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July 30, 2025 116 mins

On the Matt Heath and Tyler Adams Afternoons Full Show Podcast for the 30th of July - New Zealanders are bank hopping more than ever before, so we asked listeners for their experience doing so.

Then some advice for the new Air New Zealand CEO on changes their customers would like to see.

And neighbours from hell - some of the stories we were told were next level, think dog turds and guns.

Get the Matt Heath and Tyler Adams Afternoons Podcast every weekday afternoon on iHeartRadio, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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Speaker 1 (00:09):
You're listening to a podcast from News Talk Said b
Follow this and our wide range of podcasts now on iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Hello, you got you said? And Welcome to Mat and
Tyler Full Show pocast number one seventy two for Wednesday,
the thirtieth of July and the Year of Our Lord
twenty twenty five. Fantastic show. The end of the show
if you get to it, If you get that, if
you survive the rest of the show and you get
to the end of it, you could skip to it.
But the stories of neighbors at war that we got
into very interesting insight into how people live their lives
across New Zealand. Let's just say a lot of dog
poo has been thrown yep, some eggs have been laid,

(00:39):
and some love has been made in conservatories across the country.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
You've said it all in fantastic Stories, What and How.
That was a great show today, So thanks for listening.
As always, downloads, subscribe and give us a review and.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Give a taste to keep from us.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
All right, Dan love you, We love you.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
The big stories, the leak issues, the big trends and
everything in between. Matt Heath and Taylor Adams afternoons News.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Talk said, b very good afternoon too. You welcome into
Wednesday show. Really good to have your company is always get.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
A met get a Tyler. Fantastic to be here.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
I follow this guy on YouTube called Rick Biato, and
he's a music analysis analyst. Got that word wrong. Fantastic.
I thoroughly recommend his channel. There'll be a lot of
people out there that follow up because it's huge. But
he has been talking recently about the quality of music
writing in the twenty twenty five and he puts it
down to the low qualities a lot of producer samples.

(01:34):
The way it's put together. It's designed not to last.
It's designed just to be a paning on TikTok for
a while and move through it. It's not the same
as music used to be. It doesn't have the same
sort of artistic level and a lot of situations right point. Yeah,
So this absolutely interested me today when this popped up
and it was the top ten songs in the US

(01:55):
from nineteen eighty four this week, Okay, the top ten hits, right,
and when you read through them, every single one of
these songs is incredibly memorable and was just seemed to
loom lard for many years after they were released.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
Right yep.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
So at number one, When Doves Cry by Prince Future.
This is when down Lank When the Doves Bruce Springsteen
Dancing in the Dark and credible song at number two,
Ghostbusters by Ray Parker Jr. Are You Going to Call
Eyes Without a Face? By Billy Idol At four yep,
Jump Jump Farm I Love by the Point of Sisters

(02:32):
at five, Legs by Zizi Top great songs, She's Got Legs,
she Knows how to use them, sad songs They Say
So Much by Alton John Then What's Love Got to
deal with It by Tina Turnan, You've Got Magic by
the Cars, great song, and a very very beautiful ballad
by Cyndi Lauper. Time after Time, wom after time. So

(02:54):
that was the top ten songs in nineteen eighty four
in the US this week. Every single one of those
songs has had a life since then. Every single one
of those songs is incredibly memorable.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
Still in Yeah, each one of those is an absolute
banger to this day. What already mixed? That is the
top ten in nineteen eighty four.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
It just seems insane and so that's just randomly this week,
so you can assume that generally speaking that the top
ten just had absolute epic bangers.

Speaker 4 (03:21):
Yeah, bring those days back.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
Yeah, Well, I just don't think it's possible. You know,
you've got fifteen writers on the songs. They're all just
using loops from the back end of logic and just
throwing them together and get a few going to get
a few views on tiptop and then move on to
the next.

Speaker 3 (03:37):
Yeah too, God, what an absolute banger of a Top ten.
Right on to today's show. After three o'clock, people living
next to a derelict house and grist huge claim rodents
infested their home to the extent that one pair of
tenants with how to rent payments. One of the neighbors
said her cat has been getting very fat, to the
point of vomiting from eating the rodents. So bad for her,

(03:57):
good for the cat.

Speaker 2 (03:58):
Rat neighbors. Do your neighbors, Oh you look after their place,
you know, I mean, do they owe you anything? It's
their place, right, so they can do it.

Speaker 5 (04:05):
I want.

Speaker 2 (04:05):
If they want to have cars all over their lawns, surely,
surely that's their business. You know, rats coming over from
next door might be a bit much, but I'd say,
you know, there, my neighbors, do you like you know
or have you just had? Have I just been lucky?
Have I just never had truly truly bad neighbors? Want
to talk about bad neighbors? Coming up? Okay, after three o'clock.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
Looking forward to that. After two o'clock, he in New
Zealand has a new CEO. His name is Nick Hill,
Ravishanka and Greg four and as we know, announced he
would step down in October. So Ravend Shanker has been
with the airline for nearly five years. He's got quite
a various steam CV. He was chief Digital Officer at
Victor and managing director of Acting Center. He says he's

(04:46):
thrilled and humbled to be the next chief executive.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
Yes, so after two I want to talk about the
respect of the in New Zealand CEO because I reckon
that the in New Zealand CEO is one of the
most highly respected then talked about jobs in New Zealand.
They say that the second top job in Australia after
the PM is the captain of the Australian cricket team.
I'm not sure if that's still what they say but
at once was the saying, and I'd say in New

(05:10):
Zealand CEO wouldn't be far off that. In New Zealand
we all know their names, like we know the PM's name,
Greg Furan, as you said, Rob five, and of course
Christopher Luxon who launched his PM his political career off
the back of being the CEO of the in New Zealand.
So yeah, we want to talk about how big and
significant it is to be the in New Zealand CEO.

(05:33):
And have you got anything that you want this new
CEO to change?

Speaker 4 (05:36):
Yep, that is after two o'clock. Looking forward to that.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
But right now, let's have a chat about bank hopping.
A lot of people in June three thy five hundred
people switched banks and that was two point five billion
dollars of mortgage debts. So a lot of the banks
now are offering big cash contributions of around five thousand
dollars if you switch banks to them as a wee
bonus for coming on board. So we won't to have

(05:59):
a chat to you about bank copping.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
I just feel like it's far too much effort, far
too much effort. I can't be bothered. I've been with
the same bank since I was thirteen years old, since
my dad took me to the bank to get my
first def postcard. That's the same bank account I have today.

Speaker 4 (06:14):
That's very cute.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
They know me, Yep, they do know you. They love me,
They love you. They give me good deals. I think
I've got my insurance, my key. We save everything with me,
and I think with them, and I think there's something
great and have that continuity of bank because they have
absolutely every piece of information they could possibly need on me.
Basically everything I've ever done they can see.

Speaker 4 (06:36):
Yeah, yeah, they know your life, everywhere.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
I've been, you know what I've spent everything on. And
that works out well for me when I need money.
They seem to be okay with giving me money. It
saves time. But so many people are shifting banks, you know,
So have you changed banks? And was it worth worth
the hassle?

Speaker 6 (06:55):
You know?

Speaker 2 (06:56):
One thing that annoys people is when their local bank
closes down and they don't have a branch they can
go to. And that happened with me. The branch that
I used to go to close down and then I
was trying to get a meeting and they were not, oh,
you have to go up to Albany. But then I
was like, well does Zoom call my bank guy and Albany?

Speaker 4 (07:12):
So they do that.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Yeah, so you just if you need to have a chat,
you don't need to go onto the bank anymore. So
even if it closes down, that's all right as far
as I'm concerned.

Speaker 4 (07:20):
Have you ever threatened to leave?

Speaker 3 (07:21):
Have you ever got to that point where unless you
pull your shi t together, I'm out of here? I
don't know, you know, I like to think God have
that in me, but I think it'll be an empty
threat threatening banks.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
No, I haven't ever kicked on the door and threatened
to leave that leave the bank. But yeah, I mean
this text is immediately coming through. Not shopping around for
the best deal. Is just playing lazy Matt. You pay
your bank millions and interest over lifetime. Are they doing
the best for you that they can? You're lazy? Yeah,
I mean maybe there is a bit of that.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
Five K is five k if you can get five
k from a new bank, Oh, eight, one hundred eighty
ten eighty is the number?

Speaker 6 (07:57):
Call?

Speaker 3 (07:57):
How hard is it to change banks? And have you
changed bank recently? And did you manage to get a
really good deal? Love to hear from you. Oh eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to call.
Nine two nine too is the text number. It is
thirteen past one.

Speaker 1 (08:10):
The big stories, the big issues, the big trends and
everything in between.

Speaker 7 (08:14):
Matt Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons used talks that'd.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
Be very good afternoon Tue sixteen past one. We're talking
about bankropping. A lot of kiwis are doing that because
of the big cash contributions. A lot of banks are
offering to change with them. If you've done that, love
to hear from you on oh eight hundred and eighty
ten eighty. How much of a handshole was Its plenty
of teachs coming through.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
It is text the ambassies people in the real seat
to don't get offered promotions like a five K bonus
to change banks. Instead, we pay higher interest rates to
cover the urban sect and have to pay higher deposits
on land house purchases. It's an interesting topic that many
know nothing about and the reason the latest survey of
banking in the rural set that look down poorly on
two of New Zealand's major banks.

Speaker 4 (08:55):
That's disappointing to hear.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 4 (08:58):
Yeah, I would have thought they'd bend over backwards for
the rule folk.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
This Texas, says. Martin says, this is not well known.
But banks will also pay a retention rate. So if
they think you're going to leave, or if you're three
to leave, they will pay you attention payment of a
similar amount. How often can you do that though, just
every six months you threaten to leave.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
Yeah, I just wonder on that is.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
I remember vividly Dad was buying groceries at the supermarket
and for some reason that it didn't go through when
he was trying to wave the credit card and he
rang the bank and he did it was quite embarrassing,
but he did it right there at the checkout, and
he said to the bank, he said, unless you make
sure this works, because I know there's money in there,
I will come down there tomorrow and I will change banks.
And he was very proud about making that stance. I

(09:38):
wanted to just tide into a little hole. But Dad
loved that sort of stuff. He loved that conflict with
the bank. And I don't know if he actually got
better deals from it.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Yeah, I just wonder the days of going to the
bank and seeing your bank manager that you've got a
relationship with a kind of gone though, aren't they. Yeah,
where you can over time they get to know you
and trust you, and then you have it out with them,
Which is a shame because now I'll be interested to
know that people make these decisions. Isn't it just plugging
the information into an algorithm and coming out with exactly
what is the pre decided result from people much higher

(10:11):
up the chain?

Speaker 4 (10:12):
Exactly.

Speaker 3 (10:12):
That's why when I hear people say you always negotiate
for your mortgage rate, I just don't buy it because
I attempted that the last time we went to fix,
and they gave me pretty much what everybody else was getting.
So does that say more about my negotiating skills or
is it just a bit of a have I think
you can only negotiate so far with your bank, and
if you don't like what they offer you in the end,
then we else they go somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Well, so they say this is your offer and you
go not good enough? Yeah? And so are they running
two rates? Are they running the rate that they just
offer you and then there's another secret rate for if
the person winges?

Speaker 3 (10:47):
So I was told, But I think It was just
all a bit of a have because what they said
to me said, well, you're being offered the special rate.
This is the best we can do, and we can't
go any further than that.

Speaker 2 (10:56):
I like this text from Linda. Haha, same bank forever.
And we have never changed a power company either in
thirty five years. Easier not to I can't be asked
smiley face.

Speaker 4 (11:06):
Yeah I have.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
Once I start with an internet service provider, I'm with
them forever. Yeah, the electrocity support plier, I just with them.
Does that just make me a sucker? I'm just like that.
But is sorted, my mortgage is sorted. It's just it's
just bubbling away there. My internet connection sorted, my power
supplies sorted. I just don't I just don't think about
these things. If it works, then you keep it going. Oh,

(11:29):
one hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to call.

Speaker 4 (11:32):
John.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
You think it's worth changing out of changing banks?

Speaker 8 (11:36):
Yeah, I think so. It's a bit of a hashold,
especially if you've got you know, payment's coming out, But
if you're getting mortgages, I think it's worthwhile. But more
to the point, I think now that the government introduced
this guaranteed the positive scheme, you know, backed by the
Reserve Bank, and that they're giving much better interest rates

(11:58):
than banks. So as long as you go to the
prescribed guys that are covered up to one hundred thousand dollars,
after one hundred thousand dollars of yours is covered. As
long as you go to a guy that's covered, you know,
but you can check that out by the Reserve go
to the Reserve Bank site. They give much better interest rate,
you know, giving it one percent or more on term deposit.

(12:21):
And I find the bank up about that and they
I think they've got a stock aren't and they don't
want everyone moving to it, even though it's a far
better deal because the money is guaranteed. Anyway, they said,
oh I know, they said, but would you like to
put your money where the finance company? You know, well,
you know they try and skim you that way. And
I've found a couple of banks and they all had
the same answer. So to say, they had a big

(12:41):
meeting and and said, oh, like you tell the customers
that you know the money is not faithful, and better say,
because they're guaranteed after one hundred thousand dollars guaranteed by
the Reserve Bank. You know, why wouldn't you, right.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
So, because of course people are a bit stung by
these those kind of operations from from from the past,
aren't we things like what what was that Hubbard down
and that was.

Speaker 4 (13:06):
A big one.

Speaker 8 (13:06):
Yeah, yeah, but they weren't guaranteed in those days. And
it's only from first of July that it's guaranteed, right,
Nothing was guaranteed before that. So I wouldn't have put
money in it either. And I'm surprised that there's not
a lot more talk about it.

Speaker 9 (13:20):
You know.

Speaker 8 (13:21):
I Mary Holmes, you know, on the Sunday in the
Sunday Morning sheld and she was talking about it, and
she thought it was a pretty good idea, but it's
no publicity about it.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
She's a very knowledgeable woman, Mary Home. So with the
building society, what's the big difference between a building society
and your traditional bank, apart from you can get bitter
rates arguably.

