You're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from KFI AM six forty. Don't forget. On Thursday, you can hear the CNN presidential debate starting at six on CNN and simulcast on KFI. Excited to be able to bring that to you and the first we'll be here right after. We'd to give you post debate coverage. So looking forward, it'll be good. I'll be listening, you'll be listening, listening together, just not in the same room.
It'll be coo. You probably have heard that we are facing inflation issues right now, no doubt that will be part of the CNN presidential thing. Talking about inflation. That'll be a big A new study. I love it when we get a good study out that's able to look into exactly what the people are thinking. And according to the People Bank, Great did us and it shows that half of all adults in the United States say that money has a
negative impact on their mental health, causing stress. Yep, worrying over anxiety over money, debt, and various expenses. So there ain't have it. We did a survey that says half the country has financial stress because they're worried about money. Debt and various expenses, including the rising costs, inflation, and rising prices. So I'm glad Bank Great did a study on that because I was concerned that I was the only one. Sometimes do you feel like
surveys are dumb? Because that one feels pretty dumb to me. In fact, I would even say this, If fifty percent of the country is stressing over money, what's the other fifty percent stressing about it? If you're not stressed, what is it? Go, I'm sorry, it's the obvious. The other fifty percent are stressing over the obvious. Can you imagine being paid to conduct surveys like that? What a survey is? Water wet? What do you think? Oh my gosh, yeah, are you stressed about the
rising prices of goods? I would say that the only people not stressed about the rising prices of goods, and they tend to just take on the stress themselves because it's in their nature, are people who are financially quite secure. Well, there's one other group who isn't stressed about the rising prices of goods.
Those are the people in the corporations who are price gouging everyone. Yeah, they're doing great, They're making they're doing fine on that right, Like, whoa, why don't we just raise some prices some more and we'll blame it on inflation. We will contribute to inflation and then blame inflation for the reason we had to raise prices. And they're like, I love it. I don't think they're stress levels too high. I don't think they're goblin xenx
like pez these days like the rest of us. No, they're getting bonuses, is what they're getting. Yeah, and now they're doing stock buybacks. There are two types of people not stressing about money right now. One those that have plenty of it, including those that are making money off the stress of others, and those that have none. It doesn't matter what the price of things are if you can't afford to buy things in the first place.
Although I would say this, I think about the guy on the exit right when I'm coming in on the freeway and I take the exit, there's a guy standing there with a sign, is you know anything helps? And I don't know what he spends his money on. I'd like to think that he takes his money and he goes and he buys a sandwich, where he buys water or coffee, or something, right. I mean, I'm hoping that if people are handing him money, that he is trying to help himself out
in some way shape. That's we can debate what happens with people who are asking for money on the freeway exits. We can talk about the unhoused issue all that stuff, But I'm just telling you what goes out in my mind when I see somebody who's gotta sign up that says please, anything helps, right, So in my mind, I go, Okay, I don't want to assume the worst. I don't know this person, maybe that I have
fallen out some really tough times and anything helps. And when they say anything helps, what they mean is I'm going to take that money and I'm going to try to find myself a hot peel somewhere. Okay, cool, And I know there's plenty of services out there for this person whatever. I'm just imagining what happens after the dollar gets handed to the five dollars to twenty dollars or whatever gets hand to that person. In Mark's case, it's one hundred
dollars bills or nothing. Yeah exactly, Yeah, yeah, you're rolling in it. I get you. So I always think maybe this guy's gonna go spend this money. Mind, that guy can't get as much for his the money that he collects on the freeway exit ram as he could before. So if he's taking that money and then heading into the seven eleven and he's getting himself a slurpee and a sandwich, he doesn't have as much left over for tomorrow. Right, So in that case, the guide with nothing is concerned
about inflation. Although I also don't think that that guy has a phone line to be able to answer surveys from bankring, so I don't know how accurate some of these surveys are. They did do a breakdown as far as the demographics, and baby Boomers are worried about inflation and rising prices, Millennials are mostly worried about inflation and rising prices. Gen X mostly worried about inflation and rising prices. However, gen Z those that were surveying, and they only
ask people who are nineteen to twenty seven. Gen Z actually runs like twelve to twenty seven. But just let's just use this cohort here nineteen to twenty seven, where the participants in their serving their biggest concern was not inflation and rising prices, although it's intertwined. It was paying for everyday expenses. So they are most concerned with just not having enough money at the end of the month. If you're a little bit older, you have your job and you've
got some income, you might not have as much disposable income. But largely, according to the survey, your day to days are covered. You can afford gas to get to work, you can pay your internet bill, you can pay your mortgage, whatever it is. You might not be able to buy a new car right now. You might you might have to trim back and cut one of your streaming services, whatever it is, but you're getting by without making too big a sacrifice. For gen Z, they're just worried
that maybe they've sacrificed enough and can't sacrifice more. And I know that flies in the face of the stereotypes that we create, but remember the stereotypes that we create. Also, we're telling people that the reason millennials couldn't afford houses is because they liked avocado to posts. It had nothing to do with the fact that houses have quadrupled in price compared to earnings over the course the last twenty years. It had everything to do with them spending it on avocado tones.
