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. We're watching this
high speed pursuit near the Hollywood Freeway Glendale and Hollywood
exit off. What freeway is that? Angel? Can you tell?
Can you tell? Can you tell us?
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Oh, it's a Hollywood freewayn he's on Glendale Boulevard. He
just went under the one oh one and Jo is
heading up towards the Echo Park Lake area.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Oh, this is horrible Dodger game going on there tonight.
He's going to wipe out. Oh, he's done, He's done,
he's done. Ah, that's airbags. Once the air bags deployed,
you're done, alright, Matt. Buddy Smith joins us.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Matt, Hi, you.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
Bob com all right? Jim Sore. He's saying he's done, done,
He gets over.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
No, he got on the car. Now he's doing one
of those let me blend in society casual walks pants. Yeah,
he's belt in the belt.
Speaker 4 (01:04):
He needed That's why he was in a hurry. He
was trying to get to the Macy belt.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
You know, we were talking about this earlier. Whenever you
see a guy running away from the cops like this.
It's twenty years of you know, interesting choices, and we
see sort of the graduation of it all and then
the police.
Speaker 4 (01:24):
Yeah, all right, it starts with no belt. It starts
with with wearing pants that don't hold themselves around your weight,
so your privates are exposed. That's where the BRADTII start.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Right But you but you would think that that's sort
of commonplace because he's he's ignored a lot of norms
in life, so you would think that not having a
belt would fall in line.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
Yeah it does, Yeah, I think it does. Hey, look
at the wardrobe tells the tail.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
It goes all right, Well he's going to go off
in speed wrap. He's gonna have a different Monday night
than he thought, and highway patrol is taking him away
and that is a rap on him. But you know what, Matt,
I know you guys follow these chases with on petros
and money over there at five to seventy LA sports.
It seems to me, though, we are having more of them.
(02:10):
And Doug Steckler used to say, the most dangerous people
in this world are people with nothing to lose, and
I think there's more of those people in Southern California nowadays.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
Yeah, that one in Long Beach was the craziest thing
we'd ever seen, right, Like, that was just absurd, the
number of cars he hit, the rate of speed, the
power and mass, and the vehicle he was driving in
the complete disregard for what his actions would cause. You know,
I think I think most of them, you know, at
least in my I don't know what I've noticed him, like,
(02:41):
ninety percent of them are just dumb people doing dumb s, right,
But it's the ten percent which fall into Steckler's category
where it's like, you know what, I'm just done and
let's let's kind of I'm going to give myself some entertainment,
some violent entertainment on the way out. Yeah, And I
think that's the that's the part that you got to
(03:02):
be careful of. And like, you know that, that's where
part of me understands the whole cops just want to
back off sometimes. I know it kind of sucks for
people that want to see justice be done and get
these menaces off the street. But at the same time,
if they got nothing to lose, they got nothing to lose,
and man, you want to try to be as careful
as possible with those idiots.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Yeah, and I noticed the one in Long Beach sort
of probably hit home with you. Whenever there's one in Burbank.
I'm on my toes because I know every street, every business.
I know where the guy's going. I know where he's been,
and without telling people where you live, I know that
that part of Long Beach is an area you probably frequent.
Speaker 4 (03:40):
Oh yeah, like that's that's I mean right off seventh Street.
You know where you get the twenty two? Yeh, you
know where you pick? The twenty two ends on the
seventh Street and the last eggs of the four seventh,
three to Steel Beach Boulevard. So I got or Studebaker,
which goes into Steel Beach Boulevard, and like, you know,
you think about, well, what if my kids driving around
that street when you start, you know, having your delusion
and some grand till I got, you know, I do,
(04:01):
I take my pistol and I'd shot him in the knee.
I would do it if I came upon and walking
around the street like just you know, but that's how
you feel because it's your neighborhood and you think about
your loved ones that get t bone and you know,
there was that old dude that they pulled out of
that car in Long Beach, and it's like, holy cow,
what if that was my mother in law?