Speaker 8 (13:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:41):
Look, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (13:42):
I haven't gone on with mortgage now. I don't need
a mortgage now. But years ago I was in a
building society and you know, they had ballots, you're balloted
for them a loan which was a bit cheaper than
the bank Waans. But I don't know how they operate.
Now you never hear about them. Now I'm solely interested
in getting money untermed uposit you know on Trombly is

(14:03):
safe to put more money. And now that a lot
of these now that a lot of fun, not all them,
but a lot of finance companies, a lot of building
societies and other groups are guaranteed. But if you go
to the reserve mean you know, and look for the
positives guarantee scheme, it tells you which by dance companies
are covered and all that you know.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
And well, thanks so much for your call, John. I've
never understood all these things, like building societies. So they
say that they're owned by the members or the customers, right, yeah,
I just you know, I can't get my head around
how that works.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
Yeah, they have scared me the idea of a building society,
and that's probably naivity on my part. But as you say,
there was a couple of those well known stories that
that happened, and it just didn't feel as secure as
your traditional bank, even if you're pay an extra percent.
But I am probably very wrong on that. Oh one
hundred and eighty ten eighty. If you've gone or banking
with a building society, how's it gone for you? And

(14:57):
I'd love to hear from you. If you've recently changed banks,
what was the offer on the table? Did you get
a good cash contribution?

Speaker 4 (15:03):
And how hard was it?

Speaker 5 (15:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (15:05):
And am I just an idiot to say it seems
like too much of a pain. I'm just going to
say a hair been since I was thirteen.

Speaker 3 (15:11):
It's a lot of edmund Oh, one hundred eighty ten
eighty is the number to call. It is twenty three
past one, putting.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
The tough questions to the newspeakers, the mic asking breakfast.

Speaker 11 (15:21):
Well, the hunts on for savings for next year's budget
already David C. Moore's the Associate of Finance Minister. This
year's trick was four point eight. A lot of it
was the pay equity. Is there another big money pile there?

Speaker 2 (15:31):
Or is this we down to rats and mice?

Speaker 12 (15:33):
Well people will call it rats and mice, but there's
an old saying, if you managed pennings, the pounds will
look after themselves. We find that sometimes there's a program
that actually a lot of people didn't know that it
was spending a lot of money. We find that there's
an agency that's growing exponentially over the last five or
six years, and no one's quat short what it was
that they were doing, so they didn't call it rats
and mice, so I call it just a constant drive

(15:54):
for efficiency.

Speaker 11 (15:55):
Back tomorrow at six am the Mic Hosking Breakfast with
the land Driver, Discovery News Talk ZB.

Speaker 4 (16:01):
Twenty six past one.

Speaker 2 (16:02):
Now, bearing in mind, I've said on the show that
I've been with the same bank in of thirteen, so
I'm not a I'm a creature of haabit when it
comes to banking and such. But this has always been
my understanding of the difference between banks, building societies and
finance companies, right, Okay, So banks are if you've got
good credit and a steady income, and then you they're

(16:23):
the people for you, right, and you can organize a
reasonably low mortgage rate, yes, yes, sort of playing it safe, right.
Building societies are more flexible and there's some kind of
ownership model where you sort of they're more community kind
of situation.

Speaker 4 (16:36):
Right, sounding right to me, so far?

Speaker 13 (16:38):
Ok?

Speaker 7 (16:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (16:39):
And finance companies are if you can't get a loan
through the mainstream and they'll you know, if you're eyes
clean and your credit or is steady in your income,
it's a slightly more risky situation, but as a result,
you pay higher interest.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
Am I right?

Speaker 2 (16:53):
And my wrong? That's just my understanding of the situation
from a guy that's always been with the same bank
and it's got multiple mortgages with the same bank.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
Oh, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number
to call? Has Matt nailed it?

Speaker 3 (17:04):
Is that the general feels like the general gist of it,
I thought that was nicely be summarized.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Yeah, but I don't know how the community owning works,
you know, I don't understand how the customer ownership works. Yeah,
it'll be interested to though, there'll be there'll be an
expert out there that can explain that to us.

Speaker 4 (17:17):
Yes, Ellie, how are you this afternoon?

Speaker 10 (17:20):
Hey? Good? Thank you guys?

Speaker 9 (17:22):
Are you?

Speaker 14 (17:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (17:23):
Very good?

Speaker 3 (17:23):
So you think it's absolutely vital that you try and
chop around for the best deal.

Speaker 10 (17:28):
Yeah, absolutely. The banks rely on client apathy, you know,
they rely on the fact you're too lazy to actually move.

Speaker 13 (17:35):
Around and look around.

Speaker 10 (17:37):
And yeah, there's deals to be had, you know, especially
when I was. I couldn't believe it when you said
you've got everything with them. You know, you keep your
savor and your insurances. They'll be there'll be funds keep
you saver, funds that outperform the banks so many of them.
You know, you're just doing yourself a disservice. And the

(17:58):
insurance products are always limited. The policy wordings aren't as
good as what you can get through the open market.
So you're literally doing yourself a disservice by not shopping around. Mate.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Yeah, but so when I go to talk to my
bank when anything needs to change and I need other
projects that I need money for, they just look at everything. Andy, go, hey, look,
you've got a bunch of cash with us. When your
key we saver. You know you've paid off this and
that with us. You know, you're a very good customer,
and they seem to give me, you know, as good
of deals as any of my friends that I talk
to that have been being you know, that are shopping around.

(18:32):
So you don't think there's anything in them, just being
able to see that you're solid as a rock.

Speaker 10 (18:38):
There is definitely a lot to be said about history,
but the banks are motivated by new business and that's
why you're getting all these great big cash contributions for
switching banks. You know, they pay up two point nine
up to one percent of the actual loan amount if
you move, so they don't really care much about retaining

(18:59):
existing clients. I think one of your callers or Texas
said earlier on about cash retention. Give you an example
of just looking at all for a client one bank's
offered in twenty six thousand dollars to move, the existing
bank offer to make grand to stay.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
That's a big difference, isn't it. You take the twenty
K twenty six k over a k any day of
the week.

Speaker 9 (19:21):
Yep.

Speaker 15 (19:22):
But yeah, I mean just for your situation, focus is
new business.

Speaker 4 (19:26):
Yeah absolutely.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
But you make a good point now that you talk
about it being with the same back bank since you
were thirteen. That's probably the story that they want you
to believe that you're part you've been part of us,
and we've been part of your life since they dit
and you're part of this banking family and we know
about what matters to you. That's exactly what they want
to want the image to be.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
Right. Oh yeah, And I definitely wouldn't give any advice
I'm terrible with finances. My accountants always going well, this
is a terrible structure. We need to sort this out.
So absolutely not giving any advice at all from why
I'm just I'm quite quite quite interested. Yeah, but you're
probably right, you're probably absolutely rightly that there is going

(20:07):
to talk.

Speaker 10 (20:07):
To a financial advice through and gets you get a
good overdeal. What's available to in the market, mate, Yeah,
yourself in the service.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
Like I said, yeah, we'll think if you call, appreciate that. Yeah,
but there is this that laziness.

Speaker 4 (20:18):
It's a lot of admins.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
It is a lot of ad on any given day
to just sort of unpack everything and read. You know,
a lot of us work long hours. Not you, tyler,
You're only on a twelve to four weekdays, but a
lot of people work long hours and they just don't
have time to become their own financial advocate.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
Yeah, because what they used to say, you're more likely
to get divorced than change banks. Oh, one hundred eighty
ten eighty is the number to call if you've recently
changed banks.

Speaker 4 (20:43):
Love to hear from you. How hard was it with
the process? A lot easier than we think it is.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
I'm definitely more likely to get divorced than change banks.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
Yeah, very true. It is twenty nine to two back
very shortly.

Speaker 7 (20:56):
Jus talks they'd be headlines with.

Speaker 16 (20:58):
Blue bubble taxis. It's no trouble with a blue bubble.
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(22:07):
out more Atensity. Yeah, well premium. Back to Matt Ethan
Tyler Adams.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
Thank you very much, Rayleen, and we are talking about
changing banks. If you've recently changed banks and got a
good deal from an opposition being, love to hear from you.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
On eight hundred and eighty ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
Pedro says, geez, you're dumb, Matt. Can we savor at
your bank? Is like buying your vigies at the butcher?

Speaker 4 (22:28):
Not a bad line.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
I have bought vigis at the butcher before.

Speaker 4 (22:30):
Have you good vigion?

Speaker 2 (22:31):
Pretty sure I have. I think there's a butcher that
has some vigis.

Speaker 3 (22:35):
I love those butchers that are one stop shop. Yeah,
so take that, Pedro, totally buy vigies from my butcher.
Good past nips, I wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Marcel. Welcome to the show. You negotiate hard with your
banks on mortgages?

Speaker 9 (22:53):
Hi talking to me now?

Speaker 5 (22:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (22:55):
I am Marcel Show.

Speaker 17 (22:56):
Okay, Yeah, you're welcome and good eight to you guys. Hey,
I just want to give you a quick backstory. Alan
and I were laught sht by our own bank when
we asked for a mortgage. We had about fifty thousand
bucks with the debts and it didn't help. But anyway,
went to a mortgage broke at SBS Bank, which doesn't

(23:18):
building society expect us, And we've been for the last
ten years and that's out well. Every time it comes
up for refix it. We're all happy to go with
whatever the government raids amongst the big banks and just just.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
Tell me about SBS. So it was originally the Southland
Building Society. It still exists as a for you know,
as a proper building society.

Speaker 17 (23:43):
Yeah, I think they are underwritten if I'm not wrong.
Pact and because all their accounts are the same, you
start off for the same subjects. So yeah, I'm not
one hundred percent short, and nobody seld somebody in the
banking sets they'll be able to tell that. But they've
even helped us get ready for a rental property as well,

(24:07):
you know, with equity out of our home, so you know,
they really dropped out as well. But having said that,
we've never said that we're going to set them. I've
even turned around and said to them we're ready, ready
to live, and then they jumped to the party with
a better deal.

Speaker 2 (24:21):
Right, So do you think that they've got that better
deal just sitting there And if you don't ask for it,
then you don't get it.

Speaker 17 (24:27):
That's exactly how it what's probably for the first couple
of years of our mortgages.

Speaker 14 (24:31):
And then then then I clicked.

Speaker 4 (24:35):
And how towy do you have to get Marcel?

Speaker 10 (24:39):
Well, you.

Speaker 17 (24:42):
Well, I just as soon as as soon as they say, okay,
this is mortgage raider said, or you guys prepare to
match this one, and the nine times out of ten
they've just come straight back and say.

Speaker 4 (24:52):
Yes, right, I mean that seems very easy.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
I just say that, Marcel, because the last time I
tried that tactic, they said, this is the deal that
we've got for you, and it was the same deal
that we originally offered, and that's the best we can do.

Speaker 4 (25:04):
So maybe that was the best they could do.

Speaker 9 (25:08):
Yeah, I at that talk yit.

Speaker 17 (25:11):
But every time I've asked them for different and a
lower interest rates, They've always given it.

Speaker 4 (25:16):
Yeah, yeah, Marcel, thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (25:19):
So always negotiate hard with the banks and yeah, sounds
like a good strategy.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
Yeah, I was right this Texas is with me, a
butcher has veggies.

Speaker 4 (25:27):
Good people that the back of.

Speaker 2 (25:29):
Keeping you k save with your bank because like buying
veggies from a butcher. Yeah, with me, a butchery is
actually a great butcher. And I'm actually looking at this
three D. They've got eggs in there, They've got they've
got a few, They've got a bit of vidge in there.

Speaker 4 (25:39):
Good people, good New Zealanders. Go support them. Whist me
and butcher the Kiwi Bank of butchers.

Speaker 7 (25:47):
Love it.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
I don't know if they're the best vegetables in the world,
but they do have some veg.

Speaker 4 (25:51):
Yeah, it's convenient. I eight hundred eighty ten eighty is
the number to According.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
To Pedro, that's a bad idea to buy your vege
from there.

Speaker 4 (25:57):
Yeah, Petro doesn't know what he's talking about. Oh eight
hundred Sorry, you're a right Pedro.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
Sometimes Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty is the number
to call. How hard has it been if you've changed bank?
And what was the keys offer that you got? Love
to hear from you it is twenty two to two.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
Have a chat with the.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
Lads on eight hundred eighty ten eighty. Matt Heathon Tyler
Adams Afternoons News Talk.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
Said, be very good afternoon. We have asked the question
how hard is it to change banks? A lot of
banks are offering some big cash contributions at the moment
and a lot of key weis, it appears, are taken
advantage of that. If that you love to hear from
you on O eight hundreds Hayden, Oh sorry Tyler to
talk of you. Sorry, mate, that's all right. I was
just going to leave it at old eight hundred, but
that wouldn't get you anywhere, don't ring Oh eight hundred,
You've got to do the eighty ten eighty as well.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty. Hi, guys, this is
from Hayden. Like you, my dad, who worked in a bank,
as did his father, set up my account back in
the nineteen sixty so that we had a record that
stood me well. Unfortunately times are different. They don't care anymore.
It's all algorithm driven. Even staff have limited or no
ability to make decisions based on historical performance. Show banks

(27:01):
no loyalty. They don't deserve any loyalty anymore, says Hayden.

Speaker 4 (27:07):
Yeah, strong, but I love it.

Speaker 5 (27:10):
Lynn.

Speaker 6 (27:11):
How are you I'm good, thank you.

Speaker 18 (27:14):
My story carries on from something you just said about
the banks hold no loyalty. I went to my bank,
which I've been with for several several years, had joined
accounts with and I wanted to own open a single
account in my own name because I was due to
receive some inheritance my name. So I went into my bank,

(27:38):
approached them, said what I wanted, and it was told, okay,
you need to go and sit over there and wait.
You'll be next after that lady, and then you have
to make an appointment. And I said, no, no, I
just want to open an account. We've already got accounts
with you. I just want to And it didn't matter
what I said. I couldn't get any any joy from them.
And I said, so you're telling me I have to

(27:59):
wait two weeks to speak to somebody to open a
new account, and she said, yes, that's that's the case.

Speaker 5 (28:05):
Wow.

