Speaker 6 (34:47):
So basically, this very very wealthy, quirky.

Speaker 7 (34:50):
Millionaire is reuniting a band, his favorite band, on this
remote island, and it's sort of about those two reconnecting
and dealing with this very strange millionaire. And it's it's
laugh out loud funny, and it's also really really heartwarming. Like,
you know, I went with a couple of friends this
week and we walked away and we were like, oh
my god, I just feel so good about the world.

Speaker 6 (35:11):
When we were leaving the theater, it was really happened very.

Speaker 7 (35:13):
Often, exactly exactly.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
Okay, all right, so the Ballad of Wallace Island. Never
heard of it before, but it's on my radar.

Speaker 6 (35:23):
Now, good good, Yeah.

Speaker 7 (35:25):
So it's in theaters and you know, I'm sure it'll
come to streaming probably in a couple of weeks.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
Too, okay. And for you dark people, there's also something scary.

Speaker 6 (35:34):
Oh yeah, okay.

Speaker 7 (35:35):
So this is Sinners and it is on the complete
other end of the emotional spectrum.

Speaker 6 (35:40):
But this is Michael B.

Speaker 7 (35:41):
Jordan and he is playing twins in this movie. And
it's directed by Ryan Coogler, who directed Black Panther, Wakonda Forever,
and he directed Creed, so he's worked with Michael B.

Speaker 6 (35:50):
Jordan before. But this movie is.

Speaker 7 (35:53):
About two twins played by Michael B. Jordan who come
back to the South from Chicago and they are gonna
been a juke joint in the nineteen thirties, and so
they round up some of the best musicians in the
Mississippi River Delta.

Speaker 6 (36:07):
And they they open this juke joint.

Speaker 7 (36:10):
But what happens while they're there is the place basically
becomes under siege by vampires. So yeah, it's an allegory
of you know, the other types of evil that you know,
were pervasive in the area in the nineteen thirties and
and you know, of course they're still around today. But

(36:31):
the way they use music in the movie is just incredible. Obviously,
the cast is amazing with Michael B.

Speaker 6 (36:39):
Jordan.

Speaker 7 (36:39):
You also have Hailey Steinfeld in there. It's it's scary,
it's like unnerving, but it's so good and I think
right now it has like ninety eight percent on Rotten Tomatoes,
so critics love it. It's it's definitely worth seeing, but
it is not relaxing by any means.

Speaker 1 (36:57):
Okay, all right, yeah, I'm gonna leave that off my list.
And if you don't feel like going to theaters, there's
there's a show that's taken you way, way way North.

Speaker 7 (37:12):
Yes, it's North of North in fact, and that's the
name of the show. It's on Netflix, and it's a
sweet little sitcom that you know, it's very simple. It's
about a community of indigenous people who live in the
Arctic Circle. And the main character is is a woman
who is you know, basically leaving her deadbeat husband and

(37:34):
how she's navigating getting a job and you know, her
relationship with her mom and her own child, and it's
just sort of a.

Speaker 6 (37:42):
Glimpse at what life is like in modern.

Speaker 7 (37:44):
Times for you know, these communities that live basically where
it's winter all the time, and it's you know, it's
really sweet. It's very funny, and it's not very You're
not gonna have to spend a lot of you know, brain,
We're trying to figure out what's going on. It's very simple,
and yes, exactly, and.

Speaker 1 (38:05):
It's a series. It's not a movie, right.

Speaker 6 (38:07):
A series, yes, yes, and episodes okay.

Speaker 1 (38:10):
And Netflix, so it's probably is the whole thing out
or half the season out.

Speaker 6 (38:15):
Whole thing's there?

Speaker 1 (38:16):
Oh oh, I got a new binge?

Speaker 5 (38:18):
All right?

Speaker 6 (38:20):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (38:20):
And will have we both failed our assignment again. I
still haven't seen the penguin lessons.

Speaker 7 (38:26):
I know, I'm starting to feel like, well, I did
watch North of North, which takes place in the Arctic Circle,
so that's as close as I've gotten to the penguins.

Speaker 6 (38:33):
I still haven't. You're right, You're right, all right. I
thought I might get partial credit.

Speaker 1 (38:40):
Well, okay, i'll give you partial credit. I'm going to
give thank you ABC's Willgans. Thanks so much. We'll hopefully
do it again next week.

Speaker 6 (38:46):
Huh, all right, sounds like a plan. Amy, thank you.

Speaker 1 (38:49):
All right, let's get back to some of the stories
coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Two
people have been killed at least six others hurt in
a shooting at a Florida State University in Tallahassee. Leon
County Sheriff Walter McNeil says the twenty year old alleged
shooter is the son of a sheriff's deputy.

Speaker 9 (39:06):
Unfortunately, her son had access to one of her weapons
and that was one of the weapons that was found
at the scene.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
The shooting yesterday happened near the crowded student union building.
The two people killed were not students. Officers who arrived
on campus almost immediately shot and injured the shooter. A
US veteran has been shot and killed after he hijacked
a small passenger plane in Belize. Officials say the man
stabbed several people on the plane before he was shot

(39:39):
by another passenger who was licensed to carry a gun.
The plane circled for hours and then was able to
land safely yesterday. Those stabbed were taken to the hospital.
President Trump assigned an executive order extending the federal hiring
freeze for another ninety days. The freeze does not apply
to the military or positions related to immigration and enforcement.

(40:00):
The order means no federal government positions will be filled
until mid July, and no new jobs will be created
until it's okayed or unless it's okayed by the administration.
Home prices in California are up for March, but overall
home sales have dipped a bit.

Speaker 12 (40:17):
Statewide sales fell two point three percent from February, but
we're still up four point nine percent compared to last year.
LA and Orange County saw strong local sales increases, though
prices in both areas dip slightly. The state wide median
home price rose six point seven percent to more than
eight hundred eighty four thousand. Ongoing economic uncertainty and fluctuating

(40:38):
mortgage rates are causing weaker housing demand and slower pending sales.

Speaker 1 (40:43):
Deborah Mark, KFI News, What does that all mean? I
still can't afford a housing This is KFI and KOST
HD two Los Angeles, Orange County. Southland. Weather from KFI
mostly cloudy this morning, a slight chance of showers, mainly
further inland some sun by this afternoon highs in the
low to mid sixties at the coast Metro LA in Loan,

(41:05):
Orange County, the valleys, and Inland Empire. Fifties and sixties
in the Annelope Valley. Sunny Tomorrow with highs in the
upper sixties to mid seventies. Sunny again for Easter Sunday,
after some morning low clouds with highs in the sixties
and seventies. It's fifty five in Lahapra, fifty six in
Redondo Beach, fifty five in Studio City, fifty three in
Rento Cucamonga. Live from the KFI twenty four hour newsroom

(41:29):
for producer and and technical producer KNO along with traffic
specialist Will I'm Amy King. This has been your wake
up call. If you missed any wake up call, you
can listen anytime on the iHeart Radio app. You've been
listening to wake Up Call with me, Amy King. You
can always hear wake Up Call five to six am
Monday through Friday on KFI AM six forty and anytime

(41:50):
on demand on the iHeart Radio app.

Wake Up Call with Amy King News

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