Burrito Bandito - podcast episode cover

Burrito Bandito

May 11, 202346 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

JIM RYAN ON THE BORDER
BRAD GARRETT THE UTAH MOTHER OF 3 CHARGED WITH MURDERING HER HUSBAND -- THEN WRITING A BOOK TO HELP HER CHILDREN WITH THEIR GRIEF
BIZ BYTES W/ JASON MIDDLETON Inflation is cooling, but items aren’t cheaper. Why? / Brides and grooms have a new place to register / 40% of Gen Z work multiple jobs because cost of living / Is Twitter a dating app?
HOW TO MONEY W/ JOEL LARSGAARD New Cars, once part of the American Dream, now out of reach for many /Quarter of Americans admit they’ve never saved money for retirement / A.I. Could be about to change the way you manage your money /
Is online banking safe? How to boost your banking security

Transcript

Hey, it's Jennifer Jones Lee. You're listening to KFI, a M six forty wake up call on demand on the iHeartRadio app. This Friday Eve is particularly happy. Why is this Friday Eve particularly happy? Because starting tomorrow morning, my alarm will not go off at two forty five in the morning. What Tony is in for Tyler this morning? And I just got a double one finger salute? Whoa. I know it sucks when somebody's like, I'm going on vacation and you're like, oh, yeah, I can tell you

where to stick that vacation sunshine. Anyway, I am going on vacation. I'm heading up to Redding. It is. I know, this is like the perfect opportunity for a handle to, you know, do something some redneck comment. But I think so. This weekend, We've got Jones family get together at Burrito Bandido. You can't make this up. There were twenty six Joneses on a text message thread. Everybody's gonna get a burrito bowl. We're all gonna chill out because that's what Joneses due. We've got a steak feed,

We've got a rodeo in Cottonwood tomorrow. Mother's Day Sunday, followed by next week much much time at the lake, which is going to be great with my cousins, and then next weekend it gets real pancake breakfast Friday morning, Friday night rodeo, Saturday night rodeo. And the best part about this is I've not been to Rodeo week up there since I was seventeen and set the national anthem on a horse three nights in a row at white jeans,

red boots, blue shirt, red hat. It's all gonna be on Instagram because I feel like a lot of times I need to document my life. Otherwise you're you guys are gonna be like, she makes that up. Nope, Nope, nope nope. JJLKFI on Instagram, Jennifer Jones Lee on Facebook, And yeah, you'll get to see what my life really is like the Jones Best this weekend and I am so here for it. It'll be fun.

It's just cool because I haven't done it in thirty years, so that's why I'm looking forward to it. Some of the stories we're watching in the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. LA County Probation officials have implemented emergency security measures at the county's juvenile halls after the overdose death of an eighteen year old. Now talking about emergency measures, Tattle forty two will officially expire tonight at eleven

fifty nine. So unless a court intervenes, it looks like the pandemic era immigration policy is out of here and we've got all kinds of migrants lined up at the border. We're gonna talk about that with ABC's Jim Ryan. He's in El Paso, Texas. Also, you had the town hall last night with former President Trump and CNN's Caitlin Collins. How did it go well? At least in one case? Former President Trump says that you know how he was found liable for sexual abuse. He still says he does not know a

Gene Carroll and that the whole thing was fake. So let's start with some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour news room. A twelve year old boy has been killed in the shooting in Long Beach. A fourteen year old girl was hurt. Please say the two were walking along Lewis Avenue late last night between Martin Luther King Junior and Orange Avenues when they were approached by at least two guys in a car someone inside started shooting. Emergency

security measures have been put in in La County's juvenile halls. A list of new procedures were sent out in a memo following the fatal overdose of an eighteen year old at the Nidor facility in Silmar. KFI News obtained the internal memo yesterday, which says new search protocols would begin for visitors and staff only, see through bags will be allowed in facilities, and metal detector wands will be

issued to dormitories. Sources in the Probation department say these measures used to be in place, but were removed by the Board of Supervisors in favor of a more family friendly environment. The memo also outlines more aggressive rules to deal with drones that drop contraband into the facilities and the purchase of vapor tracer machines to

check for drug residue on anyone who enters a facility. Steve Gregory, King of Fine, hundreds of troops are heading to the US Mexico border, along with more US marshals, immigration officials, and National Guard troops as Title forty two expires. The COVID nineteen policy allowed the US to expel migrants who cross the border. Arizona Sheriff's Association President Sheriff Don Rhodes has vowed to support all law enforcement stationed at the border. We know what you're doing. We appreciate

it, we support you. We're behind you one hundred percent. We're fighting to get your resources. And we'll talk more about this with ABC's Jim Ryan, who is in El Paso, Texas. In just a second. Former President Trump says the case in New York where he was found liable for sexual abuse was fake. During a CNN town hall meeting last night, told potential voters the case was made up and politically motivated. The crowd laughed and applauded.