Speaker 18 (28:06):
So I said, I thank you very much. I'll try
another bank, and I walked out. I went to and
that was one of our top banks. I went to
the next one in the line where I live and
went in there and I got pretty much the same result.
I couldn't open an account. I explained about the inheritance

(28:27):
and all the rest of it. No, they couldn't help
me until the next week. So and I was expecting
the money in the next day or two. So I
carried on went to another bank. They were just so busy.
I thought, no, we'll come back to them if we
need to. Went to one of the smaller banks, and
they couldn't have been more helpful. In thirty minutes, I

(28:48):
had my account opened and everything was done and dusted.
And I was just so blown away by the inability
of the bigger banks to try and help me that
when I got home, I laid it complaint and with
my own bank, and I got a phone call from

(29:09):
the manager of my bank branch and I explained to
her what I'd encountered, and do you know what she
said to me. Each of these banks I went into
had about three service people on duty.

Speaker 5 (29:23):
And.

Speaker 18 (29:25):
So when I spoke to my bank I and I
explained what had happened. She explained to me, she said, oh, yes, no,
it's all to do with the money laundering. And I said, look,
I get that, but I'm already with you. What all
my details. You would have just had to ask a
few questions. I could have verified whatever, and she said, no, no,
it doesn't work like that, she said. And the other

(29:45):
thing you've got, member, is that our floor staff are
not trained to do this. We have special people to
do this, right. Your frontline service people at this particular
bank were not trained or authorized to do something as
simple as open a new banking out.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
That's concerning. But the money lading wasn't a problem at
the smaller bank.

Speaker 19 (30:14):
No.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
Not that you're money laudering. I'm not saying that, but
the concerns.

Speaker 18 (30:19):
I had to go through, sat at a computer, I
put in all details I needed. I had to produce
confirmation of my dress via a recent bill, you know.
I had to have identification, driver's license or booths whatever.

Speaker 6 (30:33):
You know.

Speaker 18 (30:34):
I just sat there and did it, and everything has
gone as smoothly as Was.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
It a good amount of money? Was it a good
amount of money that you were inheriting? Lynn?

Speaker 18 (30:42):
It was an inheritance, so yes, right, So.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
The the bigger bank missed out on having a big
whack of cash put in there.

Speaker 18 (30:50):
And I told that to the lady. I said, you
you know, not only have you missed out on money,
I said, but I'm now in a position where I'm
contemplating with it to shift all my business to my
new bank, who couldn't have been more helpful. And at
that point, I think she just got upset with me
because there was nothing. Because I told her that the

(31:10):
reason that they could not help was a business decision
on their part. They are choosing not to train their
service staff in all areas of the business.

Speaker 2 (31:20):
Where you do get the feeling line that the last
thing they want is you coming into the bank.

Speaker 3 (31:27):
Absolutely want to talk to you, very disinterested when you
come and there, Oh what do you want?

Speaker 2 (31:34):
But then, good on, youn, did you buy anything cool
with the inheritance money? Sorry?

Speaker 9 (31:38):
What was that?

Speaker 2 (31:39):
Did you buy anything cool with the inheritance money?

Speaker 18 (31:42):
No, it's gone, it's it's sitting there.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
Get yourself a little treat, Lind, Just treat yourself.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
I'm thinking about it, a Bentley is what kind of
money are we looking at here?

Speaker 18 (31:56):
I'm not prepared to disclose.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
Maybe good on your Lind.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
You shouldn't. You shouldn't. It's impolite for me to ask,
and I apologize, but I was just interested.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
You just let us know what you buy later. Thanks
for your call, Lynn, right, go ow nice to chat
with you. Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty is the
number to call, love to hear from you. If you've
managed to change banks, and if you're someone like Lynn
and you came across some pretty shocking service and got
a bit bullshe and got a better deal, really can
never chat with you. It is thirteen to two. Back

(32:26):
very shortly. You're listening to Matt and Tyler.

Speaker 2 (32:28):
Sounded like a lot of money.

Speaker 1 (32:31):
Matt Heath, Taylor Adams taking your calls on Oh eight
hundred eighty ten eighty.

Speaker 7 (32:35):
It's Matt Heath and Tylor Adams afternoons news Talk z.

Speaker 3 (32:39):
EDB News Talk zed B. It is ten to two
and we aren't talking about changing banks. It appears a
lot of key we are doing it and they're getting
some big cash contributions from opposing banks. If that's you,
really can never chat with you on Oh eight hundred
eighty ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
Man, if you have everything with one bank, there's either
one of those these two things happening. A you're costing
yourself at a guess five K a year, or they
are looking after you very well due to your celebrity
status and are relying on your status to recruit anything
extra through your public comments.

Speaker 4 (33:08):
Is that how that works?

Speaker 2 (33:09):
I am a big name from a big name at
the bank. Basically when I walk in, it's like a
why did you take that through? Why did you do that?

Speaker 19 (33:19):
To me?

Speaker 4 (33:20):
Rolled out Craig, call you mate, Yeah, good, good, good,
Now you're a good man to chatter. You're an independent
financial advisor.

Speaker 20 (33:29):
Yeah yeah, sorry.

Speaker 9 (33:30):
Sorry.

Speaker 20 (33:30):
I wasn't able to stay on the line, but I
just thought it would be worth having a bit of
a call and getting some perspective from the other side
of the fence. But I am not backing the bank.
So I heard that call from Lynna and I actually
I feel for it because that happened a lot and
was one of the biggest reasons why I sort of
left the traditional banks to.

Speaker 15 (33:49):
Look after clients a lot better.

Speaker 20 (33:51):
There seems to have been a lot of regulation and
compliance that's putting the blame for lack of customer service,
and it was very much the case.

Speaker 9 (34:00):
I'm on the ground.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
Floor as a financial advisor. Would you tell people to
leave banks because of the customer service or are you
only looking in terms of, you know, the deals you
can get them?

Speaker 20 (34:11):
Well, it really depends on what's what's the biggest motivator
for the client's end goal, because at the end of
the day, customer service really it really includes giving appropriate
and proper advice so people can make good decisions. And
I think that the banks are they've sort of been
regulated out of providing that portion of the service that

(34:33):
people are one thing, So there's a gap in the
conversations and the banks aren't allowed to have them. And
so that's why it's it's always recommended to get the
right advice to make good decisions, but it's they seem
to be okay to sell the cash, but not the
context of how to do things. So it's that's where
I think people are just not feeling the love anymore, right.

Speaker 2 (34:56):
And so would you recommend getting an independent financial advisor
sort of to be the buffer between you know, you
and a.

Speaker 20 (35:03):
Bank absolutely when it comes to getting a mortgage or
if you're looking it investing money. I would say do
that with insurance personal insurance as well, because there's so
much information to base your decisions on that these providers
don't provide and it's just their operating model. So it's
essentially I mean, I feel the whole Anti money Laundering

(35:27):
AML rules around opening bank accounts is really frustrating, and
that's not providing advice, that's just making compliance difficult. So
there's sort of two parts. Because I help people with
their mortgages and stuff, which I think everyone should be
able to make conforms decisions, So that's different to opening
bank accounts.

Speaker 3 (35:45):
Right, And what's the difference between yourself is a financial
advisor and a mortgage broke it creak?

Speaker 20 (35:51):
Oh, different terms, different names, and generally the supplier pools.
So you can find that some places have a wider
reach of providers that they can go to for for assistance,
So some places have bigger pools than others. But it's
really about having confidence in the person that you're getting

(36:12):
advice from. So you can have mortgage brokers financial advisors.
Financial advisors also cover your investment advisors too, so a
mortgage broker is purely mortgages.

Speaker 4 (36:22):
And do you get paid, Craig?

Speaker 3 (36:23):
And the reason I asked that is I would almost
I think prefer that if I'm paying you directly for
your service, that to me feels like a bit more
I can trust that you're going to get me the
better deal rather than the Yeah, so you do get paid.

Speaker 20 (36:37):
I'll give you an even better option. Nobody works for
free because you get up and you work for free,
you're a full But in my role, the bank's pay
so they outsource the they outsource the client. They still
get the interest from the mortgage, so they still reap
their cash flow, so they still got their income stream,

(36:58):
but they don't take on the client as much. So
we've got a bit of a different operating model because
we don't get a deal for the client and then
give them back to the bank. That's where I think
there can be a little bit of a short term
relationship and not the trust, but we hold on to
the client and their mortgage and thoughts gone, which is
I think a huge thing for accountability because you give advice,
you've got to be there when it happens or it doesn't,

(37:21):
and that's not that common in the industry. So yeah,
we have a different offering which I think adds that
trust back in because we've got to be there when
we've sink or swim.

Speaker 5 (37:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (37:31):
Interesting, Craig, thank you very much for giving us a
buzz A couple of techs to wrap this one up.
Hey guys, I recently wanted to take out two thousand
dollars from my bank account. It was a Saturday morning
and the bank was open, but that I was told
they couldn't give me that amount of money and that
I would have to come back on a weekday to
take it out from the cash machine outside in the mall,
which I didn't want to do because my ATM withdrawal
limit is one thousand.

Speaker 4 (37:52):
So frustrating. Have a good afternoon from Anna.

Speaker 2 (37:55):
Simon says, guys, recently refixed made my Great New Zealand
owed bank ring me and then asked if it really
was the best rate they could do. They knocked off
another zero points zero five percent from Simon, that is
at the asking it's the asking number. I suppose something
is better than nothing. Guys, over a long period of time,

(38:16):
that adds up to quite a lot. That's very good points.
This is a good text here, guys. I have been
with the same bank since I was a little nipper.
The personal yes, sorry, I'm just trying to find it.
We've had so many ticks to come in. They even
gave me help from a personal employee helped me no end.
Awesome woman. Even when I was down, I'd ring her

(38:38):
for a pick me up.

Speaker 9 (38:38):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (38:39):
When I retired I helped her buy a house her
employer didn't twenty plus years. Hope she's doing well. Thinking
now I ought to find her and say hello, great
show from Andy.

Speaker 4 (38:48):
Wow, what a story, what a relationship.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
That's old school, old school and that kind of stuff
will ever happen again?

Speaker 3 (38:55):
No great discussion. Thank you very much to everyone who
phoned and text on that. Coming up after two o'clock
in New Zealand has a new CEO. What do you
want to see from the new in New Zealand ceo
and the status and with being the head of Air
New Zealand's Yeah, where.

Speaker 2 (39:11):
Does it sit in the most manifold jobs in this country?

Speaker 3 (39:14):
Oh hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call
New Sport and Weather coming up. You're listening to Matt
and Tyler who You're having a great afternoon.

Speaker 1 (39:41):
Talking with you all afternoon. It's Matt Heathen, Taylor Adams
afternoons News Talks.

Speaker 9 (39:47):
It be.

Speaker 3 (39:49):
News Talks. It'd be very good afternoon. Chewitt, welcome back
into the program. Now, just before we get to the
next topic, this lava lamp that you got gifted by
the bakeels.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
No, No, Tyler, I got gifted by you. I couldn't
go to the BaCl Supreme PI Awards last night. You
in in my place and I understand, I understand as
you just graced yourself on the table with the people
that was sharing with you. Yes, great New Zealanders. But
there was a lava lamp, free love lamp for everyone there.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
Yeah, so they basically said, take your lava lamp and
get out of here, and please tell Matt Heath we
missed them here.

Speaker 4 (40:25):
You were to keep me on a leash.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
It's memorizing. I've plugged it in here. So as I say,
if the if ZIB goes down, it's because this love
and lamp has drawing quite a lot of current current.
It's so hot now the lava lamp. But I haven't
actually seen a lava lamp for a very long time,
and I think there would have been what four hundred
LoVa lamps ended out last night.

Speaker 4 (40:42):
Easy, Easy, it's a lot of lava lamps.

Speaker 3 (40:44):
I don't know where they found all those LoVa lamps,
but it is starting to come to life, and it's
a glorious thing to witness.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
If you should have to, if you should want to
see my love lamp fever would then I just posted
a story of it, I Matt heath in Zen on
Instagram after another story I saw Ozzy osband Killer Man.
Click that and then you'll see me and my love
lamp that Tyler gave me. Thank you.

Speaker 4 (41:05):
It's good content.

Speaker 2 (41:06):
But the New Zealand Supreme Pie Award went to a
potato top.

Speaker 3 (41:11):
Yes, a swelled potato top pie with a center core
of fond and style cooked potatoes finished in an O
Graton layer.

Speaker 4 (41:18):
So that was the supreme. But it sounds real good.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
People keept saying gratan? Is that a grouton? Is that
like scolett potatoes?

Speaker 5 (41:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (41:24):
Right, the way of saying scolet potatoes. I'm pretty sure.

Speaker 2 (41:27):
But did you say graton? What did you say? I said, oh,
graton right, let's hey. You pronounce it, doesn't it as
a U gr a t I n from the southland side.
Pronounce it scalloped potatoes.

Speaker 3 (41:38):
That's such an easy way to say scolet potatoes. And
it was made by a man called Sam. He's the
owner of Rosedale Bakery and Cafe and Albany Auckland kicked
butt last night.

Speaker 4 (41:49):
They did really well.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
Yeah, absolutely, But there's so many great pie manufacturers over
this country. Pie makers they get up early and they
just create art. We have the best meat pies in
the entire country. Potato top, you know, you can get
it wrong. You can get a potatotop very wrong. Yeah,
with with a sort of an award winning potatotop pie.
Would you squirt tomato sauce?

Speaker 4 (42:09):
No, now you're going to let it speak for itself
as tomatoes sauce.

Speaker 2 (42:14):
On top of potato mashed potato is pretty good.

Speaker 3 (42:18):
Controversial. We're gonna have to get Sam on the phone
and ask him about that. It is controversial, but right, Yeah,
fantastic award last night, and congratulations to all the winners.
Now let's get into this one. This is going to
be interesting here. New Zealand has appointed a new chief executive.
His name is Nick Hill Raven Shanker Greg four and
as we know announced he was stepping down in March.
He will be gone by October. And Raven Shanker, he

(42:40):
has been with the airline for about five years. He's
got a big CV. He was chief Digital Officer at
Victor and managing director of an Sinctura and he said
this morning. I am both thrilled and humbled to be
given this opportunity here.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
That word humbled that interests me because I reckon the
New Zealand CEO job is one of the most highly
respected and talked about jobs in New Zealand. A saying
before they say that the top job in Australia after
the Prime Minister is the captain of the Australian crew team. Yeah,
I mean it's a joke, but they do say that
there's there's a lot of mana and being the Australian

(43:14):
captain of the Australian cricket team. But I'd say in
New Zealand, the CEO of in New Zealand is right
up there in terms of performance, and I mean in
terms of importance and prestige. We talk about in New
Zealand a lot in this country because it's the national carrier,
but also we as taxpayer's own half of it. But

(43:35):
we know all the all the x CEO's names of
in New Zealand. If you're getting HRA and you know
they're checking if you've got concussion, you know they asked
things like what's the day of the week, you know,
what's your mum's maiden name. They could probably ask you
who's the New Zealand CEO? Most people that we're badly concussed,
would you know? I would say, you know, if you

(43:58):
say Rob Fife, it probably means that you've had a
hit on the head because he left in twenty twelve.
He was a good yeah, but Greg Foran you know,
he was there twenty twenty to twenty twenty five. What
a tumultuous era to be the CEO. And of course
christ pH lux in twenty twelve to twenty nineteen and
has catapulted himself into the top job in the country.