Right, So forget some of those narratives and stereo times, and let's just think about when we were twenty, how much money did we have left over after we got done working our job. For me, I was a line cook or you know, washing dishes, or you know, working that other hustle, whatever it was, how much money did we have left over At the internet, we just didn't have a whole lot leftover. And so for gen Z, they're worried about just being able to make the nut at
the end of the morning. Here, I think gen Z, here's just talking about our parents and grandparents who on one income of your dad, you know, they could support the whole family going to dedication, send a kid to college. And the gen Z people are like, well, that's a charming science fiction tale you've just told that doesn't exist. Exactly right, You
are exactly right. In fact, if you were to tell people in the nineteen fifties and even the nineteen sixties that you'd have to have two incomes just to be able to pay your mortgage and your light bill, and that you wouldn't be able to save money to send your kids to college if you made the median income. And remember what you have to have for a down payment.
If you're living in southern California and still be able to make your monthly payment, you'd have to pay something like seven hundred eight seventy thousand dollars something like that. It's like seven hundred and fifty seven hundred and eighty thousand dollars in a down paint. It's and a kidney. It's un attainable, right, totally unattainable. And I'm thinking back. My grandfather worked various jobs. He was a lagger, he was a bus driver, he diat all these
other things. He was a he was a quiet man who had a in a lot of great stories and that yeah, lagger in Oregon and in Maine, cool stories there. Surprised he still has all of his fingers because they always lost it. But Grandpa raised six kids on a single paycheck. When he got done with his other jobs, he went to work for General Motors, so he was union making enough money to support a wife, six kids, pay for the mortgage, and trying to think at least four of those
kids went to college. I think all of them did, a couple of them had scholarships, but I think all of my aunts and uncles and my mother went to combine and that was on one you kneed, John, could you do that now? Not even it's not a chance, it's no way, not a chance. So while while we're talking about stressed over money and half the country is stressed over money, the other half we're lying about not being stressed moment, it's just a it's just it's tough right now. It's
tough. And I think this is what a lot of us are gonna be looking for when it comes to leadership in this country. But I don't know how incentivized the leaders are to necessarily fix things because we keep making massive donations to them and they're happy to take those donations so long as there's a problem needs to fix. That's my cynable. Via Chris merrill In from O Kelly got to talk about this. One thing that parents are doing to try to
wrangle their raaty kids is they've decided to delay their digital age. Next you're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on Demand from KFI AM six forty. Imagine that you are a Midwestern who moves to California, and you move when your kids are going into high school. Right, So you move and your daughter is going into ninth grade. Very exciting, it's a high schooler. But
she's starting in a new school and that's scary. That is real scary for a thirteen year old to do. So the ninth grader gets to the school and the teacher starts handing out assignments, and the assignments are on an app. Now, at thirteen years old, you've yet to provide your daughter with any sort of a phone. Didn't need a phone? Why you need a phone? I know I sound a little bit old school here, right, Oh, you're sort of put a phone in your kid's hands when they're seven.
