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April 16, 2025 33 mins

The John Kobylt Show Hour 1 (04/16) - More on the high gas prices in California as another refinery has announced it is closing down in the state. Gov. Newsom and CA Attorney General Rob Bonta announced a new lawsuit challenging Pres. Trump's authority to unilaterally hand out tariffs on other countries. Alex Stone comes on the show to talk about heavy rodent activity suspected at Gene Hackman's property. There are male influencers that are using hammers to change their appearance.  

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Can.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
If I am six forty you're listening to the John
Cobelt Podcast on the iHeartRadio app. Welcome John Cobelt's show.
We are live on the radio every day from one
till four o'clock and then after the show, whatever you
miss you pick up on the podcast John Cobelt Show
on demand also on the iHeart app, and again that

(00:20):
gets posted as shortly after four o'clock. There's a lot
of big stories competing here, but I want to get
to something that impacts you every day, every week, and
that is the price of gasoline. And we often list
the prices and I'm going to do it again because
I want you to have a baseline as because there's
big news today that's going to send the prices even higher,

(00:44):
and that is the price of gas for galloner regular
in California is now four dollars and eighty six sets.
That is way higher than the national average, way higher.
And a lot of states. Do you know there's twenty
one states. It's right in front of me. I'm looking
at the screen. You can go to gasprices dot AAA

(01:09):
dot com look up the state by state gas prices.
It's going to shock you because Mississippi is at two
dollars and seventy cents, Tennessee is at two seventy, Oklahoma
two seventy one, Texas two seventy four. In fact, there's
twenty one states, twenty one of them under three dollars

(01:30):
a gallon, and there's forty four states under three dollars
and forty cents a gallon. We're at forty six. We
are more than two bucks ahead of about a dozen
states here. And it's going to get a lot worse.

(01:52):
As I've been telling you, California Air Resources Board issued
a new fuel standard late last year, and sometime this year,
gas prices are going to go up another sixty five cents,
and the Democrats in the legislature refuse to block the
price increase. So if you're talking about a four dollars

(02:13):
and eighty five cent baseline, you add another fifty five cents.
That's five dollars and forty cents. Also, the gas tax
is going up on July first, a few more cents.
And this news today, and this is really awful. James
Gallagher posted this on X and he wrote, good morning California.

(02:37):
And Gallagher is an assemblyman. He says another gas refinery
is closing, and I looked it up and Valero has
given notice that it's Benicia Benetia, California refinery is going
to close. It's going to be idled, restructured, or cease

(02:59):
by the end of April twenty twenty six. And that
is going to cut even further. We were down to
about eight refineries. There were two more announced that announced
its closure. Phillips sixty six announced two refineries would close
in the Carson area, and now you have v Laro

(03:21):
closing one in Benetia. I guess that makes it seven
to eight. We used to have not that long ago,
forty three refineries. And that's because of all the terrible,
terrible policy in California. It's caused like three quarters of
the refineries to close. Actually over more like more like

(03:48):
eighty percent of the final of the refineries close, and
so the gas prices are going to further go up
past that. Now tomorrow we're gonna have Brian Jones on,
and Brian Jones is the let me get this right,
the Senate Minority leader, and he sent out a warning

(04:09):
today to brace yourself even higher gas prices and fuel
shortages and rising costs across the board, because if gas
shoots up, that means the cost of transporting goods all
over the state goes up. Also, the Laro, there's gonna
be job losses because now it says Phillip sixty six

(04:34):
that closure affects nine hundred workers. Chevron's laying off six
hundred workers, and there's going to be hundreds of people
laid off because of the the Laro closure. So we're
losing thousands of jobs, good paying jobs in the oil industry.
And I don't know if you noticed, but we still

(04:55):
need oil and gas. You know, it's forty million people
in this state, and this is done on purpose. They
are trying to force everybody to go electric, even though
we don't have an electric grid, and nobody wants the
electric cars other than Tesla's. And the same left wing

(05:16):
crowd is busy fire bombing Teslas and fire bombing Tesla dealerships.
Newsom is completely out of his mind. But it's all
part of the plan. And this is really abusive. I mean,
you look at these gas prices around the country and

