Friday, August 30, 2013

AirTalk for Monday, September 2, 2013 - LABOR DAY ON TAPE

Contact: Producers Joel Patterson, Jasmin Tuffaha, Fiona Ng, Karen Fritsche

626-583-5100

 

SCHEDULE FOR AIRTALK WITH LARRY MANTLE

Monday, September 2, 2013

 

***NOTE: Because of the Labor Day holiday, AirTalk is on tape. During the first hour, we’ll be running the segments that made up the noon hour of our Monday, August 12, 2013 show. In our second hour, we’ll be running the segments from the noon hour of our Tuesday July 9, 2013 show. If there are any questions about the content of the show, call Joel at below cell number or email.

 

BILLBOARD #1

11:00:00 - 11:00:30

 

ENCO #41635 - BB HR.1

In: (music)

Out: “...Are you sad or proud?”

TRT: 29.6

 

SEGMENT 1

11:06 – 11:19

 

ENCO #41567 LaborDay1

In: (music)

Out: “...first Hettie Lynne Hurtes has the news.”

TRT: 13:22.5

 

Topic: Tyson Foods bans using cattle with Zilmax growth hormone: On Thursday, August 8th, market traders noticed cattle prices rose sharply. It was in response to news that Tyson Foods - a major meatpacker - quietly had sent letters to cattle feedlots indicating Tyson would no longer buy cows fed Zilmax. That's a supplement designed to bulk up cows before slaughter. Tyson cited the health of animals as reason for the change. They said experts have anecdotal evidence of cows becoming lame as a side effect of the growth-inducing drug. Such supplements are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. If market prices are up on the news, consumers can expect supermarket prices to rise, too. Industry watchers are calling this a game-changer. Some also question Tyson's true motivation. Is it because they're trying to gain access to foreign markets that ban growth hormones? Is the export market becoming more important than domestic shoppers for agriculture companies? Will other meatpackers follow suit? Will feedlots be forced to halt using Zilmax and similar drugs?

Guest:  Mike Callicrate, Cattle producer based in Saint Francis, Kansas; Proprietor of Ranch Foods Direct which markets farm to table beef

Guest:  Tom Talbot, Cattle producer and Veterinarian from Bishop, California; Past Chairman, Cattle Health and Well-Being Committee, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association

Guest: Dennis Smith, Livestock Industry Analyst and Commodities Broker, Archer Financial Services

 

SEGMENT 2

11:21 - 11:42

NOTE: This segment runs a couple minutes long, but segment 3 is shorter to make up for it.

 

ENCO #41574 LaborDay2

In: (music)

Out: “...first Hettie Lynne Hurtes has the news.”

TRT: 20:26.4

 

Topic: Tyson Foods bans using cattle with Zilmax growth hormone CONT’D

 

Topic: Kegger! Top party schools unveiled: Did your alma mater make the list? University of Iowa is ranked the number one party school in the country as part of the latest Princeton Review rankings. Last year, Princeton Review ranked West Virginia University number one, but this year WVU dropped to fourth place. University of California-Santa Barbara is ranked number seven. On the other end of the spectrum Princeton Review also ranked the top sober schools, with Pepperdine University coming in at number seventeen. If you’re a parent, would you care if the school your son or daughter went to a school on the top party schools list? Is your alma mater a party school? Do rankings like this help or hurt a school’s reputation? How much do these rankings matter?

Guest: Rob Franek, publisher, The Princeton Review

SEGMENT 3

11:44 – 11:58:30

 

ENCO #41579 LaborDay3

In: (music)

Out: “...it should be regulated like booze?.”

TRT: 13:26.4

 

Topic: How Lego went from being a cute toy to a play-time empire: The iconic LEGO brick was built in 1958, and since has captivated fans everywhere becoming the world's most valuable toy company. But just 10 years ago, unprofitable, the company faced bankruptcy. It started with a Danish carpenter who created toys, and through innovation created hit toys for the next four decades. The book, “Brick by Brick: How LEGO Rewrote the Rules of Innovation and Conquered the Global Toy Industry” by David Robertson delves into the company’s ethos, its most popular inventions, what nearly ruined them, and how they bounced back. Robertson’s book is an insider’s story that gives a glimpse into the brand that has reinvented itself through designers, company leadership, and loyal fans. Did you play with LEGOs as a kid? What did building things with snap-together blocks teach you that you used later in life?