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Like, you know this guy, man, it's crazy. Before we
get to what you're calling about, a very sad story,
I got to tell you yesterday, I used to I
used to watch The Masters with my dad annually, and
yesterday took me back to when I was a child
watching The Masters, where every shot and every hole meant
(04:40):
something and it was not a blowout. It was it
was close, and it meant something, you know, for the
eventual winner to become a h you know, a Grand
Slam winner. That was a great, great afternoon. I just
spent by myself watching that The Masters.
Speaker 4 (04:56):
I did the same thing. I watched it from beginning
the final round, from beginning to end, flipping back and
forth with the clipper game a little bit because that
was a lot of fun too. But yeah, I think
I think if you're a certain age, if you grew
up in the window of Jack and Jack Nicholas, Tom Watson,
Arnold Palmer, like that was special. And then you had
(05:19):
Sebie Balastero's you know who brought that Spanish flair to golf,
And I think the thing that people struggle with is like, wow,
you really watch golf. It's like, yeah, we had four channels, dude.
Speaker 5 (05:31):
And the Masters.
Speaker 4 (05:33):
Was on and it was a big deal. And it's
not like they were playing you know, you couldn't find
every basketball game baseball, Like that's not how it works.
The Masters were huge. Like I can remember Father's Day weekend,
you know, with my family, Like my old man was
a big Jack Nicholas guy, My uncle Ray was a
big Tom Watson guy, and pretty much everyone was a
Nicholas guy except for my uncle Ray. And they would
(05:55):
just beat the snot out of him verbally about what
at Clowny was. Were like in wat you know, just
listening to And it's just funny thinking about it now
as I'm there, you know what their age was then
I am now and just they're holding their mikeeloges, Like, Ray,
you are an idiot. Anybody that thinks watching is better
than Nicholas has got to be one of the dumbest
human beings on the play. They would just argue for hours,
(06:17):
and I thought it was the coolest thing ever. And
like that's and there's something about golf you know, it's
like a horse, but you've got your horse, and I
this is my horse that I'm riding in this race.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
But these guys you know today, look if if you
know they they all look the same, they all wear
the same shirt, they all wear the same pants. But
back when you and I were looking at it, there
was Payne Stewart, there was the wall risk. I mean,
these guys were real characters. They were smoking while they
were playing. It was great.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
Yeah, you know Payne Stewart or the knickers. And he
was sponsored by NFL apparel. It's the coolest sponsor ever.
So he would be in a tournament, you know, and
he tragically passed away in a plane crash, but he
would he would play in every tournament with you know,
hers high socks, a sweater, the old Irish taxi driver cap,
(07:06):
and it would be of an NFL team, like it
was closest to where he was playing, so it would
be like an old sweater, a bear sweater, a brown sweater.
It was awesome. Yeah, you know, and Tom Watson wore
the plaid pants and Jack Nicholas wore the gold sweater
like that was great.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Hey, I know that on a really sour note here.
I know that we lost Jed the Fish from k Rock.
If somebody were to ask me, you know this morning,
before I knew this this happened, how old Jed the
Fish was, I would say forty forty one years old.
I can't believe that he was sixty nine years old.
Speaker 4 (07:43):
Well he like, you know, Jed, and God bless him. Man,
he's one of my favorite people, if not my favorite
person at k Rock. He was just an absolute sweetheart
of a guy. Man. And I was a kid, you
know when I got there. I was what nineteen years
old when I got the k Rock or maybe twenty
that was nineteen going on twenty, and you know Jeb. Like,
(08:06):
if you were to tell me the first person who's
the first person that you can't tell the story of
k Rock without, I would say Jed. More than Rick Carroll. They're,
you know, the guy who basically started in more than
Kevin Weatherley, we turned it into a powerhouse from the
programming side of things, and more than Richard Blade, more
than Kevin and being like those sort of iconomy I
(08:27):
think Jed is the number one on air personality that
you would have to start with because like he was,
K Rock man. He was everything. And it started with
that little house in Pasadena where there was no format,
and they did whatever they wanted and they played all
this incredibly cool music that no one else was playing.
(08:48):
And it was timing, you know, part of it was timing, right,
it's the onset of the punk movement and the new wavemen.
They're playing the germs and they're playing Joy Division and
they're playing all of these bands that this is Los Angeles.
