The 'King' Returns - podcast episode cover

The 'King' Returns

Jul 10, 202339 min
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Episode description

Amy King is back to host your Monday morning Wake Up Call! She had a wild weekend traveling up to Oregon and shares her experience, which was riddled with car trouble. Then, ABC's White House Correspondent Karen Travers joins the show to talk about the NATO Summit meeting. ABC's Steve Roberts talks with Amy about race and college admissions following the overturning of Affirmative Action and diversification on College campuses. And ABC's Jim Ryan wanrs against the trending Vampire Facial, which has led to HIV transmission and is now being questioned by health experts.

Transcript

KF I AM six forty. You're listening to wake Up Call on demand on the iHeartRadio app. It's time for your morning wake up call. Here's Amy King. Good morning. This is your wake up call for Monday, July tenth. I am Amy King. Here's what's coming up on wake Up Call. Homes and Rolling Hills Estates have been destroyed in a landslide. Pretty scary. We'll tell y'all about that. President Biden has started his five day European tour, which includes a meeting with the new King and one of the Kings

of pop Elton. John has done his very live, very last live show in Sweden at six oh five. It's handle on the news. President Biden says Ukraine isn't ready for NATO membership. But let's start with some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. LA County Supervisor Janice Hans says significant land movement overnight in Rolling Hills Estates has completely destroyed homes along a canyon in Peartree Lane. I've never seen anything like this ever in my

career. A dozen homes were evacuated over the weekend because of a landslide that left the area unstable. Hans says homes were pulled off their foundations. She says her office is ready to offer any assistance it can provide. The families and the city authorities have identified the six people killed when a business jet went down in Riverside County, and TSB investigator Elliott Simpson says the marine layer at

the time of Saturday's crash was really heavy. It appears that the weather was at the minimums for landing at that airport, so the visibility and ceilings allowed for a landing, but it was right on the minimums. All six people on board were killed. The three men and three women between the ages of twenty five and fifty one. We're all from southern California. The plane had taken off from Harry Reid International Airport early Sunday, crashed in Marietta near French

Valley Airport, about five hundred feet short of the runway. It was the second deadly plane crashed near the airport in Marietta in less than a week. The family of a missing fourteen year old girl found at Camp Pendleton says the teen was raped by a marine on the military base. The San Diego County Sheriff's Department says the girl's grandmother reported her missing about a month ago. The

teen was found two weeks later. The girl's aunt says she was found in the barracks by military police and that she had been sold to a soldier for sex. A seventeen year old boys been shot and killed near the Beverly Center in La. Another teen and a man were hurt in the shooting yesterday outside Barry's Cafe. The shooter ran off and has not been caught. LA police have arrested a man they say randomly opened fire into a neighborhood. A motive

was not clear at the time the man was booked. Officers say for an hour early Saturday morning, the man drove through the Hollaback area of East LA and shot a rifle at different people in different locations, eventually hitting and injuring

one. Detectives say the man also aimed the rifle at several others. A couple hours later, investigators say they were able to locate the vehicle near the intersection of Third Street and Gertrude. No one was in the vehicle, but moments later, a man matching the description of the shooter walked out of a home near where the vehicle was parked. The LAPD says the rifle may have been used in other crimes. Steve Gregory Camfine News Metro's making some repairs to

the overhead power wires on two of its lines in downtown La. Repairs are expected to continue through Wednesday. Officials say the A and E line trains will run every eighteen to twenty minutes during that time period. And if you've been flying or know anyone who has been flying UNI, there have been a lot of flight delays and that's continuing. Severe weather on the East Coast has affected flights out of LAX and Hollywood Burbank Airport. This morning, there were eight

flights canceled, forty nine delayed a LAX. As of four thirty this morning, three flights have been delayed at Hollywood Burbank Airport. American canceled some flights at LAX, Delta delayed flights, United canceled a couple of flights. Alaska has delayed flights at Hollywood Burbank. The worst of the airport delays yesterday was at Philadelphia International Airport. They had more cancelations and delays than any other city

