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March 13, 2025 34 mins
Tornado in Pico Rivera / Weight Talk and Waist Sizes // Pico Rivera Tornado damages homes and knocks down trees.//  Emergency at Loma Linda hospital result of swatting call. // Blood Moon Set to Rise as Total Lunar Eclipse 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's KFI AM six forty and you're listening to The
Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app Camfie AM
six forty. It is the Conway Show. All right, Well,
that was fun last night with the rain. Around three
three point thirty in Burbank Man, I woke up and
I thought that there was a waterfall out there last night.

(00:23):
It was unbelievable. I don't know what time it happened
for you, but I think everybody got the same burst.
If you were up last night late last night, or
if even if you were sleeping, it probably woke you up.
But around three thirty, it literally sounded like somebody was
throwing pool after pool on our house. It was unbelievable.

(00:45):
And I would say, just checking in Weld, I got
a late start, but it sounded like like a freight
train wasitting. And then we had a we had a tornado.
A tornado here in southern California. That's very rare, it's
unbelievably rare. But Pico Rivera had had a tornado. It happened,

(01:05):
It lasted for about two minutes, took a couple of
big trees down. It was a Category zero, which I
think is insulting. You know. It's sort of like U
Bello is Bellio in the Yeah, bell there's this size
zero for dresses.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Right, Yes, I not odd personally, but.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Oh Bellio, get out of here. You're thin as hell.
But is there a double zero or triple zero or no,
there's just zero zero? Okay? Are you in a control tower?

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Are you up in them in the storm control?

Speaker 3 (01:39):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:39):
I see, okay, all right, controlling uh, you know, the weather.
But that's kind of odd to bs women into believing
that they have a zero, you know. I mean, guys
start at I think it's you know, fourteen, sixteen, eighteen, whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
It is, they start at that.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Yeah, I don't know. There's no zero size for guys
in pants.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Oh that's interesting.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
There's none. You can't. We would never ever find one.
I think it starts higher than that. I think it
starts no, I think it for kids it starts at twelve.
But for you know, for guys, it's very simple, medium, large,
extra large, that's it for ninety nine percent of the guys. Medium.
There's no there's no small out there for guys. Guys,

(02:23):
even if they were small, they would never order one,
which is the reason why they don't sell diet coke anymore.
It's coke zero because guys wouldn't buy anything with diet
in the name, so they had to rename it coke zero,
and two guys buy it, but not that many. But
you never see you see medium large, extra large, boom
one two three. Guys are pretty simple and but man

(02:45):
with it. When it comes to women's clothing, it's you know,
it's zero or I'm a one? Is there is there
a one or two?

Speaker 2 (02:52):
They usually go odd sizes two for six eight.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Well that's even I mean.

Speaker 2 (02:57):
Yeah even even okay, yeah, yah yeah.

Speaker 4 (03:00):
I'm just looking at the men's thing because you guys
do that thirty three to thirty five, thirty five to thirty,
which I don't understand it is that's your waist size,
right right, yeah, so we just go with the you know,
the even numbers zero right now.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
And I don't like that. I'm with you. I don't
like the waist size, you know, thirty four to thirty six,
you know, because because that's huge, two.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
Inches is a lot, so then like a twenty six
to twenty eight would be a zero, right.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
It's comparable to a zero in a woman.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Yeah, but we don't call it that.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
But let's face it, it is.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
Yeah, but we don't call it that. That's the whole point.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
No, I get your point.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
You know that we still call it twenty six to
twenty eight.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Well, we're not doing that because we're not giving away
those numbers.

Speaker 5 (03:40):
No.

Speaker 1 (03:40):
And also, if you're a woman's size twenty six to
twenty eight, you've got to slow down in life. Isn't
that a no, that's small twenty six to twenty eight
I'm talking about waiste size. No, No, I'm talking about I'm
talking about dress size.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
It's maybe she's big.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
Boned, big boned. I'd love to see the x rays
on that come. But twenty six isn't isn't twenty six huge?

Speaker 2 (04:06):
I'm not going there. Okay, bigger number than twenty five?

