You're listening to KFI Am six forty wake Up Call with me Amy King on demand on the iHeartRadio apps. It's time for your morning wake up call. Here's Amy King. This is your wake up call for Wednesday, August twenty third. Good morning, I'm Amy King. Here's what we're following in the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Hollywood Studios, who put out a new offer
to the WGA for increased salaries and protections in AI. Studios, said in a statement they're offering the largest pay bump for the WGA in thirty five years. Writers have been on strike since early May. The Justice Department says a witness in the federal prosecution of former President Trump over classified documents has retracted what it calls prior false testimony after switching lawyers last month, and then provided new
information that implicates the former president. We're going to talk to ABC Stephen Portnoy more about this in just a couple of minutes. An animal center in San Diego has taken in twenty orphaned pets rescued from the deadly wildfires on Maui. Officials say moving the animals to the mainland freeze up space in Hawaiian shelters for more animals with a chance of reuniting with owners. Let's get started with some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. At least
five people have ransacked a Macy's in Arcadia during a flash mob robbery. Please say. The group went into the store at the Santa Anita Mall yesterday afternoon around one and took multiple box sets of perfume before leaving in a black car. Video shows the robbers with their faces and heads covered as they filled up large bags of merchandise. National Retail Federation says organized retail crime is increasing. It caused ninety four a half billion dollars in losses in twenty twenty one.
Say some of those losses and stores are being passed onto consumers, forcing the average family to pay an estimated five hundred dollars more each year for goods. Isn't that nice? They steal and we get to pay for it. ABC's Morgan Norwood's Walgreens has opened a prototype store where all the merchandise except for essential goods in two aisles is locked up. That forces customers to use kiosks to order what they need. Dick's Sporting Goods calls the thefts one factor behind a
twenty three percent drop in its profits. A man in his twenties has been stabbed to death in Malibu, Ali County Sheriff's deputies were called just after eleven last night about a fight between a man and a woman. The man was found stabbed on pch near Las Tunis Beach. He died at the hospital. Cruz and San Bernardino are searching for a woman who may have been swept away
when Hillary caused the Santa Anna River to overflow. They are searching downstream in an attempt of low proof that resident San Bernardino count Fires Eric Sherwin says a witness claimed the woman was taken by floodwaters away from a group of about twenty people stranded in Seven Oaks. The road in and out of that community Glass Road. We have a several hundred yards section of that road that no longer exists, that was destroyed by the floodwaters actually resulting from storm. He says.
Many people have been rescued from the area, including one injured woman. Firefighters with medical supplies have had to camp out with the group. Some people have refused to leave Corbin Carson k if I News. Tropical storm Franklin has made landfall on the island of Hispaniola, as Haiti and the Dominican Republic face possible flooding. Two of the nineteen defendants in the twenty twenty election interference case
in Georgia have surrendered early. Bail bondsman Scott Hall and Trump lawyer John Eastman surrendered yesterday, three days ahead of the Friday noon deadline. Some sources say Rudy Giuliani will surrender today. Former President Trump is expected to surrender tomorrow, and that one will reportedly be televised. A teenager in Pakistan rescued with seven others from a cable card dangling over a ravine, says the rescue was a miracle. The effort yesterday took sixteen hours. The teen says he and the
others repeatedly felt death was imminent. ABC's Alani Alison Kosik says one child was rescued by helicopter, but the rescue plan changed when it got dark. Two daring responders climbed out onto the cable to set up a makeshift rescue zipline, the operation extending into the night until Finally, the last of those trapped were brought down to the ground. The students were on their way to school when
a cable on their gondola snapped. El segundo. All Stars are still alive in the Little League World Series. They beat Smithville, Rhode Island yesterday nine to three to avoid elimination. Next up is Nolansville, Tennessee, today in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The game will be at four o'clock this afternoon. It'll air on ESPN and then also stream on Fubo. Let's say good morning to
ABC's Stephen Portnoy. He's gonna tell us about a Marrow Lago worker who has flipped his testimony about what happened in the classified documents case against former President Trump. Hey, good morning. So we're talking about Yusel Tavares, the iam man at Marrow Lago who was the first known instance of a witness who testified one way and then, under pressure from prosecutors, changed their story to avoid prosecution and has agreed to testify against the former president. This is what led
to the superseding indictment issued against the former president in late July. Yusel Tavares, according to our sources in March, gave testimony to the grand jury that wasn't really the full true story, and when presented with that and a target letter by prosecutors, he flipped. He's not the first person to tell things to the grand jury that would be helpful to the prosecutors, but he is the first known witness to change his story and to align himself with prosecutors under
threat that he too would face charges Steven. So, here's my question. When there's pressure from prosecutors, is that testimony then still credible or could they later come back and say, Hey, I was being pressured, I was
threatened like this, and so that's why I flipped. It is something that defense attorneys without fail will point out, and the jury has to weigh the credibility of any witness, but it definitely it tends to help prosecutors in the main that witnesses say one thing before grand jury and then change their story. They oftentimes have either their own testimony or maybe some documentary evidence to back it up. The prosecutors must have had some reason to believe that he was lying.