in the country, and nearly two thousand flights were canceled Sunday. According to the website flight Aware, a suspected murderer has escaped from Plaster County Sheriff's deputies near Sacramento. He believe he was last seen wearing belly chains and orange jail pants, no shirt, no shoes. Sheriff Wayne Woo says Ericabrill got away

while being escorted back to jail from a hospital in rose Hill. I know there's a lot of questions surrounding this case, specifically surrounding the circumstances regarding the escape. Quite frankly, I have a lot of questions as well. Abril is facing charges for the murder of a hostage and shooting two others in April, and on the other side of the country, another inmate has escaped and accused killer has gotten out of custody in Pennsylvania State Least Lieutenant Colonel George Bivens

says Michael Burham is a self proclaimed survivalist with military reserve experience. We have located some small stockpiles or campsites in wooded areas in the general vicinity of Warren. We believe these sites are associated with Burham. The inmate broke out of the Warren County jail on Thursday. Authorities say they believe Burham climbed on top of exercise equipment in the yard, got through a metal graded roof, jumped to the ground and ran off. President Biden has traveled to the UK to

meet up with the Prime Minister and have tea with King Charles. The White House says the meeting with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will face focus on a range of global issues. One maybe Biden's decision to send cluster bombs to Ukraine. The UK is against sending those kinds of weapons. Biden and King Charles are

expected to talk about climate policy. They're hosting a forum on the issue, and we're gonna be talking to Karen Travers in just a few minutes more about that and what he's up to while he makes that five day trip to Europe. Members of Congress are going back to work following the fourth of July holiday. The House is expected to take up the eight hundred eighty six billion dollar National Defense Authorization Act this week, which already has more than fourteen hundred amendments.

Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee want to work on ethics standards for Supreme Court justices, and you don't see this every day. A woman has found a dead bear in her front yard in Monrovia. A woman says she heard a loud noise on Saturday night. She called police, who told her that there was an injured and aggravated bear in the area. Officials say they believe the juvenile bear that was found dead on Sunday is the same one that was

spotted in the area of the night before. Already say it was likely hit by a car in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. At about twenty we're gonna be talking with Karen Travers. As I mentioned, President Biden headed to the NATO summit. He has some other high level meetings planned before that, including, as I mentioned, tea with the King. I don't know if you were like me, but I was like millions of Americans. I hit the road for the fourth of July and I drove, which I thought

was a good idea. I had the option of flying, but but now I'll drive this time. And I went up to Oregon to see my mom, and I wanted to share this with you because I'm hoping that some of you can commiserate with me, because everything best laid plans, And then there were some little hiccups. And it actually started before the fourth of July weekend when I was headed home from visiting one of my best friends for her birthday and I was driving along on the five and I hit the dreaded grape Vine,

which I personally have never had a problem with. I've never had delays on the grape Vine. I've never had it closed down because of weather. I've never had it closed down because of crashes. But I have seen several cars overheat on the grape Vine and I thought, oh, gosh, that'll never happen to me. Right, So I'm driving along and right before I hit the grape Vine, headed south on the five, and I think you pass the exit that says Grapevine and a light comes on on my warning panel

and it's a picture of a battery and it says visit workshop. I'm like, h what's that. So I called my mechanic and I said, hey, what's this And he goes sounds like it could be your alternator? And I said, oh, is that bad? And he said yep. And I said, well, what do I do, And he said get it into the shop. And he said where are you And I said, I'm just about to hit the grape Vine. He goes, I don't know if

you'll make it. So I said, anything I can do. He said, turn off anything electronic, because if the alternator is screwed up, then you're it's not getting juice to the battery. And I don't understand it. All right, So I'm like, okay, cool, So we get off the phone. I'm heading up the grape fine, speeding along seventy miles an hour. Everything's great. And then I saw some smoke coming out of my vents, the air vents, and I went, well, that's not good.

