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It's National Cat Day?!

Aug 08, 202339 min
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Amy King hosts your Tuesday morning Wake Up Call. ABC's Mike Dobuski joins the show to talk about a burger battle brewing on YouTube. Then, ABC's Jim Ryan highlights how parents are having to ease their children back into an 'academic state of mind' as they return to in-person learning. Amy visited the Grammy Museum where there's a Taylor Swift exhibit, and it sounds like a blast! And Nathaniel Rakich talks about the Ohio ballot measure that could block abortion rights.

Transcript

K five a m. Six forty. You're listening to wake Up Call on demand on the iHeartRadio APPY. It's time for your morning wake up call. Here's Amy King. This is your wake up call for Tuesday, August eighth. Good morning, I'm Amy King. Had a little extra coffee this morning. Stayed up a little late last night because went to the Grammy Museum yesterday. We're going to tell you about that at five thirty. Kind of a cool little experience. It has to do with what everybody's talking about these days.

Taylor Swift. I can tell the Tyler's very excited about that. Two more days of shows for Taylor. Four down, two to go. Here's what's ahead on the wake up call. As many as eleven thousand city workers they're going to walk off the job for twenty four hours to protest us what they say is the city's refusal to bargain in good faith. The LAPD's staffing level is at its lowest levels since the nineteen nineties. There are just under

nine thousand officers as of July thirtieth. The All Star team from El Segundo has won its first two games in the West Region tournament. Go Team and we'll play Friday for a berth in the Little League World Series at six oh five. It's handled on the news. We're going to find out what voters are deciding today and how it could preview the politics of abortion in twenty twenty four. Of course, the election's not here, it's in Ohio, but

could affect us here. Let's start with some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. LA's mayor says the city will not shut down despite a strike by more than eleven thousand city workers. The workers plan to walk off the job today for a one day strike. The sanitation workers, heavy duty mechanics, traffic officers, engineers, and others will be picketing at several locations, including Hall and Lax. Trash pickup will be delayed.

City pools could be closed. The workers' union says the city's been negotiating a new contract in bad faith. A woman shot by a security guard at a Rouph's in Hollywood has died. The woman had assaulted the guard with a fire

extinguisher. The guard says the woman also had a screwdriver. Two of the three people killed in that midair helicopter collision in Riverside County worked for a local Cowfire team, CalFire, says Assistant Chief Josh Bishop and Captain Tim Rodriguez were not pilots, but coordinators for tactical aerial firefighting and were directing air traffic for five other aircraft when the accident happened. The third person killed was a contract

pilot from northern California. Officials say the air attack was ordered after flames from a house fire Sunday night spilled into a nearby field of dry brush. About an hour later, the bell for OH seven with Bishop and Rodriguez collided with a Sikorski skycrane. The skycrane had a hard landing, but both pilots were

uninjured. Steve Gregory Kophy News, a Navy sailor from Monterey Park accused of taking bribes in exchange for sending sensitive military information to a Chinese intelligence officer, is due in federal court in la He wants to be released until his trial. Petty Officer when Heng Zao pleaded not guilty last week to federal charges of conspiracy and receipt of a bribe by a public official. Garden Grove police have found more than thirty five pounds of party drugs, including thousands of figs,

anis adderall and MDMA PILLSMA is that we call an ecstasy. The term is three four methylene doxymeth and fetam. Garden Grove Police Sergeant Nick Jensen says the concern is the already dangerous street drug is now being mixed with deadly drugs like fentanyl. Actually C pills you know the size of like an eminem almost, so nineteen pounds of that, that's a lot of pills. Investigators last week

also found two pounds of coke when you start combining different ingredients. Obviously, drugs are bad and they have a bad effect on you, but you never know what you're really taking. In Garden Grove, Corbin Carson if I News, a woman from Corona has been hit with a two year prison sentence for a scheme to steal money from state benefits on debit cards with Cala Barksdale cooked up a scheme with Toya Hunter, a mail carrier, to steal the money.

They use Hunter's position as a mail carrier to steal mail carrying unemployment insurance debit cards. US Attorney's kier In Macavoy says Hunter would trade the debit cards to Barksdale for cash and gifts. Barksdale would then use people's social security numbers to activate the cards. The scheme resulted in more than two hundred thousand dollars stolen from Bake of America from twenty fifteen to twenty twenty. The mail carrier was sentenced to a year in prison. Blake Trolley k if I News.