It's market number two, right. It's like you can get
away with that on these smaller markets, but they were
doing it in Los Angeles and he was such a
(09:10):
big driving force behind it, and on air this sort
of devil may care. I have no idea what's going
to come out of this guy's mouth next. It was
great attitude. It was awesome.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (09:23):
And he was just such a great, great person man,
like an awesome, awesome guy.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
And everyone had the exact same thing to say about him.
They said, whenever they did a remote or any kind
of you know performance where all the guys in the
gals from k rock were there, he always got the
loudest cheer and always spent the most time with the crowd, no.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
Doubt, and you know what. The thing that was the
best about him is it wasn't just that it wasn't
just the K rock fans that he did that with,
but when we would have our weenie roasts and we
would have our acoustic Christmas concerts, all the artists, Like
when I was a music director, or even before I
was music director, a lot of times I would have
(10:05):
to bring the artists to the interview. And you know,
I mean not one hundred percent of the time, but
a heck of a lot, like eighty percent of the time.
They'd say by doing the interview with Jed firston, they
would come out of their mouth like they and that
was no offense to Tammy or to Wade or whoever
it was, but they were like, hey, am I doing it?
Because that's so he not only had the you know
(10:27):
he was it was not only just adored by the fans,
but he earned the respect of the artists. Yeah, as
someone who really knew his music. Who wasn't just this
guy that was dabbling on and on an afternoon drive
or in the mid days, you know, and look I
was if I'm rambling, just jump in like I was.
I was the music director. When he got moved to
(10:47):
mid days from afternoon drive, and that is not an
easy conversation to have. And it's like, hey, you've been,
you know, in the most important time slot on this
radio station for two decades, and now we're going to
push you back to middays. And he could have been
a real jerk about it, and he should have been,
because I'm nobody that's having, you know, this conversation with him,
and and he could not have been better about it.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
He was.
Speaker 4 (11:10):
And the only thing he asked, the only thing he
asked was can I still do the catch of the day?
And that? Yeah? And that's like, that's that's the music guy.
It's like, hey, man, can I still play that one?
You're you're forcing four hours of music down my throat
to play in the exact spot, in the exact moment.
Can I just get that one? Man? Will you still
let me have that in the middle of the day.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Of course that's traffic, We're good. But that is so great.
I know that a good friend of yours. I'll be listening.
I know you probably talked about him today and maybe
tomorrow as well. Just here'll never be another guy like that,
and another station like that as well. I appreciate you
coming on, man, you got to be You're the best,
all right, Matt Muddy Smith, remembering a very good friend
(11:50):
of his, Jed the Fish had passed away, one of
the big giants in radio here in Los Angeles.
Speaker 3 (11:59):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on de Mayo from
KFI AM sixty.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
All right, we got an update on the jewelry heightst
in downtown Los Angeles. Early we watched a high speed
pursuit that ended with the guy being arrested by the
California Highway Patrol. They got their guy, and he's off
to I don't know, twin towers doing little speed, wrapping
sandwich in the cell with a couple other guys and
(12:25):
cooling his heels, and that's his life, all right. The
jewelry heist, too, is somebody is not listening to radio
or KFI. Somebody's not listening to or watching TV news
two four or five, seventy nine eleven, Fox, CNN, MSNBC,
and somebody's not reading the internet about the crime in
southern California. Because some jewelry store in downtown LA had
(12:50):
at least twenty million dollars were the diamonds jewelry, necklaces,
watches in the store. Twenty million dollars worth of jewelry
in the store. Now, I'm not saying this is an
inside job, but I'm telling you I think there are
inside jobs that do look like this, where you know,
(13:13):
some guy comes in, takes all the jewelry, they still
have the jewelry, and then there's an insurance claim. I'm
not saying this happen here. I'm just saying I bet
it has happened exactly like this, and it sucks because
then we all pay more for our insurance.
Speaker 6 (13:31):
Now, the owners that we spoke to, they tell us
that the thieves got away with more than twenty million
dollars worth of mostly gold, and as well as some cash.
And the burger took place right here at this family
run jewelry store, which is located at fire.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
You you have twenty million dollars in gold at a
at a in a place where you don't sleep at night,
not in your home where you can protect with a gun,
but at a store. You have twenty million dollars worth
of gold at a store.