They need to learn how to use those apps. They don't. So imagine that you've got a thirteen year old who goes to school and the teacher starts handing out assignments that are on an app. And your daughter comes home and she says, I need a phone, and you go, you're buying you a phone since they're expensive, I have to have it for school. Yet, No, you don't have to have it for school. Yes I
do. The teacher says, I have to have it for school because all of our assignments are on this app and we have to turn it in on our app and then we can track our assignments on the app. And the teacher said, everything is on the app, and you say, no, that can't be right. So you, being a naive Midwesterner, you contact the teacher and you say, hey, I just wanted to check. My daughter says she's having a little bit of trouble with her assignments because she doesn't
have a smartphone. She says, everybody else in class has a smartphone, she doesn't have one. That can't be true. Please tell me that there are other kids in class that don't have a smartphone. The teacher that informs you that you are the naive phone, Oh, no, they all have apps. We require them. We require that the kids use their smartphones because they all have them. And so I started trying to engage the children where
they are and that's on their phones. So all of my assignments are done on the smart So here, you are a naive midwestern are who moved to California. Your thirteen year old girl suddenly has to have a smartphone to participate in platts. That's frustrating. There is a new movement right now and I don't know how well it's going to go over because, in my experience,
society doesn't let people not have phones in their teenage years. But parents are starting to band together in a new movement that is the no phone childhood movement. Study after study detailing the stress and anxiety the kids and teens deal with as a result of smartphone social media Deuce is from Maxius. Smartphones are ubiquitous. Half the kids in the US own one by age eleven. Most have smartphones by thirteen, probably because their teachers make them. An organization in the
United States called Wait until A is gaining traction. The group offers a playbook to communities of parents who want to sign pledges to hold off on getting their kids smartphones until at least eighth grade. Remember when you were a kid and there was always some group. It's usually like a like an after school youth group that was trying to get you to sign a pledge for celibacy. Now it's just sign a pledge to not go on a phone. Yep. That
society used to be please don't get pregnant before high school. Now it's please don't get a phone before high school. Pregnancy is fine. Fifty four pledges were established in sixteen states. Each pledge signed by at least ten families. Boy, you're just crushing it now, aren't it. So Evidently there's a group in Spain called the Adolescents Free of Mobile Phones. They've picked up ten thousand members around their country, which is doing much better than our pledge drive
kind of stinks. They're trying to keep smartphones if they until kids turn sixteen. Here here there are some that say, why don't we try to keep the kids off the phones until they're eighteen. That's not gonna happen. Let's we have to be realistic, right, you're not gonna keep the kids off the phones until they're eighteen. I know you think you As a parent, I can stop it happening. I'll tell my kids what they're gonna do. I control this is this is this is not a this is a christocracy.
I've used that line that way. This is a christocracy. You'll do what I say? And the kids are like, this sucks. We hate them. Yeah, you're not gonna be able to keep them off the phone until they're eighteen, but maybe sixteen. The trouble is, of course they can start driving when they're sixteen. The last thing you want to do is be getting a phone and a car or a driver's license to when they turn sixteen.
That's not great. I don't know how effective the no phone childhood movement is going to be, especially when you go and get ten families from each of sixteen states to sign on. It does not bode well for the future of amer I can tell you that I am a little dismayed though that, for instance, my daughter's school required that she have a smartphone, not just a cell phone, a smartphone, and this would have been ten years ago. That had to happen. That is, as a parent, I felt
felt trapped to be I felt trapped. I know, well, you know you could have homeschooled things. No, I can't because I'm not smart enough to homeschool my kids, and I don't want my kids to turn out like weirdos by having bad homeschool. There's a trend on tiktop. God, you gotta love these TikTok trends. Are you ready for this? Mark bring? Well? Yeah, I was already impressed with Christocracy, so yeah it was good. Yeah, I felt pretty good about them. Yeah. Unschooling.