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Yeah, okay, But because I think that the twenty six
is big, I think I don't know. I'd have to
look that up.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
It's not as big as you know thirty six.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
Well thirty six is, you know hospital time? No you
don't think so. Look, the whole country's fat. We can
talk about it. You know, everybody's fat, and we should
be able to talk about it because that's the way
you get people to stop being fat, you know, like
like when you have a lot of friends, or you

(04:46):
know two or three really close friends, they talk you
out of crap that you would do and they save
you embarrassment. Like you remember there was a an anchor
here a case who decided at one point in his
life that he was going to get a man bun.

Speaker 6 (05:04):
Do you remember that?

Speaker 7 (05:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (05:05):
Remember who that was? Okay? Do you remember what we
all said to him?

Speaker 2 (05:08):
Don't do it.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
It's not working for you. It's the worst look I've
ever seen in my life. And we said it to
him every day for like a week, like got him might?
Are you still going with that? Does your wife now,
your kids now, your friends now? And do you have
any close friends that are telling you that's not a
good luck? We beat them up every day for a week. Yeah,
guess who never came in with another one? That guy? Right,

(05:30):
You've got to have close friends tell you and straighten
you out every once in a while.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
People do not call people out on their weight.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
Though, Oh I think they do. I think they do.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
It's not okay.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
I don't think it's okay, But I think it helps
you to realize that, you know, you've got to make
a move.

Speaker 2 (05:47):
But that has to come from somebody very close to you.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
But you know what, but the wait is a weird thing.
Like I have always been thin my whole life, and
people are are you know, almost I'd say once a
month when I meet some buddy, Wow, you're really thinny Okay,
you know, And I've been that way my whole life,
and but everyone is. Everyone who says that to me,
they're willing to say that, you know, like, oh wow,

(06:10):
you look really thinner. You okay, you're healthy, you know
youre's something wrong with you? You got cancer? What's going on
with you? But if I were fat, they wouldn't say that.

Speaker 4 (06:19):
I have to agree with you do get a lot
of body shaming.

Speaker 8 (06:23):
I do.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
People say that.

Speaker 9 (06:24):
To you all the time. It happened today today at
the at Huntington Beach. What they say at the Police
Awards show. He goes, he lost a lot of weight
since last I saw you. I go, well, when's the
last time I saw you? It's an I don't know, eight.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Years ago, nine years ago. Oh yeah, okay, maybe maybe
that's when I was at my fat stage. I was
at two hundred and twelve pounds. Yeah, two undred and
twelve pounds was my Yeah, that's true. I was living
in Seal Beach, drinking beer all day and eating guacamole,
and I blew up, just bleuw the hell up? Walking
around I had all all the my jeans were thirty

(06:58):
eighth's really, yeah.

Speaker 10 (07:00):
Y have a hard time picchuing that you're so damn
sexy now.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Yeah, oh thanks, I appreciate it. But people will say
to me all the time. And again, it happened today.
You know, you've lost a lot of weighty, okay, whatever
it is, and I'm okay, yeah, yeah, I think I'm dying.
And I said, well, I've always been, you know, on
sort of thin. But I don't get pissed off about it.
You know, it's just something that people say. But look,

(07:23):
if I was two hundred and eighty pounds, nobody would say,
whoo man, really going for it.

Speaker 4 (07:31):
Yeah, it's more acceptable in this culture to be thin
than it is to be overweight, right, but.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
It's more acceptable to make a comment on it.

Speaker 4 (07:39):
No, nobody should comment on people's weight because you don't
know what's going on or what medical issues might be.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
Plus, doctor ray Kuscherry always said you can be thin
and unhealthy too. You know, just as you're thin doesn't
mean you're healthy.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
People should be curious and not judgmental.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
Okay, all right, but I think that one of the
reasons why we're all fat, well except for you, you
people are. But the reason why you guys are all fat, yeah,
is because well, first of all, you're metallolita. You know
you're not on the vodka cigarettes diet.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
Yeah, I might have something to do.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Yeah, you gotta get on that way. Oh a big
old big gales auge. We always dumped that, okay, but anyway,
it wait is odd. You know, when my mom was,

(08:36):
you know, bringing up six kids of her own, she
would have a cup of coffee. She could go to
McDonald's and get a coffee almost every day, or wind
chills and get a cup of coffee. Now you go
to Starbucks and you don't get a coffee. You get
a milkshake. You get a frappuccino, And frappuccino is a
fancy name for milkshake. That's what it is. There's milk

