Layoffs Coming to LAPD | ‘Generic’ Grocery Store Brands - podcast episode cover

Layoffs Coming to LAPD | ‘Generic’ Grocery Store Brands

May 02, 202524 min
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Episode description

(Friday 05/02/25)
Los Angeles is trying to figure out how to close the $1BIL budget gap. Layoffs are coming to the LAPD. 7 million people have Alzheimer’s. The end of the ‘generic’ grocery store brand.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from kf I AM six forty KFI AM six forty Bill handle Here do on a Friday morning. Jobs report just came out and surprisingly strong in light of even the tariff the tariffs coming back in. So it's I guess for the economy right now this moment is doing pretty well more it's better than a lot of people expect it. Now, before I get into the overhaul of the LAPD very quickly,

just before the break, we were talking. Last story we were doing was about Trump being let's say, self aggrandizing and sort of becoming all all encompassing. The presidency is everything, and Neil, I wish I had come up with this. Trump has ordered the National Earthquake Centers to now when reporting how severe a an earthquake is, we'll be using the word magnitude. We have a seven point nine magnitude. The greatest storywake of all time.

Speaker 2

Yeah, you just earthquake. It was the hugest YEA earthquakes like that.

Speaker 1

It did damage Neil. It was very funny.

Speaker 2

Uh, he is a care please.

Speaker 1

Oh someone's not muting okay, I no idea who that is? Okay, Now we're good Okay, now moving on and we're going to talk about the overhaul of the l a p D. A quick word about what's important and what is not important when cuts are being made, and obviously cuts have to be made in the city because there's a billion dollars shortfall and the budget this year. Things like well programs to help kids and music programs and things to help the homeless. Uh, you know it. It's it's important,

but it does affect us. Every day calling the cops and no one's showing up. That affects us. That affects us not only physically, but it also affects us in terms of our morale. So with that, there ain't no money, and our sheriff Jan McDonald who came in and said, you know, I'm going to take stock in the department. Within ninety days, we're going to start overhauling what's needed fixing.

And here we are six months later, not much has changed, and questions will McDonald actually shake things up, and a lot of people are saying, man, we have to. The chief situation is the LAPD is looking at the possibility of losing more than four hundred civilian workers to layoffs as the budget deficit kicks into place. Now, these are jobs that have to be done. I mean there's no question about it. Cars have to be fixed, people have

to be at the front desk when you call. It's not good to have a menu, I mean you have to talk to people. And so civilian jobs that have to be done are going to be done with a person that was sworn in peace officers cops because there ain't no money and the cops are already there. Then you have the issue of overtime, which we'll talk about

it another time. And so council members are trying to figure out how to save these positions that are on the chopping block, and not only not hiring and letting people go with the layoffs, but reducing overtime funds, slowing down the hiring of new police recruits. We are understaffed with the cops. We should have about ten thousand cops. I mean that is sort of the sweet spot for this city, even though that's lower in terms of per pack per capita, fewer than any major city in the United States.

Speaker 2

What do they have like thirteen thousand or so for New York.

Speaker 1

Oh, no, more than that, way more than that. But then New York also has ten million people. We don't, but Houston has more cops. You've got other cities. I think Atlanta has more cops. I mean, this is not good. We don't have the money. So there are two organizations. There are two parts of the city that traditionally get sort of all the money they want, generally police officers, fire fire department. No, you can't say no. The firefighters.

They're saving your house and they go in and rescue babies in homes that are burning, which, by the way, is their job, and they're all heroes that do that for some reason. You do your job, you're a hero.

Speaker 2

Okay, fine, well you do that kind of job, you're a hero.

Speaker 1

No, you sign up for that. You're not a hero. You're signing up. Sign you sign up and you do it.

Speaker 3

You're you roll your dumb ass out of bed with shorts on and a bad Costco shirt and you sit behind a mic.

Speaker 2

You sign up for that. That is a hero.

Speaker 3

When you sign up for people to shoot at you or put your life in danger every single day.

Speaker 1

Yes, I don't buy that. I think you sign up. You sign up for those jobs and that's just the cost of doing business. Then don't sign up for those jobs. By the way, you mentioned the fact that during the summer, I also go commando as long as my shirt is showing above the desk, and you're right, I just I wouldn't sign up, but people do. I don't sign up for the military. I don't go in and become a Green Beret. I don't become a ranger. That's what people do.