Okay, so do we know what he was saying and what he is now saying, or is that still all kind of under wraps. Well, you think you can infer from what our sources are telling us that in June Tavares received a target letter from the Special Council warning him that he was likely to be charged with perjury for making false statements to investigators, and before the grand jury in March, and then in June he comes forward to say, I was approached by the body man and the maintenance man, and they told
me that the boss wanted the server deleted with the footage, the boxes being moved around mar Lago to hide them from the attorney be when the Justice Department came calling. And so you can infer in that whatever he said before the grand jury was the opposite of that, and so or at least lying by
omission or in some way not telling the story that was true. And now prosecutors are going to use him at trial to try to prove that former President Donald Trump engaged an obstruction of justice in cooking up a scheme to have that footage deleted to avoid prosecutors getting their hands on it. Okay, and as the result of the flip there could be more charges. Well, no, I think so the charges have already been brought as a result of the flips.
What's new here is the fact that we've learned about it. Wasn't surprised when I heard this story last night. I said, well, of course Tavares has provided helpful testimony, otherwise they wouldn't been able to hand up that superseding indictment in July. But the story is what was behind it, because what we did not know until yesterday was that Tavares was offering different testimony earlier
in the year. And now you understand why they did it in two waves, because in the intervening time between the first indictment and the second indictment, they put pressure on this witness. He turned and that is the first known instance of such a thing happening against Donald Trump. All Right, Stephen Portnoy, thank you so much for the enlightenment this morning. Let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour news room.
Porter Ranch residents have protested a planned expansion of the Aliso Kenyon natural gas storage facility. The protest yesterday comes almost eight years after the largest ghastly Kennuis history that displaced about ten thousand residents. Hard to believe that was eight years ago. Many of them weren't even told about the league until they started having medical
issues. Following plans to initially shut the facility down, the California Public Utilities Commission has agreed to the Southern California Gas Company's request to expand the facility and store more natural gas. The La City Council is set to consider a four year contract with the union representing LAPD officers, detectives, and lieutenants. The deal includes raises, increased healthcare benefits, and patrol incentives. The agreement was
approved by a mayor Bass earlier this month. City officials say the deal could cost taxpayers about three hundred eighty four million dollars over the next four years. The Mayor's offices. LAPD staffing has gone down by more than a thousand officers since twenty twenty. Felony chargers are expected in Riverside County against a twenty one year old man suspected of multiple armed operies in Moreno Valley and Cabazon. The
guy was arrested Monday. Police say he held up gas stations in convenience stores between April and August fourth of this year. A school bus carring dozens of elementary school students in Ohio has collided with a minivan that crossed the center median ABC's Alex Perez says the bus driver tried to avoid the oncoming car yesterday, but the bus went off the right side of the road and flipped over. One student was ejected from the bus, dying at the scene. Twenty three
other children taken to the hospital, one of them in serious condition. Yesterday was the first day of school. Ohio, like most states, does not require seat belts on school buses. Former President Trump's chief of staff Mark Meadows has asked a federal judge to block his arrest over election interference charges. In Georgia. The deadline to surrender for all nineteen defendants is Friday. Meadows has asked Fulton County DA Fannie Willis for one more business day so the federal court
can hold its hearing set from Monday first. Willis says she's not granting any extensions. Performances for four Legged Friends have been happening in Orange County. It's almost showtime. Hayden Ducie only started learning to play the violin just two years ago, but the twelve year old is already putting on concerts playing for a
very special audience. Hayden is one of the volunteer musicians who perform at the San Clementi Dana Point Animal Shelter. Volunteer and Pet Project Foundation board member Nancy Coortz says, the special performances have a special name. We came up with Wolfgang Puccini spelled woofgnng and Puccini poohi ni. Nancy says the concerts are a way to engage the community while helping soothe shelter animals. Hayden says, these concerts are a really cool idea show us that they really care about all the