(09:00):
in it, there's ice in it, coffee flavor, sugar, yeah right,
It's it's like going to basket Robins and getting a
coffee flavored milkshake. Okay, So one of the reasons why
I think we're all big is because for breakfast we're
drinking milkshakes, and for lunch we have a milkshake, and
on the way home you have a milk. You have
three milkshakes with the whipped cream piled to where they

(09:23):
had to expand the lid. They had to make a
bigger plastic lid to accommodate how much whipped cream you had. Yeah,
when I was a kid, you put with cream, just
smashed it with that flat lid and and you know,
some of it went away, but you didn't put that
much on it. Now we've created the dome.

Speaker 10 (09:40):
One of the one of the greatest inventions of all time,
the domeed lid.

Speaker 1 (09:42):
Yeah, the dome lid. You know we live in but
you know we're drinking out of the sphere. It's like
a big sphere filled with whipped cream. And then there's drizzle.
You didn't have drizzle when I was a kid. There's
drizzle carmel, there's caramel, there's whipped cream, there's chocolate added
to it. And then you know, you sit down at

(10:03):
home one day and you go oh, man, what doesn't
anything fit me more? Well, you're drinking three milkshakes a day.
How you need You don't need a calculator to know
what's going on around here? All right?

Speaker 8 (10:17):
The rain?

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Did you get hit by that rain crosier out there?

Speaker 10 (10:20):
Well, I got a good amount of it.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
Yeah, yeah, we got around three three thirty. Man, it
hit hard. Oh really, yeah, it was wacked. Is pretty good, belly,
I heard a nervine. You got wasted.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
Yeah, we got a lot of rain. Plus you also
got rain, and we also got rain.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
But you got a lot huh.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Yeah, we did overnight like you.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Yeeah, that was wild.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
When I left the house at noon, yeah, you.

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Know, I went to uh, I went down hunting the beach.
Was nice enough to ask me a toast or MC
their police awards today. And I always park on the
street because I never want a valley park, you know that.
I don't want to ask for it, and I don't
want to, you know, pay for it's thirty dollars whatever.
So I found a spot on the street, which is
about a block from the hotel, and I get out
of the car and I start walking to the hotel.

(11:02):
It's probably about four minute walk halfway downpour. I'm in
a suit and tie downpour, and so I got to
make the decision do I run back to the car
to get my raincoat or do I run to the hotel?
Was right in the middle, and I ran back to
the car and got my jacket, went back in.

Speaker 11 (11:19):
I was soaking wet when I got to do the
kind of take a step this way and take a
step that.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
Way, try to avoid it. Yeah, right, what am I doing?
And I haven't decide, but it was. It was cool
to be down there with all the the people who
are the cops down there, Chief Parr down there. And
I also ran into the Orange County Sheriff down there,
Don Barnes, you know that is, Yeah, the Orange County Sheriff. Yeah,
he was there and he listened to the program. Wow,

(11:45):
and so does his assistant or a woman he works with,
a woman named Bonnie Foster, and so big shout out
to those people.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
That's so cool.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
Yeah, it was. It was cool. And look, I don't
like to give any advice because I don't like to
get any myself, but I told them, man, I said,
you guys were doing a great job. Got to keep
Huntington Beach beautiful because and don't and just drive to
LA every once in a while and ask people what
happened in LA, and then take those notes back hunting
Beach and don't do any of it. Don't do any

(12:15):
of it. Keep Huntington Beach spectacular. It's beautiful, one of
the most beautiful cities in the world by far, and
they can't let it be infiltrated by weirdos because the
weirdos will find it. They found Venice, they ruined that,
they ruined Santa Monica. They're they're ruining the South Bay,
Manhattan Beach for Mosa Beach. They're putting their thumb on

(12:38):
that scale and they'll eventually get to hunting To Beach.
Don't let that happen Huntingdon Beach. Fight, fight, fight for
that city, not to let it fall into the ruins
that is Los Angeles beach towns.

Speaker 12 (12:49):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty Pica Rivera.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
They they had a tornado and that's a major news
story in Los Angeles. We don't have tornadoes. We do
now we do now we got tornadoes.