Speaker 6 (14:04):
Come on five sixteen South Broadway in downtown LA. Now,
the family says that sometime over the night. The thieves
got into their shop. It's called Love Jewels, and they
tunnel their way in by drilling into a back office.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
Yeah, love jewels.
Speaker 7 (14:21):
It's called Love Jewels.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Love jewels sounds like Bellio's nickname, called jeweled out. Expensive
watches and ear rings and brooches. Where's that? What's that
brooch you're wearing today, belly? That's kind of hot broach. Yeah,
she's got a brooch on. I guess that's yeah. You
like that? Huh, yeah, it seems to be costume jewelry.
(14:44):
Is that correct?
Speaker 7 (14:45):
It is not you that's insulting.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
I'm trying to protect you from people in the parking.
Speaker 7 (14:55):
It is. It is okay, I borrowed it from Angel.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Okay, Love Jewels.
Speaker 6 (15:00):
And they tunneled their way in by drilling into.
Speaker 7 (15:03):
A back office.
Speaker 6 (15:05):
And then they tell us that the thieves disabled the
alarms and security cameras before entering the main portion of
the store and breaking into the stores to saves. We
spoke to the jewelry store owner's son, who was.
Speaker 7 (15:18):
Too afraid to show his face.
Speaker 8 (15:20):
A group of thieves broke in here through the back,
and they drill the hole that they've probably been drilling
it for about a month. Now, Wow, without us realizing and.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Nobody realized that. Now, I guess if you do it
at night or weekends, nobody's around drilling, drilling, drilling. I
bet that goes on a lot.
Speaker 8 (15:38):
They came in through disabled alarms, disabled the cameras, and
they had enough time to get them through these safes,
which these safs for even if you city here for
three hours drilling at it, it shouldn't open. They would
all open both. What did he say about that safe?
These safs for even if you city here for three
hours drilling at it, it shouldn't open.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
How about four hours five? They got in, so whatever
they need to do, they got.
Speaker 8 (16:08):
In, they would open both of them, which our entire
life savings are in are on both. Over twenty million
dollars worth of merchant. That's it's taken overnight.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (16:19):
No, none of the owners or employees were at the
store when the hest occurred. They discovered the break in
this morning. Now they say that this area is ridden
with crime, but they don't have insured.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
Okay, okay, okay, listen to this.
Speaker 4 (16:32):
Now.
Speaker 6 (16:32):
They say that this area is ridden with crime, ridden
with crime, and you have twenty million dollars worth of
gold and it's not insured. They don't have insurance because
it's just too expensive.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Oh my god, what's going on downtown.
Speaker 6 (16:48):
They believe that the people who did this are professionals.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
Now we're yeah, well that's obvious, right. I mean, these
guys knew what they were doing, and they probably spent
you know, six months casing joint drilling, and eventually they
made off with twenty million dollars in gold. They could
probably sell it for fifteen million, you know, melt it
all down and that's a good six months. The hall man,
(17:13):
Oh man, it's tough to live in LA. It is
tough to live here.
Speaker 4 (17:16):
Man.
Speaker 3 (17:17):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
You know, little things in life can irritate you. There's
somebody who works here at iHeartMedia who occasionally has to
give me either documents or something that's printed out, and
he always staples them on the top, right hand side,
right hand, right hand side.
Speaker 9 (17:43):
Who does this?
Speaker 1 (17:43):
I'm not going to say it is because I think
they work above me and they work above you, and
I don't want to piss them off. But when I
get documents they're stapled, but the staples on the top
right hand side. And I can't tell you how much
how that here. It irritates me just thinking about it
makes my blood boil because nobody does that. You never
(18:08):
read a document by It's almost impossible to read it.
Speaker 7 (18:12):
It's counterintuitive.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
It's just it's dumb. And the guy that does it,
I think is dumb.
Speaker 7 (18:21):
I wonder if he's listening, he should stop.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
It's just dumb. I've never seen anyone do that my life, never,
not once, not once. All Right, we got a shooting
in La at a bus stop Vermont and Martin Luther
King Junior Boulevard. We had a Jewelry Heights downtown Los Angeles.