Guest: David Robertson, professor of Innovation and Product Development at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business and the author of “Brick by Brick: How LEGO Rewrote the Rules of Innovation and Conquered the Global Toy Industry”

 

BILLBOARD #2

12:00:00 - 12:00:30

 

ENCO #41636 - BB HR.2

In: (music)

Out: “...on this reprise hour of Airtalk.”

TRT: 30.3

 

SEGMENT 4
12:06 - 12:19

ENCO #41626 LaborDay4

In: (music)

Out: “...first Hettie Lynne Hurtes has the news.”

TRT: 13:15.1

 

Topic:  Why flying phobias persist despite soaring airline safety records: The dramatic images of Saturday's Asiana Airlines' crash stir fears of flying, but the sober statistics of plane crashes tell a different story. According to a notable scholar from MIT, the chance of dying in an airplane disaster in the U.S. is 1 in 14 million. Travelling abroad? World-wide, 2012 was the safest year for commercial air travel since 1945. Put another way, MIT’s Arnold Barnett says flying has become so reliable that you could fly every day for 123,000 years before being in a fatal crash. So why are people still afraid of flying? Some are so scared that careers get derailed, vacations never got off the ground, and far-away loved ones get fed up with one-way visits. UCLA psychologist Emanuel Maidenberg joins AirTalk to explain the causes of and cures for aerophobia.

Guest:  Emanuel Maidenberg, PhD, Director, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy clinic at UCLA; he specializes in anxiety disorders

 

SEGMENT 5
12:21-12:39

ENCO #41967 LaborDay5

In: (music)

Out: “...Hettie Lynne Hurtes has the news.”

TRT: 17:49.8


Topic:  Why flying phobias persist despite soaring airline safety records CONT’D

Topic: How to lower people’s sugar consumption? Try regulating it like alcohol. Yep. That’s exactly what pediatric endocrinologist Robert Lustig at the University of California, San Francisco suggested in an interview at this year’s Aspen Ideas Festival. Lustiq argues that sugar satisfies the four criteria used to determine whether a substance, like alcohol, should be regulated. 1. Ubiquity: it is everywhere. 2. Toxicity: that consumption in a large amount leads to chronic health problems. 3. Addictiveness: the more we eat it, the more we want it. 4. It has a negative impact on society. Certainly, overindulging your sweet tooth could lead to diabetes, obesity and other health issues, but is sugar really as bad as something like liquor? Should we consider regulating sugar? What are the benefits and the drawbacks?

Guest:  Robert Lustig (LUHS-tig), MD, a pediatric endocrinologist at the University of California, San Francisco.

Guest: Keith Ayoob (AY-yoob), Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine

 

SEGMENT 6
12:41-1:00

ENCO #41978 LaborDay6

In: (music)

Out: “...Have a great day...[music]”

TRT: 16:02.1


Topic: How to lower people’s sugar consumption? Try regulating it like alcohol CONT’D

 

---

Joel Patterson

Senior Producer, AirTalk

626-583-5375 office

858-349-2205 cell

@joelerson

 

AirTalk for Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Contact: Producers Joel Patterson, Jasmin Tuffaha, Fiona Ng, Karen Fritsche

626-583-5100

SCHEDULE FOR AIRTALK WITH LARRY MANTLE

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

 

11:06 –11:20

OPEN

 

11:20-11:40

Topic: Should insurers be forced to pay for expensive new cancer treatments?

Blue Shield of California has come under fire for refusing to pay for an expensive and controversial new radiation treatment for prostate cancer. Scripps Hospital in San Diego spent $230 million on a new proton beam therapy center set to open this fall. Loma Linda University Medical Center was the first hospital-based proton treatment center in the nation. It's invested millions in the technology and claims that it’s safer and healthier than traditional radiation treatments. Blue Shield claims there is no justification for spending $30,000 using the new machine when research shows that traditional radiation methods deliver similar results. Insurers are under constant pressure to hold down costs but at the same time, patients and doctors are demanding they pay for pricy and often-controversial treatments. How do insurers decide which new treatments are worth spending top dollar? Will hospitals be willing to invest in potentially life saving new treatments if insurers won't cover them?