President Biden's on a Western swing aimed at showcasing his work on conservation, clean energy, and veterans benefits. He left Washington last night for a three night trip to Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah's he expected to announce a new national monument in Arizona to protect land and limit uranium mining. He'll be talking about clean energ in New Mexico and veterans benefits in Utah. I just love that music. It's I know it's eerie because it's tied to the Exorcist,

but it's such a cool theme. The Oscar winning director known for films like The Exorcist and The French Connection, has died. William Friedkin was also approached to produce Mash and Star Wars movies, but turned them down. He said he couldn't see the potential in them. Friedkin died yesterday in La. He was eighty seven. NASA technologies helping winemakers fight against crop sickness. Through NASA's airborne Visible and Infrared Imaging Spectrometer, scientists are able to detect early signs of

grape and vine diseases before physical signs appear. That gives winery owners a chance to treat the crops before they failed. It's being used now grape disease caused mold and wrought rooting bacteria that stroys up to thirty percent of harvests each year. That results in three billion dollars in damages annually to the California wine economy. Let's say good morning to ABC's Mike Debusky. Good morning, Mike,

Good morning. How yeah, I'm good. So we've got a ghost kitchen company called Virtual Dining Concepts, and it's sued a guy known as Mister Beast. And if you haven't heard of mister Beast, apparently you're one of the only ones because he has more than one hundred and seventy four million YouTube subscribers, almost thirty nine million followers on Instagram, and nearly twenty two million on x so he's being sued for one hundred million dollars tell us about it.

Yeah, that's right. So first thing we got to talk about here is ghost kitchens, which is kind of a new concept. It really took off during the pandemic. A ghost kitchen is basically a kitchen with no front of house. It's a kitchen with no storefront or dining area or waiters or waitresses or anything like that. It's just a kitchen. And they exist solely on

apps like grub Hub or Uber Eats. So this can be a building with a bunch of different kitchens in it that serve a bunch of different sort of virtual storefronts on those apps, or it can be an existing brick and mortar your Applebee's or your Buffalo Wild Wings that kind of do this in their own kitchen but on the side, right. So that's kind of how these ghost kitchens work. And one of the delivery only pretty much yets exactly so.

And one of the ways that these companies make their money is they contract out with big names, and as you alluded to there, one of the biggest names in the influencer game is mister Beast He's actually a guy named Jimmy Donaldson. Is his real name. Yeah, and it's it's a weird thing to say because later this conversation I have to say the words mister beast Burger. But we'll get to that. Okay, No, but his real name is Jimmy Donaldson. He's twenty five. He lives in North Carolina, and he

makes these hugely popular YouTube videos. Right, just a recent smattering of titles of YouTube videos that he's put out Hydraulic Press versus Lamborghini, one thousand blind people see for the first time, I paid an assassin to try and kill me, and squid Game in real life. That's the type of content that he puts out onto YouTube. And each of these videos, all of those ones that I just listed, have more than one hundred and fifty million views.

The squid Game one in particular, has four hundred and seventy five million views, and just as a point of comparison, the Super Bowl last year only one hundred and thirteen million measly viewers. So this guy regularly puts out YouTube videos that net above the Super Bowl in terms of eyes and ratings. Well, okay, so he's got he's got some influence. He certainly does, and it's estimated that he is the highest earner on YouTube. He is

certainly the most followed creator on that platform. And obviously, in addition to making YouTube videos, he has a number of other businesses and one of those is a contract with this virtual dining company called Virtual Dining Consps or VDC. Well, yesterday, in the Southern District of New York, that company sued Donaldson for failing to honor his contractual obligations. This comes in response to Donaldson suing Virtual Dining Concepts last week. He says he's looking to terminate his deal

with the company. He says that the food that they put out under his name, he's heard from his fans, and he says that they've reported it to be disgusting, revolting, and inedible. Those are direct quotes from this lawsuit. And it's just a hamburger, and it's it's a hamburger. You can also get fries. It's kind of your standard fast food sort of fair. And he took to Twitter and said, or his x I should say,