animals. For more, you can go to Spectrum News one dot com. Joe Kuan kup by News I love that treating the puppies, kiddies desert music. You know, we were at Pasadena Humane the other day and because they were doing their clear the Shelters event that we told you about, and there was a little girl sitting by one of the kennels where the dogs are reading to the puppies, and I think that's that's part of what the volunteers do. Was just the sweetest, sweetest thing. We were going to record it
and show it to you. But she was reading so quiet. She was just this cute little girl reading to the puppies. Right now, let's say good morning to KTLA tech reporter Rich Demiro, also host of Rich on Tech here on KFI. Good morning Rich, Hey, good morning to Amy. So should I flip for the foldable phones or not? Well, that's a great question. So I've been using three of them in the past month. The first was the Samsung Flip five. This is kind of like the entry
level easiest. It literally looks like Samsung phone that just kind of folds in half. Then I was testing out the Samsung Fold five, which is kind of like a tablet that folds in half into a phone. And now I've been testing the Google Fold, which looks like a passport that opens up into a phone. They all have their pros and cons, but I've been really
trying to figure out why someone needs a foldable phone. And I understand the appeal, like you get this big, giant screen that you can use sort of like a tablet in your pocket at all times, but you also have a regular phone. But this means that they're heavier, they're bulkier and do you always need a giant screen at all times? I don't know about you, but you know, maybe I open this thing up once or twice a
day at the most to do something on the big screen. But these companies are really pushing these things, and I think in the future, when they get thinner, when they get lighter, when they get sleeker, they will be a thing. Right now, if you want one, I think it's more of like the fun of it and the difference, you know, like you have a different device than a lot of other people out there. Okay, so for the folding phones, now they do they all have that flat
screen then when they open up, well, it's interesting. The Samsungs are a little bit more advanced than the Google Phone. The Samsung's open and fold flat. They have no gap in the middle. The Google phone doesn't have a gap in the middle, but it doesn't completely open flat, which is kind of weird. Like it opens up like maybe like one or two degrees off the like you can't fully push it down like you want to, but you're going to break the screen if you do that, and that's like a
thousand dollar break, right. Oh yeah, that's gonna be an expensive break. Now, It's interesting because Samsung is really trying to get people to do these things to switch over. So not only are they giving you a lot of money towards this phone, like up to one thousand dollars to switch, but they're also giving you one free screen protector replacement and then one discounted screen repair. I think the screen repair is like about two hundred dollars or two
hundred and fifty bucks depending on the phone. Okay, waiting repairs and protectors. That suggests to me that they're breaking a lot. Well, these definitely do break more than a standard phone. But here's the deal. People crack a standard phone screen all the time. This is just different because you're opening and closing it, so there's much more of a chance for the screen,
you know, something to get caught in there. You have a you know, I don't know why you'd have a nickel in your pocket these days, but if you did and it got caught between the screen and it smash things up, who knows, you know. I think I think at the end of the day, they're just trying to reassure people like, look, you know, you get this thing, You're gonna have two years where you can
get it fixed for cheaper free. And you know, look, a lot of people go into the Apple store to get their iPhone screen replaced, so it's kind of like the same thing. Do they have a shorter lifespan or do they know yet? Are they supposed to be equal to a regular phone? Yeah, that's the thing we don't know yet because it's these kind of
These are pretty new. I mean, Samsung has been in these for four years, by the way, and they rate them for about three hundred thousand folds, which if you do the math, it's a lot of folds per day. And you know, it's one of those things where you're on the cutting edge. There may be a problem, there may be an issue, but overall, you know, they're selling I think they sold ten million of these last year, so you know they're they're growing ever slow so slowly.