ON TAPE: Blue Shield rep

 

Live Guest :  Dr. Steven Pearson, President of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

Live Guest: Daniel Fontoura, senior vice president at Loma Linda University Medical Center

 

11:40 -12:00

Topic: LAPD crackdown on Crenshaw cruising?:

Guest: Martin Martinez, LAPD Officer

Guest: Frederick “G” Staves, (pron: stayvz) Owner, Classic G Customs; Staves has been a part of lowrider culture in the Southland since 1977

 

12:06 – 12:20

OPEN

 

12:20 – 12:40

Topic: Can the sender of a text be blamed for distracted driving of the recipient? (TEMP HEAD)

Guest: TBD

 

12:40 – 1:00

Topic: Los Angeles drivers are some of the worst in the nation. Tell us your horror stories on the road.

The city with the worst drivers, according to Allstate’s America’s Best Drivers report, is Washington D.C. It’s the sixth time the nation’s capital has topped the survey, which finds that drivers there are twice as likely to get into traffic accidents than those in the rest of the country. Los Angeles is ranked 181 on the list, among the worst. As to other California cities: Bakersfield, 56; Palmdale, 60; Lancaster, 61;  Riverside, 110; Pomona, 114; Huntington Beach, 117; Long Beach, 133, and Pasadena, 165. What do you think  is the worst city for drivers in the country? How does driving in the U.S. compared to driving in another country? In your opinion, what is the absolute worst to be a driver… or a pedestrian?

OPEN PHONES

 

 

Warm regards,

Jasmin Tuffaha    office: 626.583.5162 

Producer, “AirTalk with Larry Mantle” 

 

 

Thursday, August 29, 2013

AirTalk for Friday, August 30, 2013

Contact: Producers Joel Patterson, Jasmin Tuffaha, Fiona Ng, Kaitlin Funaro

626-583-5100

 

SCHEDULE FOR AIRTALK WITH LARRY MANTLE

Friday, August 30, 2013

 

11:06 –11:20

Topic: OPEN

Guest: TBD

 

11:20-11:40

Topic:Should insurers be forced to pay for expensive new cancer treatments?

Blue Shield of California has come under fire for refusing to pay for an expensive and controversial new radiation treatment for prostate cancer. Scripps Hospital in San Diego spent $230 million on a new proton beam therapy center set to open this fall. Loma Linda University Medical Center was the first hospital-based proton treatment center in the nation. It's invested millions in the technology and claims the success rate is _____ than traditional radiation treatments. Blue Shield claims there is no justification for spending $30,000 using the new machine when research shows that traditional radiation methods deliver similar results. Insurers are under constant pressure to hold down costs but at the same time, patients and doctors are demanding they pay for pricy and often-controversial treatments. How do insurers decide which new treatments are worth spending top dollar? Will hospitals be willing to invest in potentially life saving new treatments if insurers won't cover them?

Guest:  Dr. Steven Pearson, President of the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

Guest: Daniel Fontoura, senior vice president at Loma Linda University Medical Center

 

11:40 –12:00

Topic: Will more cop cams improve behavior of police AND suspects?

Guests: TBD

 

12:06 – 12:340

Topic: Filmweek: Getaway, Passion, Drinking Buddies and more: Larry and KPCC film critics Henry Sheehan and Andy Klein review this week’s releases, including Getaway, Passion, Drinking Buddies and more. What movies should you catch this Labor Day weekend? Also, film critic Peter Rainer is at the Montreal World Film Festival. TGI-Filmweek!

Guest: Henry Sheehan, film critic for KPCC and CriticsAGoGo.com

Guest: Andy Klein, film critic for KPCC and the L.A. Times Community Papers chain

Guest: Peter Rainer, film critic for KPCC and the Christian Science Monitor; author of “Rainer on Film: Thirty Years of Film Writing in a Turbulent and Transformative Era;” he is in Montreal for the festival.