Speaker 8 (13:06):
Certainly, what neighbors are talking about.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
That's right, not neighbors, everybody Southern California.

Speaker 8 (13:11):
Certainly what neighbors are talking about on the street. Everyone
really just expressing disbelief. Hard to understand what unfolded here
in the early morning hours. If you take a look
behind us, this is actually the best the street has
looked all day. I know you know this because we've
been following the developments hour by our crews doing everything
they can to get things cleared up as quickly as possible.

(13:32):
But we want to give you a look at what
people were dealing with with the early morning hours.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Yeah, it was radical. I heard the one that's a
guy just looking for his keys and his phone was on.
That's the That's the sound that you get when somebody
butt dials you, which is a term I don't like.
But when somebody accidentally dials your phone and their phone
is in their pocket, that's that you get five minutes

(13:58):
of that. And most people, like me, if I hear
the beginning of that, I shut it off or I
just you know, erase it. But there are some people
out there, and I have one in my family that
if somebody accidentally calls them, they have to listen to
the entire message, you know, because it's there's something there's

(14:19):
something I don't know, nasty or something voyeuristic about listening
to somebody who is going to leave you a message,
who didn't think they were leaving you a message, and
you want to hear if they mention you. You know,
there's something odd about it. But that's the sound of
somebody who has a phone in their pocket who dialed
you and goes on and on and on, and I deleted.

Speaker 6 (14:48):
I hurt the wind. It started like touring and the
whole house shook.

Speaker 8 (14:52):
That's what Picco Rivera neighbors like, I should have been
in Wicked or about you know, a Wizard of Odd.

Speaker 6 (14:58):
I hurt the wind like toiling, and the whole house shook.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
That's the new version of Wizard of Oz when they
remake it with these you know, newer characters. That guy's great.
That guy's gonna be in the opening scene Wizard of Oz.

Speaker 6 (15:12):
I heard the wind.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
I heard the wind. It started like.

Speaker 6 (15:15):
Toiling, Yes, and the whole house shook.

Speaker 8 (15:17):
That's what Pinko Rivera neighbors woke up to early this morning.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
We got we.

Speaker 6 (15:21):
Say that wasn't normal.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
Wake up, I look out the window.

Speaker 6 (15:26):
I started seeing the tree coming down. I told my
wife to get the kids.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
I was like, I was running for my.

Speaker 8 (15:31):
Life, these neighbors bracing against eighty five mile an hour
winds whipping down their streets. According to the National Weather Service,
it was about three fifteen.

Speaker 1 (15:40):
Okay, yeah, that's what it hit Burbank Ground three to
three thirty. We had that radical uh well, you know,
smaller what do they call it? Dallas Green was calling
it something yesterday, but it's a It was a radical
cell that came over southern California between three and three thirty,
and it was moving pretty quickly. It only stayed round

(16:00):
for about fifteen twenty minutes, but man, it sounded like
the all hell was breaking loose upside wine squall line. Yes,
that's right, a squall line.

Speaker 13 (16:09):
Team.

Speaker 6 (16:09):
We said, wow, what happened? And I told my wife
that was a tornado acto bit.

Speaker 8 (16:16):
Those National Weather Service investigators visited the neighborhood today.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
So kind of connecting the dots.

Speaker 8 (16:21):
And confirmed it what they call a high end e
F zero tornado, which is the lowest level. The storm
sent several trees falling across cars and streets, down power lines,
causing water main breaks, damage to roofs, and sighting.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Of homes, and you know what came down all the
trees that the lunatics go into city hall meetings and say.

Speaker 10 (16:40):
Please don't take our trees down.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
They've been around for thirty five years. And then the
city council members like, yeah, but they're gonna kill somebody. No,
they'll never kill anybody, Please leave the trees. And then
this happens and all those trees come down. Luckily nobody
was killed.

Speaker 6 (16:57):
I mean, I can handle earthquakes and whatever we am,
but a tornado is is just wow.

Speaker 8 (17:04):
That two minute long tornado left a mess that stretched
about one mile long and eighty yards wide.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Wait a tornado, I mean literally, I passed Pika Rivera
today on my way down down south. It happened right
there in Peka Rivera a tornado.