and he said that he wants to get out of his deal. One of his memorable quotes during this sort of period was miss young Beast signed a bad deal, so he's you know, unhappy with this company that he's contracted with. Well, VDC says that his lawsuit from last week is meritless and that actually he's attempting to renag on his contractual obligations and that his comments on

social media, given his influence, actually damaged their brand. So that's why they're now seeking one hundred million dollars in damages from this very popular YouTuber. Dude. Did they have a case, really, that's a good question. I think it's still an open question exactly who has the upper hand here, because there's one way to look at this as well, this guy signed a bad deal. He is up front and admitted that right like he you know, signed this deal back in twenty twenty. You know, he's a young

guy. As I said, he's twenty five now, so he's twenty two back when he signed this contract. Maybe you should have read the fine print a little bit more. One of the risks that you run with things like ghost kitchens are that you are essentially contracting out not with one major franchise, but with a variety of different kitchens across the country, and the quality control across that range of different kitchens can be pretty suspect at times. I actually

got the opportunity. In the interest of thorough journalism, I ordered burger. Yes, so I felt like I couldn't tell this story without actually getting my hands on one of these things. So I ordered one last night to my apartment, and I gotta say it was pretty average. It was not the worst burger I've ever had in my entire life, but it was like pretty middling when it comes to like a fast food burger, right, so wait, tell us about what is it? Is it just a regular burger?

What's on it? How's it looked? I went for the classic. There's a couple different options, but I got mister beast Style or beast style as they call it. So I think that's a special sauce. But like you gotta think in terms of like this is this is like a big Mac, right, It's it's, you know, a fast food burger. It has a special sauce on, it's got onions. I had pickles on it. It was it was pretty tasty. I would say the worst part of it

was the bun. It was I would have appreciated like a toasted bun or something like that. But but beyond that, again, like I said, it was, it was pretty mediocre. One thing I will say it was ten dollars, which was too much, I would say for a piece of fast food at the end of the day. And on top of that, you know, I had to have it delivered and there were fees and all that sort of thing, Whereas like I feel like I could just go to

McDonald's around the corner if I really wanted to scratch that particular witch. But yeah, that was the Mister Beast Burger. But I mean that speaks to this idea that you know, these ghost kitchens, the quality control is really hard to pin down. But on the other hand, this guy signed a contract and you know, the company is saying that he's not honoring that contract.

So I think it's still pretty up in the air. What ultimately this comes down to is the fact that it's a real lot of money that they're looking for. But as we kind of alluded to, mister Beast seems like he can afford it. So the ghost kitchen is saying that they have lost a ton of money because he came out and said these suck. They're disgusting, right, and I went out of my deal. So right, Okay, And how many do we know? How many Ghost Kitchens virtual dining concepts

has around the country. Is it just like the one or two or is it a bunch? Well, they have many. I I don't have an exact number in front of me, but I mean they are across the country, and I mean that is also you gotta think it's not like their physical locations. They're just kind of like, you know, one ghost Kitchen can conceivably support many different brands on these these social apps, and you know they partner up with with local chains, you know, your McDonald's, your Applebe's

and that sort of thing as well. But they do have one physical location, which I think is interesting in New Jersey. But that is at this point the only Mister Beast branded piece of brick and mortar that you can walk into. I did not, I did not go that far. I do live in New York City. I'm not that far away from it. But I'm like, you know, we gotta we gotta cut our losses at some point. Well, I appreciate you being the in depth reporter and going and

trying that burger Mike Debuski. Thanks so much. It's going to be interesting to see how this all plays out because it could have huge implications for other influencers as we move forward. Very true, all right, thanks so much. Swimming pools, trash pickup, and some services at LAX all expected to be impacted. Is up to eleven thousand LA City workers started twenty four hours straight today. Voters in Ohio head to the polls today in a special election

that could affect the future of abortion rights in the state. The Megamillions lotto jackpot of one point five five billion dollars is on the line for tonight's drawing. No winner from last night's Powerball drawing, so that jackpot goes up for tomorrow to one hundred and seventy million dollars. At five thirty five, we're gonna be talking with the curator of the I Can See You Taylor's Version pop up exhibit at the Grammy Musician Museum. It's for those of you or your

daughters who just can't get enough Taylor Swift. It's kind of cool. At six oh five, it's handled on the news. Part of the Malholland Highway, closed for a couple of years, could be reopening. But right now, let's say good morning to ABC's Jim Ryan. Jim, kids are heading back to the classrooms soon, sum and so Cal are already back like San Bernardino schools. So what are parents being asked by health experts to do to get them ready for it? Easy? Does it? Take it slow?