 

12:40 – 1:00

Topic: Porn industry update [Temp Head]

Guest: TBD

 

---

Joel Patterson

Senior Producer, AirTalk

626-583-5375 office

858-349-2205 cell

@joelerson

 

 

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

AirTalk for Thursday, August 29, 2013

Contact: Producers Joel Patterson, Jasmin Tuffaha, Karen Fritsche, Fiona Ng

626-583-5100

 

SCHEDULE FOR AIRTALK WITH LARRY MANTLE

Thursday, August 29, 2013

 

11:06 –11:20

Topic: OPEN

Guest: TBA

 

11:20 -11:40

Topic: Nissan plans to build first self-driving car by 2020. Are you ready? Cars come with a lot of bells and whistles nowadays, but they got nothing on what the global automobile industry at large is working on next: a car that drives itself. Indeed, the race is on for the automakers to build the first self-driving vehicle. Japanese carmaker Nissan, at an event Tuesday, said that it plans to put the first driverless car on the road by 2020. Not to be outdone, General Motors came out with its own timeline for a self-driving car. Tech giant Google is said to also be working on its own version. As futuristic as they may sound, the technology to build self-driving cars is already available and according to experts, it's just a matter of fine-tuning and improving on what's out there. The technology could mean a less angst-ridden commute for drivers and could reduce road congestion. But then again, it could make drivers ever more distracted than now. How do self-driving cars work? What road rules need to be in place before the arrival of these cars? Would you buy a self-driving car? Is the public ready for them?

Guest: Amir Efrati (ah-MEER eh-FRAH-ti), tech reporter for WSJ

Guest: Bernard Soriano (saw-REE-AHN-noh), deputy director of the California Department of Motor Vehicles who also heads of the agency’s self-driving car project

 

11:40-12:00

Topic: What's the best way to judge college grads' real value to potential employers? High school students who want to sell themselves to the college of their dreams aim for high SAT scores and nosebleed-level grade-point averages. What about ambitious college students who want to land the job of their dreams? Most grads rely on their GPAs, networking and polished resumes packed with summer job experience, volunteerism and recommendations. But can an employer really judge who is ready for the workforce based on an "A+" in Literature 401? A newly revised test for college graduates claims to assess "work competency" and higher-order thinking skills. The Collegiate Learning Assessment, or CLA+, is catching on with some universities which will use it to figure out whether their students are ready for the workforce. As practical as it sounds, will it greet the same criticism as the SAT? (STILL DRAFTING BLURB)

Guest: TBD

Guest: TBD

 

12:06 – 12:30

Topic: What’s the appeal of e-cigarettes? Leonardo DiCaprio is doing it. And he’s not the only A-list celeb making electronic cigarettes look cool. The faux smokes are showing up in movies and television shows and enthusiasts known as “Vapers” even have their own convention called VapeFest, coming to Vegas this September. The emerging subculture of “smokers” is obsessed with the technology of their electronic smokes, which can be tricked out with all kinds of flavors and funky accoutrement. E-cigarettes, also known as personal vaporizers and electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS), are battery powered devices that provide inhaled doses of nicotine by way of a vaporized solution. They’re used by many to simulate and replace tobacco smoking. Fans and advocates swear by them as a great way to quit smoking tobacco. But skeptics say it’s not clear whether they really help people kick the habit and that more research into their health impact is needed. So what is it about e-cigs that’s so appealing to users? And what are the risks?  

Guest: Spike Babaian (f) (buh-BAY-un), founder, The National Vapers Club; one of the creators and organizers of VapeFest

Guest: Anne Joseph, M.D., Professor of Medicine; Director, Applied Clinical Research Program; University of Minnesota; President of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (international scientific organization…not speaking for them though)

 

12:30 – 1:00

Topic: How the ‘sports gene’ could be better than doping: Sometimes we can’t help but think that some people would be genetically predisposed to particular abilities. For example, very tall men often hear that they should play basketball, bulky young boys are chided to try out football, and the long-legged are encouraged to take a go at track and field. According to the 10,000-hour rule, popularized by Malcolm Gladwell’s book, “Outliers: The Story of Success,” practice means everything. Not so, says Sports Illustrated writer David Epstein. In his new book, “The Sports Gene: Inside the Science of Extraordinary Athletic Performance,” Epstein calls Gladwell’s research biased because the people he studied were already exceptional. According to Epstein, some people have genes that affect their athletic abilities. While growing up, Epstein observed that although a fellow runner was more talented than he was, Epstein improved faster with training. He also noticed that the best runners weren’t just Kenyans, they specifically Kalenjins. “The Sports Gene” mentions how the EPOR gene can cause an athlete to naturally produce more red blood cells, which is the purpose of doping. Other genes affect how someone responds to weight training and regulate how much oxygen is delivered to your body. Do these genes give athletes unfair advantages? What will it lead to in the future? Can you test for “sports genes”? Would it lead to athletic screening? What about in the medical field? Could this lead to more personalized medicine?