Republican Senator Mitt Romney says he hopes the civil trials outcomes shed some light on Trump's character. The jury of President Trump's appears found him responsible for a sexual assault. I hope the jury of the American people reached the same conclusion, which is he is not fit to become president of the United States. When asked if the jury's decision would prevent women from voting for him, Trump

said no, I don't think so. When we come back more on what's happening at the border with the expiration of Title forty two at eleven fifty nine tonight or right now. Let's get a look at your drive. Good morning, Robert Dubucky. Where we hadn't We're heading to lake View terrors on the west und side of the two ten where all lanes are shut down between Osbourne and the one eighteen. This is Caltrans work scheduled until around six o'clock this

morning, so you are seeing heavy delays through the area there. We also had a full closure in Upland on the eastbound side of the ten freeway. Youclid towards Fort Street. They've started picking up those cones. Want for some minor delays heading through the area as they continue that process. And then Loma Linda on the westbound side of the ten. Just passed Mountain View. It's a crashed in the carpool lane backed up. They're heavy to Alabama Street.

KFI in the sky helps get you there faster. I'm Robert to Bucky five or six on your wake up. Called Jim Ryan, good morning to you. Has the situation at the border changed at all? With now literally the countdown now going to just a few more hours. At the expiration of Title forty two, thanks are pretty much where they were yesterday in the day before that, although this migrant camp that was set up outside of church here in El Paso has kind of been clear to have. People have been taken to

other shelters, are taken to different locations. As you know, the Customs and Border Protection processing facilities here in El Paso and down in Laredo, different parts of the state are essentially overburdened at this point, but there are locations that are not, and some people are being shuttled to those other places, those other customs locations to make applications. So what happens to night at eleven fifty nine pm Eastern time. Title forty two is replaced by Title eight.

Title eight was the immigration policy before Title forty two was imposed during the pandemic. Then it goes back into effect. It has its own rules and regulations, its own stipulations that they imposed requirements on people trying to apply for asylum

or apply for immigration status here in this country. And it also allows for the immediate expulsion of people who are not here legally and they can turn around and be sent back either in Mexico or to their home countries without hearing whatsoever. So some things will change, some things really won't change. The one thing I tell you is that a lot more people will be applying starting tomorrow

four asylum. That's what I assumed, And so that's in probably the influx there, because they're like great, starting at eleven fifty nine, you know, boom, the minute the clock strikes midnight, I can go in for my asylum or apply for it. Going back to now the title eight, that one with the restrictions where you can be turned around if you try and

come illegally, you can be flipped around. I know that some of the border patrol people were talking about people who are trying to get in illegally through those border checkpoints, and that they had seen an influx of people coming through there. So those would be the people, right who they would turn around immediately if caught. Yes, right, the folks who are coming here illegally.

So I mean you're dealing with two different groups of people, those who are trying to sneak into the country illegally between the border checkpoints and those who are coming through legally or trying to come through legally, making application, surrendering to border patrol, filling out paperwork and then being admitted into the country or being turned around immediately because you don't qualify. So yeah, these are those

are kind of the two groups. And the administration, the Biden administration, has sent active duty military personnel here to back up the customs agents in processing all this paperwork. Governor Greg Abbott has sent another can tinggent of National Guard troops who will be monitoring and between the border checkpoints to see that people aren't

coming to the country illegally, all right. And for these border towns that have all these people in them, and I realized that you're saying, you know, the church that you were looking at where they had migrants there looks like has been cleared out. That kind of thing, the stress and the strain on these border towns, and I realized that's why a lot of the

National Guard troops were brought there in the first place. But the strain on resources even in those cities, and I'm talking you know, bottled water, food, that kind of thing. I would almost think that it's sort of like you guys had just been through some sort of natural disaster or you were prepping for a natural disaster. It just seems like if you're going to have an influx of all these people, you would have to kind of plan like

that exactly. That's what's happening here in El Paso. The city has been working on this for several weeks, well, I think, planning for it for months. The city declared made a disaster declaration a couple of weeks ago, and has been setting up temporary shelters. For example, two schools, disused schools have been set up with cots inside and with the emergency feeding, and that's sort of thing. You're right, it's very much like a natural

disaster. Those are being prepared for people coming in if they're needed. They might not be needed, but I think the expectation is that they certainly will be put into put into use. So now that you're right, there is this preparation in border communities all up and down, not just here in Texas, but in Arizona, New Mexico and over where you are in California. All right, thank you so much, Jim, I appreciate it. So