(05:36):
I just I go get crazy pissed off. I mean,
you know one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine,
States in the two dollars in the two seventies, and
then you have a set of states in the two
d's and the two nineties, and you scroll all the
way to the bottom, and California is at four eighty six,

(05:59):
creating is at diesel fuel is at five dollars and
a penny.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
And and what you.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
Don't see is how the regulations in this state force
the oil refineries out of business that they can't survive.
This isn't cool. There is no replacement. There is no
electric power grid that's been built there.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
There is not a practical grid of.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Electric fueling stations, charging stations that's been built. I mean,
it is so nuts and so wrong. And nobody, nobody,
the voters aren't paying attention. Normal people are not paying attention.
They're just you know, nodding along. They pay their five

(06:55):
bucks a gallon, and they pay one hundred dollars for
a tank every week. Meantime, you know, we're getting close.
By time we're done with that sixty five cent increase
next year and the extra tax we are going to
be paying almost double what other states pay, almost double.

(07:18):
He never answers to this, and a big key and
we talked about this last week was USC came out
and said that, And this is Michael mcchey.

Speaker 3 (07:29):
We had him on the show.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
He's with the professor at the USC Marshall School of Business,
and he did a study. He looked at fifty years
at California data and he said, flat out, California's high
gas prices and supplied dilemmas are by design largely self inflicted,
the result of directed policies and the litany of regulations, taxes, fees,

(07:55):
and costs. That was the study. Michael mcche, the USC professor, Sir,
he told the truth. Nobody has asked Newsome about this.
Newsom did a big dance a few weeks ago, a
few months ago too, you know, holding a special session
they were going to have a Blue Ribbon commission look

(08:18):
into price gouging with the oil companies. Well, miche found
that there is no price gouging, there's no price manipulation,
there's none of that. It's entirely the governor and the
legislature one hundred percent. So now we're looking, you know,
five point fifty a gallon in gas, and the price

(08:43):
of oil recently has dropped considerably. I'm just I'm just shocked.
No coverage of this, no sustained coverage of it in
any meaningful way outside of a few Republicans. Because there
are only few Republicans, there's no pushback in the legislature.
The Democrats are all going along with this. You are

(09:05):
going to be paying probably five point fifty six bucks
a gallon. And I told you I was in North
Carolina over the weekend. There's two dollars and eighty seven
cents there too, eighty seven. I'm giving you the real numbers.
And now you we were three refineries of are announced
their closing in the last few months, and there's only

(09:27):
maybe seven left, and there used to be forty three.
They're trying to force us to be all electric all
the time, except there is no supply of electricity, and
nobody wants those stupid electric cars outside the teslas, and

(09:48):
the Teslas are now politically incorrect to drive. I don't
know what's what's going to happen here. Something's got to
give when we come back. Newsom and the idiot Attorney
General Rob Bonta spent the day suing Donald Trump over
the tariffs. We'll talk about that coming up after one thirty.

(10:09):
We are going to have Alex Stone from ABC News
to talk about the revelations regarding Gene Hackman and his wife.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
That's all I had.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
You're listening to John Cobelt on demand from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Coming up at two thirty, Alex Stone from ABC News.
We're going to talk about the new revelations and the
deaths of Gene Hackman and his wife.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
Now.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Today first segment, we talked about how there's another major
refinery closing. Valero is closing one in northern California, which
is going to drive up the price of gasoline. You
got the California Aresa's Resources Board sixty five cent increase coming.
You've got another gas tax that's going to happen on

(10:59):
July the first. So we're talking about five point fifty
a gallon at least for regulars. And as we're going
to keep telling you, USC Professor says, these massive gas
price increase are entirely the fault of government. This is
Newsom and this is the Democratic legislature. But instead Newsom

(11:22):
and his sidekick Rob Bunt of the Attorney General, they
spent the morning filing lawsuits against Donald Trump over Trump's
tariffs because he Newsom and bonts is California is going
to lose a lot of money. And they say that
Trump has no legal right to impose the tariffs, that

(11:45):
if he declares a national emergency, there are other acts
he can take, but raising tariffs isn't one of them.
They say Congress is the body that can raise the tariffs.
Let's just start with Rob Banta's argument. You're at a
press conference they had this morning, cut.