Guest: David Epstein, author of "The Sports Gene: Inside the Science of Extraordinary Athletic Performance;" he is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and notably covered Lance Armstrong and the Boston Marathon.

TENTATIVE – DO NOT PROMOTE

Guest: Malcolm Gladwell, author of “Outliers: The Story of Success” (Little, Brown and Company, 2008), which popularized the 10,000-hour rule; he is also a writer for The New Yorker

 

---

Joel Patterson

Senior Producer, AirTalk

626-583-5375 office

858-349-2205 cell

@joelerson

 

 

Thursday, August 22, 2013

AirTalk for Friday, August 23, 2013

Contact: Producers Joel Patterson(on vacay), Jasmin Tuffaha, Fiona Ng, Jerry Gorin, Kaitlin Funaro

626-583-5100

SCHEDULE FOR AIRTALK WITH LARRY MANTLE

Friday, August 23, 2013

11:06 –11:20

OPEN

 

11:20 -11:40

Topic: Holmes trial: Should juries hear testimony on death penalty procedures? [temp head]

Guest: Nancy Haydt, criminal defense attorney who specializes in death penalty cases; she has practiced in California, Colorado, and federally; she is also on the Board of Governors for California Attorneys for Criminal Justice

BY PHONE

2ND GUEST TBD

 

11:40-12:00

Topic: Museum row gets exotic with Petersen plan: The iconic Petersen Automotive Museum is about to get a very expensive present for its 20th birthday - a total renovation. The Miracle Mile museum is about to undergo a dramatic silver and red redesign that's been called a "fiery red zebra". The new exterior will be competing for eyeballs on 'museum row' with the $650 million renovation of LACMA. Will the dramatic new exterior design by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates draw attention away from the new LACMA? Is the design too overpowering for the location? If you've visited the Petersen in the past, will the new design bring you back for a second look?

Guest:  Terry Karges, Executive Director, Petersen Automotive Museum

BY PHONE

Guest: A. Eugene Kohn, Chairman, Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) - lead architectural firm for the Petersen Automotive Museum redesign; KPF designed the expansion and renovation New York’s Museum of Modern Art

BY PHONE

 

12:06– 12:40

Topic: Filmweek: You’re Next, The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, Smash and Grab: The Story of the Pink Panthers and more: Larry is joined by KPCC film critics Henry Sheehan and Alynda Wheat to review this week’s releases, including You’re Next, The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, Smash and Grab: The Story of the Pink Panthers and more. TGI-Filmweek!  

Guest:  Henry Sheehan, film critic for KPCC and CriticsAGoGo.com

IN STUDIO               

Guest: Alynda Wheat, film critic for KPCC and People

IN STUDIO               

 

12:40 – 1:00

Topic: Val Kilmer explores Mark Twain in a one-man show [temp head ]:

Guest:  Val Kilmer, Actor starring in “Citizen Twain” at the Pasadena Playhouse

 

 

Warm regards,

Jasmin Tuffaha    office: 626.583.5162 

Producer, “AirTalk with Larry Mantle” 

 

89.3 KPCC 89.1 KUOR 90.3 KVLA
A Southern California Public Radio station
SCPR.org | Facebook | @AirTalk

 

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

AirTalk for Wednesday, August 21, 2013

SCHEDULE FOR AIRTALK WITH LARRY MANTLE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

11:06 –11:30

OPEN

 

11:30-12:00

Topic: Should parents who choose not to vaccinate their kids be liable if others get sick or die as a result?

Guest: Arthur Caplan, Head, Division of Medical Ethics, NYU Langone Medical Center

BY PHONE

Guest: Dorit Reiss (door-eet rice), Professor of Law, University of California Hastings College of Law

BY PHONE

PENDING

Guest: Eugene Volokh, Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law

 

12:06 – 12:20

Topic: Should police be allowed to search your cell phone without a warrant?