They're not heroes. They are, but it doesn't matter. I mean, we can talk heroes now. There are heroic things that are done, but again it's their job. It's to the extent their job is okay. Anyway, that's another issue. The point is is they're shaking it up, and where does McDonald go And I don't know. He's not gonna have the money. And so this is a time when normally are going to get what they want. Police protective legos in there and cops gender. The benefits are great, a

lot of overtime if you want it now. Unfortunately it's mandatory over time. The pay is pretty good, but now, I mean it's come to a screeching halt. Incidentally, firefighters they don't make as much money here, and cops don't

do as well. What cops do is they get trained by the academy here, one of the best academies in the country, the LA Police Academy and the Sheriff's Academy, and then they go off to these smaller jurisdictions and get one hundred and twenty hundred and thirty thousand dollars a year where our cops don't. And so that's the other thing. In order to be competitive, we have to raise wages to the point where that's going to break the city. This is a city that you would argue

is ungovernable. County is doing okay, and I would argue the county is ungovernable. So we'll see what McDonald has to say, and call what nine to one incidentally, and see how long it takes, see how long you're on hold or how long the phone is ringing. And the other problem I've been pushing this forever. Frivolous calls to nine one one should be a felony and no one

gets tagged for it. Someone is having a heart attack, you call nine to one one and you get an ambulance and you have the dispatcher talking about someone's corn bread recipe because they're calling nine to one one.

Speaker 2

No, wait, wait, what kind of corn bread?

Speaker 1

I know, jalapino cornbread which is very strong, that's nice, or corn bread without with corn kernels in it.

Speaker 3

You know, I was everybody coming down on me because I was questioning the intensity of reaction to the possibility of them closing down animal shelters, which I know, of which we have six of, which I know is a sad and horrible thing. But where's outrage when we can't pay for law enforcement or for the civilillion folks.

Speaker 1

Well, the only thing, the only thing that is it. Yeah, the only thing that's more important than cops is animal shelters. And saving animal is like we.

Speaker 3

Are leading with our heart instead of our heads. And well, yeah that's a given.

Speaker 1

Well what a shocker that is? All right? Now, I have told you and have complained about the cutting of programs and what the Trump administration is doing, uh, throwing the baby out with the bathwater, and not just the bathwater, but the bathtub. Uh and the bathroom and the house and the neighborhood, going through what programs and funding and defunding I mean with a tractor. Uh. So here is one and this is a situation in which uh, this

sort of proves the point too fast, too quick. Fundamentally, the Donald Trump is right about how unfair the balance of trade is. It's a lot more complicated than that, because in some cases we have no choice. In some cases it makes sense. But the big sick premise is correct. It is unfair. So what he is doing is changing

America completely, among other things. So, doctor Charles Decarley, this is a story, who was co director of the U C. Davis Alzheimer's Research Center, got a call March twenty fourth, your study has been terminated. Now. Decarly has been conducting a six year examination funded by the NIH of brain and vascular conditions that can be risk factors for dementia.

The study involved hundreds of medical staff, fourteen research sites, seventeen hundred patients, nineteen clinical locations, and was building towards twenty two hundred and fifty patients. He said, this was the culmination of my career, the pinnacle of my research over the last thirty eight years. Fifty three million dollar payments. That was the study. It cost fifty three million dollars paid in annual allotments, and it was approved during President

trump first term. Now we have term two, and the administration has taken a chainsaw to universities and federal jobs and federal funding. Whether you believe in the premise at all, but he has done this with a chain saw scientific research. And there's talk of a brain drain where these high end scientists are just leaving the country. So the letter from the NIH informed a caarly that his study has artificial and non scientific categories, was on the chalk being blocked.

It no longer effectuates agency priorities. By the way, it was one of fourteen of these kinds of research projects that were defunded. This one has to do with Alzheimer's. Seven million of us in the US age sixty five and older have Alzheimer's. It's the seventh leading cause of death, expected to roughly double in the next thirty five years. And this is the funny one. Okay, this is what he said. I don't know if it's true or not.

He suspects he was targeted because the name of his study, the clinical significance of incidental white matter lesions on MRI amongst a diverse population with cognitive complaints. And we know for a fact that the Drump administation is going three going through DEI programs just on their names, and they are that's a fact. And he says, wait a minute, diverse.

Speaker 4

Here is a reference to the spectrum of health and age. It has nothing to do at all with DEI, but it has the word diverse.