Okay, but her right now, you were just saying, maybe want to hold off until they improve them a little bit more. Well, I think that they're at a good place this year. All three models are at a really good place. But you have to understand the compromise is if you go to my website rich on tech dot tv, I write about all that stuff with the fold and the flip. You know, you just have to know
what you're getting. But if you want to be on the cutting edge, like I've been carrying one of these things for a month now, and it's really fun because you always have this big screen with you. But at the same time, it's always have big screen with you. Yeah, it's just it's it's just not like you have this small phone in your pocket like these
are heavier. They're a little bit bulk heere. Okay, so iPhones coming out with their new phone and that's when we get rid of the lightning jack and go to the USBC, which is more universal, right, yes, okay, so this yep, And what's what's the cool thing that they're including with the new USBC. Well, you know, it's a slow tech newsday when I'm talking about the braided cable on the iPhone. But here's the deal. A lot of people'll be we'll be using USBC for the first time when
the iPhone fifteen comes out next month. USBC is currently what they use for one end of the cable that plugs into the charger, but now it will be the other end of the cable that plugs into the phone. So it's kind of like a universal charger cable, data cable, whatever you want to call it. That has been used on Android phones for many years. Now it's coming to the iPhone, which will make it a lot easier to pack for vacations and trips and travel because you only need to pack one cable.
But Apple, I think they're doing something a little bit nice. They're making the cable longer. It is braided, so it has this nice like fabric braiding on the outside, and the rumor mill says that it will match the color of the phone you get. Okay, so that sounds ridiculous, but I will tell you I had the rose Gold phone which got stole loop so I don't have it anymore. But when I got that, I got a
rose gold case and I got a rose gold chord for it. So yeah, okay, ridiculous, But I was all matchy matchy, and I loved
it. I hear you, And I just posted on my Instagram. The other day I was in Walmart, much to my wife's chagrine, she does not like Walmart, but we were in there and I was like ready to tweet about how I thought it was funny that they're selling a sparkly charging cable and pink or whatever purple, and she was like, oh my gosh, I need a new cable, and she literally bought it, and I was cracking up, and I posted this to my Instagram stories and every person wrote
me back and was like, yeah, Rich, we like our cables a lot of women, and they're like, we like our cables to be you know, the same color or fun or sparkly. And I was like, all right, you know, there's just some things in this world I don't understand, and that's one of them. Okay, Well, I'm glad that they're going to have MATCHI MATCHI cables because it apparently to me and many other
women, it's a very important thing. There you go. KTLA Tech reporter Rich Demiro, host of rich on Tech right here on KFI Saturdays from eleven to two. Love your show, by the way, and you can follow Rich on Instagram at rich on Tech. His website is rich on Tech dot tv. Thanks Rich, All right, have a great day. All right, let's get back to a couple of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. The Alliance of Motion Pictures and Television Producers has released
a statement with its offer to striking Hollywood writers. It's been met with resistance and skepticism from union leaders. They've promised a more detailed description today on the state of negotiations. The union representing three hundred forty thousand UPS workers says it's members have approved a tentative five year contract deal that avertsus strike. The teamsters say eighty six percent of the it's cast were in favor of ratifying the contract.
The union says that was the highest vote for a contract in the history of the teamsters at UPS. The deal was reached days before an August first deadline, and the La City Council has approved plans for public safety upgrades at the Hollywood Sign. One calls for putting a permanent fence around or a long Mulholland Highway to stop drivers from stopping near the sign. They would also install a traffic roundabout in the area. Now, the City Bureau of Engineering has
a few months to find a way to pay for the updates. When we come back, we're gonna be talking to Jane Wells. It's time for Biz Buzz and the Buzzes. If you want to buy a home, you need to make a lot of money. The Justice Department says a witness in the federal prosecution of Donald Trump over classified documents has retracted prior falls testimony after switching lawyers, and provided new information implicating the former president. India could become only
the fourth nation to ever land a spacecraft on the Moon. It's scheduled to touch down today and if it does, it would become the first space moduled land on the lunar South Pole. Remember the Russian spacecraft Luna would have beat India to the South Pole, but wound up crashing into the Moon. Over the weekend. At six o five, it's handled on the news, the first two of nineteen defendants in the election interference case in Georgia have surrendered.
