You're listening to KFI AM six forty wake Up Call with me Amy King on demand on the iHeartRadio app KFI and KOST HD two, Los Angeles, Orange County. Hey, it's time for your morning wake up call. Here's Amy Kig. It's five o'clock, straight up. This is your wake up call for Wednesday, April third. Good morning, I'm Amy King. So glad you're getting your day started with us today. We have lots ahead, so
let's get right to it. Here's what's ahead on wake up call. A seven point four earthquake has rocked Taiwan, knocking down more than two dozen buildings. The US Geological Survey says it expects after shocks as strung as magnitude sevens in the coming days. We're going to have more on that in just a minute. We'll so to be talking with ABC's Tom Rivers, the biggest quake
to hit the island in twenty five years. And on a personal note, my landlords are vacationing over there, so we were texting back and forth yesterday and heat they're fine, or at least they're not responding to my text now. And it's like, I think it's like eight o'clock at night there. But they said that they have felt a lot of earthquakes because obviously they live
in southern California, but nothing like they felt today. He said, it felt like we were at the bottom of a mixing bowl and a spoon was just moving us all around and up and down. They said, they're staying in a safe place, so hoping good things. Weird to have somebody in the big quake over there. We're trying to see if we could get them on the phone, but like I said, I don't know that they have phone service. Like sometimes when you're traveling overseas, you have text service but
not phone service. So anyway, kind of scary for them. A second temporary channel has been cleared near the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. This second channel is going to allow Cruise to clean up the waterway. Work continues to get a third deeper channel open for larger ships to get through. It'd be about twenty five feet deep. The Key Port of Baltimore has been closed since the collapse more than a week ago. Taylor Swift has
earned a spot on Forbes World's Billionaire's List. The singer songwriter ranked number two thousand, five hundred and forty five on the year's list, with a net worth of one point one billion dollars. According to Forbes, Swift is the first musician to make the ranks solely based on her songs and performances at six oh five. It's handled on the news President Biden and China's president she have
talked for the first time in months. Let's start with some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four newsroom that magnitude seven point four earthquake hit Taiwan, killing at least nine people. More than eight hundred and eighty others are injured. Stuart Weinstein with the National Weather Services the quake yesterday hit on the island's Pacific side. It's a relatively earthquake, so the ground shaking that
it produced is potentially very destructive. TV reporter Vivian Shao says the most severe damage is in and around the east coast city of Juaalian. We have heard of reports of people stuck in collapsing buildings right now, and a lot of firefighters are assembling search and rescue teams to help out the more severely damaged places. The US Geological Services. The quake yesterday was the strongest to hit the
island in twenty five years and prompted several tsunami warnings. The Japan Meteorological Agency said a tsunami wave of about one foot was detected on the coast of one island about fifteen minutes after the quake, and smaller waves were measured near two other islands. The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department has released audio and video of
a shootout where a teenage girl was killed by deputy. Gunfire dots are The video shows fifteen year old Savannah Gratziano getting out of her father's pickup during the shootout with deputies. Then you hear a deputy trying to guide the girls. Moments later, the girl goes down. A deputy in a helicopter sees it and realizes what happened. Official set Gratziano may have been kidnapped by her father
in September of twenty twenty two, shortly after he killed her mother. There had been confusion as to whether the girl was a victim or a willing participant. Steve Gregory KFI News. The FBI has put up a twenty five thousand dollars reward to help find a man seen on camera near the site of an attack on an electrical substation in Torrents. The FBI says someone shot a transformer last year at the SoCal Edison substation, turning off circuit breakers. No one
was hurt, but property was damaged. The man caught on camera was wearing a tan overcoat, a hood, black pants, and boots. You can see a photo of him at KFI AM six forty dot com slash FBI. California's snowpack is above average for a second season. Governor Newsom was at Echo Summit yesterday, where he said the state has gone from extreme drought to record rain and snow in recent years. He says there's a need to constantly adapt
how the state manages water supplies, like making upgrades to storage capacity. Newsom is pushing the proposed Delta Conveyance project, which he says he hopes to have permitted by the time he leaves office in twenty twenty seven. The forty five mile long tunnel would move water beneath the Sacramento San Joaquin River Delta. Let's
say good morning now to ABC's Jordana Miller. In Jerusalem, Jordana. We were talking last week about one of the problems with getting aid into the Gaza strip was the danger to the people delivering it, and tragically those worst fears were realized. That's right, it Israelly. It's been a painful, painful
couple days here since this happened Israel. It appears that even though this was a three vehicle convoy of aid workers who are part of the World Central Kitshien's mission to deliver aid, they had just dropped off about one hundred tons of aid to a warehouse in central Aa, and then in three separate vehicles,