Speaker 4 (44:19):
On the back of that, you'd say, yeah, Oh, eight
hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call the
CEO of Air New Zealand?

Speaker 3 (44:25):
Is it one of the most powerful positions in this country?
Love to hear from U nine two ninety two is
the text number?

Speaker 9 (44:31):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (44:31):
And what would you like to see the new CEO
of Air New Zealand change? What do you think needs
to happen with their New Zealand? What do you think
needs to improve? Because he will definitely be listening to
the show right now.

Speaker 3 (44:42):
Absolutely Oh eight one hundred eighty ten eighty is the
number to call. It is eleven past two.

Speaker 1 (44:49):
Your home of Afternoon Talk, Mad Heathen Taylor Adams. Afternoons
call oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty News Talk said, be.

Speaker 4 (44:59):
Very good afternoon Due. It is fourteen past two and.

Speaker 2 (45:02):
We're talking about the new CEO of Air New Zealand.
What would you like to see change at Air New
Zealand and how much mana do you think think the
position has the CEO of New Zealand. I think they're
right up there with some of the most important and
prestigious people in the country. But right now this is
just going to deviate off the topic a little bit. Tim.
You are currently eating the winner of the BaCl Supreme

(45:24):
Pie Award.

Speaker 13 (45:26):
I am, I've just been through the capon pat all.

Speaker 2 (45:29):
Right, all right, so how is it working? So this
is the potato pot potato tops from Rosedale Bakery and
Cafe and so as there's there's there's mashed potato on
the top. But when does the grouton come in.

Speaker 13 (45:44):
It's kind of in the center and it kind of
goes down from the top through maybe a couple of
centimeters off the base of the pie.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
Right, did it make your dreams come through the pie.
Are you impressed with it?

Speaker 9 (45:56):
I wouldn't go that far.

Speaker 6 (45:57):
It's good.

Speaker 13 (45:58):
I'm impressed with it. I'm more of a steak and
cheese man. But it's a little bit contrasting. You're not
you're not sort of expecting that the French flavors of
the middle.

Speaker 2 (46:07):
Oh right, yeah? And did you did you sauce it?

Speaker 6 (46:11):
Tim?

Speaker 2 (46:11):
Did you put tomato sauce on it?

Speaker 19 (46:14):
No?

Speaker 13 (46:14):
No, none of the rubbish.

Speaker 4 (46:15):
Yeah, yeah, it's a piece of art. You got to
treat it with respect. And what about this? What about
the spice of their mints? Was that was that nice?
We add on with that, Gratton.

Speaker 13 (46:24):
I think it's pretty what you'd expect, the pretty standard
sort of potato top style mints, which is good.

Speaker 5 (46:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (46:31):
How long was the line before you had to get
one of these award winning pies?

Speaker 13 (46:35):
There was only one person in front of me, right,
but he but he did say he had made etra
and it was pretty stacked.

Speaker 4 (46:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (46:45):
So, I mean, the one one thing about these award
winning pies is they have all these rules. The pastry
can't be burnt in any spot and it has to
fill right up, so there can't be a gap at
the top where the gravy and the mintce just stopped.
So was it fill right to the top? Is the
pie just solid right through? Tim?

Speaker 9 (47:02):
Absolutely?

Speaker 13 (47:03):
It was big mound over the top actually with the potato.

Speaker 4 (47:06):
Oh mate, you're making me hungry.

Speaker 3 (47:08):
So so in terms of all the pies of you
you've eaten in your life, Tim, where would you put
this one in the top three?

Speaker 15 (47:14):
Ah, I'd say you all right too.

Speaker 4 (47:18):
That's good.

Speaker 2 (47:18):
Well, that's high praise, that's high praise.

Speaker 13 (47:21):
So I'm pretty loyal to the dairy day.

Speaker 2 (47:25):
Oh yeah, that's a great that's a great, great location.
Great they make some great pies there. Thank you so
much for your call. Thanks for that intrepid reporting out
on the streets there of Albany. Tim, all right, thank you.

Speaker 4 (47:38):
He took us on the journey. Thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (47:41):
So the Rosedale Bakery and Cafe, So that's in Where
is that? That's you know, where is it? Albany, Albany, Albany.
But I'm just trying to work out exactly where it is.
I guess it's Rosedale Road, is it?

Speaker 4 (47:54):
Anyway, go check them out.

Speaker 2 (47:55):
People in the area will know. It sounds like they've
got a few going and the queues aren't too long.

Speaker 4 (47:59):
Yeah, get down there now.

Speaker 2 (48:01):
You want to win. You want to eat the best
pie in the country on the day it's been announced.
You know that's very special, isn't it.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
Right back to this discussion we're having about the new
CEO of Air New Zealand.

Speaker 4 (48:13):
Nicol Ravashanka is his name.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
So the question we put to you is what do
you want to see with Air New Zealand now that
it does have a new CEO. Oh, eight hundred eighty
ten eighty is a number to call.

Speaker 2 (48:24):
I don't care how prestigious the muppet is, says this texter.
He needs to make sure regional fears drop.

Speaker 3 (48:33):
That is I mean, that's what a lot of people
have been demanding of in news for a long time,
the price of regional air fairs. But really, can to
hear from you on eight hundred and eighty ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (48:42):
You don't know anything about him, mate, I mean, that's
a bit of a stretch to call him a muppet. Yeah,
come on, he's risen to the position of CEO of
in New Zealand. He's unlikely to be a muppet.

Speaker 4 (48:53):
Yeah exactly.

Speaker 2 (48:54):
At least give him a chance to prove himself.

Speaker 3 (48:55):
Yeah, he hasn't even started the role yet where he's
about to This is a good quick text here. The
question would ask of the new CEO of Air New
Zealand is how about putting some Airbus A three eighties
on regional flights.

Speaker 4 (49:06):
My reasoning behind this is go beg or go home.

Speaker 9 (49:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
Don't forget Ralph Norris who first built up in New
Zealand to where it is today. Yeah, that's right, Ralph Morris.

Speaker 3 (49:17):
He was a fantastic So he was what early two thousands, Yeah,
just before Rob Fife, wasn't he?

Speaker 2 (49:23):
I believe so? Yes it was, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (49:25):
Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call.
So what do you want to see from Air New
Zealand with a new CEO and how much mana is
attached to that position?

Speaker 4 (49:33):
Love to hear from you. It is nineteen past two.

Speaker 1 (49:39):
Matt Heathen, Tyler Adams afternoons call oh eight hundred eighty
ten eighty on News Talk ZB.

Speaker 4 (49:45):
Very good afternoon to you.

Speaker 3 (49:46):
We are talking about A New Zealand's newer CEO that
was announced this morning, Nikau Ravin Shunka. He's taking over
from Greg four and so what do you want to
see from Air New Zealand with the incoming new CEO.
Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (49:58):
Se number call.

Speaker 4 (49:59):
I tell you what.

Speaker 2 (50:00):
There's a lot of love for Ralph Norris, who was
the CEO from two thousand and two to two thousand
and five. A lot of love for Ralph Norris, a
lot of love for ro five.

Speaker 4 (50:08):
Yeah. Yeah, I think they were both trailblazers.

Speaker 3 (50:11):
Is They're a bit trite to say it, but I
certainly think with Ralph he made a lot of changes
and turned that company around at the time.

Speaker 2 (50:18):
Well, I'm not getting at a lot of people agreeing
with me because I was saying that, you know, in
New Zealand's being the CEO is right up there with
the most sort of important and prestigious positions in the country.
I mean, they're kind of like they're obviously our you know,
they're our flagship whether they're a national carrier, right, but
they've also won a lot of awards globally in New Zealand,

(50:40):
and they've been innovative in the past, and there's been
lots of times when we've been very very proud of
in New Zealand, and I think just it's just glamorous
in general to be involved. You know, if I'm ever
at a dinner and there's a pilot there, I will
absolutely punish the pilot worth questions.

Speaker 4 (50:56):
Yes you will.

Speaker 2 (50:58):
Aviation is just an incredibly interesting topic to a lot
a lot of New Zealanders. So being the CEO of
IN in New Zealand is just it's a very interesting
technical and complication to position to be in.

Speaker 3 (51:10):
You'd put them in the top ten for sure. One
hundred and eighteen eightyc number call Colin.

Speaker 2 (51:14):
What do you think in New Zealand should focus on this?

Speaker 21 (51:17):
And you see, well, I reckon if anyone ever gets
a chance to speak to this new chap, they should
ask them to consider under promising and over delivering rather
than the other way around. With service, I've flown numerous
times on numerous occasions internationally between the main centers and
I live regionally at the moment, and the regional service

(51:40):
is shocking in my view. You know, I'm not not
complaining about price or anything like that, because you know,
having done a bit of economics at school and at UNI,
you know you understand supply demand, number of sets that
are optimal all that sort of stuff. But when you've
got customers who are paying what pop would consider to

(52:03):
be top dollar for a flight to say, between Apia
and Auckland war Palms to the northern christ Church, you
want those flights to leave on time. You want them
to actually show up. You don't want to be in
the mall and get a text an hour and a
half before your flight is saying sorry, your flight's being canceled,
and then you have to get on the eight hundred

(52:23):
number try and rebook. And when you're in regional whereas,
there's not enough seats or capacity to take that extra
volume from a canceled flight, so therefore you end up
missing your flight. And usually when you're leaving a regional
area on a Friday with the intention of being back
on a Sunday, that's usually for I don't know, family event, sport, concert,

(52:46):
So there's a whole lot of other costs that get thrown.

Speaker 9 (52:49):
Out the window.

Speaker 21 (52:50):
And I mean, I've got an example where I was
going up for a mate's birthday, flying out a past
north to Auckland, get a call a text flight it's
been canceled, ring them, Yeah, we can't put you on
the next one because that's now full. So the netflik
we can put you on at one o'clock tomorrow, which
was going to be a Saturday afternoon, so I was

(53:11):
going to miss my Friday night events. I'm sure I
could do Saturday ones, but then I'll be leaving again
at lunchtime on Sunday, so it kind of reduces the
weekend funness. So I said, well, how about I drive
to Wellington at my cost and you put me on
a flight from Wellington to Auckland. Lots of capacity there

(53:34):
should be able to do that.

Speaker 9 (53:35):
Oh yeah, we can do that, no problem.

Speaker 21 (53:36):
Okay, let's call. Can you give me a voucher for
parking at the airport? Seem as how I'm being inconvenienced?
Oh no, we can't do that, okay, but the good
news is I can keep your flight from Auckland back
to Paston North, but hang on on floing out of Wellington.
My car is going to be in Wellington. Don't you

(53:57):
want to find me back to Wellington? Oh yeah, okay, right,
So that's that's one example. Another example was went to
trust you to see some friends flight down direct out
of Palms to North to christ Church not a problem.

Speaker 8 (54:11):
The flight back.

Speaker 21 (54:12):
Unfortunately, there weren't any direct flights by direct lights christ
Churps Palms North, so had to fly christ Church, Auckland,
then Auckland Palms to North. The problem was seven hour
delays and Auckland wasn't ideal, so I took the one
that's only an hour, which suited me.

Speaker 9 (54:33):
Obviously, me and I could get back.

Speaker 21 (54:34):
From christ Church to Auckland wasting an hour, then me
back and Palms to the North sort of a reasonable
time on the Sunday. So I booked that flight. Yep,
that's fine. Take that. The flight out of christ Church
is delayed, so therefore I get to Auckland and missed
my flight to Palms to North. So therefore I have
to stay a night in Auckland, which you know, to

(54:56):
be fair, they paid for. But it meant I missed
the day's work the next day because I wasn't back
in time. So those sorts of things, you know, whether
it's a two hundred and fifty dollars flight each way
or two hundred and eighty dollars flight each way, all
it's a smart saver where you have to add an
extra twenty bucks for a bag or the flexibility of
being able to change your flight. That's neither here nor

(55:17):
there to me, because I understand the economics of it. Yeah,
but it's when you say this flight that you've booked
and you're going to the EPUT to catch at three
o'clock is now not going to happen and we haven't
got the capacity to do anything with you. That is
when you start Is.

Speaker 2 (55:36):
It getting better Colin, Because I haven't got the exact
stats on me, but I understand the that is getting better.
The reliability of your New Zealand has been improving over
the last year.

Speaker 21 (55:48):
I think that's you have to take that with a
grain of salt because there's some people that probably haven't
had any of their flights, whereas I've had like four
or five out of seven or eight and the only
well that one out of christ Chips to Auckland was
the only main trunk sort of flight or a jet
flight that was affected everything else, so the turboprops, and

(56:10):
it seems to me that a lot of people, particularly regional,
have felt that they're affiliation with the New Zealand has
been kind of well, we've got no choice either fly
in New Zealand. Or we drive, you know, on the
main trunk route. You've got Jets, Star and whoever else

(56:30):
are not familiar too much fly and you've e a
book in New Zealand because the others aren't reliable. But
you know, most regional people have thought, well, we have
to use in New Zealand because don't really have much
choice in most markets. But it's just the fact that
if you want to fly, that's your choice and you
don't mind paying that little bit of extrac So it's
not the money. But anecdotally, I think there will be

(56:51):
a lot of people that will say yep, it's rubbish,
or then you get the same number of people whill
say yeah, it's pretty good. But I think my view
would be that most of those stats are based on
total travelers and the majority of travelers are on the jets,
which you know more people fly Auckland Willington then probably
the number of people that fly.

Speaker 2 (57:12):
Yeah, that's an interesting point on Auckland volume. Yeah, I
get that's right, so total travelers.