We had a high speed chase that we followed. And
it's chaos. That's what it is. Los Angeles is a
(18:50):
lot of chaos. And then PCH might be reopening, and
we're working on a huge story for tomorrow on PCH.
We've been interviewing residents of Malibu and Pacific Palisades and
we're almost done with our study. We'll present everything tomorrow
(19:11):
around four pm. But PCH might be opening, might be opening,
and we'll tell you who's against it. A lot of
people out there are against it, and we'll tell you
who that is. All Right, another robbery in crime ridden
southern California. This time, let's go to the valley in
North Hollywood. What's going on in North Hollywood, California?
Speaker 10 (19:33):
In North Hollywood burglarized overnight. Los Angeles Police responded to
the location of Heartland Street off of to Hunga Avenue
about four o'clock this morning.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
Oh, that's a pot store. I know where that.
Speaker 10 (19:44):
I mean at off of to Hunga Avenue about four
o'clock this morning.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
What I think this is a pot store?
Speaker 7 (19:52):
Oh you do think it is?
Speaker 1 (19:54):
Well, I think that didn't they didn't they say it was.
Speaker 10 (19:58):
In North Hollywood burglarized overnight. I Los Angeles Police responded
to the location of Heartland Street off of Tahunga Avenue
about I.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
Thought they said it was a pod store. All right,
Maybe it's not. Maybe it's not.
Speaker 7 (20:10):
Four o'clock this morning.
Speaker 10 (20:11):
Storage manager tells us that at least one suspect took
cash and cannabis from the store before.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
It is a pod store, okay, but.
Speaker 10 (20:21):
Cash and cannabis from the store before leaving in a vehicle.
Police still looking for that suspect.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
There you go. Since POD's legal, I smell it everywhere
ever where I go. You know, people are smoking weed,
they're smoking in public. Can you do that in LA?
I don't know. Is that legal to do to just
party and smoke pot in public? I don't know. It
depends on where you are. Yeah, maybe, Like I don't
think you can do it at Dodger Stadium. I think
(20:47):
they'll throw you out of there for then.
Speaker 5 (20:50):
You know, there's this spot on the flour oh five
Freeway in Long Beach, right around Cherry Avenue off past. Yeah,
every day when I drive past it, it just that's
all I can smell it. Where is it on the
four o five at Cherry Yea.
Speaker 7 (21:07):
Long Beach?
Speaker 1 (21:07):
They call that Boguart Corner?
Speaker 7 (21:10):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Do they they still do? Kids still use that term? Uh?
Steph wus. You're young. You probably have friends who blow
a little weed. Do you still do they still use
the term bow guarding? Uh?
Speaker 11 (21:22):
Yeah, usually when it comes to uh, bow guarding the
snacks when they are when they are you know, partaking.
Speaker 5 (21:30):
Don't bowguard that snack, my friend.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
Don't boguard the stacks. Ah, that's cool, dude. Do you
have a Steph, who's You're a lot younger than we
are and you should be proud of that. Do you
have a lot of friends that blow weed? A couple
not not not all of them, but most are the
most kids your age into gummies or smoking.
Speaker 11 (21:54):
I would say, uh, gummies and vaep oh is that right? Yeah, okay,
it's easier. Yeah, you're right. And a lot of people,
well when it comes to the gummies, they usually using
to sleep.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
Okay, yeah, you know what, I've got a great I
always unplucked plug my headvins. I got a great idea
that nobody has has done yet. I'm gonna give it
to the public because I don't have the time to
do it or the desire to do it. But you
ever see Krozier, You're you're about uh, you're a little
younger than I am. But remember kids in our in
school that had breathing problems. They had asthma on these
(22:28):
others inhalers. Yeah, it was just a little it was
like yeah, right, like a Bianca blast or buts banoka
Banoka blast. Right, It's like right, but nobody has done
that and throwing a medical label on it for vape
because if you had one on a plane. You could
(22:49):
take two shots of nicotine on a plane and they're like, oh,
it's just my asthma is kicking out. You know, it's not.