they were making their way back to the camp where they were staying. The route had been pre approved and coordinated with the Israeli Army, And nonetheless, despite all that, there were soldiers on the ground who did not get that information. They are telling their superiors that they believed there was one Hamas militant in that convoy, either jumped on top of one of the vehicles or inside,
and these soldiers ordered drone strikes on the three vehicles. Now, you know, obviously a lot of questions about why, even in that explanation, all three cars were targeted if they believed there was a militant in one of them. Obviously the intel was wrong in any case, and it was an even more tragic event. But it goes to show that Israel's deconfliction mechanisms, that is, the way that it communicates between and coordinates between AID groups and
their central command and the soldiers on the ground, is flawed. And we have to say Israel knew before this incident that it had trouble with its deconfliction mechanism, because we already knew for the last several months that the UN agency who had Palestinian workers AID workers, that over one hundred and seventy of them had been killed. Unfortunately, it took the depths of foreign nationals for the Israeli army and the leadership to make changes and wake up and see they have
a major problem here. So now they're pledging changes. They're at least, you know, at least the Israeli army and the political leadership are taking full responsibility for this incident, Okay, and then Jordana. The other really tragic side effect of this is that those ships that had pulled up and were offloading the AID and getting it to the people of Palestinians that are to Palestine said
yeah, we're leaving right, So this is really sad. One of the ships that was on its way, the third Maritime Aid mission, turned back in the seas and went back to Cyprus, to Larnaca, to the port of Larnaca. And that's because the unight Arab Emirates said, wait a second, we're pulling you know, our funding and our support for these maritime missions. Untel Israel can prove that it can, it can safe, you know,
safeguard and keep aid worker safe. So the really sad domino effect of this is that not only do people die and their families are grieving today, but the people of Gaza who need the aid now it's even you know, it's hampered efforts to get that aid to them. There won't be an aid coming to the shores of the northern Godza Strip, and it will be more complicated to get aid to them because people are unwilling to do it now.
Even the World Central Kitchen they shuttered sixty of their operations across the strip. Okay, in Jordana. We're seeing more protests inside Israel about how this is all being carried out. What are people doing and is it growing numbers or about the same number of people protesting Now we've seen the protests now grow in
the last several days. Those who are protesting against Nataniel's leadership and calling for him to step down have now joined forces with some of the families of the hostages who believe the prime ministers are doing enough to get their loved ones out. And we've seen large, consistently large protests here in Jerusalem for the first time during the war. They kicked off on Sunday with about one hundred thousand people, but still we've seen tens of thousands in the last couple of days,
and tonight there will be another large protests. Those are you know, not only in front of the Parliament. They've been marches to Nataniel's residence here in Jerusalem. The official residence is under renovation, and even there there have been some kind of clashes between protesters and police. Ahead of Israel's FBI, what's called the shin Bet, has warned that you know, they're getting some you know, alarming an increased number of threats against you know, the Prime
minister and the violence and the danger of the protests there. So things are definitely heating up. It's putting pressure on Nataniel, no doubt, to try to get a deal, but it doesn't really threaten his government. He's not going anywhere. Okay, Jordana Millan, thank you so much for the update, and they'll continue to hope that some sort of resolutions reached soon, God willing soon. All right, let's get back to some of the stories coming
out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. LA City Council's voting unanimously to pull police from the infamous graffiti towers in downtown LA and hire private security to protect the site from more vandalism. City Councilman Kevin dal Leone says the LAPD has better things to do. LAPD is a trained, professional police force. They're there to protect them and serve the city of La not to protect them and babysit buildings. About thirty floors of the abandoned Ocean Wide Plaza are covered
in graffiti. City council says they're going to make the owners of the building and others that have been hit by vandals reimburse the city for the cost of the private security. La Metro has finished its tunnel work for the nine mile extension of the D Line. When completed, the D Line train will travel from Union Station to Westwood with an estimated fifty three thousand riders each day. Right now, the train goes from downtown LA to Wilshire Western in Koreatown,
but Metro hopes by twenty twenty seven it'll have seven more stops. LA Mayor Karen Basset Yesterday, five years of tunnel work has the project on track. Today we celebrate another milestone in our efforts to build our world class transportation system and improve access throughout Los Angeles. The first phase, extending to Wilsherre, Los Sienaga, is slated to open next year. Michael Monks KFI News.