We'll take a look at who's turning themselves. In next five fifty we'll be talking with five dot COM's Nathaniel Raikitch about what to expect at the first Republican presidential debate. It's tonight, but right now, let's say good morning to CNBC special correspondent Jane Wells. Jane, this storm has done a number on
farmers, which I'm guessing is not going to be great news. When it comes to prices and supplies later, well, it may end up being an issue amy, because two thirds of our winter vegetables come from the Imperial Valley, which kind of dodged a bullet with Hillary. It was supposed to be, you know, really wallop the farmland out in that part of the world. They did get a bit of rain and really some whipping winds the farmers down there. That's where I spent most of Monday, Sunday and Monday covering
the storm social media. I'm sorry I saw you on social media. Oh yes, I happened to be on Interstate eight as this huge boulder came crashing down and we barely got past it before HP closed. It was you know, the wind was more interesting to me than the rain. It was just so sustained and intense. But we talked to these farmers out there who managed to get out what they had in the ground, which is a lot of alfalfa and corn stuff that they sell to the dairy industry, and get that
bailed up quickly. I mean, they were hiring people right and left, doing double cruise, all kinds of overtime. Now, the question is they're supposed to be planting those winter vegetables now, getting the seed in the ground, and they are going to have to wait and see if the ground dries out, how quickly it dries out. Some farmers are like, hey, minimal damage is not that big a deal. Others are saying, we you know, everything has to go perfect now. We can't have any more of
this kind of weather going on or they're going to miss their contracts. I mean, they they're on a very strict schedule. Most of the farmers down the Coachella Valley farmers got hit really hard because they the way the land is, the ground is up there and slopes. They didn't have quite as much drainage, so it was not great, but it could have been a lot worse. So they they were harvesting ahead of the storm so it was ready, or they did they kind of take it a little before it was ready,
just to make sure they got it, got it both. I mean, whatever they had in the ground they were they were pulling out. Now it had to go. There were some crops that we saw. The one guy was trying to grow a jalapeno pepper crop down there for the first time because there's such a pepper shortage. He ironically, this farmer alex Jack, last Friday before the storm was having to put sprinklers on these pepper plants to get them keep them cool because it was like one hundred and fifteen degrees down
there. Knowing that there was going to be this deluge of rain and wind that might just mow his pepper plants down. They did. Okay, he lost a few, but he's going to be okay. But most of the stuff in the ground was alfalfa and other kinds of feed, and they just got it out bailed. They had it under tarps to try and protect it. Some tarps work better than others. But now goes in, you know, spinach and broccoli and artist chokes and all the sorts of things that Americans
eat during the winter. And the hope is that the ground dries out and it's going to be okay and then you can keep to their schedule. Well, it's see me back to like one hundred degrees again for the rest of this week, so maybe that'll dry it out quickly. So I'm curious as to whether our region is being relied on more heavily because of what's going on Ukraine, or are those two separate harvests. They're separate. I mean the
vegetables. Ukraine is most lee wheat and that comes out of that part of the world, the Imperial Valley. For the interesting, A lot of it goes to Saudi Arabian other parts of the world, not just California dairy industry or whatever. But it's not It is a little bit of to use an actor, apples and oranges. No, okay, well that's good. So if you're looking to buy a house, good luck, because you've got to
make a ton of money to do it. Do it. Yeah, the California Association of Realtors, I actually was a little surprised at the median home price isn't higher, even though it is very high. The median home price right now in California is eight hundred and thirty thousand dollars, and you have to make a minimum income of two hundred and eight thousand dollars to qualify for a mortgage. And only sixteen percent of the people in California can afford that
medium home price with that kind of and have that kind of salary. Sixteen percent. Back in twenty twelve, it was fifty six percent of people could afford a meeting the medium price of a home. So we have really housing, as we all know, has become unaffordable in California. But it's really bad. The condo prices again are more affordable. They have actually come down
a little bit since a year ago. Twenty five percent of us can afford the media and a condo, which is six hundred and forty thousand dollars. You have to make about one hundred and sixty thousand dollars a minimum to afford that. So you can factor that into your into your checkbook, and you and your I just don't know, you know, I have kids. I have a daughter who's in her thirties, has makes a great living as a lawyer, and she wonders if she'll ever be able to buy a house where
she wants. You know, it depends on where you want to be. Like if you want to live in or Sanfordino County, which is the most affordable county down here, the medium hoe price there is four hundred and fifty seven thousand dollars and find inncome would be one hundred and fourteen. Oh, only one hundred fourteen, But then you have to drive two hours to get into town. For your job. Yeah, unless you're going to work out there, and maybe you're not gonna make a one hundred and fourteen thousand out