jan all right, see later. ABC is Jim Ryan, And obviously we'll be keeping up to date on this if there's any I don't know anymore. It's it's it's interesting to me because the plan is for there to be chaos. That's the word that the President even used, that he predicted there would be chaos at the border. And I think that even for all the planning that you do, if you're one of these border towns or border states and all the prep that you can make, you can't predict all of the you

know, facets of chaos, right. I mean, that's that's it in its definition. It's well, this is my definition of chaos. You don't know what's coming because everything's kind of out of control and scorely, and so I don't I don't know how even as much as these border towns prepare, how prepared can they be for what they don't know? Right, let's get back to some of these stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour news room. Now. Florida Governor De Santis has signed an immigration bill as his

state is preparing for the end of Title forty two. He says the state is bracing for some turbulent times and things can get a lot worse. People are gonna come if they get benefits, and so what you want to do is say there's not benefits for coming legally now. The bill signed yesterday in Florida requires hospitals accepting Medicaid to include a question on the forums about a patient citizenship status. The legislation also includes banning undocumented law school graduates from being admitted

to the Florida Bar and strengthens the required use of e verify. That's that database that employers used to check and employees employment eligibility. New York Republican Congressman George Santos has pleaded not guilty to unemployment and campaign finance fraud charges. He was released on bail and said outside of court yesterday he's gonna fight. The reality is because it makes no sense that in four months, four months,

five months I'm indicted, mister Santos. There have been a lot of questionable things surrounding you, some of which we have even cought to So I'm just saying which unt Santos is facing a thirteen count federal indictment. How Speaker McCarthy says he will not support Santos for reelection, but for now he's not calling

on him to resign. And remember, Republicans need every vote that they can get so I feel like even the fact that McCarthy is like, I'm not touching you, buddy, is kind of a big deal because he knows that there is the potential for a Democrat to come in there. Should Santos be booted out of his seat, and so for even the House Speaker not to get behind you kind of says something because his position sort of puts or could potentially put the number of votes in the party at risk. The La County

Sheriff's Department says money is driving the continuance of street takeovers in Compton. Police say drivers are paying off some workers at tire shops to stay open during the street shows, and some people are getting kickbacks for posting the driver's videos online. Former street takeover driver Ismael Tamar says he stopped participating when he saw it was creating danger, a danger to people and a danger to the public as

well as the people attending the events. The Sheriff's Department says it impounded several cars and handed out citations during street takeovers Monday night. The department says it has zero tolerance for anyone earning money from street shows in Compton. Chris Adler, KF I News. All right. You guys know how much I love shows like Snapped or you know, anything that's on ID or whatever. I love true crime stuff. This story about the mom from Utah charged with murdering

her husband then writing that children's book to help them with grief. Yeah, we're going to talk more about her. She's been charged with murder and I just want to know how she thought a sort of preemptive strike. Oh honey, I want you to read this book just in case anything ever happens to your dad, suspicious anyone. We'll get into that with Brad in just a few minutes. You're listening to wake Up Call with Jennifer Jones Lee on demand

from KFI Am six forty. Welcome to your wake Up Call for a Thursday Friday Eve. As I like to say, some of the stories were watching in the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. A twelve year old boy's been killed in a shooting in Long Beach. A fourteen year old girl was hurt. Police say the two were walking along Lewis Avenue late last night between Martin Luther, King Junior and Orange Avenues when they were approached by at least two guys

in a car someone started shooting. A couple in a Bentley have been shot at in Valley Village and what police say may have been an attempted follow home robbery. The people in the car say they were waiting for a friend yesterday when a guy walked up with a gun demanded cash and jewelry. The driver of the Bentley backed up to try and get away, but hit a passing car. A woman in that car was hurt and that's when the shooter ran

off. And remember the guy who was suspected of killing Natalie Holloway, the American teenager in Aruba in two thousand and five. He's expected to be extradited to the US to face federal fraud charges. Now, Natalie Holloway's body was never found and charges were never filed against your in Vander Salute, but he's charged with trying to extort money from Natalie Holloway's family. Hey, I know that you've heard the rumors as we have. There is talk about AM radio

being removed from new cars and trucks. But if you remove that, you're taken away the access to the very AM radio stations that millions of Americans count on for local emergency information, especially when our cell phones are dead because maybe we've lost power or the tower went down something like that. That's when AM radio is your lifeline. Even FEMA and first responders across the country rely heavily on AM radio just to deliver public warnings and emergencies. And that's because of

AM radio's unmatched reach, resiliency and because it's free. And this hits home. I mean, do you think it's okay for you to lose access to KFI when you're on the road? Exactly? You need to make your voice heard on this issue. Text the letters AM to five two eight eight six and tell Congress to keep AM radio in all our cars and trucks. Standard message and data rates apply. Let's say good morning now to ABC's Crime and

Terrorism analyst Brad Garrett. Brad, this story is fascinating to me because I think that any person who does almost a preemptive strike for a murder that they are about to commit to me feels really dumb, and it kind of in this case. I want to the woman who is involved in this, mother from Utah, who wrote a book on grief to help her kids. I guess, should their dad ever die and then the dad dies, it seems like, come on, lady, you didn't think you were gonna get caught.