Costco members can now get a weight loss subscription through their club store. Members can get medications used to treat type two diabetes and well recently obesity, starting at one seventy nine for a three month subscription period. They're offered through a partnership with Sesame, which is a direct to consumer healthcare marketplace. Non Costco members can also get a subscription. It's going to cost a little bit more one ninety five per three month period. Okay, so I just came across
this article kind of piqued my interest. How much do you wash your hair? Cono, how often do you wash your hair? Like like a week in a week? Yeah? Do you wash every day? Correct? Every day? Nick Pouliochini, what about you? Do you wash your hair every day? So some time ago somebody told me not to wash your hair every day, So I washed my hair every other day, every third day, and I put some conditioner hair every day, So I put something in my
hair every day, but not shampoo. Yeah, that makes sense, And it's time to producer an who's running around getting ready for a handle on the news. She said she she washes her hair about three times a week. That's about where I am too, about three times a week. And there are experts talking about how often you should wash because if you don't wash enough, it can cause of course excess oil and that looks gross and can build
up dirt on your scalp and that leads to other problems. If you watch it too much, your hair can dry out and break and really cause a lot of damage to your hair. So Kate Holden is a clinical tricologist based in the UK. She says, if you have straight hair, it tends to need more washing more frequently versus curly hair or thick hair. She said, if this is the one that kind of kills me, she said, if you wear braids, like you always wear braids, like who does that
all the time? But a few people do, then you only need to wash every two to three weeks. I can't imagine not cleansing my scalp more often than two to three weeks. And then if you have dryer damaged hare be more careful with how often you wash, because you can dry out your scalp. So they said, it's kind of a fine line, and I think that people as you go, you kind of get used to it. Like I have a friend who was really fine hair. She has to watch
it every day because otherwise she looks like an oil slick. Okay, anyway, helpful hints from wake Up Call the National Weather Services. There's no tsunami threat to California from yesterday seven point four earthquake in Taiwan. Several tsunami warnings were issued for Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines after the shaking, but they've all been canceled. At least nine people were killed in the quake.
Hundreds were injured. A federal appeals court today is going to hear arguments over Texas's immigration law that would allow state police to arrest and deport illegal immigrants. The law is on hold during the appeal. The Biden administration is arguing the federal government has exclusive authority to enforce the border. How Speaker Mike Johnson's going
to be the featured attraction at a fundraising didn't in Newport Beach tonight. The goal is to raise money to get more Republicans, who have a razor thin majority in the House elected to the House. Tickets range from one thousand to fifty thousand dollars at six zho five. It's handled on the news. Is Israel's taking even more heat in its Wargans Thomas after what Benjamin Netanyahu calls an
unintentional strike that killed seven aid workers. Right now, let's say good morning to ABC's Stephen Portnoy, and of course Stephen Donald Trump is fighting a lot of legal battles, but today we're focusing on the classified Documents case. What's going on with that one? Well, what's going on with the Classified Documents case is a back and forth between not just the prosecutors and the defense, but between the prosecutors and the judge, Judge Eileen Cannon, over a dense
subject. So we're gonna have to peel it back and make it as digestible and understandable as possible. And that's what you're so good at, right requires unfortunately requires a bit of setup. Okay, So here's what we're talking about. The issue is whether Trump can that all of the classified documents found at
Mar A Lago were his personal records rather than presidential records. And the judge has signaled that she may eventually tell a jury that Trump is right, that he did have the ability for himself to decide what was personal rather than what
was a presidential record that belonged to the National Archives. Late last night, the prosecutors essentially asked Judge Aileen Cannon to just rip the band aid off and rule in Trump's favor on this point so that they can quickly file an appeal to the Eleventh Circuit Court, which in the past has reversed Judge Cannon on
a question similar to this one. So this is a back and forth between the prosecutors and the judge, and last night, in their filing, which ran more than two dozen pages that the prosecutors called this whole idea that the judge's propounding pure fiction, and you could see in their filing the frustration that they have with this judge who's a Trump appointee, that she's leaning too heavily into the defense attorney's theory of the case, which is that the Presidential Records
Act gives a president the discretion to decide what of the records that he has during his presidency belonged to the National Archives as public records, and what he
can keep for himself. And what the prosecutor is saying is there's no way that Congress ever would have had it in mind, and there's no way that it ever should be upheld by the courts, that classified material related to the national defense America's best kept secrets that are held in these classified settings, the secure, compartmented facilities, that they should be hanging around mar a Lago in the auditorium and the bathroom and the storage room, moved around by employees of