Speaker 8 (17:18):
Mostly centered in the area of Glen Cannon Drive. Fortunately
nobody was hurt, and at this point there are no
reports that any house is uninhabitable, but the National Weather
Service says there may be more to come.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Even at times today couldn't rule out a couple of
funnel clouds and maybe even another small, brief week tornado.

Speaker 8 (17:36):
Which has some homeowners like Nicole Heromoto or a carport
this morning. Pine trees are still here, and if we're
expecting another tornado, I'm worried that another one might fall.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
Yeah, it's possible for people that don't know where Pek
Rivera's it's literally it's off like where the five and
the six so five meet. It's just a little bit
north of that, a little bit north of the five
and the six so five. So if you're in the area,
it's west of the six oh five, north of the
five freeway, and south of the ten Freeway. That's Peka
Rivera more south than that. It's it's closer to the

(18:08):
five than is the ten. And they had a tornado.
It's wild, big news story.

Speaker 8 (18:16):
Well, some good news for people who have similar worries.
We actually ran into a man who said he was
running the tree removal service on this street, and he said,
the plan is for all of those big trees to
be taken down as a preventative measure.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
That's right. It is very tough to go into city
hall in any of these small cities, you know, Burbank, Glendale, whatever,
and fight for these trees because the city is going
to take them all down after what happened in Peka Rivera.
They're all coming down because.

Speaker 8 (18:41):
They are concerned about the potential conditions in the area.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
That's right. In the meantime, look, I love the trees.
Magnolia had these big fight as trees. They're taking twenty
to thirty of them down every year. They're going to
eventually wipe them all out. It was beautiful while it lasted,
but they eat up the sidewalks and they're going to
fall on somebody and kill somebody, and so they have
to take them down. It's just the way it rolls.

Speaker 8 (19:01):
In the meantime, the City of Peka Rivera says that
they are assessing the situation here, handling cleanup, and from
there will determine what, if any assistance may need to
be given to homeowners' reporting. Lave On Karma Dickerson, NBC
four News, All right.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Karma Dickerson, let's roll. That's great man. I'm glad everybody
survived that. That is a wild night. A tornado at
three o'clock in the morning, not in Oklahoma, in Pika Rivera.
That's that's wild.

Speaker 12 (19:27):
You're listening to Tim Conway Junior on demand from KFI
AM six forty.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
We had a swatting incident yesterday Loma Linda Hospital. Not good.
Just as we were wrapping up, right before seven o'clock,
that's when it happened. Hundreds of cops showed up at
Loma Linda. I had a friend whose daughter, son in
law and grandkid was in the hospital room and they
were sheltered in place. Very scary, and I don't know

(19:55):
how to prevent that in the future from you know,
these idiots calling a fake call in and then the
whole county reacts to it. I don't know. You know,
with with old phones, you were able to trace where
the call came from. But with these new phones you
can't most of the time. So it's gonna be tough,

(20:16):
and there'd be a lot of copycats out there. But
I'm glad nobody was hurt and everything turned out fantastic,
except it scared the hell out of everybody, especially the kids.
You know, the kids have enough to deal with who
are in that hospital. They can't take any more bad
duws and they can't take any more stress.

Speaker 7 (20:37):
Chaos and terror at Low Melinda University Medical Center on
Wednesday evening after San Bernardino Sheriff's Department got a disturbing
call around six o'clock.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
And advised he was hearing voices in his head and
he wanted to kill people.

Speaker 8 (20:50):
He told us that he was armed.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
And he was over next to Lo Molnda's Children's Hospital.

Speaker 7 (20:56):
He then said that he entered the hospital ron Correo.
I just arrived to visit his sister.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
All the mihracles, all the coffs just came pulling in
with the sirens on about thirty cop cars winter and
weren't she room?

Speaker 6 (21:07):
And then they just falled straight down.

Speaker 7 (21:09):
Meanwhile, Teresa Diaz was up on the thirteenth floor visiting
her husband when she saw the police lights from the
window thirteenth floor.

Speaker 1 (21:18):
She probably is a little superstitious.