Take it easy, but do it make sure that the kids are acclimated and ready to go back into the classroom. Consider the shaving. The rich teenager at thirteen to eighteen years old spends eight hours thirty nine minutes every day on his or her device. That's that's yeah, eight hours and thirty nine minutes, and that's probably a pretty good summertime average. Of the tweens, the eight to twelve year olds, they're spending about five hours and thirty three minutes

every day on their devices. Now, once they get into the classroom, it's time to put the things away. Put away the phone, the iPad, whatever device is their preferred method. But you know teachers aren't going to stand for that. So if you can wean them off of that early before the school year begins, you'll have a kid who's better prepared to sit down and learn without that pediatrician say, kids actually going to go through a sense

of withdrawal. You know, they're suddenly their devices taken away, their anxious, their fagitty, They can't concentrate, So easing them into the loss of that device at least part of the day is the best way to go. I think it's so interesting that there's literally physical and mental like repercussions of taking away a phone. But now in schools they are learning more like on iPads and that kind of thing, So maybe that helps ease the transition because they're

not being completely taken away from their electronics. Yeah. Absolutely, yeah. I think that in most classes, certainly big city classes, they do some of their learning on laptops or on tablets, you know, maybe even some cases on their phone, So that may ease that anxiety just a bit. But yeah, but they're not doing what they would normally be doing, and

that is scrolling through social media. The most popular social media sites among teenagers and preteens no surprise there, TikTok, Snapchat is up there on the list. Facebook is still on that list, and Pinterests. Believe it or not, my mom loves Pinterest. So when it comes to their phones, their tablets, like the parents that you're saying, kind of ease them out of that, But how do you do that? Like, if so, if they're spending eight and a half hours on it, how do you get them

out that? Because I can see a lot of teenagers throwing temper tantrums right now saying I just want my phone, like and getting them to interact when they're mad is tough, it is, And you're right, it takes kind of biting the bullets. So if they're on the average, if they're they're like the average kid who's looking at a device eight and a half hours a day, back at down to eight hours and fifteen minutes one day, and then eight hours, so then just it's a matter of scaling it back down.

And at the same time, you're trying to build back into a sleep schedule too, Right, So if the kids stays up until ten o'clock on a summer night and they need to get to bed by eight thirty for school the next day, back them down fifteen twenty minutes a day, depends really upon the date of your school starting. Yeah, it reminds me of when when I was a kid, Mom and dad limited TV time, So I guess it's sort of sort of the same thing. What do the schools have

bands on phones in classrooms? Well, certainly a lot of them. Do you know many of them are implementing these little lock bags now that some you have to use it some concerts. Right, if you go into a concert and the artist doesn't want you shooting video, you have to put your phone into this little lockbox or a little lock bag and carry that with you. You can't get at your phone. Some schools are using that same sort of

device to make sure that the kids aren't using their phones that way. They have it available to them, they can get to it if they absolutely need it, but they're not in the habit of just grabbing it and scrolling. I think we had to do that when we went to visit the US Capitol. I bet you did the same kind of thing. Well, it'll be interesting to see how many you know, how how kids moods are leading up

to school. Yeah, I said, pediatricians are seeing that, though I was a little surprised at that that, you know, can a kid I actually go through withdraw Well, if you've if you've been around a child and they're they're at a restaurant or something. Their parents say, Okay, time to put the device away. It can cause a physical reaction in that kid. You know, they want that thing the same way an adult smoker wants

a cigarettes. Well, they've talked about the addictive nature of the social media and how the algorithms suck you in and you know, the reward you get when you do certain things and when you get texts and you hear that ping, ping, and like that actually stimulates your brain. I wonder if TikTok does that on purpose? You think really maybe? Yes? All right, Jim, thank you so much. Appreciate your time this morning. Mom and dad, good luck. Let's get back to some of the stories coming out