Speaker 4 (12:02):
Together with Governor Newsom. I'm filing our fourteenth lawsuit against
the President in less than fourteen weeks, this one challenging
the tariffs he unlawfully imposed under the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act. We're asking the court to reign in the president,
restore to our economy, and uphold the Constitution. The President

(12:25):
is yet again acting as if he's above the law.
He isn't. He is yet again violating the US Constitution,
overriding Congress's authority, and breaching the separation of powers. It's simple.
Trump does not have the authority to impose these tariffs.

Speaker 3 (12:44):
He must be stopped.

Speaker 4 (12:46):
The gravity and instability of the situation at hand cannot
be overstated. The risk of California to our businesses, our workers,
our families cannot be overstated. Trump's tariffs are already hampering
the states ability as a major purchaser of goods ourselves
to contract for, purchase and sell goods. Already, vendors have

(13:07):
warned us that they're going to pass the cost of
Trump's tariffs onto the state of California. Trump may claim
he's a great businessman, but Trump's tariffs are truly terrible
for business, and they're breaking the law. The reality is,
the US Constitution gives Congress the power of the purse.
It's Congress's responsibility to set and collect taxes, duties, and excises,

(13:32):
including yes, tariffs, not the presidents. Congress hasn't authorized these tariffs,
much less authorized imposing tariffs, only to increase them, then
pause them, then imminently reinstate them on a whim, causing
our nation and the global economy whiplash.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
Trump is right right there, all right, stop stop, that's
Rob Bonta. Yeah, it is a ten percent tariff on
all goods, and there's extra tariffs on Mexico, Canada, and China.
And he was going to have further tariffs, which he rescinded. China's,
you know, is like one hundred and forty five percent.
You've heard this story going on for weeks here. One

(14:13):
of the aspects is the stock market took a big dump,
and Newsom relies on stock winnings for his budget. I mean,
he relies a lot on people cashing in their tech
stock increases. And the tech sector has been written hit
harder than most because of these declines, and he's looking

(14:38):
at a huge budget hole already.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
And if.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Tax revenues come in short of expectations because people's tech
stocks dropped so dramatically, then he's got a load of
trouble because just this week he had to get an
extra three billion dollars to pay for illegal alien healthcare.

(15:09):
And he already borrowed three and a half billion dollars
for illegal alien healthcare. So on one end, this idiot
is spending over twelve and a half billion in total
on illegal alien healthcare. And he's looking at one of
his main sources of revenue, the stock sales that wealthy
people makes as a main driver of the state's income,

(15:34):
the state government's income. And so he's panicking here, and
so he's he and Bonte are more interested in bragging
about the lawsuits they file against Trump, and not about
gas that's going to go for five fifty or six

(15:56):
dollars a gallon, Not about the highest unemployment rate in
the country, not about the highest homeless rate by far
in the country. You know, this is all the stuff
that affects us. We're affected by the homelessness, the crime,
the high unemployment rate, the high gas prices. He doesn't
address any of that. Instead, fourteen lawsuits against Trump. It's

(16:24):
just astonishing how he thinks that's the basis of a governorship.
Screw screw the voters, Screw the taxpayers, as long as
he can beat his chest that he's suing Trump fourteen times.
All right, when we come back, we're going to talk
to Alex Stone form ABC News, Gene Hackman and his wife.

(16:47):
More details coming up coming out on why they died
in New Mexico.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI A
six forty.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
We are on every day one until four and then
after four o'clock John Cobelt's show on demand on the
iHeart app. That's the podcast version of the radio show.
And again we post that shortly after four o'clock Gene
Hackman is still dead and so is his wife, and
they had been dead for weeks.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Their bodies weren't claimed.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
For quite a while, and it was so mysterious the
way they died. Not only the husband and the wife,
but one of the dogs was found dead. And we've
got new information. Alex Stone from ABC News is here
to explain. Hey there, John, Yeah, So, we've been given many,

(17:42):
many hours body worn camera video and almost eight hundred
investigative photos from the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Department. It
was ordered the release by the court in Santa Fe County,
and with it came a whole bunch of police reports
and surveillance videos of Gene Hackman's wife, Betsy ra out
shopping before her death. She was picking up things like

(18:03):
respiratory medication and because she apparently thought she had COVID,
but all painting this picture of their final days when
they died, and play some of it for you here.
In this audio from the body cam, you hear the
deputies arriving. They had gotten the call that a worker
had found what he thought was somebody down inside the
home could only see through a window, and the Santa

(18:26):
Fe County Sheriff's deputies arrived to make entry.