Two cert petitions have been filed with the Supreme Court seeking ruling on whether searching a cell phone requires a warrant.  In one case, the US government seeks judgment regarding a case from 2007 that involves a Massachusetts man who was arrested on suspicion of selling drugs.  When making the arrest an officer noticed the suspect’s flip phone was receiving a call from “my house”, and he traced the number to an address where police later found more drugs, cash and guns.  In his case the defendant (Wurie) argued that the police had no right to look at his cell phone’s call history without a warrant, and though the initial district court denied that motion, the US First Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with the defendant.  The Obama administration,countering the higher court’s ruling, points to a handful of cases that have given police discretion to search a suspect’s person under the Fourth Amendment, including items like notebooks and pagers, and are seeking judgment on whether searching through a cell phone’s call history is protected in the same way.  In the other case, Riley v. California, the police officer searched a suspect’s iPhone, and appeared to have done a more extensive search through the suspect’s contact information. At first glance it seems that searching a basic cell phone’s call log doesn’t seem to violate the Fourth Amendment, but cell phone technology has advanced so much that people nowadays hold a wealth of information and assets on their phones that make this a thornier issue. It seems that one way or the other the Supreme Court will soon have to decide exactly where cell phone data lies under the rules of the Fourth Amendment. Is a cell phone or a smartphone akin to rifling through a paper notebook? Or is it more like searching the nooks and crannies of an automobile, which can often require a warrant for searches? What if the smartphone is connected to “the cloud” and could link up to a plethora of data belonging to the arrestee?

 

Guest:  Jeffrey L. Fisher, Attorney for David Leon Riley in Riley v. California; Fisher authored the current petition before the Supreme Court challenging police searches of cell phone content; Professor of Law and Co-Director, Supreme Court Litigation Clinic, Stanford University Law School

2nd Guest: TBD

 

12:20 – 12:40

Topic:  Bring up the neighborhood: “gentefication” versus gentrification in Boyle Heights, Long Beach and other SoCal hip spots

The city of Boyle Heights, a working class Latino neighborhood east of Downtown, was recently profiled in The New York Times. The paper looked at the neighborhood’s twist on gentrification. The people changing Boyle Heights are neither white nor middle-class, but are young, hip Latinos who have moved back into the area, the very place their parents had left years ago, to open up record shops and bookstores—often times the first signs of a neighborhood going upscale.

They are called “Chipsters” – short for Chicano hipsters and what they are doing is called “gentefication.” Despite the shared cultural and ethnic background, local residents aren’t always welcoming this spate of newcomers with open arms.

This phenomenon isn’t just happening in Boyle Heights, but also in places like Santa Ana, Silver Lake, Long Beach, Echo Park —cities that have always had a large Latino presence. Is there a difference between gentefication and good old gentrification? Have you returned to a neighborhood you grew up in? If so, why?

OPEN PHONES +

Guest:  TBD

 

12:40 – 1:00

Topic:  Paying for dates: Men want women to chip in; women only want to be asked

Most men are still paying for dates, but in reality many are wishing women would chip in sometimes. According to a new study presented at the American Sociology Association, 64% of men and women believed should pick up the tab from time to time. At the same time, 39% of women hoped men would not ask them to contribute at all. The ritual of men paying for all the outings dates back to when most jobs were not accessible to women. But today men and women are both equally in the workforce. The study looks at how this dynamic shift of gender roles impacts the dating realm. Do women want equality in dating too? The study shows that younger college-educated men and women were more likely to share the costs of dating.Who should pay for the first date? Should men always pay? How have the ‘rules’ of dating changed? Does it matter who makes more money?

Guest: Janet Lever, Professor  of Sociology at Cal State Los Angeles and the co-author of the study titled “Who Pays for Dates.”

BY PHONE

 

Warm regards,

Jasmin Tuffaha    office: 626.583.5162 

Producer, “AirTalk with Larry Mantle” 

 

89.3 KPCC 89.1 KUOR 90.3 KVLA
A Southern California Public Radio station
SCPR.org | Facebook | @AirTalk