So it's actually the other way around. She actually didn't write the book after she killed her or allegedly killed her husband, and the book was written so her children, you know, it talks about grief and solace and all these things. And to even add another bizarre aspect to it, Jennifer, is that apparently there's a picture of her deceased husband with wings on and halo in the book, you know, like so her children will never forget the father. You know, I'm going to guess, you know, she's sort

of a classic anti social personality. In other words, anybody that could do what's been alleged she did is beyond cold and calculating. But then to write this book on top of it, and then go on local television to promote the book, you know, of the very crisis and trauma that she actually caused. It gives you a lot of insight into sort of her emptiness when

it comes to feelings about other people emptiness. And also I've noticed sometimes that when you have somebody who has they murdered a spouse or something like that, the ego or the hubris behind with which they think they're smarter than everybody else or you know, nobody's going to catch them. It's amazing to me how they, not all, but a majority of them sort of fit into that profile. And one thing that goes with antisocial personalities is arrogance and you know,

I'm better than you, sort of that type of thinking. So, I mean, if you think about the steps that she took, that would be you know, from an investigator standpoint as at how I look at cases to start with, you know, I mean, she leaves, it's almost like Hansel and Gretel dropping crumbs along the way thinking with this crime. And I mean she goes through a local apparently a local drug dealer to buy Fenton all she changes the life insurance policy so that she's the sole beneficiary of which

he figured out before she died. He died, and he switched it to his sister, and apparently she didn't know it got switched till after she killed him. So you know, there's those little twists that are you know, in this case, they apparently argued about some house she wanted to buy. She was a real estate agent for two million dollars. He didn't think it was a good investment. That day after he dies, she buys that house.

Oh see, I mean even that, even that, even that, I mean, it's kind of like she's just sort of slapping it in people's faces that I'm going to get by with this. You're not going to catch me, and I will say, and I don't understand why that took them so long. It took them a lot of months to charge her. I mean, she wrote this book, she went on television promoting this book,

and then recently actually they arrested her. So I don't I don't know what's going on, because this case strikes me as pretty being pretty straightforward, but it's it's bizarre. Were they possibly just I mean, making this an airtight case against her, and because she had dropped so many breadcrumbs, like you were saying, maybe they assumed that she would drop, you know, I don't know, a whole loaf of bread along the way, Well maybe maybe.

And if they believed that she was not a public safety risk to leave her in a community, then you know, that's one of the reasons you go ahead and arrest people because you're concerned about them harming other people. I guess they didn't feel that that was the case, and I don't think there's any indication that she did. But yeah, so she has a detention hearing I think in the next few days to see if they're going to keep her

in jail. Oh my gosh, Brad, in a case like this, would you keep her in jail now that all of this is out, now that all of these evidence is against her, would you keep her? Would you look at somebody like her as a flight risk? Well? Maybe, and we'll see what the prosecutor argues, because you know, his family was apparently or is a super well known family in Summit County, which is where what Park City is, Utah, And so you know, I assume she

had a passport. They'd have to take her, they'd have to seize her passport. If if you were going to let her out, I would put an ankle monitor on her so you can keep track of everyplace she goes. Yeah, but we'll see if if she a threat to other people that we don't know, that certainly will be discussed if it's relevant in this hearing. All right, Thank you so much, Brad. I appreciate your analysis. You're welcome set. All right, you two talk to you later. That's

ABC's Crime and Terrorism analyst Brad Garrett. I didn't she's watched If I should say, the accused woman see you look at me being the good news girl. I feel that if she is the actual killer in this case, she's watched way too many Lifetime movies and not right till the end because you always get caught. You know, you killed the husband, the life insurance policy has changed. You write a book about grief and you put a picture of

your husband with wings and a halo in the book. Nobody's gonna suspect you. Lord, Where's Valerie Burton Elly when we need her? LA has voted to ban a crime ridden homeless camp and a two block area of Woodland Hills. Officials say the camp has been home to a rape, stabbing, and an attempted murder. Him made and who manages Pickwick's Pub, says her restaurant

is now closing at ten instead of midnight to keep staff members safe. She says that means a loss of business, probably a good thousand a night that you could probably bring in, but it's just not worth it. Staff safety is everything. Councilman Bob Bloominfield says his office has worked for months to house people living at the camp. The city Council voted nine to five yesterday to approve the band Lake trolley. Kaf I News, we're gonna talk with Kavised,