Speaker 14 (21:20):
Now we knew something was up and then they had back.
We just told us we had to stay locked into
the floor of my husband.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
I'm surprised they have a thirteenth floor, you know, usually
hotels and hospitals. Yeah, go twelve fourteen, fifteen sixteen. Here
you hear the story. I don't know if this is
a myth or not. Where guy was going to bungee
jump off a hotel. It was thirty stories and he
bungee jumped and he hit his head and died because

(21:47):
he didn't realize they took out the thirteenth floor, that
they weren't counting the thirteenth floor, so shorter.

Speaker 10 (21:53):
Than he was counting on. The rope was longer, County.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
Yeah, the rope was longer than he thought, just ten feet. Yeah.
I don't know if that's an urban myth or not.
It's got to be. It's got to be. There's no
way that somebody's that dumb. Although I don't know bungee
jumping off a hotel, I'll be fine. Gone bang, And then.

Speaker 14 (22:17):
We were told visitors had to leave. I overheard that
there was an active shirter in the paramedic a department.

Speaker 7 (22:24):
When deputies arrived, they started the search for the alleged gunman,
working their way floor by floor and room by root.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
Put a nightmare. All those resources that had to be
used the overtime. You know, other areas of that part
of southern California unprotected because the cops are all concentrating
on this one lunatic that turns out wasn't even.

Speaker 7 (22:45):
There to clear the hospital.

Speaker 3 (22:47):
As they cleared, we were happy to report they didn't
find any evidence of any victims or certainly a suspect
that had done any of those things. So this appears
to be what we call a swatting call or a
false call, but causes a masslaw enforcement response.

Speaker 7 (23:01):
Infuriating for John Erics, who works in the pediatric department.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Good, I hope he's pissed. He should be. He's got it.
You know these kids again, these kids are are are
They can't they can't take any more stress.

Speaker 15 (23:13):
There's a family that was in front of my my
part my driveway right here, and they were saying that
their family member might they might pass without them being
able to see that they're condition it, and they got
pulled out here and drive away from them.

Speaker 7 (23:25):
Sureff Shannon Dyke is praising not only the first responders
but the hospital staff for putting their patients first.

Speaker 3 (23:32):
What I heard on the radio them barricading their patients,
locking doors and doing things they're true. He ROAs my investigators,
they're going to turn over every relief and if we
can find the person or person's responsible for this, we're
going to.

Speaker 6 (23:45):
Do just that.

Speaker 7 (23:46):
Sheriff Dykes says, in some cases, people making swatting calls
will use IP addresses from outside of the country to
mask their locations. Again just to recap, no shots fired,
no one injured, and that call was apparent a fake call.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
Unbelievable. We all have to react to idiots every day. Again,
we talk about it every day on this on this
station LA Southern California, we throw a lot at you.

Speaker 11 (24:13):
Can you think of another place where there are so
many people that are already like full of anxiety and
like you were saying, they're already stressed and they're already
at their breaking point.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
It's the worst where you could do something like that.
I can't imagine. I mean, I don't know. You know,
you have you have kids, and that one family whose
child might be passing because and they were kicked out
of the hospital and they can't be with that child.
Well they're they're they're dying. And man, oh man, it

(24:44):
is a weird society. We live in a special place. Yeah,
real special place. That's that that should be a permanent
lock up job, you know, just get them the hell
out of society. It's you know, the the people that
are at Mattel Children's Hospital or Chalk or Children's Hospital

(25:06):
Los Angeles or Loma Linda those people are uh you
know again, they they are in there. Everything that they do,
everything the parents do when a child's in the hospital,
is about that kid. They don't think about bills anymore.
They don't think about eating, they don't think about sleeping.

(25:27):
They just want to get that kid better. And when
you come in with a swatting call and you tell
the cops you're in there, you know, shooting, you're going
to shoot out the place. That will make some people
just snap, you know, I mean, that could be a
it could have attributed to somebody's suicide. You know, those
people are already on the edge. It's it's the worst,
it's the worst. I hope they catch the the guy

(25:48):
that did this and and really severely put it, make
an example out of them so other people don't do
it in the future. But you know, it's going to
happen in the future. And are you just happen It's
gonna happen again. It's gonna happen again and again and again.
We just live with crazy crazy in Southern California, total craziness.

Speaker 11 (26:10):
Well and they say they don't even they couldn't say
that it was even someone from Southern Califia I know. Basically,
could they could have been an international person.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
What is that thing? It's called the UPN or it's
a VPN VPM.