Speaker 1

I know, Neil is going crazy. This is what Di Carlo says that. Okay, I'm telling you, this is what he believes. Also, his study of a lifetime has been defunded, and so he is scrambling. And I mean, what does he do. I mean, does he believe from the f from the FEDS artificial and non scientific categories, the study of Alzheimer's on what causes it? I mean, it seemed to me pretty important, but you're right, the word diverse

is in there. By the way, someone came back and said, hey man, this happens with this is what the NIH is doing all day long cutting spending. And someone goes, hey, guys, this is important stuff. And the NIH did turn around and refunded it. But it is crazy out there. I mean, it's beyond comprehension what's going on out there. And by the way, his clinical partners, each of them had to be contacted. They had to contact as many as one hundred patient each because of the termination, and then they

recall back saying you're back on the study. A few days later. Everybody is spinning on this stuff. No one has any idea. Now is it true? Which one do you take? The letter that was given to de Carlos saying your study no longer is the point of our scientific research. We think it is now superfluous. Do you buy that one? Well, Decarly says no. It's the word diverse. And if you remember it, there is a program out

there or the Trump administration is. He has said we are going to stop every program that even references diverse or dei huh okay. Now do you remember nineteen seventies inflation was insane. No one had any money, so a few grocery stores had an idea buying food straight from the man manufacturer, putting it into this no frills packaging, the blue label. Everything was blue label, and selling it for less than the name brand stuff. These were called

generics and they were got awful. If you remember, neil ps were starchy, corn was bland. I mean, it wasn't good stuff. You remember that, I do?

Speaker 2

I remember the white labels with the blue stripe that just had Yeah, you had no idea.

Speaker 1

Yeah, but here is a question I'm going to ask you, the manufacturer. The stores didn't manufacture their own corn flakes. They bottom from the big boys, and in many cases they were from the same line, the food line. It's just a group of corn corn flakes went off into a different conveyor belt. We're putting in these ridiculous packages. Why the reputation of having such crap.

Speaker 2

Because not all of them were that way.

Speaker 3

I mean, you remember the toastios or whatever, and it would be like, try to be like tasty loops or what and you're like, trust me, my mom would buy those in big bags.

Speaker 2

And we knew the difference immediately.

Speaker 3

You know, you have seven kids and you're trying to get them cereals that are colorful.

Speaker 2

We could tell they were crap.

Speaker 1

Okay, now let's fast forward. Okay, we're in the same place now, high inflation, people scrambling for money and they want to go to the store, and do you buy a product that is not a name brand? And one store started all of well actually two started all of the nowadays generic the generic brands and Neil. You don't know what I'm you know, we have not planned on this.

Speaker 2

No, I haven't read the story you're looking at it.

Speaker 1

You have not, So give me if you had to guess two stores that are doing generic, well, it's not generic, non branded, non major branded products.

Speaker 2

Who would you come to mind?

Speaker 3

Would eat Whole Foods and Trader Joe's.

Speaker 2

That's what, okay? Are Costco and Trader Joe's.

Speaker 1

Well, it is Costco and Trader Joe's. And you're right, Whole Foods, which I didn't think of.

Speaker 2

They had the three sixty five which came to mind, right.

Speaker 1

And so here what I want to do. I want to come back and continue this conversation because why is today's generic foods in many cases better than the name brand stuff, better and cheaper? And who actually started all this in a big, big way was Trader Joe's and their marketing is genius. And I want to talk about Costco and then the Whole Foods I don't talk about because Whole Foods is ridiculous. It's so expensive. An Amazon bought it and then it became half a Whole Foods.

It used to be Whole Paycheck, remember they used to call it. I just went into Whole Foods the other day for something. And I could not believe the cost of steaks. I couldn't. I mean, I just that's impossible. They can't cost it.

Speaker 2

To arowon or arowon or however you're pronounce no.

Speaker 1

But then you have Bristol Farms and you have Gelson's.

Speaker 3

Arowan will put everybody to shame.

Speaker 1

I have not. I have not, So I'm going to go there and buy a Hamburger patty enough at pay what eighteen dollars a pound for hamburger on a good day, We'll be back.

Speaker 2

You have to finance when you walk in.