host of Macro Tuesday Tuesdays. How about Sundays two to four. Jason Middleton is here and we've got our bis by this morning. I want to ask him if inflation is cooling, which it appears to be, why aren't things any cheaper? And what percentage do you think of gen zers say they're having to work a one regular job and they also have to have a side hustle. I'll tell you what the percentage is in just a moment. So Catwhether from KFI. We've got more sunshine on the way. We're going to

start to warm it up. And it looks like by Saturday, Heiselby in the eighties to the very low nineties, you're listening to Wake Up Call with Jennifer Jones Lee on demand from KFI AM six forty. Tyler's on a Disney cruise, of course he is. He's going to Vancouver. I was like, look at you crossing country lines there boy, So anyway, it should be fun for him. He'll be back next week. But Tony, thank you. In the meantime, I enjoy your musical selections. Skaf I am

six forty live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. La County health officials say people at high risk for monkey pox should get fully vaccinated before the upcoming Gay Pride events. And there's an experimental skin patch that has helped toddlers who are highly allergic to peanuts. Jason Middleton joins me now. He is the host of Macro two to four here on Sundays he anchors. He's our business guy. Jason has like eighteen hats out there. There's a whole locker of different hats

for you. I sure know it every time. Wait a second, I have a locker. Cool you didn't know. I just found my mailbox not too too long ago. There's a study, Jason, that was published in the New England Journal of Medicine yesterday that says this patch called Biaskin helped toddlers who couldn't even tolerate a small peanut to eventually safely eat. I mean I would think that this is huge for this company. Yeah, absolutely, I

mean isn't this a persistent worry for anybody? I mean, and I mean kids of course, but other people have peanut allergies too, and but this one specifically addresses, you know, youngsters and whatnot. I have a family member who is a doctor who specializes in infantcare and infant surgery, specifically neurosurgery. Even still, he covers a lot of this, and so with his with his patient Coterie, and I find that his uh, his reports back

about peanut allergies are always like they're they're terrifying. And he's himself allergic to tree nuts, so it does Oh yeah, I think, yeah. But so so that's top of my medical professionals. They'd be great. I mean, I mean, to be able to reduce the worry on the medical side and for the printing parenting side. Yeah, there was I had a neighbor once, and there was a neighbor down the street who used to feed the birds peanuts in our neighborhood. Huh, And it was maybe two houses down

from us. Anyway, the birds would fly and drop the peanuts shells in our backyards. But his daughter was allergic to peanuts, and so he had to go down the street and be like, hey, you know, it's great you're feeding the birds, but can I can we feed him something else? Because if my daughter steps on them or something like that, the peanuts, right, I had neither. So anyway, I loved this line. I do too, because it's all so rapid response to I don't know how

it works. I mean I just recently of patch. Yeah, so anything that would mitigate the impact for sure, because their unintended consequences. Your person wasn't trying to that neighbor wasn't trying to hurt anybody. Everything obviously trying to trying to feed the birds, right, Yeah. So it was just that was kind of crazy, very cool. I'm surprised artificial intelligence didn't come up with that for us. First. Well, I'm glad that humans are still

coming up with stuff. Well, but I feel like increasingly fewer and fewer things we are coming up with. I want to know, though, with inflation cooling this week, Jason, why in the world don't we see, Hey, look, inflation's cooling, prices come down, right, fantastic point, and I mean the price of peanuts remains up, unfortunately, because it goes back to food prices. Right, So we got a four point nine percent increase a year every year, so it's a little bit better than the

five percent we were expecting. Okay, okay, So the FED stuff, the interest rate hikes, the ten hikes over the last fourteen months started to take effect, but not as quickly as we had hoped, and not as quickly and time wise as well, is like number wise, right, So things aren't coming down, and one of the reasons is inflation. So sticky is food costs, right, So there we go, Steven. Airfares are coming down, but it's food costs seven okay, four point nine percent,

that's across the board. That's like if you put the price of everything together. Think about it's called the consumer price index, right, that's the very core index. It's it's it's a blunt tool, it's not very surgical, but it does give us an indication. Seven point seven percent is food cost inflation. So that gives you the idea of the gap between like what we feel and what they're telling us. And have you noticed? And I was shocked. I went to the grocery store, went to Trader Joe's and I

don't remember what it was. My bill would say, like a hundred bucks or something like that. But the next week then I was super busy eating out all the time. I spent less money eating out than I did buying food at the grocery store for a week. They can buy bulk, they can get things through the supply chain a little bit faster. The relief is coming. I know. I've been saying that for months and it's true. But everybody's been saying it, and it is coming. It's just not coming