Speaker 3 (18:28):
There's not another door, might be able to go around
this through or so they find their way in.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
As they go in, there is a dog, a German
shepherd that is one of the living dogs. One died
and two survived, but the German shepherdho's alive, protecting the
body of Betsy Arakawa, who is down in the bathroom
with thyroid pills strewn about on the countertop, and the
dog is sitting there protecting the body, and the deputies

(18:53):
as they go in, they're talking to the dog. Way
we know from evidence photos of Betsy Rakawa's emails and
the trash can that was there in the bathroom, that
she thought she had COVID. She took a COVID test.
She canceled an appointment she had, telling the person an
email that she had the flu and cold like symptoms
and that she had tested negative for COVID. Now we

(19:16):
know she had hauntavirus, the rare disease spread through rodent droppings,
more common in New Mexico than elsewhere, but still rare,
can mimic the flu and then in this case and
in many others, be deadly, and that she had been
dead for about a week before Gene Hackman died of
heart failure. He may have never, they believed mentally been
aware enough to have known, at ninety five years old

(19:37):
with Alzheimer's that his wife was dead. So they kept
clearing the home. They had not found him yet. They
had guns out because they didn't know what this was.
They had their guns drawn, and they continued to look
through the home. We see feet over here, saying that
they saw feet, and they go in with their guns
out to look at what's around the corner, and they
find Hackman dead, just off the kitchen.

Speaker 3 (20:00):
He's been down for a while.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
You hear them putting their guns away there. They think
they smell gas. They open up windows and check appliance.
His turns out, the gas company comes and except for
a very very minor, non lethal amount of gas and
that that was leaking out of a stove, that it
wasn't gas. It was just all the smells of everything
going on in there. But a firefighter asked them, Yeah,
I mean, they've been dead for quite a while. Firefighter
asked them, that was the gas leaking out of their bodies. Yeah,

(20:24):
I mean in a way and in food rotting and
that sort of thing. But there was a firefighter there
who asked you if they had heard whose house it
was people.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
On Gene Hatchet.

Speaker 4 (20:35):
That's what you.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
Yeah, So he explains to the deputies Gene Hackman he
was an actor, and they kind of very interested in
that moment of learning who it was. There was another
report that we separately obtained that it's from the health
department that says there were quite a few signs of
rodent droppings and rodent nests and alive rodent on the
property in the garage. They had three in their garages

(21:01):
and in one of their cars. None of it was
in the house. The house came back clean for rodents,
but around the property where they were living there was
definitely roadent activity. And now we know with hantavirus you
can just sweep up rodent rat droppings and just when
it becomes airborne and gets up in the air and
you breathe in that dust, that that can be enough
if they're infected to get haunted virus from that. Because

(21:25):
I was wondering the wife, Betsy Arakawa, like she wasn't
alarmed by all the roading droppings. I thought they were
in the house, but I guess not. Yeah, they weren't
in the house. That house came back clean in the garages,
and it's not that uncommon anywhere, let alone in the
mountains of New Mexico on this huge property to find

(21:47):
some roadent droppings and to probably clean them up and
not think much about it, and not knowing that you
just breathed then a disease and she thought they were
the symptoms. They can mimic having a cold, And she
thought she had a cold, and took that COVID test,
went out and respiratory and we can tell from her
Amazon history that is in the evidence that she was
buying really herbal type pills for respiratory health, trying anything

(22:10):
she could because clearly that's gonna work. Yeah, but that
she had been out hot virus from roading droppings and
you're gonna take herbal pills. Yeah, But she didn't know
in that moment, there was no way to know. She
thought she had a cold and you know, or the flu,
and and was just trying to take care of it. Oh,
herbal pills aren't going to cure anything. So I'm just

(22:33):
amazed how people believe in all kinds of hocus pocus nonsense.