a president who are not government officials. They say in their filing that it's just pure fiction and sort of an after the fact argument to cover himself that Trump is now making that he had some sort of extraordinary power through a reading of the Presidential Records Act, that he could decide for himself that even if they're marked classified, he has deemed them personal it has the right to keep them forever. Okay, So if you said that he has the right to
say, yes this I can keep this one. Does he have to tell somebody that he wants to keep it or can he just say I'm deciding to keep it. Is that part of the issue. Well, it's part of the analysis for sure. I mean, one of the things that prosecutors are pointing out is there's no documentary evidence of Trump, you know, making this decision. There's no testimony from someone who worked for him who said, yes, I was ordered and instructed by the president to not only or to move
these particular documents into this place because he deemed them personal. There's no evidence that he actually was sifting through any of it himself to make that determination.
And all of that weighs in the prosecution's favor. But the defense is relying on a case involving Bill Clinton, and obviously everything in the law is built on precedent, and precedent can get in the way of the prosecutors here twenty twelve, the conservative group Judicial Watch filed a lawsuit, or at least it was settled in twenty twelve, relating to their ability to access some of Bill
Clinton's records. And Bill Clinton said, no, no, no, no no. I kept things in my sock drawer that are personal and Judicial Watch can't have them, even if they might be government records. And what the court here in Washington ruled in twenty twelve was that the president a former president,
has an implied right in the Presidential Records Act. It grants him the discretion to decide what's personal and what's presidential, that is, what's a government public record, and what should be disclosed and what he can keep for himself, and that that determination can't be questioned by a court because of the separation of powers, and essentially just the discretion that the law, this particular law
gives to a president to make this determination. Now Trump is leaning heavily into that, saying, well, if it was all right for Clinton to make
that choice, why isn't it all right for me? Well, I think one of the arguments of prosecutors are making is talking about some really top secret material here and there's no evidence that Trump poured over it and made this determination that this was really something he wanted to keep for himself, as much as it was perhaps a half hazard kind of sort of like all these boxes in this place and load them up on the truck, and you know when the
National Archives came calling, sort of Trump. And this is again my characterization of what it seems has happened, or what prosecutors or alleging happened, is that Trump sort of took this defensive posture and said, no, you can't have any of it. It all belongs to me. But here are fifteen boxes you can have, but the rest is all mine and you can't have
it. And that's why prosecutors are alleging that he obstructed justice, that he had his attorneys misrepresent the facts, that he hired his own people at mar A Lago to move these boxes around to hide them from his own attorneys, and there's, according to prosecutors, video evidence of it. So what the prosecutors are frustrated by is this idea that their interpretation of the law, their attempt to apply the law to Trump, has been frustrated, almost stymied,
by this judge. And they believe that she's going to get overturned on appeal, and so they just want to move forward to that because they have their eyes on the calendar. They want this to get under way as quickly as possible. They do not want to see further delays. And you know this could drag out. Certainly is in Trump's interest to drag it out. Okay, So the judge is should the order, and then the prosecution contested it. And as this is all unraveled and peeled back. But you've done such
a great job explaining to us, Stephen, what happens now? Yes, well, well it's a really good question. I mean, look what the judge ordered. What you just described as the judge is what the judge said. Okay, prosecutors, you have until midnight, April second, that was last night to respond to my order, which is to draft jury instructions. So they begrudgingly did so last night and they said, listen, we disagree with you, your honor on the law. We would ask that you would
simply make a ruling on the law so we can appeal it. And that's what she's going to Maybe she's going to do. She doesn't have to, that's the request from the prosecutors, and the minute she makes that order, if she does well, then the prosecutors will try to take it to the Eleventh Circuit, which early on in this you remember, there was the whole
conversation about the special Master. We're digging back into twenty twenty two here, but when Trump was arrested, or actually first there was the raid on his property, and that's where all the documents receize. Trump's attorneys wanted to have a special master reviewing these documents because he was asserting that he had some sort of personal right to keep them, and the special Master would be independent eyes on it and could decide yes, in fact, this is personal and that's
presidential. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals above Judge Cannon, said that she was wrong to appoint a special Master because this was so clearly classified material that belongs in a skiff, and there's damage that the national security that could be done, and they overruled her. Prosecutors say they expect they'll do it, the Eleventh Circuit will do it again, and they just want that to happen as quickly as possible. Okay, well, we'll be watching Stephen Bordono.
