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Secrets &🚔 Speeders Busted, E-Bikes Banned 🥚 Humpty Dumpty Wasn’t an Egg?!  Restaurant Ranch

Secrets &🚔 Speeders Busted, E-Bikes Banned 🥚 Humpty Dumpty Wasn’t an Egg?! Restaurant Ranch

Published 1 day ago
Description

Tim Conway Jr. Hour 4 (5.1) 🎙 

 

9:05 – 405 freeway delays expected this weekend thanks to a major repaving project. Conway breaks down the difference between surface streets vs. service roads, because yes, both terms are real — and yes, Southern California traffic makes everything more confusing. 

Then it’s time for the CHP crackdown results, and they were not messing around: officers handed out 11,800 speeding tickets statewide during a 24-hour enforcement blitz. Slow down, ding dongs! 

9:20 – The show also covers a heartbreaking Orange County case involving an 81-year-old Vietnam War veteran and beloved substitute teacher who died after being hit by an electric motorcycle allegedly driven illegally by a teen. Prosecutors say the boy’s mother had been warned before the crash, and now she’s facing an additional charge of involuntary manslaughter. Plus, L.A. votes to ban e-bikes on hiking and equestrian trails. 

 

9:35- Cottaged Cheese, In the classic nursery rhyme, “Little Miss Muffet sat on a tuffet, eating her curds and whey”. The “curds and whey” are simply the solid and liquid parts of milk after it has been curdled. "Ring Around the Rosie" is indeed about the plague, specifically the Black Death. The rhyme originated around 1347 and describes symptoms of the bubonic plague, such as the "rosy" rash associated with the disease. Humpy Dumpty NO where does it say he was an egg.  Why does everyone serve ranch dressing? House made is restaurant reference instead of homemade. Is it Pet Smart or Pets Mart. 

 

9:50 – Cottaged Cheese, In the classic nursery rhyme, “Little Miss Muffet sat on a tuffet, eating her curds and whey”. The “curds and whey” are simply the solid and liquid parts of milk after it has been curdled. "Ring Around the Rosie" is indeed about the plague, specifically the Black Death. The rhyme originated around 1347 and describes symptoms of the bubonic plague, such as the "rosy" rash associated with the disease. Humpy Dumpty NO where does it say he was an egg.   

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