quick enough, right. I will say that when doing Neil Savadra's show, The Fork Report on Saturdays, we've been talking about egg prices. Oh gosh, yeah, we've been watching those as well. So good news to report there is that we're coming off an all time high in December of twenty twenty with egg price or twenty twenty one with egg prices. So the wholesale price

is coming down faster than the retail price. Okay, okay, So the retail price is the tail that wags the dog for us because we're the consumers, right, But in the middle where the wholesale prices, the wholesale markup, that's coming down to a point where we're going to get back to about two fifty for a dozen at most next month. Okay, so that this month really how the restaurants are going to buy, so their costs they're going

to come down there, they're coming down. So eventually it will hit us too at the grocery source for sure, and not just eggs, but as an example, I use eggs. Okay, got it all right? So I thought this is a brilliant one. Brides and grooms going to Etsy to register and I was thinking back, I got a crap ton of stuff what I don't know thirteen years ago, I guess on Etsy for my wedding.

I mean everything from the napkins to the favors too. I remember I had a guard that was you know how everybody in the bride takes the garter off and throsday, but it was an Atlanta Braves garter because bride is supposed to wear the garter. Oh did you? I guess I messed that up. That's on me. I think it's a great alternative. It's like it's your own boutique. Yeah. I dig it. Being able to buy niche products online of something we're all used to. But having having protected and verified sellers

I think is really important. And Etsy has an established organization there, and so yeah, I mean, and plus you can find you can find fun, novelty things, or you can find everything everyday things that you might need as well. Yeah. Absolutely, I didn't realize how much actual shopping shopping you can do on Etsy, right, Like you can go find you know, I don't know, Dodger stuff or whatever. And it's not even stuff that somebody has made. It's like an actual old, you know, starter

jacket or something like that on it. So you can find briding groom supplies if you're planning the wedding or if you're attending the wedding, you could do it that way too, maybe, I mean, I think it's I think it's fun. I think it's a way to put your personal stamp on something

as as personal as a wedding, okay, briding groom. And of course this isn't because Bed Bath and Beyond is, let's say, less less than wedding ready, Okay, so other other retailers are going to honor those coupons that Bed Bath and Beyond was really good about sending too many of out apparently, and then then when you push it past that, other stores are going to honor those for a while. I think most of that stuff expires by

the end of this month. The reason that I'm grabbing my phone is not because I'm being rude, but I just got a bed bath and Beyond coupon. Oh yeah, in my email there it is. It says bed Bathroom Beyond store closing sale new reductions added ten to forty percent off lowest prices. Find your store here, great, so you can go there and if you have an old one sitting around that says ten percent off anything you buy over thirty bucks or whatever, you can take it to one of their competitors right

now in most cases and find some kind of deals. So they're doing they're doing horse trading when it comes to these coupons as well at their competitors, just trying to get some customer loyalty coming in their doors. As bed Net and be honest, is shedding theirs all right and really quickly before I let you go. I was fascinated that forty percent of gen zers say they have

to work multiple jobs because of the cost of living. So they've got a full time job and then they have a side hustle as an uber driver or something like that. Yeah, I think there's a lot of reasons for this. Obviously, it's it's unfortunate in a way. I mean, it's cool if you want that freedom of doing that, but without a national health insurance program like other countries have, we don't have that here, right, so

we have to adapt for that. So you have to have a core your net for your medical insurances to come somewhere, and then you're augmenting it. And it seems like the younger you are, the more likely you are to have to do that. I think older work are staying in the workforce longer, taking up a lot of the top end of salaries, and so a lot of the company's labor costs go towards an odor and aging workforce, and so it's unable to really hire either hire new talent, more talent, or

pay the talent that they have more. You rock, I doubt that you explain things. Yeah, the guarter thing maybe if I know confident if I'd done that, I mean, if he had worn the Dodgers garter, that's true, but I mean you're a Dodgers fander, you're not. It's true, And any kind of Dodgers attire, yeah, is appropriate at any time that's true, and I'm sure you can get some on Etsy somewhere. Absolutely not not legally authorized by the Major League Baseball or it is. You'd never

know some of them are registered on there. I'm sure. Oh yeah, absolutely, all right. Jason Middleton macro two to four on Sundays. You'll hear him later with handle eight o'clock and yeah, Jason's everywhere. Yeah, and for me all next week. That's right, tomorrow morning, I believe too. Yeah, that's right. I heard you mentioned you're headed up for some kind of outdoor event. Yes, that will be some bull riding. I will not be riding the bulldog. Are you doing the national anthem again?

I am not. I am not doing the national anthem. I think my national anthem on a horse days are over pictures exist somewhere right, Oh, absolutely, I'll find some when I come back. I'd like Matt, I'd like to see it. Oh yeah, oh you guys get ready Instagram. Oh you guys my performing days woo. Not a costume I didn't have back in the day, red boots and red cowboy hat. It was a full on red stetson. Wow, well done, thank you. I know I went big on it. All right, Jason Middleton, thank you.