I thank you for making sense of the nonsense. You bet all right, Yaike, because that's a lot to appeal or unveiled or whatever. Pull back, you know what I mean, lots of details. You know what tonight is. It's the night that Dodgers take on the Giants. First pitch goes out at seven o'clock. It is zipp A Putti promo night, and it's the last game of the homestand you can listen to all the action. It's
gonna be a beautiful day for Dodger baseball. Listen to all the action on AM five to seventy LA Sports live from the Galpin Motors Broadcast booth, or you can stream the game in HD on the iHeartRadio app keyword AM five seventy LA Sports. A seven point four earthquake has rocked Taiwan, knocking down more than two dozen buildings. The US Geological Services it expects aftershocks as strong as a magnitude seven in the coming days. We're gonna have more on that with
Tom Rivers in about fifteen minutes, so stick around for that. Egyptian state media says the bodies of six foreign aid workers killed in unintentional Israelists have been transported out of Gaza. They were delivering aid to the Palestinians when their convoy was hit by Israeli strikes. Yesterday, more than a billion dollars is on the line in the powerball drawing. The jackpot is at one point zh nine
billion dollars. There's been no jackpot winner for the last thirty eight drawings since January first, The odds of winning the jackpot won in two hundred ninety two million. I'm still buying my tickets. At six oh five its handle on the news. A new poll shows most Americans want the Supreme Court to reject former President Trump's claims that he should have complete immunity against prosecution. At five
fifty. As I mentioned, we're going to be talking with ABC's Tom Rivers about the biggest earthquake to hit the Taiwan island in twenty five years, and also Ukraine taking aim at Russia. Amis on it, Damien's on this, as on it, Dami's on it. What am I on? Normally I'm on streaming or books that kind of thing, But I every once in a while I venture out and go to the movie theater and because there was the
new Ghostbusters movie a couple weeks ago. I told you that I went and binge watched all of the previous movies in case I needed to see them to enjoy this one. I'm glad I did because it was a good refresher course. But we went and saw Ghostbusters Frozen Empire, and I'm a little torn on it, honestly, because it's a good movie. Is it a great movie? No? It has the stars from Afterlife, which is the one
that was released I believe in twenty twenty one. That's McKenna Grace and Finn Wolfard from Stranger Theme Things, and Carrie Koon from Gilded Age, and Paul Rudd of course Avengers, and then you add in Patton Oswald, who was Remy and Rataitui. He's one of those actors that I absolutely love. First he's really fun, but you hear his voice and you go, where do
I know that from? Yeah? He was Ratch to me. Also, Kamali Ali Nanjiani if I'm pronouncing that right, he was in The Big Sick and Silicon Valley and he's kind of a fun new character in this one.
And then of course they bring back the old characters the originals, Bill Murray, Dan ackroyd Ernie Hudson, Anti Potts, and the movie starts in New York, so they're back at the fire station in New York, where the original movie was set in the eighties, and the new generation of Ghostbusters have moved from Oklahoma, where After Life took place for some reason, to the firehouse in New York where Ghostbusters set up shop, but they don't have the
original Ghostbusters with them. What they do have is they still have that containment system where they put all the ghosts, but they aren't any Ghostbusters around to teach them how to put the containment system together. So that's just like one of the weird little things that goes on that this movie takes. It makes a lot of leaps and doesn't always have a good path to how they got
there. So I feel like there's some pretty big gaps in the storyline, and I also feel like there are things that changed, Like they make some comment about how this was a very haunted place, the firehouse, and I'm like, I don't remember the firehouse actually being haunted from the original movie, but they make references to things that weren't in the original movie. I thought that was a little bit weird. The story does weave the original Ghostbusters into
the story, which is wonderful. Dan Ackroyd I love and it's cool how they bring him back in. Ernie Hudson, they bring him back in and then Bill Murray is always fun to watch, especially in Ghostbusters. But he was standing there seeming I mean, like looked sort of confused in a lot of the scenes, which when you see it you'll understand what I'm saying. Like I said, the story's kind of a stretch. There are big holes
in it. Is it worse fifty to seventy five bucks to go to the movie theater to see it if you're a big Ghostbusters fan then maybe otherwise. It's coming out on the stream Netflix expected in June, so you'd have to wait a couple months. But it's fun, it's nostalgic. But you know, one thing that I felt like it was missing some of the joy. I don't know how to explain that. But the Ghostbusters, you know, I mean, the world civilization is at risk and all of that stuff.