of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Federal prosecutors have recommended a six year prison sentence for former city Councilman Mark Ridley Thomas, citing public corruption and abuse of power and privileges while in office. He was convicted in March of bribery, fraud, and conspiracy for allegedly steering county contracts toward the USC School of Social Work in exchange for a one hundred thousand dollars contribution to an organization run

by his son and other benefits. Ridley Thomas has denied any wrongdoing. Sentencing set for August twenty. First News brought to you by American Vision Windows. The Chino Valley's School District is under investigation by the state Attorney General over a new policy regarding transgender kids. The rule, approved last month, requires schools to tell parents when students ask to use a name or pronoun different than what's on official records. A. G. Banta says the policy may violate state

law. He says it could also lead to students being abused by family members who don't accept them. I think it's absolutely embarrassing that they're assuming the parents are dangerous for them to straight out just assume that to begin with, without any kind of process or do process. School board president Sonja Shaw says the policy is legal and was reviewed. She says she thinks the AG is trying to scare other districts to keep them from adopting similar rules. Hurst Castle in

San Simeon is giving people a chance to swim in Neptune's pool. Members of the foundation at Hurst Castle can book a reservation for a thousand dollars. That's an expensive swim. The first event, the Hollywood at Hurst Castle Neptune Pool Swim, will be hosted August nineteenth. No more than fifty people will be allowed in. Proceeds from the event will benefit the foundation that helps restore the

castle. Many of the eleven thousand city workers are going to walk off the job for twenty four hours to protest what they say is the city's refusal to bargain in good faith. I'm in from Sam Pedro, schedule to be sentenced today for a virtual kidnapping scam in which he got family members to pay thousands of dollars in ransom for people who hadn't actually been kidnapped. The All Star team from El Segundo has won its first two games at the West Region Tournament.

They'll play Friday for a birth in the Little League World Series coming up at six oh five. It's handled on the news. The judge in the Trump Classified Documents case has had a few choice words for federal prosecutors. Will tell you about that now. In celebration of Taylor Swift's six sold out shows at so far, she's done four of them. She's got two more, one tonight, one tomorrow. And for those who either can't get enough of

Taylor or maybe didn't get to go to the show. The Grammy Museum has created a special exhibit the Grammy Museum at LA Live Downtown LA and we got to catch up with the curator of the I can see you Taylor's Version exhibit at the Grammy Museum. It's Kilcy Gills. We decided that since Taylor's here, she still has a couple more shows to do. She's got one tonight Tuesday and then again on Wednesday. But we've got this Taylor Swift exhibit going

on until mid September. So tell us what happens when we come to the museum and how are our tailor fans going to go Berserko and what are they going to say? Oh my gosh, this is like Taylor Paradise. So we, like you said, we have this now through September. You can either walk up or get tickets online at our website and then coming too the Grammy Museum, you'll see Taylor merch and our lobby retail store. I saw that first thing. Yeah, you'll come all the way to the fourth floor

where we have to pop up exhibit. So in the room next to us here we have two display cases full of speak Now era wardrobe. So it's stuff that she wore in music videos, for some photo shoots and on stage during this speak Now era. Okay, and tell me how what are costumes like? Are they pretty spectacular? There are spectacular? Yeah, So she was wearing a lot of vintage back then. You have some like a beaded

flapper dress. You'll see a banjo and a guitar and then some awesome stuff you are on stage and like tons of sequence because you know she likes to catch the light when she's performing. Absolutely, But it's all about the I Can See You music video. So she's breaking those pieces out of the vault, breaking her old album out of the vault, and it all is that rerecording of speak Now Taylor's brocheck. Yeah. And then there's a special video

that you have playing right, So that's the music video. So you can see all these outfits in the video and you can see her, Joey King and Taylor Lautner breaking her out of the vault, running past all the mannequins and it's a good time. Yes, Okay, So after we see the video, then we head downstairs for a little red carpeting. Yes, yes,