And then I looked at the instrument panel again and it had a temperature gauge. It said coolant level. It was red, and it said turn off your engine. Now I'm like, oh, that's good, because I'm going seventy miles an hour on the Grapevine. What do I do? I think God was looking out for me that day, because right there was an exit there. I think there's it's the Fort tahone exit. In fact, it's number two ten. I know that only because I needed that for Triple

A to come get me. But so I got off the freeway. By now, the whole engine is just smoking and it's coming out of the hood and I'm freaking out and shaking, but I got off the freeway. I was very lucky. Got off the freeway, got into a parking lot called Triple A. Three hours later, they finally came to get me. Not because of anything Triple A or the towing company did wrong. They were just really busy and I had seen several cars broken down on my way up before

I broke down. So that was the start of my little journey. And that happened the week before the Fourth of ju Amazingly got that fixed. Talk to my mechanic, I said, I can I drive to Oregon now? And he goes, yeah, everything should be fine. So my friend flew down from Oregon to drive back up with me. Good friend right, and I go pick her up at the airport and I thought, oh, it'll be fun. It's a beautiful day. I'm gonna put the top down because

I have a cute little convertible. And as the top is going down, and it finishes its whole thing where it puts the top down and then closes everything down. I hear this loud crack. I'm like, oh, what's that. Look look around, everything looks fine. I'm like, okay, cool, We're good to go. Get to the airport. We're putting the luggage in the trunk, and I go, well, that's weird. There's this little flap that's pressed up against the back window and it's not supposed to

be that way. So we get home, we deal with that, We get the top closed, we get the window down, and then the window won't go back up again. So it's going like you hit the little electric butt or the button that brings it up, and it goes the skinking king, king King, but nothing's happening. So I'm like, well, I can't take it back to my mechanic because he already has been my miracle worker

worker. And now it's Friday afternoon, before the fourth of July weekend, so I guess we're just going to drive to Oregon with the window down. So we drive to Oregon with the window down. It's one hundred and ten degrees. My air conditioners working, but not very well, and so we made the trip and thank god my friend was with me, and then we get to the last exit before the Oregon California border, pull over for one last rest stop, because of course we're super hydrated, lots of Starbucks,

lots of diet cokes, lots of water. And I get back in the car and my check engine light goes on. I'm like, oh my god, you gotta be kidding me. So we hobble along and get into town, get it to a dealer. He's very nice. He goes, oh, so you need me to fix your window. I go, yeah, but now I've got a check engine light on. So I've got apparently an older engine, so the carbon is built up in it and so it triggers a sensor or something like that. So the car spends most of my time

in Medford in the shop. But they fix it. They get the engine light turned off, they service the air conditioners, so I have nice, cool, nice cool air coming out. And they fixed the window, and so I'm like cool, I'm ready to go back to California. So I jump in the car on Saturday morning. Off I go in. The check engine light goes on again. I'm like, I gotta go. And they had told me that it's just a sensor because the carbon is built up.

But this what is going on is not going to prevent me from driving, So I make the drive, have a great time. By the way, stopped and saw Jennifer Jones lee at in reading for a couple of hours, so that was really fun. On the way home, and then hit the Grapevine again and I tell you I made it, but I was having heart palpitations the whole time, and just to be safe, I turned the heater on because I said, Tyler, don't look at me that. And I

was like, oh, I'm not looking at you any kind. I get the heat off the engine and all that stuff, and saw so many cars, at least a dozen cars were broken down. So I mean, it was just like this comedy of errors for the last couple of weeks with my car that's normally been a very good, reliable car. She's just having temper tantrums. But here's my takeaways. Triple A saved my life and has several times. And Triple A plus is what I recommend because it'll take you up

to one hundred miles instead of seven miles. Okay, so triple A. Make sure your car is ready to go, do all the things that you need to do to your car. Make sure that you know you got your oil and all of that stuff. If you have good friends like my friend who flew down to drive back up with me, that was very helpful. And also keep lots of snacks and waters next time you make a trip.