But it was still fun and this one had some of that, but it didn't quite get to the same fun level. Ghostbusters Frozen Empire. It's in theaters now. It's been out for a couple of weeks. Like I said, if you're a big Ghostbusters fan, of course, because it's fun in those and the little tiny marshmallow men are there, that's very cute. Doesn't quite live up to my expectations. Let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. The City of la has
taken more action to secure the abandoned griff covered towers downtown. The city councils already voted to spend millions to block off the site and to clean the graffiti from Ocean Side Plaza. The abandoned mixed use towers are still covered from top to bottom by spray paint and they become an attraction to onlookers, but the city wants to make sure the site is patrolled. The foreign owners of the project have been unresponsive, so city council yesterday approved the option for the city
to hire private security officers. The measure was pushed by Councilman Kevin Daleion, who represents downtown Michael Monks KFI news Hogue Health System has expanded its young adult mental Health Program to Newport Beach. The program was designed to help younger adults
learn to cope with primary mental health conditions. Psychiatrist and program director, doctor Cina Safaia says the intensive eight week program can help treat people with depression, anxiety, autism, and bipolar disorder, even the occasional eating disorder if it's not if it's not a moderate to severe version of that disorder. He says, adults between eighteen and twenty six can self refer to either the Irvine or news Port Beach clinics. The program was started in twenty twenty one and was
expanded because of a growing need for outpatient mental health centers. Chris Adler KFI news three Mexican nationals arrested in Elmonte with more than one million fentanyl pills have pleaded guilty to federal drug charges. Prosecutors see the guys conspired with others in twenty twenty two and twenty three to distribute the deadly drug. They're facing ten
years to life in prison. California Attorney General Rob Bonta says he's sponsoring an affordable housing bill that would make it easier to build housing in cities and counties that fail to adopt a compliant housing element on time. No city must do everything to address our housing crisis, but every city must do something, must
build, must do their fair share. The lawmaker who wrote the bill, Assembly Member Buffy Wicks, says failure to adopt a local housing plan would trigger a provision that limits the ability of local governments to restrict development of new projects. Hopefully, this bill should get sign into A lot will never have to be used. It won't have to be used because cities will do the right thing and build the housing that our communities so desperately need. She says,
It's going to take teamwork to solve the housing crisis. Former President Trump has sued the co founders of his social media platform, truth Social, alleging they mismanaged the platform and therefore are not entitled to their stock shares in the company. Wes Moss and at Andy Litinsky pitched the idea of truth Social to Trump when he was banned from Twitter following the January sixth ride at the Capitol. Trump's lawsuit comes a month after Moss and Litinsky sued Trump, claiming he was
trying to dilute their stock shares. Travis Kelce has announced the headliners for his annual music festival, and no not his girlfriend Taylor Swift. She's not going to be there. She'll be in Sweden. Kelsey Jam will feature performances by Lil Wayne, Two Chains, and Diplow, among others. It'll be held
May eighteenth, not here, though it's in Kansas City. It's going to be livestream though Kelsey says safety is a top priority given a shooting at the Chief's Super Bowl rally in February. More than twenty thousand people attended the music festival last year. We're just saying hi at KFIAM six forty dot com slash Wiggle it's the Wiggle Waggle Walk to benefit Pasatina Humane. Please come walk with us. This is KFI and KOSTHD two Los Angeles, Orange County, 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 calls so much we covered today, you can listen any old time on the iHeartRadio app. You've been listening to wake Up Call with me Amy King, you can always hear Wakeup Call five to six am Monday, through Friday on KFI AM six forty and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.