Unschooling, although one influencer who is a spiritual influencer who has two hundred and fifty thousand followers on TikTok and has advocated practices such as free birth, which is pregnancy without any medical intervention, hope the kid is okay, and then drinking her own menstrual blood. She says that you should allow your kids to
grow up free schooling. It's an ideology that proposes that children learn best when their education of self direct is self directed, meaning they do not attend formal classes, have teachers, or adhere to a formal curriculum of any kind. Oh yeah, that's exactly what we need in this country, is less formal education. That's going to solve everything. My mom drinks her own mensrure blood and she could. She named me Mowgli raised in the wild. Yeah,
just kidding, screwed, screwed. We will be supporting that child in the future. There's no doubt in my mind about none. And somebody's like, oh, this is just brilliant. This is free range childhood. Look, Lord, boundaries, set boundaries. Kids gone straight to Congress for it. Oh my gosh. Oh parental rights versus crazy people on TikTok how will the Supreme Court rule on that. We'll get techy, super geek techy. I love getting geeky. It is next Chris Merrill INFROMO Kelly. You're listening to
Later with Moe Kelly on demand from KFI AM six forty. I love getting tech geeky, getting geeky with it. I'm a big fan of watching some of the advancements that we have right now. We are at a time in this information age where tech advances faster than it ever has throughout any other point in his stream. Every day we advance more than the day before, So we are advancing faster today than we were last year at this time last year, more than the year before. All that kind of thing, and especially
with the UH. The advancements in AI fascinating. What AI is gonna do. It's gonna supercharge a lot of boer our tech advancements and probably inevitably will be used for destroying humankind in some way, shape or former. A lot of people think that the machines are going to take over. I don't think it's that the machines are going to take over. I think that we as
humans are going to figure out a way to weaponize AI already. I know the military is trying to use it to better target things, and at some point we are going to use AI to kill ourselves. On what Until that happens, let's enjoy the ride. In this case, it would be a ride without a driver, because we now are likely to see Weaimo expanding into La Waimo is the car that drives itself, oftentimes running into things that it
shouldn't run into. We've seen this happen with all of the what they call avs autonomous vehicles, and a regulatory board has reaffirmed Waymo's ability to operate its driverless taxi service in Los Angeles, just days after a bill that would have let local governments regulate the driverless cars stalled out in the state legislature, so we can still have weimo's in the streets. I'm always fascinated by the waves because there are times that a weimo will do crazy things that you are sure
it ran across at some point in its testing phases. So Weimo, which is the Google company right the alphabet alphabet apparent company, Weimo's underth I've seen videos of, for instance, a Weimo on an exit ramp trying to turn left onto a surface street, but the traffic on the surface street is called out because the people on the surface street are trying to turn onto the on
range, so traffic is backing up during the rush hour. Weaymo then drives the wrong way in the oncoming traffic lane, trying to figure out how it's going to get past this line. Are you telling me that during the testing phase the Weymo vehicles never encountered rush hour and never had to try to figure out when they could turn left, and that they weren't allowed to turn left,
and so again bo bizarre. I was driving on the road one time and I had one of these waymemos pull out, and it scared the hell out of me. It didn't do anything wrong, to be very clear, it didn't do anything wrong, but it was. It was one of those surface streets, and it had two lanes in each direction and a turn lane.
So I am in the left hand lane going north, let's just say north just the sake of the story, and all of a sudden, this weameo turns off of one of the feeder streets and it turns left at a high rate. I mean it accelerated. Driver loves this is. It was just running as attacks driver lives, and it accelerated and it pulled up alongside me in the turn lane and just about came up to my speed. I
thought that thing was going to swipe right into me. To be fair, had there been a driver behind the wheel, I probably I would have been okay with it because I know the driver is getting into the turnline until they can merge over behind me in the in the north bound lane. Fine. But the fact that it didn't have a driver or scared the hell out of me. It did. I thought, this car's lost its mind. I thought this is the moment the machines are taking over and they're gonna start killing
humans, start with me. That's what I thought at the moment. But it did okay right across another one. Uh. Just this week, I thought it was a viral video where the the Weymo with a passenger came up to a piece of construction in a street. And you've seen this before where they decided they're going to resurface a certain areas starting at this point, and they're resurfacing, for instance, the intersection. So what do they do? They tear up the asphalt that's there, So it's just kind of a it's
kind of a gravelly looking thing. Well, they clean all that up and then they bring in and lay out new asspholet. So this weymo pulls up. Obviously it's not a lot. This was closed. It missed the sign saying it's closed, and it kept driving right onto the dirt area until it came up to a construction worker who was staring at the car and of course, Waimo's not going to run over somebody. It's not supposed to me the dirt area of the torn up road, and the construction workers going, now