so we we have Taylor's twenty twenty three Grammy red carpet. Look, it's a navy blue beaded, beautiful, full down custom for her, and then her shoes that go with it, so you can see how high her heels were now, so it's just dazzling under the light, all the bead work. And then our second floor has even more stuff. Okay, we have a Songwriter's Hall of Fame exhibit. She happens to be an honoree because she's an amazing songwriter. Wasn't she just inducted into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame

or something. She bought a special award back in a few years back, so I'm sure she's been inducted into a lot of hall of Fames at this point. But we have some facsimiles of her handwritten lyrics, so they're so precious. We don't have the real thing, but it's really nice to see these copies and look at her handwriting, her creative process, and just how

she kind of came up with these lyrics everybody loves so much. Okay, super and then intermixed with all the tailor stuff when you come into the Taylor Swift exhibit. You can also wander around and see everything else that is the Grammy Museum. We saw the Michael Jackson some of his jacket City wore. Oh my gosh, they're so cool. Yeah, I mean it's the Grammy

Museum. So she's here amongst so many giants you mentioned Michael Jackson. Peggy Lee is up here as well, and then downstairs you'll see Harry Styles, Shania Twain, Shakira, and on the Songers Hall of Fame exhibit floor you'll see like John Legend, Lionel Ritchie, Smokey Robinsons, something for everybody, okay, and then you can cap off your I can see you now Taylor's virgin experience by going to the Mike Curb Cafe. We saw that there's some

yummy little treats. And remember last week we went to the Barbie the cafe land Word for the Barbie stuff and we had a pink latte. Well for Taylor, they have a lavender latte and some hummus, and there's a there's a couple of different U sliders like look, kids sliders are fun. Yeah, and also a buffalo chicken wrap that sounds have so many delicious or end our day. That way sounds good. Okay, what are what are the hours of the museum? So we are eleven am to five pm on the

weekdays and m to six pm on the weekends. Okay, we're usually closed on Tuesdays, but we're staying open because there's a soapy show and I want people to be able to come and see Taylor, so absolutely we'll be here all week. Okay, there you have it. You can get a sneak peek at what you'll see at the Grammy Museum for the I can see you Taylor's version exhibit on my Instagram at Amy K King and also on our website

kfi am six forty dot com slash wake Up Call. It's really kind of fun and her outfits are so spectacular, and then just everything you see at the Grammy Museum if you haven't been, it's like eighteen bucks and it's a way to spend a few hours. And although they have they have tailor merchants, she mentioned, so if you need your your tailor merchant you didn't get to get into the show, you can get it there. Although it's different

than what's it this show. Here are some more of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Two of the three people who were killed in that midair helicopter collision in Riverside County, we're well known in the Inland Empire. Assistant Chief Josh bish Off and Captain Tim Rodriguez were assigned to Calfire's Riverside unit and were well respected in the agency. The third person killed

was a contract pilot from Northern California. Bishop and Rodriguez were in a Bell four oh seven helicopter directing traffic for an aerial fire attack when it collided with a Sikorski skycrane. LA County Sheriff's detectives say they're still looking for those responsible for the murder of a man found inside a barrel, and Malibu County's medical examined or determined Jovante Murphy was shot in the headge stripped, naked, and

then stuffed into a plastic barrel and dumped somewhere in the ocean. The barrel was found last week by a lifeguard. Over the weekend, it was reported that Murphy's brother was tied to the murder of rapper Pops Smoke, but was quickly cleared. It was suggested that two murders or somehow connected. So when asked about the connection, a source close to the case replied, investigators dispelled that rumor immediately and are looking for clues in the opposite direction. Steve Gregory

King if I News. A woman in Corona has been sentenced to two years in prison for stealing money off eed D debit car Prosecutors say the woman cooked up the scheme with an ex mail carrier. US attorney Saren Maca voices the woman stole from people who were struggling. They needed unemployment benefits to pay their rent, to pay their grocery bills, maybe pay off credit card bills,

whatever the heck they needed it for. So what happened is the mail carrier stole the unemployment debit cards between twenty fifteen and twenty twenty and then sold the cards to the woman from Corona. The carrier was sentenced to one year in

prison. A judge in la has dismissed all claims against the county in a lawsuit by a former assistant sheriff who claims she was demoted for complaining about the alleged involvement of a deputy in the beating of an inmate, Robin Lemon was suing for intentional infliction of emotional distress, defamation, and violations of the Public