Speaker 11 (26:21):
We're using the internet, yeah, blind, yeah, and nobody knows
where it came basically, yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Yeah. Well, welcome to California, home of complete a Holary.

Speaker 12 (26:32):
You're listening to Tim Conwaytunire on Demyan from KFI AM
six forty.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
We're having a lunar eclipse tonight. I don't know if
you know that, but if you're outside, it's going to
start at eleven fifty seven tonight, two night, partial eclipse
at one oh nine, full total eclipse, full blown eclipse
at two twenty six am to six.

Speaker 11 (27:01):
And it's one of the few ones where you should
be able to see it through the entirety of the
of North America at least.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Oh that's cool. Yeah, all right, So for our syndicated stations,
you can see it anywhere in the United States right
now or tonight. But it's actually it's two twenty two
is where it's going to be full blown. Let me
see if that's the right time for LA. All right,
let's find out some more about it and i'll get
you an exact time, but I think it's two twenty six.

Speaker 16 (27:31):
The Moon will appear blood red when Earth blocks most
of the light shining on its surface.

Speaker 13 (27:36):
Most of the western hemisphere.

Speaker 16 (27:37):
Will have the best view, and it all starts around
twelve to fifty five Eastern as in right after midnight,
and is expected to last more than three and a
half hours. Now, NASA is sharing the best ways to
catch the eclipse and what it reveals about our closest
cosmic neighbor. NASA Artemis three and LRO Project scientist Noah
Petro is here to tell us all about that. Noah,

(27:58):
thanks for coming on. I know it's not often that
the Earth is positioned precisely between the Moon and the Sun.
So how rare is this? And why does it turn
the moon red?

Speaker 3 (28:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (28:07):
A couple great questions. So the rarity is because we have.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
To have great questions.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
What was the question to tell us all about that?

Speaker 13 (28:17):
Noah, thanks for coming on.

Speaker 16 (28:18):
I know it's not often that the Earth is positioned
precisely between the Moon and the sun.

Speaker 13 (28:22):
So how rare is this? And why does it turn
the moon red?

Speaker 14 (28:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (28:26):
Okay, Well, I think those are the only two questions
you can ask. Where he said, great question.

Speaker 13 (28:32):
How rare is this and why does it turn the
moon red?

Speaker 5 (28:35):
Yeah, a couple great questions.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
So the I don't know what other questions you can
come up with. I think those are the only questions.

Speaker 5 (28:43):
Rarity is because we have to have that perfect alignment.
So we may have partial eclipses two or three times
a year, but we really don't get total eclipses. But
for a few times every few years. We won't have
another eclipse like this one where the entire breadth of
the country, in fact, North and South America will be
able to see this. Twenty forty eight.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
Oh twenty forty eight. Wow, you gotta catch this one.
So tonight, here are the times for southern California, and
the moon comes up at six forty four pm. All right,
moon's up, We're rolling. At eight fifty online broadcast begins.
People are online YouTube. Bang, we've got the online eclipse rolling.

(29:22):
Then at eight fifty seven the eclipse begin tonight eight
fifty seven pm. At ten oh nine, it's gonna get
even more more radical eleven twenty six pm. Total eclipse
begins eleven twenty six pm. The greatest eclipse, the greatest

(29:42):
blackout of the moon will be tonight at midnight. Tonight,
at midnight in Los Angeles, you will have if the
clouds part ways. It looks like there's is partly cloudy
out there.

Speaker 8 (29:56):
Right now.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
I'm looking outside in Burbank. There's clouds around the hill,
but the valley looks pretty open. You'll be able to
see it. If it's this cloud configuration tonight, you'll be
able to see it. Tonight at midnight will be the
full the total eclipse of the Moon tonight midnight in
Los Angeles, give or take a minute or two. By

(30:19):
tonight at midnight, total eclipse of the Moon. And the
next time it's going to happen is in twenty forty eight,
That is twenty three years. This is I call this
my last eclipse. This is a wrap.

Speaker 10 (30:40):
Wow, look at you protecting.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
It is my final eclipse tonight, My final eclipse. Is
a bold prediction. Oh yeah, one hundred percent. Hey, look,
I might not even get to this one.