So that's my little that's my little adventure. I hope that yours was less eventful and that you had a wonderful time for the Fourth of July with family, friends, all that stuff. Here are some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four Hourvenues Room. Triple digit heats headed to the South Land and it is sticking around for a while. Severe weather on the East Coast is affecting flights out of lax and Hollywood Burbank Airport this morning, and

the FDA has been asked to look into Logan Paul's energy drink. It has the caffeine of six cans of coke thirty five. We're going to be talking to ABC Steve Roberts about colleges and how they're working to make sure there's enough diversity on campus in the wake of the Supreme Court decision that bans affirmative action. At six oh five it's handled on the news about a dozen homes or slip sliding away and rolling hills estates. We'll tell you about that, but

right now we're going to check in with ABC's Karen Travers. Good morning, Karen, Good morning. President Biden's on a five day swing through Europe. So what's on the agenda today. First, Stoff was in London where he met with the British Prime Minister Rishi Sunach. Their first time meeting there, but the sixth time they've been meeting in six months. This is a significant

amount of time that these two world leaders have sat down together. The President kind of jokes that they're now basically meeting once a month, which means a lot of conversation. This is a continuing of the time that they spent at the White House just a couple of weeks ago, talking about the global economy,

the US UK relationship, and of course Ukraine. The President did a brief photo up with reporters at the start of the meeting, didn't take any questions, but said he couldn't be meeting with a closer friend and greater Ally.

He's now meeting with King Charles at Windsor Castle and that's notable because there had been some grumbling in the press over there about maybe the President snubbing King Charles by not attending his coronation, by not meeting with him in Northern Ireland when he was there in April. But now he's doing a big sit down with him where they're going to talk about the USUK relationship as well as climate

issues, because that is something very important to King Charles. Tonight, the President heads the Lithuania for the NATO summit two days where Ukraine's fronting center a chance for the President to continue that strengthening of the alliance, showing support for Ukraine against Russia's war, and also talk about the new member Finland just got

accepted in April. Sweden's membership is still lingering because of objections from Turkey, but the US is significantly showing support for Turkey's membership or excuse me, for Sweden's membership and really trying to push that across the finish line, but not pushing for Ukraine. We all know that Ukraine really wants in, but I

can just said over the weekend they're not ready yet. Yeah, and we saw the White House again emphasizing that Jake Sullivan said, NATO will not excuse me, Ukraine will not be joining NATO coming out of this summit, but there will be a discussion of what steps are necessary as it continues along that

path. President also had said that in an interview over the weekend that he doesn't think Ukraine is ready for membership in NATO, that there are still certain reforms that would need to be done in that country, and he also warned that if Ukraine joined now, that would thrust the US and its allies into war with Russia. That is, of course, not something the Biden administration wants to do, so there are a lot of things that would have to

happen first. But you know, notable that there's using a conversation about it happening down the road, likely after the war ends. Okay, And now is Biden expected to get some pushback for the cluster bombs that they're that the US is now providing the Ukraine. I think this is something that he will hear about in his meetings with allies or he will likely have on the sidelines,

perhaps even during the summit. The White household the weekend with defending this, saying that this is necessary right now because of how quickly the Ukrainian forces are using up artillery. John kirbyan national security folksman, said they're doing it at a clip of many thousands of rounds per day, so that this is something that's necessary. He said that the US is sending me because the Ukrainians don't or the US doesn't have enough of the kind of munitions that the Ukrainians

need right now, gotcha? All right? Well we'll be watching and see what comes out of it. Karen Travis, thanks so much for taking a couple of minutes with us this morning. Have a great day. Thank all right, YouTube, Now let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. A man from West la is set to be sentenced for fraudulently getting more than seven million dollars in COVID nineteen relief