We'll talk with kfies. So Jason does Macro from two to four. Right before him, you have Joel lars Guard with how to Money, and we're going to get in with Joel in just a second, talking about new cars maybe no longer part of the American dreams, so we'll find out just how much those are costing right now when we talk with him in just a few minutes. You're listening to Wait Call with Jennifer Jones Lee on demand from KFI AM sixty kf I AM six forty live everywhere on the iHeart Radio WAFF.

This is your wake up call. I'm Jennifer Jones Lee. Some of the stories were watching in the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. A couple in a Bentley were shot at in Valley Village in what cops they may have been an attempted follow home robbery. The people in the car say they were waiting for a friend yesterday when a guy with a gun walked up demanded cash and jewelry. But the driver of the Bentley then hit it, put it in reverse, tried to get away, but then he hit a passing car. Then

a woman in that car was hurt and the shooter took off. A twelve year old boy has been killed in the shooting in Long Beach and a fourteen year old girl was hurt. Police say the two were walking along Lewis Avenue late last night between Martin Luther, King Junior and Orange Avenues when they were approached by at least two guys in the car and someone inside those cars started

shooting. Also, the man suspected of killing American teenager Natalie Holloway and Ruba in two thousand and five is being extradited to the US to face federal fraud charges. Here's the deal. So, Natalie Halloway's body was never found and charges were never filed against your in Vander Salute. However, he is charged with trying to extort money from Natalie Holloway's family. Yeah, Joel lars Guard, good morning to you. Joel is the host of How To Money Sunday's

twelve to two here on KFI. And I'm telling you, if you're in the new in the market for a new car, holy cow, just stay in the market for a little while longer. Yes, I think I think

you're right. Hold off as long as you possibly can, because new car prices are through the roof, and we're talking the average new car price hit forty eight thousand dollars in March, which is just unfathomable owne factor in higher interest rates combined with that, we're talking about monthly payments, you know, getting closer to a thousand dollars like in the in the upper seven hundred Graine. So it's it's a bad time to be out there trying to find a

new car, you know. And some people are thinking, like, wow, that's close to a rent payment anymore. Well, yeah, rents have gone up uite a bit too, right, So maybe that's rent payments from like two thousand and six or something like that. Yes, But but it is funny, like the older I get, the more I'm like, oh, I remember that a car payment used to cost a rent cost. But it's yeah, so but it is true. I mean, that's how expensive cars are getting. And I do worry. It's just one of these places

where it just feels normal to buy a new car. But it's it just it can't be normal if you want to make progress with your money in other ways. For most people, like I am, I feel the pain by the way, because I am in the market to buy a used car. Mine was just rear ended total, and so I'm trying to find something new, and it's tough out there to find even a reasonably priced used car.

So but so I just I want people to really think long and hard if they if they don't have to find a new car right now, it's just a great time to be holding off as long as you can, babing the car that you currently have, making the fixes and kind of making it a car that you're happy to drive for at least a couple more years, because we don't know how long it's going to take for the car market to return

to normalcy, but it's still way out of whack right now. All right, Well, now, if you have to buy a new car right now, and you are spending nearly a thousand bucks a month this next story, you're probably thinking, well, that might be me. A quarter of Americans say that they have never saved money for retirement. But I guess if you're somebody who's living paycheck to paycheck, maybe you do have a lot of debt

and now you're seeing those prices go up, it makes absolute sense. You're just working to keep a roof over your head and food on the table at this point. Yeah, And I mean there are a lot of people who because of just the circumstances of what they earn and with rising costs of costs of so many things, that it is difficult to kind of keep up with inflation, and maybe their salary hasn't kept up with it, and so they

are living paycheck to paycheck. But there's a whole slow of folks, and these are the folks I'm really trying to reach more than a name thing who have the ability to really change their own circumstances. And we're talking about buying that new car, Well, if you buy a forty eight thousand dollars vehicle, yeah, it's going to be a whole lot harder to save anything for

your retirement. And so I think a big portion of that twenty five percent who have never contributed anything to a retirement account, like they could find a way to put a couple of percentage points away into a workplace retirement encounter, into a roth IRA if they don't have access to one of those. And one thing I like, Jennifer for people to do to kind of to kind of identify with their future cells so that they feel more compelled to invest for

their future. Now is to use something called the face app. Download the face app, take a picture of yourself, and it'll generate like a visual image of what you're going to look like thirty years from now. I've done it for myself. I'm going to age gracefully, I think, which is which is wonderful. Yeah, but I think seeing what you're going to look like decades down the road can help you understand. Wait a second, I am going to get older and I am going to I'm gonna need money for

future me. And I think there's like an empathetic sort of response that we intuibibly have when we see an age diversion of ourselves that makes us more compelled to invest for that future person that we now like realize is actually coming to It's easy to put it off and be like, I'm never getting old, but the truth is we're all going to get old, and it's important to start saving money for the future. And I think that's one tangible way that

we were more likely to do it. I have done the face tapp, and just for anybody out there listening, I don't care how much you bleach your hair that would be me to make it not gray, or how much botox and filler you get also me, it doesn't matter. It's going to still show you. Yeah, I mean it's it's we're all going there right.