Speaker 3 (22:37):
Uh so uh and he didn't know what was going
on at all. No, and no.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
You see some from the evidence photos that there was
one open package of bagels there, there were some other
food items that were around, but there's no evidence that
he was eating during this time, that that he was
able to care for himself in that way. That there
was no food during the autopsy found in his stomach.
He clearly must have been drinking water at some point
or some kind of fluid because he did live for

(23:04):
about a week week and a half after she died,
but there's no indication. Maybe had a bite of something
here and there, but no indication that he was eating anything.
By the way, they call the deputies in the body cam,
they call his daughters in la in southern California, and
the daughters say that they hadn't talked to them in months,
that had been quite a while, that they were very private,

(23:25):
and that they had not chatted with them in months,
So it doesn't seem that they were super close.

Speaker 3 (23:30):
And then nobody Yet nobody picked up the bodies for weeks.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Yeah, it was a little while on that as well
for the family to not just claim the bodies but
to actually pick them up. But the workers and we've
heard from them over and over again in these different
police documents and videos. They say that they were a
private couple as he got older, as Gene Hackman got older,
that he really withdrew from society. She would go out

(23:53):
and she seemed very healthy and fitness minded, but that
they didn't see much of him as as many people
do as they become get into their nineties where they
pretty much stay at home.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
Yeah, really looking forward to the nineties. Good luck on that.
You got a while?

Speaker 2 (24:11):
Yeah, yeah, I don't. But that's exit bag time, all right,
Thanks very much, Alex. You got to thank you Alex Stone,
ABC News.

Speaker 3 (24:19):
Yeah, you got a while, not that long.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
No, And I'm telling you I'm maybe on my uh
the day before I turn ninety.

Speaker 3 (24:33):
I think that that'll be exit bad time.

Speaker 2 (24:34):
I do not want to end up go ahead, because
I well, walking around in rodent droppings and it doesn't
bother me. You wouldn't wife sat on the floor that
I don't want to end up like that.

Speaker 5 (24:51):
No, I don't blame you. I feel the same. Yeah,
you're going to go too, I am, yes, probably way
before that. I don't think I'll make in one of
those texts suicide back.

Speaker 2 (25:03):
Yeah, yeah, when we come back, have you this so
offends me. I you know, I never go on like
TikTok and most of the social media nonsense. But there's
so much, so many disturbing trends there are now guys,

(25:23):
they're influencers. If you're a man and you're an influencer
on TikTok.

Speaker 5 (25:27):
Hey.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
Boy, did your dad failure?

Speaker 2 (25:31):
And he's going on TikTok and part of the looks
maxing movement where men try to change the uh shape
of their face of their bones by using hammers. Oh,
they actually hammer their face in order to make themselves

(25:54):
more good looking.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
I'm not making this up.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
This was in Baron's magazine, which is a big financial magazine.
I'll tell you about it when we come back. Is
that going to be a trend now?

Speaker 3 (26:05):
No, I doubt. It's a very painful.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
One, whacking yourself with a hammer so you get a
better draw line.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
You're listening to John Cobels on demand from KFI AM.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
Six forty coming up after two o'clock.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
You know that MS thirteen member that Trump said to
the l Salvadoran supermax prison and all these wieners in
the media and in Washington are whining that he didn't
get due process. Well, they found a pretty awful crime
that he committed in his past. And this is the

(26:44):
guy that all the journalists and politicians and judges are
fighting to have him return to the US. Well, tell
you about it coming up now. Just absolutely low social media,
I really do. And there's nothing worse than all these idiotic,
stupid trends and fads and nonsense. And then everybody starts

(27:08):
reading about it and talking about it, and I try
to ignore most of it, but this one is just
like so stupid. There is something called looks sing. It's
one word double x l o O K s m
A x x I n G. It is an online

(27:29):
trend that pushes to young men all kinds of crazy
techniques to boost their looks and sex appeal. And for example,
and this is this is all real stuff. This is
in Baron's magazine, which is a serious financial magazine. A
male TikTok influencer strikes his cheekbones with a hammer.

Speaker 3 (27:54):
That's terrible.