Speaker 1

What's going on? Are It's a replay of what happened in the seventies, and that is inflation was high, economy was in sort of trouble, and people were worried, and so we bought Generics at the stores and they were white labeled with the blue stripes, and we had no idea who made him, and the stuff was for the most part kind of terrible. We're doing the same thing today and it's sort of a it's a pattern that's been happening where you have Generics, except they're the store's

own brand, and the difference is today. Those generics are in many cases better than the name brands. All started with Trader Joe's, and Trader Joe's has the Trader Joe's label. Of course, it doesn't make its own bread, and it doesn't make its own enchiladas. And the quality is insanely good and the prices are fantastic. Kirkland products amazing great quality, I mean great quality Kirkland because they go direct. There are no distributors involved, and that saves a pile of money.

And they don't advertise. There's no marketing for these products either.

Speaker 2

And you know what their standards are. Their standards are. It has to.

Speaker 3

Compete with has to be equal to or better than the best of that category. So like the olive oil, they're Kirklan olive oil for price point and all of that has to be at least equal to what's out there already and usually better. So you're not you know, we have the brand there at Walmart is great value. Great value is their brand. And Tracy, my wife, just brought home three sauces, one which is very similar to

the In and Out Burger sauce. There's one that is damn near identical to the Chick fil A sauce and which is a great sauce, by the way, And I was blown away at the quality of these simple condiments. You know that they're nailing the flavors on and they're cheap as hell.

Speaker 1

Yeah, case in point, go to Chick fil A and buy one of their little bottles of sauces that you can take, and you spend so much when you're relative to going to a Walmart, which I don't go to. I go to Ralph's and Kroger. Brand products are as good as the name brand products. And I will excuse me a little froggy there. And the part that I really enjoy. One things about Trader Joe's probably the best marketed organization. Their marketing is beyond comprehension. It's so good.

They're the fearless flyer. Their publication that comes out once a month is so well written. You want to buy everything that's on that they advertise on that everything and.

Speaker 2

The other's funny, it's playful.

Speaker 1

And the other thing about Generis and what these these companies are doing, these stores are doing, is they're creating flavors and products that don't exist even in the name brand world. And they are absolutely delicious. Different flavor muffins and different flavors. I mean the enchiladas. I bought some enchiladas the other day. Also, I go to Trader Joe's and they have Indian food. The individual packaged Indian food product is made out of Canada, only place that I

know it exists, and it is dirt cheap. I mean you have a meal for three dollars and fifty cents and entree with rice and butter, chicken or vindalou you know lamb.

Speaker 2

East Indian contingent in Canada.

Speaker 1

Oh, they do a great job. So are you a big fan of these generic products?

Speaker 2

Because I love them absolutely.

Speaker 3

I have started replaced I mean Kirkland obviously, like Kirkland vodka and things like that.

Speaker 1

They really have.

Speaker 2

They've got great booze, they have great olive oil. There's a lot that we now have switched to in the house that are store brands, like I said, with great value there at Walmart KERR Glen.

Speaker 1

Now, as far as the alcohol is concerned, I have an expert at home. You know, I don't drink. Lindsey, on the other hand, is a falling down drunk who every night she drinks so much. She literally falls off the chair.

Speaker 2

It explains a lot.

Speaker 1

Yeah, she listening, I don't know in the other room. Yeah she's a lush so uh yeah, she's not listening. Will she's not listening. She's in she's in the hot tub. Okay, in any case, she she says that the Kirklan brand of liquor is not the same. That is not the same. So I don't know.

Speaker 3

No, its like I some of the their their flavored.

Speaker 2

Whiskey is not my favorite.

Speaker 3

But there their vodka I think will go up against most vodka's big time. And uh, they do have a good whiskey. Well, they have a good tequila.

Speaker 1

Okay, you know, I don't know. Let me ask go ask lindsay she may yeah, she may be floating, floating in the hot tubs, face down. I have no idea, and I'll go check her out. Okay, I'll ask her. Okay, we're done. Coming up, We're gonna make it a little different because I'm leaving at the bottom of the hour at eight thirty, I have a doctor's appointment, So it's ask handle anything coming up the next two segments, and then Neil is taking it with Foody Friday at eight thirty.

Speaker 3

Hey Bill, wait, hold on one quick thing, because I know you're grilling a lot now.

Speaker 2

Is the signature select at Vaughn's.

Speaker 3

Their Butcher's Trio Burger Patty's pre made are excellent.

Speaker 1

Oh okay, excellent? All right, Vaughn's fair enough, okay KF I am sixty you've been listening to The Bill Handle Show. Catch My Show Monday through Friday, six am to nine am, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app

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