Speaker 21 (57:19):
But if they were to issue a set of stats,
which I can't see them doing, if they were to
issue the stats and say, right, reliability number of travelers
affected on the main trunk routes like Auckland, Queenstown, christ Church.
They need an et cetera. This number the flights that
are affected and the people that are affected on regional
I think that's where you get a few eyebrows going.

Speaker 8 (57:42):
It's not very good.

Speaker 4 (57:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (57:43):
I think if you call Colin just look at the
Parmi stats. He thought deeply about that stats because I
I think I think it is improving. But yeah, I
mean all stats can be can be misleading if you
don't drill right in. Absolutely, yeah, but I mean that's
an interesting point though. In New Zealand's we kind of
feel like it owes us as the national carrier to

(58:07):
sort out the regional situations. We don't see it as
just a pure business, do we know? We see it
as it has it has an obligation to the country.
We've bailed it out a number of times.

Speaker 4 (58:19):
Yeah. Do you think that though?

Speaker 3 (58:21):
Do you think it's there's an obligation there to reduce
or make it as easy as possible for regional flights
more people to access them.

Speaker 2 (58:28):
I kind of do, But I can kind of see
as well why you don't want hear in New Zealand
bankrupting itself.

Speaker 3 (58:35):
It is a tough position that Greg Forum was in
no doubt about it. Oh eight, one hundred and eighty
ten eighty is the number to call. What do you
want to see from the new CEO of the New Zealand.

Speaker 2 (58:43):
This is interesting. We've got a text here, I'll share
it from this pilot talking about you know, being a
pilot going out to dinner gatherings and how punishing.

Speaker 4 (58:50):
It is great teachs. It is hapas two.

Speaker 7 (58:55):
Juice talks. It'd be headlines with blue bubble taxes.

Speaker 16 (58:58):
It's no trouble with a blue bubble. Health New Zealand
nurses are striking country wide until tomorrow morning, with protesters
and major centers but rating the government and their employer,
saying their work conditions are dangerous for patients and staff.
Waves are flooding coasts and Russia's Kural Islands after a
magnitude eight point eight earthquake, with thousands being evacuated. Tsunami

(59:22):
warnings are in place for Japan, Alaska, Hawaii, and the
entire US West Coast. Our emergency management agencies warning of
possible strong sea currents and unpredictable surges across all our
shores from midnight. The Institute of Safety Management says it
worries a government push to simplify manufacturing safety rules is

(59:44):
putting lives and limbs on the line. Consultations begun cabinets
planning a decision in November. MADI life expectancy has risen
to seventy five point eight years, with Pasifica on seventy
six point nine. General life expectancy is at eighty one
point eight, highest for Asians and then Europeans. Audrey Young

(01:00:06):
on the signs that Prime Ministers Luxen is getting worried.
You can read the full column, and then said Herald
Premium macnail to matt Ethan Tyler Adams.

Speaker 3 (01:00:15):
Thank you very much, Raylen. And we are talking about
the new CEO of Air New Zealand. It was announced
this morning. His name is Nika Rava Shunka. He's taken
over from Greg four and who announced his decision to
stand down in March. So what do you want to
see from the new Air New Zealand?

Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
Soll this person says, could they please stop making those
punishing safety videos. The quicker the better makes me want
to open the air lock and jump out before we
even take off.

Speaker 4 (01:00:40):
I'm so with that teach. So that is job number one.
That's an easy one. I just make it clean cut.

Speaker 2 (01:00:44):
Back in the day they were great. Actually, the new
basketball one is not too bad compared to some of
them that have been in the past. But I just
want the safety information as fast as possible. Yeah, just
get it out as quickly as possib If you want
to do something working funny around that, that's fine, but
it has to just move through the information. Boom boom boom.
I don't want to hear about a taker, hay, I
just want to a bang bang.

Speaker 4 (01:01:01):
Bang, Yeah, nicely said, Oh, one hundred and eighty ten
eighty is the number to call.

Speaker 2 (01:01:06):
How about all the muppets who want cheaper air fists
in New Zealand. Remember it's a publicly listed company who
has survived COVID and struggling to return any dividend to
its investors. Fifty one percent are the New Zealand taxpayers. Secondly,
how much do you think an overseas carrier will charge
if they were the major player? Try twice the current rate,
just for starters. Thirdly, drive your car to christ you
pay for a fairy ride and a hotel tail room

(01:01:28):
on the way down and back, plus your fuel and
running costs flying as cheaper. Thanks for that, Roger. Now,
I was talking before about how you know, maybe that
the reason why there's such a prestigious position being the
CEO is because of a New Zealand is because how
much people just generally like pilots. Yeah, and god damn it,

(01:01:50):
so many texts come out, Oh here we are. Yeah, sorry,
so many texts coming through.

Speaker 9 (01:01:55):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:01:55):
I was saying, just because people just generally think aviation
is cool. Right, So if you're the CEO of in
New Zealand, it's the national carrier. You know, it's had
some great innovations in the past, it's lost, it's one
a lot of awards. But also it's just related to
planes most of us think are really cool. You're the
boss of pilots, And I was just saying, if I
ever run into a pilot, I just drilled them with questions. Yeah,

(01:02:18):
you saw it when we're out at the Wistpac helicopter
to be pulled off the one of the.

Speaker 4 (01:02:24):
Leave them alone, Leave them alone, But oh my god,
not that one.

Speaker 2 (01:02:28):
Where's it going? Here we go, Here we go, Matt.
I'm an airline pilot. Who has flown all over the world,
and I lie and tell people at social gatherings I
sell PVC piping as no one asked questions about that.
People will talk your ear off if they find out
that you're a pilot.

Speaker 4 (01:02:42):
He is directly to you. Met That is so goodb piping.

Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
Okay, here we go, Steve, Welcome to the show. How
are you going good? Your thoughts on in New Zealand, Well.

Speaker 22 (01:02:56):
I've a little bit of suggestion, and that is that
they change their refund policy on cancel flights. So I
was one my wife and I had booked through Welling
to look and Wellington on the first of May. And
if you remember the first of May, that was a catastrophe, right,
all the flights in the country were cancer because of
where there was terrible and so we tried to rebook

(01:03:19):
and all the flights were gone, so there was no option,
and I was attending a wedding, so we drove to
Wellington instead of Fine, right, and that's fine when we
ended up coming back and I understand that we there's
not any Zel's fault, but they won't give you the
money back, all right, They're going to give you a
refund and the problem is we can't use the refund.
So I don't really think that's sort of doesn't feel

(01:03:43):
right to me, you know. I mean, it's not many
events were you pay in advance and that's canceled and
you don't get your money back.

Speaker 23 (01:03:50):
But this is the law.

Speaker 22 (01:03:51):
I mean, then Zella's note breaking any rules there. You
go to the government website, it says that's the way
it works. So I reckon, there's the new guys there.
You should change that policy because I don't think it's
quite right, you know. I mean, if you're a visitor
in New Zealand and the flight's canceled, how would.

Speaker 17 (01:04:07):
We ever use the refund?

Speaker 22 (01:04:08):
Yeah, I'm not looking for any compensation. I mean we
lost home, hotel, accommodation and other bits and pieces, but
I'm not looking for compensation. I'm just looking for the
money back for what they didn't deliver.

Speaker 2 (01:04:18):
It does seem a little unfair if you've booked a
flight and from no fault of your own, it gets canceled.
And it's not your New Zealand's fault, it's it's the
weather's fault that it's been canceled. But it does seem
a little unfair that you can't get your money back
on that situation.

Speaker 22 (01:04:33):
I mean if you paid a deposit to get a
house built and the guy gets damaged and you can't
come and fix your house when he's twelve months away.
Where you get your money back and you don't have
to wait for him, you know what other product?

Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
What are service?

Speaker 22 (01:04:47):
Works that way?

Speaker 7 (01:04:48):
Yeah, just doesn't seem quite right.

Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Yeah, thank you for your call, Steve.

Speaker 3 (01:04:53):
A lot of people would agree with that. And I
remember that incident, and there was a couple of other incidents,
and people will call me a muppet and a mug
here for saying this. Yeah, there it is, thank you, Mat.

Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
I haven't even heard what it is here.

Speaker 3 (01:05:05):
It is that those instant says, we knew how cash
strapped and in trouble air New Zealand was. And I
understand what Steve is saying, and it's logical, but the
pain all of those people back exactly what they paid
for the airfare instead of the credit, and it took
them way too long to admit this, but that would
have put them in an even more serious financial position.

(01:05:26):
So that was their way of trying to give something
back to customers who had been put out but still
keep the National Airline trucking along. And a lot of
people say, well, tough Becky is not my fault. I
paid for a service, I didn't get it. But I
can understand why that credit system was in play is
because they were in such strife at the time that
they needed to do whatever it takes to try and

(01:05:46):
get something back to the customer, but also make sure
they went leveraging cash as well.

Speaker 2 (01:05:51):
So if you if you met the New in New
Zealand CEO, mister Ravashenka, You'll be like, yeah, you're not
refunding people's sweet as mate, love it, keep it going.

Speaker 4 (01:06:00):
Yeah, yeah, it seems like a good master.

Speaker 2 (01:06:03):
It's my favorite thing you do in New Zealand. Not
reliable at all, very arrogant attitude, especially with the huge
high flight costs, late cancelations of flights with no reason given,
operational what does that even mean? Delayed departures and this
is between Auckland and Wellington. We have resorted to going
back to Jetstar. We've got to understand with New Zealander
is that we're a long, thin nation with a light

(01:06:24):
of weather. You know, when you get on a plane,
they go the pilot goes bit a weather about.

Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
That that is a good line.

Speaker 2 (01:06:31):
That is often the case in New Zealand. Yeah, we
love talking about weather, bit of weather about. But there
are so many variables in flying a plane, and there
was always going to be some cancelations. It's just the
way it is. And you definitely want you definitely want
an airline to be overly cautious exactly. Yeah, it's a
lot better missing your plane than that plane going down. Yeah,

(01:06:51):
it's it's a bit foggy, but we reckon. We'll give
it a we'll give it a go. We back ourselves.

Speaker 4 (01:06:58):
It's fifty to fifty, but let's roll the dice.

Speaker 5 (01:07:01):
Eighty.

Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
But I absolutely guess how for get how frustrating it is, Bridget,
Welcome to the show. Hi, great, the better since you've
called Bridget. What's your thoughts on this?

Speaker 6 (01:07:12):
Oh?

Speaker 19 (01:07:13):
I would just love to see in New Zealand stop
canceling so many flights out of the region. I love
in nut Monmoneri. Probably eighty percent of my flights in
the last few years have been disrupted out of Taranga,
some due to weather, a lot due to engineering and
technical difficulties, and just recently or just a week ago,
we have had a whole flight to reschedule for a

(01:07:37):
return flight from Sydney next Monday, or Monday coming to
tell us that our morning flight at nine fifty am
is now rescheduled till six twenty pm. I mean that's
an eight and a half hour that's a big reschedule,
leaving you arriving in Auckland at eleven thirty pm and
no way to get back to the regions. You know,

(01:07:57):
they put us on a flight Tuesday morning with no
explanation as to what's what the reason for the the
reschedulers or any accommodation options. You sort of left to
either Lloyds and the Aukland Airport from midnight throt or
six am, or find your own accommodation. So I think
they can really up their game on that sort of thing.

Speaker 2 (01:08:17):
Yeah, you've been very unlucky though, So I'm just looking
at this. This is I'm trying to find some stats.
So the stats I've got here are just for the
end of twenty twenty four. But in New Zealand was
running a one point four percent cancelation rate on its flights.
But as the previous caller said, you know that might
be skewed because you're not canceling a lot between I
don't know, Auckland and christ Church. You know, it's a

(01:08:38):
lot probably potentially a lot more regional flights being canceled.
But do you think that that you've just been incredibly
bad and you know, incredibly unlucky with your eighty percent bridge?

Speaker 19 (01:08:48):
Yeah, very much so, Yeah, for sure. And I mean
some of it's weather related, which I totally understand.

Speaker 8 (01:08:54):
We had a flight last year.

Speaker 19 (01:08:55):
Coming back from the Gold Coast with large ruds and fog.
We couldn't get that to tear on her. But like
the previous quarter said, no reimbursement for that connecting flight
in no reimbursement for the rental car that we decided
to hire and drive home ourselves.

Speaker 6 (01:09:08):
So yeah, I can do you do you have a click.

Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
The insurance because you can click a little flight insurance
button on there or get a flixy fear can can
can help with those kinds of situations.

Speaker 19 (01:09:17):
Bridget I have started doing that more often now that
I've got a university student that we fly home from
Canterbury quite often.

Speaker 5 (01:09:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 19 (01:09:24):
Always rather paid more work for the flexi flight because
it changes so often. Because we've lost so much money
and in changing flights for in that respects. So yeah,
definitely something to do going forward. Yeah, but yeah, it's yeah,
it's just pretty frustrating. And I just think, yeah, I
think this is potentially we are AI comes and we

(01:09:47):
get in an email from some months from nobody. It's
just an automatically email. You've been rescheduled. There's no real
person looking at this and going Okay, this is not
going to work for these people arriving in Auckland at
a living city at night and hanging around an airports
or six Allen. Yeah, so I think there's certain if
you highlighted there too, Bridget.

Speaker 4 (01:10:04):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 2 (01:10:05):
Yeah, thank you, And I hope you get a better
hit rate than the eighty percent inlation you've been going
at the moment.

Speaker 3 (01:10:10):
That is very unfortunate. One hundred and eighty ten eighty
is the number to call. What would you like to
see from the new tour CEO of in New Zealand?
It is sixteen to three.

Speaker 5 (01:10:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:10:18):
I think mister Ravishanka will be getting a lot of
hassles from people around regional flights.

Speaker 4 (01:10:24):
You certainly will be race for that.

Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
A fresh take on took Back it's mad Heathen Taylor
Adams afternoons have your say on eight hundred and eighty
ten eighty News Talks.

Speaker 4 (01:10:34):
B it is thirteen to three.

Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
This Texas is re refunds for canceled flights either purchase
Flexi fear tickets or travel insurance, getting the cheapest tickets
and still expecting all the privileges as probably a bit much.
That's from Craig. Thank you for your text. I always
book flexi flights, always get my money back book and
advanced early enough for the price to be decent. Boys.

(01:10:56):
As has been discussed many times with the HOSK in
New Zealand. In New Zealand does not report the region's
very well in statistics. Yeah, yeah, that's true. That's we
were saying before. Yeah, I only what the regions aren't happy.