money. Andrew Marnell pleaded guilty in twenty twenty one to bank fraud and money laundering force submitting bogus federal tax filings and employee payroll records. He's looking it up to forty years in federal prison. Amazing how many people scammed the system during a worldwide pandemic News brought to you by American Vision Windows. Investigators in Riverside say they're trying to find other people who may have been sexually assaulted by

a local doctor. Sam Zenoofi, was arrested late last month, released on bail, and then re arrested on Friday when more people accused him of assault. Zanofi is the owner of Timeless Skincare, laser clinic and primary care family practice on Rockton Avenue. LA City firefighters they've spent more than an hour putting out a fire in the Westlake district that damaged three buildings. The fire early this morning started in a building that has businesses below and apartments above. The

flames spread to an attached building and a four story apartment building. About one hundred firefighters worked to put the flames out. No injuries were reported, and that's always good news. Arson investigators are now looking to find the cause of the fire. Police in Ohio are trying to find whoever opened fire on a group of people in Cleveland. Ticlar individual started shooting and forced the crowd.

As you all noticed that nine individuals. Cleveland Police Chief Wayne Drummond says people were gathered in a larger group outside a group of Mars yesterday when the shooting started. Investigators say they're not quite sure what led up to the shooting. SpaceX has launched twenty two Starlink satellites into orbit from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Base in Floridas. And it's so amazing these things are going off all the

time. Like it used to be like such a big deal because the launch has only happened like once a year or something, and now it seems like they're going off like every week. This was SpaceX, oh, speaking of that. This was SpaceX's forty six mission this year. The Starlink satellites spread broadband internet around the world. Heavy rain has caused severe flooding in New York's

Hudson Valley, killing at least one person and forcing road closures. Orange County Executive Steve Newhouse says some roadways looked like rivers, and more rain is expected. I talked to the governor a dot. Everybody's working their hardest to get here. We're handling all the calls on a priority basis. He says. A woman in her thirties drowned when she was swept away trying to get out

of her home two other people escaped. New York's governor has declared a state of emergency for Orange County, and heavy rains have caused severe flooding and mudslides in southwest Japan, killing at least two people. At least six people are still missing. The flooding and mudslides have also closed roads, canceled into laid trains, and cut the water supply in some areas. Here are some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Homes and Rolling

Hills estates have been destroyed in a landslide. Not great news. President Biden has started his five day European tour, which includes a meeting with the new King. Apparently had tea with King Charles today. Elton John has done his last live show in Stockholm, Swedom. He would did his last live show in America at Dodgers Stadium and somebody was there, right, somebody was lucky enough to, oh my gosh, it was so great. So it's weird

that it's like nine months later and he's doing his last live show. He says he's been doing it for fifty years. Unbelievable. I think he deserves a vacation at six oh five, it's handle on the news. A suspicious fire has broken out at LA City Hall. Will tell you about that, but right now it's time for us to talk to ABC's Steve Roberts, the news political analyst in Washington, d C. Hey, Steve, how you

doing, Good morning, Good morning, Hi there. So institutions are looking for new ways to guarantee diversity in the student body in the wake of the Supreme Court decision that bans affirmative action. So how are they going to go about that? Steve? Well, diversity is very important, and anybody in LA knows this to be true. I've taught college at George Washington University for over thirty years, and I can tell you that a diverse classroom is so

much richer, so much more vibrant. And it's not just about the kids who represent diversity. It's about everybody else who benefits from them in the classroom, including, by the way, the professor. I can't tell you how any important things I've learned over the years from my diverse students, and so race has been a useful metric, but it's never been perfect. I've got one student who Hispanic student from Florida, her very successful journalists. Her dad's