Speaker 5 (30:51):
We won't have another eclipse like this one where the
entire breadth of the country, in fact, North and South
America will be able to see this until twenty forty eight.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
So twenty forty eight is that isn't that? Isn't that
twenty three years? Yeah, twenty forty eight, twenty three years now.

Speaker 10 (31:08):
Yeah, I'm kind of with you on that. Yeah, very
what could be my last?

Speaker 1 (31:11):
Oh yeah, but it trusts me it's my final eclipse.

Speaker 13 (31:15):
How rare is this? And why does it turn the
moon red?

Speaker 1 (31:18):
Okay? Alright, alright?

Speaker 5 (31:20):
That same process is why we see a red moon
because during an eclipse, the shadow of the Earth falls
across the surface of the moon, and the red hue
of every sunrise and every sunset on the planet is
projected onto the lunar surface, and so can you see, Oh.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Yeah, that's cool. So the sunrise and the sunsets from
around the world are projected onto the moon.

Speaker 11 (31:41):
Yeah, because the Sun is not actually touching the moon
because the Earth's in the way. What the Sun doesn't
touch the moon. The Earth is between the light from
the sun. The Earth is between the Sun and the moon.
So it's not so the moon is not getting direct
the sunlight from the sun. Yeah, right, is that getting
the carry around from the edge of the Earth, which
are all, like you say, the sunsets in the sun

(32:02):
and the sunrise.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Yeah, And because the Earth is so much bigger than
the moon. That's why it's happening. They're the same size.
You'd never never notice. But that's gonna be cool tonight
at midnight. So stay up if you can at midnight,
exactly midnight tonight, you're gonna see a wild eclipse and
you're not gonna see one again for twenty three years,
So don't don't go to bed early.

Speaker 5 (32:24):
Night onto the lunar surface.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
And so, Jimmy, do I need to wear my eclipse glasses?

Speaker 1 (32:29):
Yes, yes, I forgot to tell everybody that you've got
to wear big thick foil glasses. Make it five or
six layers of foil. And if you don't see anything,
that means your eyes are great.

Speaker 10 (32:43):
Everything's working perfect right for your lunar eclipse.

Speaker 1 (32:46):
Right if you don't see anything through that five layers
of foil, man, you've saved your eyes. Good for you.
Good for you.

Speaker 5 (32:52):
When you see the total eclipse tomorrow morning or late tonight,
when you see the moon turn that red color, you
can thank Earth's magnificent atmosphere for causing that red color.

Speaker 16 (33:02):
That NASA happens to have a few missions on and
around the moon right now.

Speaker 13 (33:06):
So what are you hoping to learn from.

Speaker 16 (33:09):
Those images and the data they collect and how the
eclipse impacts them.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
It'd be great, after this question if he just pulled
his pants down and farted right towards the camera.

Speaker 16 (33:21):
That NASA happens to have a few missions on and
around the Moon right now.

Speaker 13 (33:24):
So what are you loving to learn from.

Speaker 16 (33:27):
Those images and the data they collect and the eclipse
impacts them?

Speaker 1 (33:34):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (33:35):
Absolutely so. Literal clips are special events.

Speaker 8 (33:41):
Absolutely so.

Speaker 5 (33:42):
Literal clipses are special events. But for spacecraft in orbit
around the Moon, such as our Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter or
the Blue Ghost mission one that's on the surface of
the Moon, eclipses are quite challenging. You lose the sun,
the source of your power. So for the l O spacecraft,
we're actually going to be turning off our instruments.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
Oh that's interesting. You know this solar powered vehicles or
observers that are on the Moon are circling the Moon
won't get any light, and so they're gonna shut him down.
And that's why you had to shut her down. So
tonight midnight watch the eclipse. We'll keep reminding you, and
I'm sure George Nori will talk about it. You know,
he's all about the eclipse. And you know, I'm sure

(34:20):
he'll mention it, he'll talk about it live. Yeah, right,
he'll be on live during the eclipse. We sure I
get Nori on and talk about it. George Nori. That
guy's a stud, all right. We live on KFI More
Nouth Crush Conway Show on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
Now you can always hear us live on KFI AM
six forty four to seven pm Monday through Friday, and

(34:42):
anytime on demand on the iHeart Radio app

Tim Conway Jr. on Demand News

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