Speaker 4 (01:11:10):
No, the regions are very very angry.

Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
The regions. My hometown of Denian is not considered a region. No, No,
that would be considered main trunk. Yeah, main trunk. That's
a great way to praise it. You've been speaking to
too many pilots. I think, don't don't downgrade to need
into a region.

Speaker 4 (01:11:27):
We love donners guys.

Speaker 2 (01:11:29):
On top of not giving refunds and only giving credit
is that they then put the cost of the flight
up and your credit no longer pays for the same flight,
effectively devaluing your money and making you pay more for
the same service. Go Riley, you've got something you'd like
to say to the new in New Zealand's CEO.

Speaker 23 (01:11:49):
Yeah good, I texted earlier and I've got a call
from a producer, so obviously want me to elaborate on
it a bit. But the Voles, the CEO, new CEO
of the New Zealand, I'd really look into having a
low cost similar to Mont's Jitstar. Personally, I travel for
business a lot and flying Zealand and I use the

(01:12:09):
lounges with my laptop and my headset one of those guys.
But when I fly for personal travel, like to oz
in a long ago, I flew Jetstar and it was fine.
It was probably two hundred dollars cheaper, and I was
a two and a half hour flight and I don't
need a meal in that time. So I think lots
of people regionally would consider the same, like a I
don't know what a Army talk f and flights is

(01:12:31):
maybe a one hour you can probably go an hour
without a snack or a drink, and if that flight
was one hundred dollars cheaper, I think it would it
could support.

Speaker 2 (01:12:40):
Yeah, thank you Riley. Yeah, I don't know if you
New Zealand could do that regionally. You know, in New
Zealand will run a low cost airline if there's ever
competition in there until they chase the competition out.

Speaker 4 (01:12:52):
Exactly.

Speaker 3 (01:12:53):
It's pretty hard for them to run a Ryan Air
situation in New Zealand, but I'm sure they're considering it
if it is going to be profitable. Oh wait, one
hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to call
love to hear your thoughts. What would you say to
the new in New Zealand CEO.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
In New Zealand has just been voted the safest airline
in the world, so maybe some engineering issues is a
great thing. Yeah, yeah, I mean that's I mean it's
the same before. You definitely want your airline to be
overly cautious.

Speaker 8 (01:13:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:13:17):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (01:13:18):
Out of all the things in businesses that you don't
want to take a risk, it's the plane, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (01:13:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:13:23):
We are a demanding lot though when it comes to
in New Zealand, isn't it, Because as you said before,
it's often been voted the best airline in the world
and certainly in the top five. As that Texas said,
it was voted the safest deir line the world.

Speaker 4 (01:13:34):
That's something to be proud of. But we demand a
lot from Air New Zealand.

Speaker 2 (01:13:38):
This Texas says high the budget carriers in the USA
are more polite and efficient than AY in New Zealand.
In New Zealand are Prima Donnas and a tiny world pond.
That's from Bob. Really, I find the domestic airlines in
the United States to be absolutely horrible, pretty rough, just
this war to try and wedge the biggest bags into
the overhead lockers. Yeah, it's horrible. And I always think,

(01:14:00):
how come the domestic airlines and because you know, service
in the United States is just so good. Yeah, most
things in the United States just blow your mind how
well it's organized and how well things are run. Generally fantastic.
But for some reason, in my experience, their domestic airlines
have been an absolute.

Speaker 3 (01:14:18):
It's like stepping back in time. Some of those planes
they're old as how, it's like stepping back into the sixties.
They run down the falling a bart. Yeah, it's a
very trescky way to fly in the States, all right.
One hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to call.

Speaker 4 (01:14:30):
They do have live sport on them though, a lot
of them that is nice. Is got on your Americans.
It is nine to three the issues that affect you
and a bit of fun along the way.

Speaker 7 (01:14:40):
Matt Heath and Taylor Adams Afternoons, News.

Speaker 4 (01:14:42):
Talks be afternoon. It is seven to three.

Speaker 2 (01:14:47):
Best thing in New Zealand ever did was abandoned Wanganui Air.
Chatham's best thing it ever did was I said it twice.
Ch HadAM swooped in and look after us very well,
and they really canceled. They were the only ones to
leave Auckland when in New Zealand canceled service.

Speaker 4 (01:15:01):
Yeahrom Andria ed Chadtham all the way.

Speaker 2 (01:15:04):
Big fan of ear Chatham's Nick. Welcome the show. Your
thoughts are around and in New Zealand.

Speaker 6 (01:15:10):
Yeah, good guys, Thanks very much, first time caller here,
and I love listening to you both. Yeah, I've got
a bit of a different take on it. Actually, mind's
more about them if they I've got no problems with
their New Zealand running a successful business and a successful company,
but I think what it doesn't do is look after
its loyal customers, and just in terms of the people

(01:15:33):
that use the airline a lot for business and personal
use and.

Speaker 15 (01:15:37):
Things like that.

Speaker 6 (01:15:38):
I've had terrible problems with them just in their their
upgrades and they're more their Star Alliance program and things
like that. So I think actually I'd be looking at
drifting away from them just because you just don't feel
like a valued customer.

Speaker 2 (01:15:53):
Right, So are you a corew member?

Speaker 7 (01:15:56):
You have a Yeah, I've.

Speaker 6 (01:15:57):
Gone through different business ten years, you know, gold Elite,
and I was now Goal. What happened to me is
their new rewards.

Speaker 5 (01:16:06):
Program now with new every year.

Speaker 6 (01:16:09):
But I needed something like seventy five points to maintain
my status, and I had six or seven points flights
booked after that, and in thirteen days time, I would
have accrued those points and I would have maintained my
STIR status. But because I was thirteen days late and

(01:16:31):
I had about six different overseas flights that would have
really bumped me up, they wouldn't respect that and they
wouldn't upgrade or keep or maintain my status there, So.

Speaker 2 (01:16:44):
Did you talk to you talk to them, and they
were like, there's no no leeway here.

Speaker 16 (01:16:49):
I did.

Speaker 6 (01:16:49):
I could talk to them twice, and they rejected me
both times, and then the third time I said, I'm
actually going to go to the press. I guess I'm
going to it.

Speaker 16 (01:16:58):
Now.

Speaker 6 (01:17:01):
You better honor you better honor it because this is
this is a bloody joke. So that left a very
bad taste in my mouth. I just think if you're
looking at overseas flights, you know, the status program is
what actually makes people, you know, particularly you know, people
who fly regularly. That's important in terms of what it

(01:17:21):
gives you.

Speaker 5 (01:17:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:17:22):
Absolutely, next, Sorry, we're just running out of time here.

Speaker 5 (01:17:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:17:24):
I've got to say that when I got dropped down
from gold Lead, it hurt. I bet it that I
felt like it was an actual physical status I lost
as a human being. But going you know, at the
start of this hour, my premise was that the CEO
of in New Zealand is a very high status position.
It's maybe somewhere up there in the conversation, just below
Prime minister or you know, governor general or something. And

(01:17:47):
I've got to say I haven't got a lot of
support for them, but.

Speaker 4 (01:17:49):
A lot of people wanted to talk about regional flights.

Speaker 3 (01:17:52):
So thank you very much, and to the new CEO
of Air New Zealand, god speed because people are going
to come at your heart about those regional flights.

Speaker 2 (01:17:59):
Yeah. Best of luck to your mate.

Speaker 3 (01:18:01):
Yeah, go well right, coming up after three o'clock, What
rights do.

Speaker 4 (01:18:04):
You have to say?

Speaker 3 (01:18:05):
How your neighbors live? This is going to be a doozy.
Oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number
to cool new sport and weather.

Speaker 4 (01:18:12):
Coming up.

Speaker 3 (01:18:12):
You're listening to matt and Tyler. Great to have your
company as always, You're.

Speaker 7 (01:18:21):
On you home for insateful and entertaining talk.

Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
It's Mattie and Taylor Adams afternoons on news Talk sebby afternoon.

Speaker 3 (01:18:30):
Welcome back into the program. Seeven past three. Awesome Devia
company is always. This is going to be a great share.
What rise do you Tyler? Sorry, I've got to eat
it myself.

Speaker 2 (01:18:39):
You got to hit yourself a little bit, so you
had some You finally found those stats you're looking for
in the last hour.

Speaker 4 (01:18:44):
Yes, now forgive me because I had them up and
my computer just crashed.

Speaker 3 (01:18:49):
But we know that Mike Costkin was doing a deep
dive and to try and find out about delays and
cancelations when it comes.

Speaker 4 (01:18:54):
To regional roots and New Zealand with Air New.

Speaker 3 (01:18:57):
Zealand and the latest pushback was from the Ministry of
Transport that they came back to the Mike Cosking breakfast
and said, we are still looking into those details and
we've still got some weok.

Speaker 4 (01:19:07):
To do on that are looking into it.

Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
So okay, all right, So we didn't get to the
bottom of it.

Speaker 4 (01:19:11):
Oh, it shows how hard it is to get those figures.

Speaker 2 (01:19:14):
I should have just let you continue with what you're
doing of stopping you because you didn't actually get them
fair enough. But can I just say before we move on,
yes please, that the lava lamp you got me is beautiful.
I'm just it's just mesmerizing, mesmerizing here in the studio.
You went to the Bacal Supreme Pire Awards, everyone was
given a lava lamp. You bought one in for me.
I've plugged it in here so if we go our

(01:19:35):
fear it's drawing a lot of current and might shut
down the whole of zib at some point, as he
was saying before, But it's very warm, it's given up
a lot of heat, but beautiful. Yeah, I can see
why people were so into the lava lamps in the seventies.
That's mesmerizing. If you if you're listening to the show
this hour and no one sees anything for you know,
seven minutes, it's because Tyler and I have just zoned out.

Speaker 3 (01:19:54):
Yep, we're trapped in the mesmerization of the lava lamp.
But it took away wild of cream cup, didn't it.
But now look at it, well, look at it?

Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
Go all right, all right, and look if you want
to experience, go to Matt Heathen's it on Instagram. I've
put on my story for you. You know, I just
guess you want to experience the beauty of this. But anyway,
so Tyler, you continue with what you were doing.

Speaker 3 (01:20:10):
This is going to be a great discussion. So what
rights do you have to say how your neighbors live.
It's all kicking off down in christ Chooch. People living
next to Derrelic houses and christ Chuch have claimed rodents
infested their home to the extent that one pair of
tenants even withheld rent payments. So one of those neighbors,
and this is a direct quote from her it's a
lovely quote. She said it was pretty quite gross. But
her cat has been getting very fat, to the point

(01:20:32):
of vomiting from eating all of these rodents.

Speaker 2 (01:20:35):
Wow. So when you say rodents, are they rats?

Speaker 3 (01:20:37):
Yeah, must be right, And I would say lucky cat.
The neighbor's not not having fun with all the vomit
in the house, but the cat's loving it, getting very
fat off all those all those mice.

Speaker 2 (01:20:47):
Well, notwithstanding rats, I think it's probably too much if
you've got vermin spilling out of your neighbor's house, and
you know you don't want a pied piper, You don't
want to have to bring in the pied piper. But
do neighbors? Do neighbors actually owe you to look after
their place because it's the it's their land. Can't they
just do what they want with it? If they have
they want to have cars all over the front door,

(01:21:08):
isn't that their business? I mean rats, Absolutely, that's maybe
a bit much. But if it's feeding your cat, then
then that's all good, you know? Or have I just
been really lucky with late neighbors because with my neighbors,
I'm like, you go for your life?

Speaker 9 (01:21:20):
You do you?

Speaker 2 (01:21:20):
I mean maybe when you're trying to sell your house,
you might ask them to turn the stereo down and
put some tarts over some stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
But yeah, you could bribe them to do that. Just
take off of the afternoon and clean up your front yard.

Speaker 2 (01:21:31):
Yeah, so what do what do your neighbors are?

Speaker 19 (01:21:34):
You?

Speaker 3 (01:21:34):
M I generally and this I mentioned this to you,
actually is that got the lovely neighbor at the back
of the house and they love burning things out the
backyard and we get the smoke wafting over and look,
I can have a bit of a winge about that,
but if I'm being honest, I don't really have a
say on if they're going to be burning stuff, and
the whee brazier that is their property.

Speaker 4 (01:21:55):
They can do what it likes.

Speaker 3 (01:21:56):
My only concern was if there's a few embers hit
the fence and she all goes up. That was my
only concern. But I'm not going to dub them in
for that, because that, to me is just a step
too far. While the lovely elderly couple they look about
one hundred and two, They just potter around the garden
and boon stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:22:11):
What's wrong with that?

Speaker 7 (01:22:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
So have you got terrible neighbors E one hundred and
eighty ten eighty where you've had to say something around
how they're running their property. Have you had, you know
or as you run a live and let live type situation?

Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
Yeah, I eight hundred eighty ten eighty is the number
to call. What rights do you have to say how
your neighbors live? If you've got into a bit of
a neighbors at war situation, love to hear from what are.

Speaker 2 (01:22:33):
You just turning yourself into one of those sort of
snooty people that looks through the Venetian blinds like a
missus mangle and caves. Yeah, definite, think what the neighbors
are doing.

Speaker 4 (01:22:42):
There's one on every street.

Speaker 3 (01:22:44):
Oh, eight hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to called.
Text numbers nine two nine two. It is eleven past three.

Speaker 7 (01:22:49):
US talk zebby.

Speaker 3 (01:22:50):
It is fourteen past three, and we have asked the
question what rights do you have to say how your
neighbors live?

Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
In this story we're talking here with the rodents coming
next to it. It turned out that you have very
few rights.

Speaker 4 (01:23:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:23:02):
So, as I mentioned before at the setup, so there's
a couple of neighbors that live next to these derelict
houses and they're infested with rats. One of the neighbors
with held rent payments from the landlord. So they took
it to the tenancy tribe from.

Speaker 2 (01:23:15):
The landlord and their house because the neighbour's house was
so disgusting exactly.

Speaker 8 (01:23:19):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
So they took it all the way to the tenancy
tribunal and they the tenancy tribunal came back and ruled
that the withheld payments was wrong because the landlord and
where's the quote here, the moce became a problem due
to the state of neighboring property was not something the
landlord had any control over. It was for the tenants
to find a way to manage the problem themselves. The

(01:23:41):
ruling said, so good news for that landlord, and quite right.
If the landlord doesn't own that property, it's not their problem.