a cardiac surgeon in Miami. She doesn't need any help. But I got a white student from New Jersey's first generation the college who's dad's a truck drivers. He needs a lot of help. So race has been useful, but it's not the only way of guaranteing diversity, and the colleges are moving rapidly towards figuring out other ways. Of course, in California, for years, you've had to do that, and colleges have had to do that because the explicit use of race, you can ban there for a long time. And

so focusing on socioeconomic status. Finding these first generation camps of any race is is it's an important and effective substitute them and absolutely essential for a healthy college environment. So how do you find these students? Because you like you You gave the example of the the Hispanic student whose dad is a cardiac surgeon, so he's good to go, like he can he can make the do the

applications, he's going to get in. But then there's the white the white girl whose dad is a trucker, and they probably don't have the money. But you know, you want you want to mix, you want the Hispanic, you want Black, you want Asian, you want what, you want to a little bit of everybody, and if they're under or less advantaged financially, maybe they're not even going to apply to the schools. True, and

this means recruitment efforts. It means advertising, It means working through college counselors in high schools, including those from disadvantaged areas. It means doing a great deal of outreach. But it also means understanding that recruiting students from disadvantaged backgrounds is only the beginning of the process. I see this on campus every day.

You can't just focus on recruiting kids. You've got to focus on retaining them, because once these kids get to campus, they can be pretty fragile. You know, comfortable middle class families. If something goes wrong in the family, they have resources, they have savings, or they have an uncle who can help them. A lot of these first games families, they don't have this elasticity or these sources, and if one thing goes wrong, someone loses a job, the family truck breaks down, they can be in crisis

overnight. And so you've got to focus on retaining them and not just recruiting them, and one of the key variables, there's something called the Pelgrands. This is a marvelous federal programs, one of those federal programs that really works, been around for fifty years and now the maximum of my student can get

in a grant is about seven thousand, four hundred dollars. Well, that covers the community college in la but it doesn't house very much a USC or UCLA, and you need there needs to be a significant increase in my view of the annual rate because the pelegrands have really lost purchasing power. The cost of college is basically doubled in many places over the last twenty years, but the power of pelgrands only increased about thirty percent. So it's not just recruiting

these disadvantage kids, these first ten kids, these immigrant kids. It's also focusing on keeping them in college and helping them make the most of their college experience. Yeah, and looking at increasing the funding. Where is that in the process, Like it is that just an idea at this point to increase the pell Grand opportunities or is it really kind of pushes on to get that done. That's a good question, and there is a push to get it

done. Now, last year in the federal budget, there was an increase of five hundred dollars in the maximum a lotment for pell grand and that was helpful, but there's still way way behind, and there's a movement. There's a long consocium, large consocium of education advocacy organizations now pushing something called doublepell double the pelgrands. I think it's a good idea from my perspective as a teacher, because you know, kids when they get to college and they look

I think everybody should make some of their own money. I think everybody, no matter how wealthy of families, you contribute to their own education. But if you're working two or three jobs to get through college, you can't begin to make the most of that college experience. And what pelgrams can do is help buy kids some freedom to make the most of college. And it would

be one of the best investments this country could ever make. And do you have any kind of an idea of a timeline since it pushes on, like, do you think that's something that they can make happen in the next year or so, or is it kind of down the world. And you know, budgets are always tight, you know, budgets are always tight amy and there's always a competing, many competing demands for federal money. But the value of this idea is that cuts across political line. This is not a part

as an issue. It should be and can be an issue that both parties can get behind. But you know, you know, right now people are talking about cutting the federal budget, not increasing at it. But when you talk about the investment of federal money that brings the maximum return on the taxpayers investment worse for taxpayer dollars, it's got to be right at the top of the list. Yeah, investing in education never a bad idea. Thank you

so much, Steve Roberts for your insight and your time this morning. We'll talk to you again soon. Okay. So, if you're looking to sell your home in Orange County or the Ie, the near future might not be looking so bright for you. There's a couple of new stories out about that home buying in LA and Orange Counties fell twenty four percent in a year, and a big reason is that the house payments are scaring away potential buyers. Sales of houses and condos, both existing and new, were about just under

seventy five hundred for May, for both for LA and Orange Counties. That's up seventeen percent for the month, but down twenty four percent for the year. So it's it's interesting when you kind of dig in the numbers, but you look at the rising interest rights plus the sky high costs of real estate here in southern California, and it's just like, how are you ever going to afford a home? And so a lot of people aren't even trying.