what we do? So the construction workers had to herd the car, I guess. So they had a construction worker that was in front so that the car couldn't go that way, and then they had another construction worker kind of come around on the driver's side and walk closer and closer so the car would kind of pull away. It was it really was. It was like watching
farmers heard a bull into a pen. They were trying to basically scare the car into thinking it was going to hit somebody until it would turn in order to avoid them, and then go onto the other street and recalculate around them. It was the most bizarre thing. So good news, we've got more of that going on the street. A little more of that we have that. That's don't worry, We've reaffirmed the ability to do more of that. Oh good, I can't wait. The self driving cars should advance very quickly
based on the advancements and technology that I mentioned earlier. The AI, so they are artificial intelligence is learning at an incredibly rapid pas. Right. It's self learning. It's it's it's it certainly doesn't have its own agency. It's not conscious, but it is starting to pick up on things and learn from stuff. And so what's happening is a number of these companies are integrating AI into their self driving cars, and they've sent contracts with certain AI companies to
do this. So let me see if I can find this a number of companies that have done Oh yeah, loobby Waabi is a trucking system, right, so it's they want to do autonomous trucking. We knew that was coming. It's probably going to be one of the first places where autonomous vehicles start making a real difference and start eliminating jobs. Truckers are going to go I want to, and companies are going to say, look, I don't have
to pay a trucker. I just have I pay for this autonomous program and the semi might cost me an extra one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, but I'll make up for the the first two years that I'm not paying a driver, right, that's the thought pust. So Wabi is testing a system. They call it provably safe because its decisions can be interpreted and traced unlike other
black box av systems. What Wabi is doing is using learning based AVS, in other words, AI artificial intelligence autonomous vehicles AIAVS AVS, I E AVS, whatever it is. So now you've got Wabi is using this, and other companies are going to start trying to integrate this sort of self learning into their vehicles, and they say this will help our vehicles, our autonomous vehicles
advance at an incredibly rapid rates rate. So you've got Wabi, You've got Wave, which is a UK self driving carn Nvidia, which is one of the biggest names in AI. They're the ones that they kind of bounce back and forth between Apple and Microsoft. Is the most valuable US company because they're basically producing all of the hardware for AI that's being used. They are partnering up with these different companies. Sounds cool, right, that's great. There's
a problem, and this is what people are not getting. They want AI to teach a virtual driver to reason like a human so it can make snap decisions correctly and safely, even in novel situations like oh my god, we can't turn left because there's too much traffic. They wanted to think like us, Okay, I'm all for then, but we're relying on AI to do it. In other words, we have one emerging technology, autonomous vehicles that is now going to start relying on another emerging technology, AI to help drive
the emerging technology, and techis are excited. They're like, oh, look, cars can learn faster using AI. But the truth is AI is still learning to learn, so any advances in these self driving cars can only go as fast as the tech advances in AI. Does that make sense? In other words, you can't be a better driver until you learn how to drive better by just saying, look, we put a human in there, and humans are good drivers. Therefore, by putting a human behind the wheel,
the car will be a better driver. No, not until that human learns how to be a better driver. In the case of AI, it has to learn all of that stuff first, and we're still figuring out how to make AI learn better. So until we do that, the cars can't be autonomous. Ert follow good, clear as mud. Glad we cleared that up. See that's how techies think nothing makes sense and somehow it all works because
they're smarter than us. I'm Christma olf, I am six forty. We're live everywhere on the iHeart Ready we app you're listening to Later with Moe Kelly on demand from KFI amsing And in my experience, I have had wonderful interactions with the postal carriers. I've been very fortunate. I have generally very good
postal carriers, and they're there for a long time too. The only reason that they would not be on my route is because they got a promotion or something of that sort where they're filling in for somebody else and they didn't route that name. But for the most part, you get a good route. As a mail purse delivery person, you love it. That is, of course, unless you've got nasty dogs. Inder that's got to be stress. Dog attacks on mail carriers rose in California over the last year. The largest
cities in California had the most bites. Obvieed LA had sixty five dog bite incidents with fighting the mailman, San Diego forty one, Sacramento twenty six, San Francisco twenty, Long Beach nineteen, Oakland seventeenth, President thirteen, Bigspi at twelve out of ten, and at least one attack was reported in nearly half of calibate. In his cities, Pacinating, Englewood, Anaheim each had eight attacks and Pedro Pomona was six. North Hollywood, Huntington Beach, where
else the Garden Grove, Burbank all had fives. From the the Dukes sho wo Are we to read anything into that? No, Na, don't read a whole money except the dog bites are still down from what they weren't in twenty nineteen. I think Cordon's story. They're still down from that, but they're up from the last couple of years, right, So that's that's not a great trend. And I'm trying to look into this, and I'm gonna there are times that I say something on the radio and people hate my guns.