there. In LA, the median price is seven hundred and ninety thousand, and you got to make almost two hundred thousand for that. And in Orange County, which is the most expensive down here, one point two five million is the median price. That means half the homes are worth more than that
and half the homes are worth less one point two five million. You need a median qualifying income of three hundred and thirteen thousand and two hundred dollars gets them not buying in Orange County. No, Oh, my gosh, I didn't realize it was and I didn't realize there was that much of a disparity between LA and Orange County County. That's a huge number. That is uh, that's almost yeah, that's almost thirty That's more than thirty percent more to
live in Orange County than it is in LA. That's that's crazy. Yeah. And then when the prices are that high too, you know, you want to hit that threshold of having twenty percent down so you don't have to pay the what's that insurance last. Yeah, hold on, hold on,
I'm back. You know that the insurance you have to pay if you don't put twenty percent down, that also raises that threshold because if you, you know, if you if you're buying a million dollar house, the chances of you having enough to put down twenty percent might be a little bit lower as well. Well, that's and now we've got interest rates close to seven percent on mortgages. You know, the twenty percent down you don't. There are
more depending on what your income is. You can get a mortgage for ten percent. You can get a mortgage for like five percent down. But that's the big thing, and that's where I think a lot of people who are buying their houses are depending on their parents to help them or something, you know, if their parents even can help them. I just I don't see it as being sustainable. When interest rates went up, housing prizes were supposed
to come down, and that really hasn't happened. Well, cross our fingers that maybe it does happen eventually. I'm not gonna hold my breath for it. Yeah no, I wouldn't either, all right, Jane Wells, thank you so much for your time. I'm glad you've made it home safely and and we're able to escape the Big Boulder. Yeah, thank you, Amy. All right, you can find out the latest from Jane on Substack at Jane Wells dot substack dot com. And I wanted to mention really quickly.
I said at the opening of this segment that India was planning to touch down on the Moon. It has. The spacecraft has landed near the Moon's south pole, becoming the fourth country to touch down on the lunar surface. The Elsa Gundo All Stars are still in it. They beat the team from Smithfield Road Island nine to three in the elimination bracket yesterday. They play again today against Nolansville, Tennessee. The games at four on ESPN and on Fubo.
We're just minutes away from Handle. On the news this morning, you're going to keep getting your packages from ups. Three hundred forty thousand teamsters workers have approved a new contract. Right now, let's say good morning to five thirty eight dot COM's senior elections analyst Nathaniel Rak. Nathaniel, the first debate is
tonight. Who standing center stage and how'd they get there? Yeah? Ronda Santis and Vivek Ramaswamy are the two candidates who are going to be in the middle of the stage, And the podiums were arranged based on polling, which is also part of how the candidates qualified for the debate. So in order to be on the stage at all, you had to reach at least one percent in a series of polls that the RNC had kind of set criteria for.
But the candidates with kind of the highest polling numbers are in the middle. Of course, Donald Trump is polling at the absolute highest in the entire race, but he is gipping the debate. Yeah, so with Trump not there, what are we expecting to see? Are they going to go after Trump? Are they going to go after Biden? Are they going to go after each other? Or do we just have to kind of wait and see.
Yeah, well, I think all of the above, right, you know, I think Trump is obviously the front runner in the race, so they have a lot of incentive to try to tear him down. Of course, that's something that they haven't necessarily shown much interest in doing with regard to like his indictments, for example, It's a turkey thing to attack Trump,
who remains so popular within the party. But I do think having him not be there makes it a little bit easier because maybe, you know, there's not the risk that Trump will kind of lash out at you, and maybe there is strength in numbers in terms of if all the candidates attack Trump a little bit, he won't single any one of them out, you know,
on social media later on or something like that. But then otherwise, yeah, I would expect people to maybe attack of the Ramaswami who has been rising in the poll, and also run to Santas who is still barely in second place. Do it, Does it debate this early matter that much? Or is it too early in the race, or is like, what's the significance of having a fifteen months before the election? Yeah, it's it's pretty early
for sure. I mean obviously, you know, bear in mighty fifteen months before the general election, but people will be voting in Iowa in less than six months, so it's not that early with regard to the primary. But obviously they're going to be more debates. You know, a candidate who has a bad performance you know today, might have a better performance later on. So it's not probably not make or break, but you know, we'll obviously
we'll still be watching. You know, it's you know, if you maybe have a bad performance today and you lose five or ten percentage points in the in the polls, you know, that's ground you have to make up later. So so you'd rather not. Yeah, Traditionally do the debates move the needle that much? Traditionally not that much. You know, basically the things that can happen in the race are you know, you can shoot yourself in