Speaker 2 (01:23:47):
Yeah, I'm for that. This Texas says, if it's in
your view, it's your right to complain. My neighbors don't
mow their lawns, their kids run around naked. I think
it's disgusting. My house includes my rights around my view.

Speaker 4 (01:24:03):
Well, just I don't know the neighbour's property as the
viewpoint you on.

Speaker 2 (01:24:10):
So you're from your property. From the texts, probably they're
looking out their window, I guess, and they feel like
they own their view. I don't know, it might be
that might be a hard thing to argue. But also
little kids running around nude, I mean they've got us,
they get nappy rash.

Speaker 4 (01:24:24):
Yeah, good point.

Speaker 2 (01:24:25):
My neighbor throws his lawn clippings clippings over our fence.
When I bring it up, he said he doesn't, so
I filmed him. He still said he didn't do it.
So I dumped my recycling over the fence. He threw
fruit at my roof in the middle of the night. Interesting.
I wonder if this person lives next to Jeremy Wells
of seven Sharp fame.

Speaker 4 (01:24:42):
But it happened to him, did it?

Speaker 2 (01:24:44):
Well, No, he has. He had a neighbor whose dog
barked a lot, so he started throwing citrus fruit from
his tree at the neighbor, bouncing it off the roof.
Might be different.

Speaker 4 (01:24:53):
Where did that get to? In the ends? Did they
resolve that?

Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
I don't have to. I'll text him and see if
he resolved their problem. And this this is a very
matter of fact text. The dog from next door craps
on my lawn. No more information included, So the text
that said that if you want to give us any
more reflection, a dog from next door cracks on my lawn.
I guess it's part of the conversation.

Speaker 3 (01:25:11):
Yeah, I think the neighbors sending you a message. There,
Oh one hundred and eighty ten eighties a number to call, share.

Speaker 2 (01:25:15):
Or welcome the show. Hello, Oh hi, how are you
very good? Thank you? You've have you got problems with
your neighbors?

Speaker 12 (01:25:24):
Oh?

Speaker 24 (01:25:24):
Yeah, Well, we bought a house five years ago and
the neighbors haven't mowed their lawns for the five years
that we've been there. So I rang the council because
there's a walkway beside our house, and I thought that
if someone throws a ciger red or something over the offense,
then they would be a fire risk. And the council
said that there's nothing we can do that they can

(01:25:46):
do or we can do. And the only thing I
could do was ring the fibergate and tell and register
some sort of concern about the fire risks. But I
have no rights. It's a neighbor to tell them to
mow their lawns or keep their property tidy.

Speaker 2 (01:26:02):
Do you live a name. Do you live in a
sort of dry area Cheryl.

Speaker 24 (01:26:07):
And Patama?

Speaker 4 (01:26:08):
Oh yeah, I can get a bit right it.

Speaker 2 (01:26:10):
And has it been the same people living in the
house that whole time?

Speaker 24 (01:26:13):
Yeah, they lived there, they're happy living now. I have
never ever seen them in about it or in the
law on the law.

Speaker 2 (01:26:20):
Have you got any relationship with them at all? Have
you ever talked to them?

Speaker 9 (01:26:23):
Oh?

Speaker 24 (01:26:24):
No, No, you know one of the neighbors that one
of the neighbors talked to them about it and they
told them to stay out of it. It was none
of their business.

Speaker 2 (01:26:31):
So right, I mean do you think I mean, do
you think it is your business? Chill?

Speaker 24 (01:26:39):
I just feel that if it's a risk a virus, yes,
side birthday. Because my house has only stairs down the
back of the house, which is close to the house.
We don't have a front way out of the top story.
So if I had to get out in the fight
because they had a fire, I'd have to go towards
the fire to their house to get.

Speaker 13 (01:26:58):
Out of my house.

Speaker 24 (01:26:59):
And I think that that is a risk to me
and I should be able to think the council should
have been able to do something about it.

Speaker 2 (01:27:07):
Yeah, I mean from their point of view, though, can
you see and I understand where you're coming from, but
from their point of view, can you see that they
might think, well, this is my my land, my property,
my lawn. I'll do with it what I want.

Speaker 24 (01:27:20):
Yeah, but I guess what you're talking about.

Speaker 13 (01:27:22):
Rats.

Speaker 24 (01:27:22):
Yeah, we've got rat hules under our fence. So because
I don't know what's looking in there, but I'm pretty
sure there's rats from there, and who knows what else
is going on in there?

Speaker 2 (01:27:31):
Would you consider knocking on the door and saying, look,
I know you may be too busy to mow your lawn,
but I'm worried about the fire risks. So come then
when we come over with a weed whacker and sort
it out for you.

Speaker 19 (01:27:44):
That's a good idea.

Speaker 24 (01:27:45):
I'll try it.

Speaker 4 (01:27:46):
Yeah, give it a go.

Speaker 3 (01:27:47):
It's a fun We thank you for your call, Cheryl,
and all the best with that. Five years without mowing
a lawn. Look, I get property rights, but come on,
just tidy yourself up a little bit.

Speaker 2 (01:27:56):
Five years, but that's their lawn. What if they what
if they? You know, because there's all these people that
believe in the bees right, and the bees need a
dishivel type situation for them to land. The bees don't
like your men a cure lawns, Tyler. The bees want
a rough and tumble area for them to get their
their pollen. So maybe maybe who knows why why they

(01:28:17):
want their lawn like that, But isn't that their issue?

Speaker 3 (01:28:21):
Yeah, I'd still call shame at them on the street
if ever I saw them. Forget the bees, just tidy
yourself up. Eighty is a number to call.

Speaker 2 (01:28:28):
Hi, It's unacceptable to burn anything in your garden. How
would you feel when you came home to ruin laundry
and having to move indoors as you're about to entertain outside.
That's from Juliet. I mean, if you're going to burn
something in your yard. I mean, look, there's there's the
legal thing, and it's also they're just being a good
human being thing. So if I was ever going to
do a big burn in my yard, I might go

(01:28:48):
over and knock on the door and say to the neighbor, Hey,
you might want to take your laundry in and cancel
your barbecue. We're burning a lot of plastic bottles in
the backyard.

Speaker 3 (01:28:57):
I don't know what if they said to you, I'm
going to dob you into the council because you can't
do that. I mean, at that point you just say
it's going to burn baby, So get ready.

Speaker 2 (01:29:03):
Man, Tyler, you absolutely have a right to complain only
when they're right and pine on ours. Otherwise, live and
let live. I say, that's from Craig. Thank you for
your tech.

Speaker 3 (01:29:11):
Plenty of phone calls coming in on this one. I
eight hundred eighty ten eighty. Have you had a problem
with your neighbor and how did you sort it out?
And what right do you actually have to say how
your neighbors live, even if they are untidy or don't mow.

Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
Their lawns for five years?

Speaker 2 (01:29:23):
Yeah, oh, eight hundred and I also up next, I
want to tell you this information that I read recently,
this fact on why we like my lawns.

Speaker 4 (01:29:30):
Okay, this is good. Twenty past three.

Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
Matt Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons call oh, eight hundred
eighty ten eighty on news Talk ZB.

Speaker 3 (01:29:42):
For a good afternoon to you. What rights do you
have to say how your neighbors live? Have you got
into a bit of a scrap with your neighbors because
you don't like what they do into their lawn? Or
there might be some crappy cars parked out front. I
eatee hundred eighty ten eighty.

Speaker 2 (01:29:53):
The sticks says there should be a warren of fitness
of residential presentation. But I guess how do you decide
on that? Because you know what, maybe you you you
believe that maybe your neighbor believes that a bunch of cars,
rotten cars is they like the bogan hook them in status.
I I spray round up in the middle of the
night to sort out my neighbor's lawns.

Speaker 4 (01:30:17):
That is good.

Speaker 2 (01:30:18):
Yeah, I mean that's risky though. You know you're out
spraying your neighbors lawn with the roundabout, they come out,
that's the roundabouts round up. Then they could escalate, they
could spark off, escalate, Philip, you've got a neighbors at
war situation or you had one?

Speaker 9 (01:30:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, No, I had one a few years
ago with a neighbor. I had a puppy and I
probably ended up being the bad guy out of us
two parts to parts of us. Got a new puppy
and we labrador and anyway, I was working nights, and yeah,
they're a bit barky for a start, when they're little yeah,
and he come over and in front of my partner

(01:30:56):
and went absolutely barrico about midnight about the dog barking,
and she was all up there. So I got the
better of me and I ended out trying dogs work.

Speaker 5 (01:31:07):
And it carried on.

Speaker 9 (01:31:08):
And he used to have a party, as you do,
and he used to have parties and stuff. So what
I would do is get up in the morning and
start two lawn miles up about seven o'clock, and he'd
been partying until two. Just still them up with gas
and just let him go full board till they run out.
That was That was sort of one thing I did. Anyway,
I carried on with the poot thing for a while

(01:31:29):
and then I left that alone. And then anyway, we
had a real downfall one time and his drain got
blocked up. Now he got up on the roof and
what happened was he got up to clean the spouting
off and fell off the ladder and broke his legs. Yeah, yeah,
real bad break. Anyway, I'd come home from where, I'd
just go home from where, and I stand opened the

(01:31:52):
doors up, and then I could hear him yelling out
and yelling out to me, and I just sort of said,
I've just got iffing home and you're going to start
on me already. I'd just sit shut up. I don't
want to hear it. I don't want to hear about it, mate.
Then about twenty minutes later, the ambulance, I like, man,
I feel real bad about this now because he was
he actually poked the bone. The bone country wow.

Speaker 2 (01:32:15):
So he was yelling for help and you were like,
I can't deal with you right now, buddy.

Speaker 25 (01:32:20):
No, no, no, And then yeah, son, And in retrospect,
do you think that you could have handled think you
could have handled it better?

Speaker 9 (01:32:31):
Film? I probably sort of. I was a bit younger,
and so yeah, McCool. And actually, now fifteen years later
we get on quite well, right, because I think we
both realized none of us were going to win this battle.
But I never even mentioned about, you know, about the
dog ship thing. I never brought that up to say
sorry or anything. But yeah, yeah, at the time, it

(01:32:53):
was just like, oh, man, this guy is not going
to stop. And he must have thought I'm not going
to stop.

Speaker 2 (01:32:59):
Well, you know, the bone through the kneel wherever it
was was probably put you in a position of feeling
a little bit sympathy for him. I imagine you could
cool down in the end.

Speaker 9 (01:33:09):
It did in the end, because like I see, he
was yelling out and I thought, oh, here we go,
he's starting already. I've just got home from work and
you know yea, and yeah, sure enough, he was going
on the door. He's fallen off if he needs to
do do.

Speaker 2 (01:33:22):
You think Philip, he had come over with the barking
puppy and he hadn't absolutely screamed and yell. I mean,
you know, I mean, obviously you probably took it too far,
but you know, it has opening gambit around. The dog
was pretty full on. I mean, he could have knocked
on the door and said, you know, hey, the dogs,
I'm trying to sleep, and the dogs with the barkings,
but really having to go your missus would get you

(01:33:42):
got got your your shakels up, didn't it?

Speaker 5 (01:33:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:33:46):
Well it did because she'd actually just said that baby.
So she had only got down to the hospital about
before that, and I was a newborn, so she was
a bit really upset. You know, a woman get a
bit all moanala.

Speaker 2 (01:33:59):
And also you know you were in full protective dad, Mo.
You've got a new you've got a new offspring, so
you were probably you know, protecting your protecting your nest.

Speaker 9 (01:34:08):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, And that's the thing. And the
old dog. It actually actually back at Burglars were in
his house a few years later, so he probably should
have thought, wow, he's a dog after all.

Speaker 4 (01:34:19):
Yeah, so help.

Speaker 3 (01:34:22):
Yeah, how likely do you reckon it was that it
was the dog toos that you flicked on his roof
that clogged up the drain in the first place.

Speaker 9 (01:34:30):
More than likely you're responsible a broken leaves like that
was there was a hat like I mean, like, yeah,
I think one of his other one of the other
neighbors actually took all the drain. They fixed all that
because he was a hospital week. I think they fixed
all that and a bit together and didn't even told
him it was full of dog shoes.

Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
Well look, I'm glad things after fifteen years have cooled
down a little bit and you know, his his legs
healed and and your dog's good and yeah, you know,
happy ending.

Speaker 9 (01:35:03):
But yeah, it wasn't for a start, it was World
War three. It was a rushery. Hey lucky we don't
ned drones.

Speaker 2 (01:35:12):
I'm telling you, yeah, you're doing drone dropping dropping twos
from drones.

Speaker 4 (01:35:17):
Yeah, great story, Thank you very much. Phil is the
number to call. Have you had a bit of a
falling out with your neighbor? Love to hear from you.
It is twenty eight past three.

Speaker 7 (01:35:30):
You talk said the headlines.

Speaker 16 (01:35:38):
My apologies, it's all go in the news room and
this is your latest headlines with blue bubble taxi. There
is no trouble with a blue bubble. Tsunami alarms across
the Pacific since a magnitude eight point eight earthquake hit
off Russia's east coast, with after shocks continuing and tsunami

(01:35:59):
waves flooding the Coral Islands. Evacuations have been ordered in Japan, Alaska,
and Hawaii. Warnings cover the entire US West Coast, and
strong and unusual surges could reach New Zealand shoreline about midnight.
Phone records have turned up new leads and the hunt
for seventy five year old Roy Arbin, who went missing

(01:36:19):
on an overnight walk on the West Coast last Wednesday.
Urban's phone has been pinpointed to an open area south
of Mount Davey on Thursday afternoon. Nurses say enough is enough,
with thousands of Health New Zealand workers striking for twenty
four hours today protesting nursing shortages, pay and conditions. Legislation's

(01:36:40):
been introduced to crack down on boy races and fleeing drivers,
and a change at the top for a New Zealand
with Chief Digital Officer Nicol Ravishankar replacing Greek fourign As
CEO from October.

Speaker 2 (01:36:53):
How the all Blacks.

Speaker 16 (01:36:54):
Eligibility rules could stall Richie Muanga's return. Seymour at ens
at Herald Premium. Now back to matt Eathan Tyler Adams.