There's there's no way around it. So but the more we push it off and assume that we won't, the more we can justify the spending in the here and now and avoid kind of it's gonna be paying one way or another, either now or later. And I want people to institute on purpose, a little bit of painting their lives at removing some of their current spending

so they can set aside some money for their future. Okay, Jason Middleton was just talking about AI when he was in here, and I know that's been a thing that I feel like I can't do a business report anymore, or even sometimes just a regular old everyday report, you know, news report without AI somehow making its way into the newscast and in this case banking in

the metaverse. I'm not sure if this makes me nervous. I mean, it feels like I could go to chat GPT and be like, hey, make me a millionaire and then boom, all of a sudden, it'll be in my bank account. But I guess that's not the case. Yeah, I mean, I think AI and the metaverse are two different things in my mind, and it seems like the metaverse, at least from my vantage point, has failed catastrophically, and nobody, especially after COVID and lockdowns and time

alone, nobody wants to spend time in the metaverse. Sorry, And I would rather be out in the real world, going on hikes, hanging out with friends. Right, So I'm the metaverse is what it is, and I think it's going to just kind of go away at some point. AI not so much, and so I'm curious to see the impact that AI is going to have about our personal finances. I think at some point it really

is going to make a big deal. And I think Turbo tax announced that they had some sort of back end AI thing to help you do your taxes. I don't know how much that was actual marketing or how much that was actually accurate. It was just kind of helping people with really really basic tax circumstances file their taxes quickly, which they can already do. But so it's

yeah, it's interesting. I don't know how far or how big the impact is going to be of AI. It certainly seems like, based on the prognostications of a lot of smart tech folks, that it could be bigger than the Internet. But for right now, a lot of people I've seen people ask chat GPD questions about their personal finances. Sometimes it gives great information back, sometimes it spits out inaccurate information, and it doesn't know kind of the

latest news on what's happening with student loans or something like that. So you do have to be careful before you're starting to use kind of these these AI generated answers to you know, inform exactly how you handle your money day to day. Right now, Joel, we love you. We are so glad you're on KFI twelve to two on Sundays, How to Money with Joel lars Guard. His podcast is how to Money as well. Have a great weekend. I'll be listening, all right, sounds good. Thanks for having me,

Jennifer, thanks absolutely anytime. Kfi's Joel lars Guard. I love that guy. He's just between him with Jason with kind of the macro like, here's how all these things you hear in the news are going to impact you. Then down to Joel where he does the more lifestylee like, Hey,

if you need a car, if you're banking or whatever. That Sunday like chunk, I guess of on airtime is so freaking educational and fun because the two of those guys are super fun and crazy and but anyway, I just if you, yeah, if you want to, if you want to know about money, but not be preached to while it's you know, while you're getting your information. Those are the two guys to listen to. And apparently Amy King says every day could soon be hump day outside schools in La.

The La City Council has approved a motion that calls for speed humps to be installed outside every public school in La. The motion comes just weeks after crashes outside district schools left a woman dead and two children injured. The motion would be similar to a speed hump installation program at public elementary schools in Council President Paul Krikorian's district in North Hollywood and surrounding areas that will be completed by the

time school starts this fall. No timetable and no cost estimate has been given for the citywide speed hump plan. There are almost eight hundred public schools in the LA School District. Amy King KFI News and Finally over and Wiser, Young at heart, only a big wiser. That's General Hospital actress Jackie Zeeman, known for her role as Nurse Bobby Spencer. I remember sitting in the living room with my mom watching General Hospital when I was a kid. She's

died. The executive producer of the show says he's heartbroken to announce Seman died last night. He says she was a bright light and a true professional. Jackie Zeman was seventy years old. This is KFI and KOSTHD to Los Angeles, Orange County. Beautiful sunny weekend on tap. By Saturday, highs Inland could be in the eighties to the very low nineties. We lead local live from the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. I'm Jennifer Jones Lee. This has

been your wake up call. You've been listening to your wake up call with me Jennifer Jones Lee, and you can always hear wake Up Call five to six am Monday through Friday at KFI AM six forty and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android