the foot right debate probably won't help you that much. The kind of one exception is if you are a lesser known candidate, So maybe the Promiswamy would fall into this category. Even though he's rising in the polls nationally, he's still only in like the high single digits, I believe, But you know, there are still like a majority of Republicans who don't have an opinion of
him yet they just don't know enough about him perform one. And so if he has a strong performance today, obviously this is a national audience that could you know, maybe make more Republicans say they're considering voting for him. But then on the foot side, yes, you know, think about like brit Carry a few years ago when he couldn't remember the three cabinet departments that he would eliminate as president. That basically sunk his campaign because it showed that he
wasn't ready for prime time. Yeah, and as far as national exposure, I can't even name all eight of the people who are up on stage tonight, and I usually picked pretty close attention. But there's a couple on the end that I don't know who they are yet. Yeah, exactly. So the candidates with the lowest name recognition who are on the stage are North Dakota
Governor Doug Bergom and our former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson. So I think they might have the most of games in the debate if they can put on a good performance. I guess we'll have to wait and see. And it's going to be the first How many debates are they going to do? Do we know? No, they haven't announced, but so far there's so they're doing one obviously today, They're doing one in September and one in October, so
it's kind of weak they heap up that pace. We might be looking at one for months until the primary is over, Okay, and then real quick, five thirty eight is going to be watching the debate, of course, and then immediately after do you start polling to see how everybody did? Yeah, exactly. So we've partnered with EPSOS and the Washington Post and we are going to go into the field of this, you know, eight pm Pacific tonight, right when the debate ends, and then we'll be polling throughout the
night, and then we'll have result of that poll in the morning. Floyer of the seed in almost in real time, whether the debate did move the needle? Okay, And we can see the results at five thirty eight dot com. Yes, absolutely, they should be up by midday on Thursday. Can't wait. Thanks so much, Nathaniel Rackage for your expertise about the debates coming up tonight. Some of the stories coming up out of the KFI twenty
four hour newsroom. Officials in Ventura County say a body pulled from the ocean had puncture injuries. The man was found Saturday in the water off Point Magoo, the Ventura County Sheriff's offices. The death is considered suspicious. Former USC running back Reggie Bush is expected to announce a defamation lawsuit against the NCUBLEA alleging
he received improper benefits. His lawyers say the lawsuits based on the NCUBALEA issuing a statement in twenty twenty one saying it would not consider restoring Bush's collegiate records because of his prior involvement in a pay for play arrangement. An NCUBAA investigation found Bush, his mother, and stepfather accepted thousands of dollars in cash and free housing from a would be marketer while Bush was playing for usc beginning in
December twenty of two thousand four. Officials in Mexico say the use of roadside bombs by drug cartels is on the rise. Forty two soldiers and police in Mexico have been hurt by improvised explosive devices this year. Sixteen similar injuries happened in twenty twenty two. Cartels have also been using bombs carried by drones. Over the last four years, five hundred and fifty six bombs have been found by authorities in Mexico this year. A daycare in Omahasban temporarily closed after a
child left in a hot van died. The child's mother protested outside the daycare. Yesterday. It had to been around wood in the morning the morning til we didn't get castled. Three my daughter said she could have been her eighty seven hours, no windows down, on nothing, screaming, crying, nobody heard anything. Everybody's in this building while she's learned the outside in the parking lot. The driver of the day caravan faces charges of child abuse by neglect
resulting in death. A man in Maryland's been sentenced to fifteen months in prison for participating in the January sixth riot at the Capitol. Prosecutors say he shoved his way to the front of the crowd and encouraged people to rush police. They say he also grabbed a police shield and caused an officer to fall down a flight of stairs. The man pleaded guilty to interfering with law enforcement. He'll be on probation for three years when he's released. He's also been ordered
to pay a two thousand dollars fine. And a family in Arizona has sued over a bat in their hotel room in Las Vegas. They say they found it on the curtains last year at New York, New York. They say they killed it and left it in the stairwell. Stairwell while they told staff, the resort got rid of it before the health department was able to test it for rabies, and the family claims they had to get painful injections to
prevent possible infection. The lawsuit is asking for more than fifteen thousand dollars in damages. We lead local live from the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. I'm Amy King. This has been your wake up call, and if you missed any of wake Up Call, you can listen anytime on the iHeartRadio app. You've been listening to wake Up Call with me Amy King. You can always hear wake Up Call five to six am Monday through Friday on KFI Am six forty and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