But it was the second slowest May for sales in records dating back to nineteen eighty eight. What are the thirty five years board years. It's the forty seventh smallest sales total for any month in over thirty five years, thirty nine percent below the average May sales pace since nineteen ninety eight, and the inland empire, the home buying picture is not looking a lot better. It's not

a thirty five year low, but it's a seven year low. And again they're saying these mortgage rates are keeping people up from buying, which is it's too bad because it's fun to own a house. I've had one. I've been renting here in LA for a long time, and I would love to buy a house here there's just no way for me to afford at the down payments, and then you look at the the interest rates and all that stuff. So for right now, I'm just going to be a happy little renter.

Here are some of the stories coming out of the twenty four hour k FI newsroom. Triple digit heat is headed to the Southland and is going to stick around at least through the weekend. Severe weather on the East Coast is affecting flights out of lax and Hollywood Burbank Airport this morning, and the FDA has been asked to look into Logan Paul's Energy drink, which packs the caffeine

of six cans of coke. We're just minutes away from Handle. In the news this morning, President Biden says Ukraine is not ready for NATO membership. We'll be diving into that, but right now it's time for us to talk to ABC's Jim Ryan about vampire facials. Good morning, Jim, Good morning. Yeah. Vampire facial also known as the protein rich plasma treatment. Those facials. What is that? Yeah, Well, what they do here,

it's in the longer short here. They pull a little blood out of a patient, right, a client, a customer, somebody in a spa. They then use in Apharies's machine or some kind of device to spin out the platelets and the plasma from that blood, and then they reinject that back under the skin. What it does, or what it's intended to do, is to encourage the growth of cellar cellulose, you know, and chlagen under the

skin to make it look firmer, plumper, or younger. It's the same theory as you know, you work out by lifting weights and when you liftwits, you're actually damaging your muscles a little bit. Your body responds by building new muscle on top of that stuff, and you keep doing it and you get bolt up. The theory here is that as you reintroduce the plasma the platelets under the skin, yes, you're committing a little bit of damage,

which are also encouraging the growth of new skin, new calagen. And it's got some pretty high profile supporters, the Kardashians among them. And you know, you can have it done all over the place. I see that in Los Angeles and Hollywood. You can get it done for about fifteen hundred dollars. Oh, it's a bargain. Well, so you're taking the blood like if I was getting a vampire facial done, you would take my blood, spin it out, and then reinject it. Correct. Yeah, that's that's

right. Yeah, you're reinjecting the patient's own blood and I couldn't call them patient, you know, client or customer or whatever, and reinjecting it back under the skin the same blood except spun out so that you have these plasm and platelets that are being introduced. And you know, it's perfectly fine. There is a governing but sort of the Cellular Medicine Association says that it's perfectly safe if it's done properly. They have the needles that are used, the

micro needles or standard needles that are used are sterile. If not, you can get into problems. That's what's happened in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Okay, tell us about there's a medical spa in New Mexico that has now been closed down because apparently they didn't follow all those safety protocols. Yes, and what's more, the owner is sitting in prison. The VIP Beauty salan salon and spa in Albuquerque. It's been closed for five years almost after a couple

of clients tested positive for HIV after they had had this procedure done. Well, now other clients have tested positive as well. Yeah, about one hundred customers have been tested and I think total at least five now have tested positive. And I think it raises it should raise the alarm level or raise the concern among people who are having this done anywhere, just to make sure that,