I understand I know you're not gonna like what. I'm a buve percent, especially dog. I consider myself a dog person. I'm a big dog lover. Dog's over you know, twenty pounds. Of course, anything smaller than that doesn't count. But I consider myself a dog lover. And I don't even know if the people here have dogs. Foosh, I don't know if you have a dog. Tuala don't know if you have a dog. Mark don't know if you have a dog. I don't have a no idea, no dog. Okay, good, all right. I might upset some
people. And I actually ran into this at my weekday job where I said something about rock Wilers and how awful rock wilers are, and the guy goes, I have a rock Wiler. I love my dog. That's great, but they're horribly ugly creatures. That said, I know people with rock Wilers, and this is the best companion. Blah blah blah blah blah. But here's the truth. The dog bites are up. And you know what else is up the rise in pit breeds. Pitbull is now the most common dog
that you find. It used to be there. We've gone through different different you know, kings of the Mountain, the Labradors, Golden Retrievers or Great family dogs. Pits are now the most popular dog there. Nobody wants to hear it because everybody wants to say there are no bad dogs, there's only bad owners. But that's garbage, total garbage. Do you think that pit bulls are inherently dangerous? I do, really. They have an instinct to bite. Its nature. And listen. I got lots of friends that have
pit boles. They trust their dogs implicitly. The dogs are the best brands. Dogs never have a biting incident. But that's not the point. Is the pit breed has a switch in their brains that tells them to attack. We don't know when that switch is gonna flip. And I will say this too. Every dog has that switch. Every dog does, just like every human has that switch, the fight or flight. We all have it. Pit Bulls have a little bit different threshold. Even those sweet little dog owners
they say, my dog would never do anything. Look, I got a gentle giant. I have one hundred and ten pound dog. She's afraid of everything. My wife turned out she sent me attack. She was going to bed right because she doesn't want to listen to me. So she says, I'm going to bed. She turns the fan on in the bedroom, and the one hundred and ten pound dog wind be like turn around left the room. She's afraid of the fan. I don't think she would ever hurt anyone.
But you know what, I have seen this dog do, this gentle giant, this this scaredy cat, this person who cowers because there's a fan in the bedroom. I've seen her kill. Granted it was chipmunks and not babies like pitbulls like they do, but she has the hunter instinct. These are all descendants of wolves. Killing is in their nature. Don't be fooled by the cute Instagram videos that I repost because I love them so much and they're so godly and I just want to squeeze them all because I do.
There is something about that mail truck and the sexy blue shorts that turns these coaches into absolute killers. That's why a lot of the smart male people start carrying treats. Me. I think that's brilliant. They started doing that too, I don't know, like the fifteen twenty years ago, they started carrying treats. So when they dogs start barking, they're like here, have a treat, then they run. Yeah, that only makes sense. Also,
let's just be honest. Letter carriers taste good. Okay, I haven't tried them. Okay, is there something? Is it because they walk so much? A nice Yeah, they're nice and lean. It's a lean meat. I got you. I had an UPS driver come up from my house one time. I had another big dog. Thisears ago. I had another big dog. He was a He was a German Shepherd mix. I don't know what he was mixed with, but he was golden like a like a yellow
lab. But he was he was a shepherd. I mean, if you were colorblind, you say German Shepherd, no doubt, but you're not colored blinds you. I don't know what that is. So this yellow shepherd that I had, big dog, Gentil Johnny hated the UPS guy don't know what. UPS comes up and the dog is outside, sees the UPS pull up. The UPS guy doesn't see the dog until he drops the package by the
front door. The dog. The UPS driver goes screaming, flying out of the runs down the walkway to the front of my house and jumps in the bed of my own of my pickup that was in the driveway and goes, get the dog off of me, Get the off of me, the poor guy, and so I I, you know, I hold the dog. I think his counting. I'm sorry. He's all barked, no bite, and the ups guy jumped out of his bed. I don't take any chances.
I don't blame him, don't take any chances. That's fine. I don't know many probably jumped in the bat of my truck, that's fine. Yeah. Well, Also, what was he wearing. He kind of brought it on himself by wearing that out down yeah yeah, yeah. He was dressed like, you know, a killer, like a like a giant brown ups sexy, brown short killer. I mean, if you ask me, it sounds like he was asking for it. Oh, you might be right. Snassage that kind of like you never wear and wear a black wet suit.
I think the sharksnak your seal. Just walking food, That's probably what it was. I think you're onto something. Chris Merril caf Ams at Sporting Wear Live Everywhere on your iHeart radio app Talk it Out, The Tilt k f I and the k os t h D two Los Angeles, Orange County Live Everywhere on the er radio