Safety Officer's Bill of Rights. Lemone was one of the deputies accused of taking photos of Kobe Bryant when his helicopter went down in Calabasas twenty A doctor in New York's been charged was sexually assaulting six women, including a teenager. Da Melinda Katz says she believes there may be others assaulted by doctor g Allan chengg. She says video found in his apartment shows him abusing drugged women in a

hospital in his apartment in different states and overseas. He's facing fifty criminal charges and multiple life sentences. A senior US diplomat says COUPS leaders in Niger have refused to allow her to meet with the country's democratically elected president. Acting Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Newland says the military officers have been unreceptive to US pressure to return the country to civilian rule. Leaders of West Africa's regional blocks say

they will meet later this week to discuss next steps. The last former Minneapolis police officer convicted in state court for his role in the killing of George Floyd has been sent to nearly five years in prison too. Tao was holding back a crowd of people in twenty twenty when Floyd was killed. The officer was convicted of aiding and abetting second degree manslaughter. He's already serving a three and a half year sentence on a federal civil rights violation. And A community landmark

in Burbank has announced its closing its doors for good. You probably recognize this one. Pickwick Bowl has been around for more than sixty years. The owners say the decision to shut down next week comes after years of legal battles with the developer, who wants to turn the property into an apartment complex. Neighboring Pickwick Gardens, which offers weddings, banquets and an ice rink, will continue to operate as usual. The La Kings acquired the rink in twenty eighteen and

will still run the facility. A powerful storm system moving through the East has killed two people and left nearly four hundred thousand homes and businesses without power, and the Megamillions lotto jackpot drawing is tonight. It's worth one point five five billion dollars. Third largest in lottery history. I think it's the largest Megamillions jackpot ever. Right now, let's say good morning to five thirty eight dot

COM's senior election analyst, Nathaniel ray Kage. Good morning, Nathaniel, Good morning. Hey, voters in Ohio, they're going to vote on Issue one today. I would imagine polls are just about to open in Ohio. On the surface, it appears to be a measure that would require a sixty percent majority to pass an amendment to the state's constitution. But then there's another more

volatile issue lingering below the surface. Yeah, exactly. So it is a measure that would raise the threshold for passing future custshi amendments to sixty percent. But the reason is so controversial is that it's widely seen to be targeting a November ballot measure on abortion rights. So liberals have put this measure on the ballot in November that would basically guarantee abortion rights in Ohio where currently it's under

dispute. And so, you know, the basically Republicans put today's measure on the ballot in order to make it harder to pass that future one, thinking that it's a sixty percent Okay, So if the measure in November would basically codify abortion rights in the state, is that correct? Exactly right? And right now, if you want to pass a measure in the state, it just needs a simple majority, exactly right. And if Issue one passes today,

henceforth it would acquire sixty percent. For that includes the abortion ballot measure, it would need to get sixty percent to pass if Issue one passes today. Okay. I have found from past things that sometimes ballot measures are worded a little confusing or they you know, they don't really talk about the underlying issues. And the big underlying here is that November ballot measure for on codifying abortion. So do you think voters in Ohio really understand what they're voting on

today and the implications. So yeah, you know, I think we have a couple of signs of that. First is that the campaign adds you know, all of the advertising has been focused on issues of abortion and kind of other reproductive issues. So maybe we'll confuse at first when you know, the abortion is at stake in August, but wait, it's not about abortion.

But I think that most people are you know, have been educated to that point on the us that you've seen really high turn out for this space, which bically is unusual in the middle of the summer in an odd year, and so I think that, Okay, it's all kind of procedural change. Nathaniel. Unfortunately, we're having such a hard time hearing you. You're cutting out real bad, So we're we're gonna cut this a little bit short.