It's not a it's not a medical device. It's just
the the same ingredients that are in a vape. And
you're like, oh, they hey, you're vaping. Like, no, it's
not a vape, it's my asthma. I want to see
(23:09):
somebody do that. Somebody's going to do that and make
millions because then you can do it in public. You
can do it at the Dodger Stadium or Disneyland. You
can do it on a ride. You know, hey, what
do you was that guy doing on seat three? Remember
that in Pirates of the Caribbean keep your hands in
the boat. Stay in the boat, keep your hands on
the boat. Like man, they're watching every move. But you
(23:29):
could you could do that on Pirates of the Caribbean,
like a, is that kid vaping? No, he's got asthma.
He's got asthma. And you can't ask any more than that, hippa,
that's right. Yeah, it's got a medical label on it.
Now it's asthma. Like, oh, I think you're vaping. I mean,
you're you're sucking that down like a like a lector lux.
You got these big your bow guarding with your lungs. Here, Bob,
(23:52):
what's going on with you? I think people somebody's make
a lot of money. Whoever comes up with that, that's
my ten cents. I give you that because I don't
have any again, any desire to do it. I don't
have the technology to do it. I don't have the
desire to do it. And I'm making enough money where
I don't need an extra forty dollars because that's about
what it'll make.
Speaker 3 (24:12):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from kf
I am six forty.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Sharon Belly, Oh yeah, yeah, she's with Sharon with an e,
Sharon with a knee. Hey, can you tell everybody how
you got your name? I think that's a great story.
Speaker 12 (24:31):
So my mother's name is Sheila, and my father's name
was Ronald. And my mother said to my dad when
I was born, let's take the first three letters of
your name and the first three letters of my name,
and my dad said Ronchi, and so it's spelled.
Speaker 7 (24:47):
S H E R O N, So great, Ronchie Ronchie.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
I could just see your dad coming back from the
dog track going rat Ronchi. No, this is something like
call me ch sometimes. That's good. You know my dad,
My dad's best bodies, you know, for most of his
life were Ron and Sheila Clark.
Speaker 13 (25:10):
Is that right?
Speaker 7 (25:12):
That's sweet?
Speaker 1 (25:13):
And they have a They had a daughter named Jennifer Clark,
which is my wife's maiden name. Ah, that's yeah. What
was that?
Speaker 7 (25:24):
Krazer said, that was creepy. I don't know why that's creepy.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
I don't either. Hey, Krozer, is he on a mic?
Speaker 7 (25:30):
Yeah, he's on a mic.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
Krozer, how did you get your name?
Speaker 9 (25:34):
I get Oh, I was almost Marshall Allen Krozer the third,
but my dad said no. So my mom said, all right,
I'll name him after my slow brother Michael. So that's
how I got the name Marshall Allen. Yeah, it was
almost Marshall Allen.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
You know that sounds like remember that commercial with that
p s A where a guy was calling up to
see if they the apartment was for rent and he'd
have like a you know, like a Southern accent, like
no apartment's rented, and then he had like a you know,
a Spanish accent nope, parton apartments rented. And then the
guy who called because my name is Marshall ellen Krozer,
(26:14):
Oh it's available. You're that old PSA that sounds like
one of those names, Marshall ellen Krozier. Yeah. I I grew.
Speaker 9 (26:24):
The love the full name of my dad being a
Marshall Encoser the third, and I kind of wish that
would have been cool, but they went with my slow uncle,
but they kept Alan. So I am Alan Krozer the Third.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
You know, I like, uh, Michael better than Marshall. Damn. Yeah,
I think Marshall is it's just not you.
Speaker 9 (26:45):
Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 4 (26:46):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
Yeah, I think I've gotten that before. You don't look
like a Marshall Ham. I had asked my mom and dad.
I don't know. I was like twenty or so, and
somebody said, uh, oh, you named after your dad. I
said yeah, I think so, And then I asked my
mom and dad and I said, am I named after dad?
And my Mom's like.
Speaker 9 (27:03):
Oh, that's right, No, No, you're actually not.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
I'm not because my dad's real name is Tom Thomas
Daniel Conway.
Speaker 10 (27:12):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (27:13):
So I said to my mom. I said, oh. Then
how am I Tim Conway And she said, well, I
had a brother named Tim, and like, oh I got
an uncle Tim, and she goes, well, not so fast.