yeah, the conditions are sterile. So so five people have tested about so somewhere along the line someone got it done the needle, So maybe there's like a patient zero who might have had HIV, but then they didn't sanitize and sterilize everything the way that it should be, and then it got to the next person. Yes, exactly, they told two friends somebody else to tell two friends, you know, and it's sort of grows exponentially, or

it can if it's not stopped. And so that's what the Health Department and New Mexico is trying to do to track down everybody who might have had contact with those original needles or with that original patient zero and try to stop this in its tracks. But you know, it's not just HIV, but also hepatitis B, hepatitis C, could be other infections that people would come down

with if those needles had not been sterilized, that's just crazy. Okay, So here's the question then, So like, how do you know You go into a place, you assume that they're going to be nice and sterilized, But is there anything a patient can do to protect themselves? Well, yeah, you can look at the you know, the state records. If it's a regulated business, then you can take a look and see if there have been other complaints about it. Better Business Bureau is a good source of that

sort of thing. Do a little bit of research because you're dealing with your health here. But you know there's also just kind of eyeballing and walking and sitting down and take look is it. Does it appear to be clean? Is the staff, you know, well groomed, are they wearing they have proper documents on the walls, and are they prepared for this kind of thing? So yeah, I mean there's a gut instinct I think that people have.

But also you can go in and look at records. And I think the point you made too as you're saying you should research that, and I think that's a lovely idea, But I think that a lot of us at least speaking for me, I wouldn't even think to go, I'm gonna go look. I mean, I'm gonna go check out reviews online. But I wouldn't look at like official stuff and say does he have these certifications or are there any violations? Like I wouldn't even know where to look for if there

were as a violation. Sure, yeah, well, I think you're right. People they shop around, they try to find the best price, but they also try to find the place that either has the best reputation or also is the most qualified or suited to do this sort of thing. I mean again, it's it's said to be perfectly safe unless right Yeah, Okay, So the owner is of the VIP Beauty salon and Spawn Albuquerque is in jail right now. Oh so and she what charges is she facing? Well,

she did. She was charged, you know, with negligence related to the HIV infection. So it wasn't just a regular it wasn't just a civil problem, it wasn't a regulatory issue. These were criminal charges that she was up against. And I'm wondering like if somebody, you know, hopefully with the treatments and everything, the people who were infected are going to be okay,

but what if one of them died? I mean she would she face murder charges or potentially sure homicide charges or manslaughter charges were possibly negligent homicides something like that. You know, if you knowingly didn't maintain procedures that were sterile in there and somebody got sick, possibly died, then yeah, it could be a very serious thing. And again we're not just talking about HIV, but

the potential for heppitaitis a thing that you're up against. If you get a tattoo or get botox, just then be very careful anytime somebody's poking it with

an eedle. Okay. Oh, And the difference between the vampire facial and the botox is like the botox freezes you, the vampire facial doesn't do that, right, Yeah, I mean different substance serves that are injected under the skin, you know, right, So whereas with botox it's one I think it's an organism actually, and with this it's blood that's been spun out to get the platelets in the plasma and that's what's reinjected. Okay, Jim Ryan, thank you so much. So the price of beauty is it worth it?

If you want to be a VM buyer, maybe it is okay. One thing before we take off, I want to just mention that today is the first day that McDonald's is offering a spicy new tree. McDonald's is turning up the heat on one of its signature menu items, the quarter pounder with

Cheese. So starting today, they're officially going to serve a cheesy Halla pain bacon QPC quarter pounder with cheese for a limited time, two beef patties, bacon palapeeno slices, and two slices of American cheese and cheddar cheese sauce. I might have to give that one a try. Just say we lead local from the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. I'm Amy King. This has been

your wake up call. You've been listening to wake up call? You know you can always listen live on KFI a M six forty weekdays from five to six am, and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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