But thank you for sharing the information. We'll be watching it. The polls are going to be open any second now and and we'll see what happens. But it is interesting, Like I know that I've read ballot measures before and maybe you guys have to that you think it's one thing, but it's really not, and the way that it's presented can be very misleading. So uh be interesting to see what the turnout for this is and also the implications for

other states. Here are some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. The number of LAPD officers has dropped to its lowest in decades. Officials say the city has struggled to recruit new officers and retain current officers eligible for retirement. They say the department's newest academy class began last week

at less than half capacity. Less than half capacity officers are voting this week on whether to accept a new four year contract that promises twenty percent races for most officers and a higher starting salary for new recruits. A man from Fountain Valley has been sentenced to life in prison for beating, shooting, and tossing a man off a boat where he drowned. Prosecutors say Huang Lie and a woman tricked James Dao onto the boat in twenty nineteen four some late night lobster

fishing, then killed Dao over about forty thousand dollars in unpaid debts. Dao's mother said its sentencing yesterday, Lee is an evil, cruel demon who belongs in Hell. The woman was sentenced in April to twenty two years. Covina police are investigating the death of a two month old infant at an apartment. Police responded to reports of a newborn who wasn't breathing on Conwell Street. Paramedics tried resuscitating the baby girl, but she was pronounced dead at the scene.

The mother was allegedly out of state and the infant was with a babysitter when she died. Sunday. Investigators say DCFS had been out to the home before on a separate ongoing case. Police say the cause of death has not yet been determined. In Covina, Chris Adler KFI News, a state law that allows people more time to file complaints for sexual abuse by prison officers as triggered dozens of lawsuits. Attorney Michael Correo says people wearing a badge have a duty

to protect those in custody. A lot of cases we see that they're supervisors that sort of allow them to do whatever they want, and that bleeds into every aspect of policing while they're policing women in these facilities. Correa says previous law required people to file acclaim within six months of an assault. The new

bill, enacted last year, allows people to go back a decade. Lawyers for former President Trump have asked a judge to narrow a protective order that prohibits him from publicly sharing certain materials and evidence in the twenty twenty election case. Federal prosecutors has asked the judge Friday to prohibit Trump and his legal team from

posting potentially harmful things like details of the case or grand jury transcripts. In a twenty nine page filing yesterday, Trump's lawyers argued the censoring is too broad and would restrict his First Amendment rights. They've asked the judge to shield only genuinely sensitive materials. Special counsel Jack Smith has asked the court to dismiss former

President Trump's protective order counter proposal. Smith fired back yesterday, saying the initial order sought by the Department of Justice was standard and reasonable and says there is no need to narrow it. Ukrainian officials say two Russian missiles that hit the center of a city in the eastern Denetsk region, killing at least five people. Ukraine's president has accused Russia of trying to leave only broken and scorched stones

in eastern Ukraine. The deadly attack happened a day after officials from about forty countries gathered in Saudi Arabia to try to find a peaceful settlement for the war in Ukraine. The Red Crosses adopted the FDA's new guidance on blood donations and announced yesterday all donors will be assessed based on individual risk factors, not sexual orientation. Susan Forbes as a spokesperson for the nonprofit One Blood. She says there were lots of gay and bisexual men who were not able to donate blood

because of the previous policy. The new guidance further insures safety the blood supply, and it enables more people the opportunity to donate blood, and those are great things and we want as many people who are able to donate to be able to do so. Forbes says under the old nearly forty year guidelines, men who had sex with men had to remain abstinent for three months before donating

blood. Strong storms moving through the eastern US have killed at least two people, out power to more than a million, and caused the cancelation of thousands of flights. The threat of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes stretched from Alabama all the way up to New York. A fifteen year old boy was killed by a falling tree in South Carolina. A twenty eight year old man was killed by lightning in Alabama. The company that helped millions work remotely is making its own

employees stop working remotely. Zoom is telling its employees to come back to the office. The platform became a staple app during the height of the COVID pandemic for work and personal use. The New York Times reports zoom Meetings jumped from ten million to over three hundred million in twenty twenty, and became the most downloaded free iPhone app that year. A Zoom spokesperson said the company believes a

structured hybrid approach would be the most effective for its employees. The Time says Zoom CEO had a tense meeting via Zoom, with employees frustrated about the time and money they'd waste commuting. In other words, full circle. Mark Ronner KFI News. We leave 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 it, you can check it out on our pod cast anytime

on the iHeartRadio app. You've been listening to wake up Call, you know you can always listen live on k f I Am six forty weekdays from five to six am, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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