Speaker 2 (27:55):
Try what a what a stupid species as we are huh. Now,
The thing is he's using the sharp edge of the hammer.
He's hitting himself in his cheeks.

Speaker 3 (28:15):
With the sharp edge.

Speaker 5 (28:16):
It's cheaper than plastic surgery.

Speaker 2 (28:18):
John he calls it his skincare routine. It's also known
as bone smashing. And people online, I don't know if
they believe this or you know, they're just trolling people.
See some of these influencers put this outrageous stuff on

(28:41):
their site. They get so many followers, then they can
start selling all kinds of products. And I guess video
of a guy whacking himself in the face with the
sharp end of a hammer, Oh, that's gonna get your hits.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
You know, people are under a lot of pressure to
look good, and this is next level.

Speaker 3 (29:10):
I thought this was women suffered from that.

Speaker 5 (29:12):
I think I think mostly women, but I think men.
I mean, don't you care about how you look?

Speaker 2 (29:17):
John?

Speaker 3 (29:21):
Well, yeah, I guess I do.

Speaker 5 (29:22):
But you get your haircut, you go when you buy clothes.
You know you you play tennis, right, you obviously care.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
Some of that is influenced by my wife. Okay, you
gotta see before and after pictures.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
Show you sometimes and you can see why I wasn't
married earlier. Then I'll get some hits on social media.

Speaker 2 (29:46):
Yeah, before and after, Yeah, before and after meeting your
future wife. In fact, the first thing she did is
she dragged me to a store and insisted I buy
four shirts, and she took my old shirts and through
them all out.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
I love that.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
I didn't even have money for the shirt. Yeah, no,
it's I mean she she threw out gifts my mother
had given me. She was so appalled by my wardrobe.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
That's funny.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
It's bone smashing and it's a way to get an
angular jawline. Now, this apparently started among the in cells.
Do you remember the in cell movement? Yes, involuntary celibate men,
and they blame their lack of sexual activity on women.
That women are mean, and that women just want money

(30:38):
and status, and so guys that don't have the right look,
so the right job, they're always out of the running.

Speaker 5 (30:44):
Okay, you can so turn that around, John and say,
guys just want younger women, blonde women, skinny women, tan women. Yeah, okay,
welcomes both.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
You say, you can keep going. What else does she have?
Who is this woman?

Speaker 2 (31:04):
You get there? Yes, there's a British influencer named Oscar Patel.
He promotes a concept called mewing. It involves pressing the
tongue into the roof of the mouth, and that's supposed
to improve your jaw and facial structure. You walk around
all dar coug press to the roof of your mouth.

(31:30):
They did a study at Dublin City University. They created
fake accounts registered as teenage boys, and their TikTok and
YouTube feeds were bombarded with male supremacy and miss misogynistic
content because all this, all this stuff comes out of
the idea that that women are are rejecting men, and

(31:55):
it's led to these toxic beauty standards. If you don't
look like a Hollywood star, you might as well give up.

Speaker 5 (32:00):
It's the women's fault. Okay, I get.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
It, it's the women's fault. In the end, yeah it's not.

Speaker 5 (32:06):
Yeah, well, no, we're telling you to do something so
stupid like hammer your face.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
No, go hammer, go hammer your fish. I do want
to know. I'm not going to feed into it. I no,
I don't want to hammer my face. I'd like to
see the video of the guy hammering his face, though,
of course you would. I mean, how many times can
you whack yourself in the face with the sharp end
of a hammer. There's got to be a limit to that.

(32:36):
And how does the healing process make you look like
a movie star.

Speaker 3 (32:40):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (32:41):
Nonsense, all right, I'll just have to live not knowing
when we come back. This illegal alien that Trump deported
without filling out the proper paperwork, and I'm talking about
Trump didn't fill out the paperwork, not the illegal alien.
And Trump's been whacked every day for it by the
media and judges and advocates and politicians. Well, it turns

(33:04):
out he's a real bad guy. Uh, just take it
from his wife. We'll tell you more. Debra mark Led
in the KFI twenty four our newsroom. Hey, you've been
listening to the John Cobalt Show podcast. You can always
hear the show live on KFI AM six forty from
one to four pm every Monday through Friday, and of course,
anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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