He died when he was six months old. I said, oh, okay,
(27:34):
so I'm named after your dead brother. Yeah, yes you are, Tim,
all right, appreciate.
Speaker 7 (27:43):
That, But then how can you be a June I'm not.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
That's why Junior is not on any documents that any
legal documents say. Really, yeah, it's nowhere. It's my my
full name, Timothy Chapaz and the plump BRESDNA hand the
third you know, Doug Steckler had his name changed. I
don't know if you know that. No, Yeah, Doug Steckler
was born my old partner, very funny man, funny, smartest
(28:08):
guy I've ever met in my life. He was born
his last name was really was really Steckler, but his
first and middle name he hated, so he changed it
when he was older. His first and middle name it
was Adolf bad Sex. Is that a horrible name? Yeah?
(28:29):
Horrible like Adolf, Like you know, you think Adolf Hitler
and then why would you want to put bad Sex?
Speaker 7 (28:35):
Is that a family name?
Speaker 1 (28:37):
I think it was? Yeah, that was I think I
think he was named after his dad.
Speaker 9 (28:45):
When I was younger, I was I was essentially Mickey
until I was about seven, and all my report cards
had Mickey on there, and I hated it in the
seventies early seventies because it was e y. And when
my parents got course, I was seven and when we
registered for school, I was with my dad. He says, Okay,
you get to choose your name. It doesn't have to
be Mickey anymore. And I was like, oh, thank god,
(29:07):
no more Mickey. Am I c K Why? I said,
I just go with Mike. And that's when the life
cerial commercial come out.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
M I c K White. So Mikey likes it, Oh
my god. So and then but but also that's around
when that song came out, Oh, Mickey's a fun making.
I had already changed it to Mike. I couldn't change
it back at that point.
Speaker 9 (29:31):
That was the tragedy that would have been hot.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
What about you, Steph fush where'd you get Steph Fuche? Well,
that came from you. Where's the name Stephan from? Is
that a family name? No, it's actually named after a
tennis player.
Speaker 11 (29:50):
My dad was really into tennis during the eighties, and
I guess he originally wanted to name me Graham and
he and mom was adamantly against it. So I guess
there was a player named Stefan Edburgh who is currently
playing and that's where he got the name from. And
so it's also the German spelling as well.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Is that right? Yeah, so you could have been Pete Sampras.
Well yeah, that was a little later, but yeah, or
if you know, things didn't you know, changed in life,
maybe stephie Graff, Yeah, it could have been. That could
have been.
Speaker 7 (30:28):
Richie, Richie, Richie.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
Where'd you get that name from? Richie? Really Richard?
Speaker 13 (30:34):
My brother, Carlos, the eldest He told my mom that
I look like a Richie, like a rich kid, like Richard.
And then but my name was actually going to be Michael,
so Michael Quinto. And then Carlos, my eldest brother, he
was like, nah, that's too so too white. Yeah, so
(30:55):
they were like, that's a white let's call you Richard.
Yeah right, no, yeah, so it's uh, it's Richard, but
Richard sounds like too like proper, So it's always been Richie,
you know.
Speaker 1 (31:06):
By the way, I worked with Richie and Steph uge
for two and a half years before I knew either
one of you were Hispanic. Well, I was adopted. Oh,
I didn't know that, and I just made that up. Okay,
I didn't know that. I thought you were just like two,
like dopey white guys. I didn't know that either one
(31:29):
of you were Hispanic. Learned something new every day, right, yes, yeah, yeah,
but I didn't know you had the big Argentina connection.
That's kind of cool, yes, sir, Yeah, and uh, all right,
we gonna getta get out of here. I guess right.
We have thirty seconds left. All right, Belly, give us a.
Speaker 12 (31:46):
Name to get your name, the Angel of Traffic.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
I love it.
Speaker 7 (31:51):
Oh that's really interesting.
Speaker 1 (31:53):
If I was busy take side streets.
Speaker 7 (31:56):
Your award winning traffic readers, that.
Speaker 8 (31:59):
Was one of one.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
I'm busy. Okay, all right, Angel, please God Almighty. All right.
We're live me Kelly Next on KFIM six forty Conway
Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app. Now you can
always hear us live on kfi AM six forty four
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