Speaker 3 (01:37:02):
Thank you very much, Raylean, and we are talking about
neighbors at ward. Do you have any right to say
how your name neghbors live if you're not happy with
how they are mowing the lawn or a bit of
dungey cars parked in the in the front of the house.

Speaker 2 (01:37:15):
Yeah, this is on the back of some rats that
have been running over from someone's neighbor's house. This text
is an interesting one, and like before I go into it,
I just I've sensored it a little bit.

Speaker 4 (01:37:25):
Okay, okay, because this is news tis he'd be this
sounds good, that sounds full noise.

Speaker 2 (01:37:29):
I'm pretty sure my neighbors get a kick out of me.
Seeing them making love. It's a bit of censoring making love.
I changed okay, good honestly, bro. They put music on
and then go at it in the conservatory out front.
I locked eyes with the woman. It's weird because she
works at a medical center. I go to at the desk,
but she acts like nothing is going on. To be fair,

(01:37:50):
I don't mind.

Speaker 3 (01:37:51):
It's kind of cool, great text. I'll ask him for
advice because I don't know what to do in that situation.
I mean, live and let live.

Speaker 4 (01:37:59):
Just enjoy the show.

Speaker 2 (01:38:00):
This sounds like everyone's happy.

Speaker 4 (01:38:02):
Don't tell anybody at the medical clinic.

Speaker 2 (01:38:04):
It sounds like both both both sides are getting what
they want out of the situation. So yeah, happy days.
But you know what, thanks for sharing.

Speaker 4 (01:38:12):
Yeah, thank you very much. I enjoyed that.

Speaker 2 (01:38:14):
Raji. Welcome to the show. You've got You've got a
situation happening as we speak.

Speaker 9 (01:38:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 26 (01:38:20):
So first, it's brendam One just text me saying, hey,
you should see your story on the radio, and I
was like, oh, tuned in and I was okay, A
sort of a bit of a long window story, but
I'll try to keep for short. I've been at my
property about twenty years. That neighbor's been on the State
House for about twenty five and seven of us share
a driveway. That's the only house that parks on the

(01:38:42):
shared driveway, park on half on the lord, half on
the driveway. None of the other neighbors do it. We've
been pretty lenient because you know, it's shared five kids
at one stage, and now kids are having kids, and
so I just got to the point, I said, look,
just keep it, keep it to one side so we
can just get it, keep getting it out, you know,
And got to the point there was one kind the driveway,

(01:39:03):
one on the left hand side and one on the
right hand side. And I was just like, Noah, that's it.
I tried talking. That's also I tried talking to her,
tried talking to the kids, saying, just park on one side.

Speaker 6 (01:39:13):
They can fit five, six cars.

Speaker 26 (01:39:15):
Comfortably on their property as well. You know, I'm my
dad anyway, like Bob windelf from my head and one
of the neighbors were just six or you know, the
other six neighbors saying why why are they parking on
the right of where no one else is Like Bill
moment rung crying.

Speaker 2 (01:39:31):
Aura told her, I wrung her.

Speaker 26 (01:39:33):
To lodge a complaint and us four neighbors and then
A signed the complaint within five hours. I haven't seen
the car down that right of way.

Speaker 2 (01:39:40):
For it, but the last two and a half days,
all right, So you think they got the hard word
from Kiang order.

Speaker 26 (01:39:46):
No, I think she's lying about how many kids are
living there, living there but going on or I haven't.
I've run, I run crying Aura to lodgic complain. Also
I rung owing companies saying can I get cars toad
if they're blocking in? And no, we don't get into
private matters around the council. They said, it's not it's
not their shoe because it's gone a right of way.

(01:40:06):
I've got they're blocking, but you know, the road for
emergency vehicles and stuff, not our problem.

Speaker 21 (01:40:12):
Okay, is it called the police?

Speaker 20 (01:40:14):
If you want me to call the police.

Speaker 2 (01:40:18):
I mean, that's that's incredibly annoying. If there's a possibility
for them to not do it as well, I mean,
that's that's very very annoying.

Speaker 9 (01:40:26):
You know, they like I said, but we I tried.

Speaker 26 (01:40:29):
You know, the other neighbors wanted me to be the
spokesman because I've been here second longest, and I was like, look,
I've tried, like I've tried for the last three months,
just say, look this is we just park here. Any
are parking on the road on my dad. But if
they parked six cars on their property and then four
down the right of way, that's ten cars. And they
still just don't want to do it, this double parking,

(01:40:51):
you know, like we had a rock gas truck that
built as a guest to the neighbor. He couldn't get through.

Speaker 2 (01:40:56):
Yeah, that's annoying.

Speaker 26 (01:40:57):
And I was just like and I was just like,
come on, man, like so yeah that one one phone
call now is just and it's just fixed it. And
I'm like, man, I could have done this three.

Speaker 9 (01:41:04):
Months ago, but I tried. You try, you try to
work with people.

Speaker 26 (01:41:08):
Yeah yeah, and they'll just give you the middle finger.
And then they got and the fun son came.

Speaker 6 (01:41:12):
Out top was shyster out of the door.

Speaker 9 (01:41:14):
I'll get your came tod out of your property if
you to one.

Speaker 2 (01:41:17):
Of my cars.

Speaker 9 (01:41:18):
All right, mate, that's all right.

Speaker 5 (01:41:20):
That was it.

Speaker 4 (01:41:20):
That was That was the last call, mate. Glad it
worked out for you.

Speaker 2 (01:41:23):
Yeah, well, let's hope that holds on.

Speaker 5 (01:41:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:41:26):
Doberman Doberman. Right, We're going to play some messages when
we come back. More of your stories. Neighbors at war?
Do you have a right to tell?

Speaker 3 (01:41:33):
You tell your neighbor how they should live if you
had problems with a neighbor that is a bit disorderly. Oh,
eight one hundred and eighteen eighty is the number to call.

Speaker 4 (01:41:42):
It is twenty three to four.

Speaker 2 (01:41:44):
And has anyone else got neighbors making love in the conservatory?

Speaker 4 (01:41:46):
We'd love to hear from you, absolutely, the.

Speaker 1 (01:41:48):
Big stories, the big issues, to the big trends and
everything in between.

Speaker 7 (01:41:53):
Matt Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons used talks.

Speaker 4 (01:41:56):
It'd be good afternoon. It is twenty to four.

Speaker 2 (01:41:59):
It's interesting text. What the hell is a conservatory? So
I was sharing that story before about them. Pretty sure
my neighbors get kick out of seeing me seeing they're
making love. Honestly, bro, they put music on and go
at it in the conservatory, and so I just thought,
was underest think that someone takes you and see what's
the conservatory? So out of that whole story about the
medical center and the locking eyes was that they were

(01:42:21):
interested in what a conservatory is? It is, Lady dar
But it's because I'm saying conservatory instead of conservatory, because
that's how the person seen it. In conservatory, any of
us will play cludo, just without native people in the conservatory.
Anyone that's been in the cargo knows most of the
houses out the front have like the sort of glass
bit that you sit in. Yeah, out the front of
the house, it's.

Speaker 4 (01:42:39):
A good place for making love. Some would say, oh,
eight hundred is another to call neighbors conservatory conservatory.

Speaker 2 (01:42:47):
Yeah, I think maybe I confused. People were saying conservatory anyway.

Speaker 4 (01:42:50):
Doesn't matter anyway, oh eight hundred, eighty, ten and eighty
were getting.

Speaker 2 (01:42:53):
It wasn't the part of the story that I was
most interested in.

Speaker 4 (01:42:55):
We're geting some great stories about neighbors at war.

Speaker 2 (01:42:58):
Joe, welcome to the show.

Speaker 5 (01:43:00):
Hey, how's it going.

Speaker 2 (01:43:03):
Very good? Thanks?

Speaker 14 (01:43:05):
Yeah, So about twenty years so, possibly under the papacious
city counsel, maybe just before the change of an office,
my father could notice for all that I'm saying, you
need to do something about your lawn because the virus. Right, Yeah,

(01:43:26):
so I wass think she's living out of town at
the time, But yeah, I got the.

Speaker 9 (01:43:30):
Copy of it sent to me.

Speaker 14 (01:43:32):
I came back up Torkland and hired a scrub cutter
and got in there and started clearing it out. And
then on the day I was clearing it out, I
had noise control turn up because I've been using the
scrub cutter for too long.

Speaker 9 (01:43:47):
In the neighbor.

Speaker 2 (01:43:48):
So do you think it was the same people that
were complaining about the lawn that? Yeah, So that is
interesting because we're talking took a sheer ring before and
she said her neighbors hadn't been mowing their lawn. So
the council can demand that you made because it was
the council the demand that you do, Is that right, Joe?

Speaker 5 (01:44:05):
Yeah, Yeah, So I.

Speaker 14 (01:44:06):
Believe it might be a when moment in fact, that
Chris was under the Papakura City Council being semi rule, Yeah,
they would take they would take that as as.

Speaker 5 (01:44:17):
More of a risk.

Speaker 4 (01:44:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:44:19):
I've just looked it up in an Auckland, Joe. So
I've just gone to the council website complain about an
overgrown section. Overgrown sections are a common complaint year round
and can have serious health implications where we will take
action rats, vermin, flies, and mosquitoes, other insects capable of
causing or transmitting disease in fire risk.

Speaker 2 (01:44:37):
Ah right, But but that's that's I mean, you're doing
the right thing there, You've got your you know, you're
you're actually cutting the lawn down to do the right thing.
So the person that complained about that, I mean that
is just let you finish the job, you know this pity.

Speaker 14 (01:44:53):
The guy from noise control and just kidding me. It's
basically what he said, and he went down, and I
believe it when spoke to him. You're just barking up
the wrong tree.

Speaker 9 (01:45:05):
Him, come up, come from out and down.

Speaker 2 (01:45:11):
Joseph, good guy in the story. Joe was the hero
in the story. You know, he's fixing the problem. Yeah.
I mean there's some people that are just predisposed to complain. Yeah,
Chronic dissatisfaction syndrome. I talked about talk about a lot
on this on the show.

Speaker 3 (01:45:25):
Yep, there's a lot of that out there. Absolutely, one
hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number to call my.

Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
Elderly neighbors and nudists and love vengie gardening. I'm not
sure which way to approach them. Well, probably what from
the frontal? From behind?

Speaker 3 (01:45:38):
Is that what it's probably yeah, probably yell out to
them from a distance first and just say that you're watching.

Speaker 2 (01:45:43):
Yeah, But like I mean, as this text about for
your own benefit, which way to approach them? Do you
want full frontal or do you want to approach them
from behind?

Speaker 4 (01:45:52):
Yeah? Always from the back.

Speaker 2 (01:45:54):
But yeah, that is interesting. Yeah, I mean, I mean
that's an interesting one. Like the nudity in your own property.
I mean, it's your own property. Can it can be
nude in your own property? I was driving past the
State House just yesterday actually, and there was this really
fat nude person in the window as I was driving past,
and I thought, that's gross.

Speaker 3 (01:46:13):
That's a big nude person. Paul, you've had an issue
with your neighbor Nigel.

Speaker 5 (01:46:21):
Oh man, you like gooes are making me laugh, man,
I'm enjoying your program. And two, by the way, I
hope I make you jealous with this one. I had
two of those potatoes.

Speaker 2 (01:46:32):
Oh good man from Rosedale. Yes, and you had two
of them?

Speaker 5 (01:46:40):
Yes? Well I couldn't go there to just tap one,
could I Award?

Speaker 4 (01:46:44):
You're a smart man, Paul. I like your style.

Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
What time of day was that, Paul? For the pies?

Speaker 5 (01:46:49):
Sorry?

Speaker 2 (01:46:50):
What time of day were the pies.

Speaker 5 (01:46:52):
It was o' clark. I was expecting a queue out
the door, but there was a small queue and when
I got in the queue, we shouldn't be talking about pies.

Speaker 2 (01:47:00):
But yeah, so that's out in Albany, isn't it. Rosdale,
Rosdale Road, the Rosdale Bakery and f a the winner
of the Supreme Pile Award.

Speaker 5 (01:47:11):
And I spoke to the lady and it was her
lifelong dream to to win that Supreme award.

Speaker 2 (01:47:16):
Time good.

Speaker 5 (01:47:18):
And went away with my two pies and absolutely enjoyed them,
favored them. But I'm a fan of Patrick pies too.
I get a chance to sample of the post.

Speaker 2 (01:47:30):
Yeah, Patrick Lamb, what a genius. Bethlehem pies are incredible.

Speaker 5 (01:47:35):
If you know, his story is even more amazing.

Speaker 2 (01:47:38):
I think he should be knighted. I think he should
be on the on the King's Honor List. You know
he's done services to pies.

Speaker 5 (01:47:45):
Yeah you put it in an old second done.

Speaker 2 (01:47:48):
Yeah, I mean I keep saying he should be nighted,
and then I do nothing about it. A New Year's
Honest List. Here, we're done, let's get onto which we
put the pies behind us? Nutty Nigel, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:48:01):
Yeah, it's the era where you know your neighbors, you
know their names, to talk, talk across the themes that
I'm in everything like that. Anyway, Nail came to our
neighborhood and we did a nice thing. Make some SCons
go around, welcome them to the neighborhood and everything like that.
Do the nice these and he kind of was on

(01:48:21):
board a little bit. Then about a week's later he
whacked up the thins. Then he whacked up in a
day and only had to sort of a third of
the property, but he had pulled pellets apart, waked it
up in a in a day, with the nails pointing
out our way.

Speaker 14 (01:48:44):
My wife was horrifice.

Speaker 5 (01:48:47):
He went around and said, look, no to Fince, you've
knocked up Countail'm and pressed with it. We've got all
the nails on our side. Anyway, more more developed from
the scope. So I think someone was mentioning about being
able to park in front of your health Yeah, okay,

(01:49:08):
well I park on the rug because we live up
a right of way. And I came home one day
and he was eyeballing me, and I said, oh, he
wants to look talk to me, you know, And so
I got out of my vehicle and popped out and
he says, and I want you to park there? And
I went, really, Nichel, sure, yeah, but can't anyone pack

(01:49:29):
he up? I mean, and he said, no, I don't
want you to park there, and he kind of started
threatening me, and we were both getting elevated, and I
was going, oh, this is just getting you know, under
the collar, both of us, both of us. And it
took me just a moment to go, just a moment,

(01:49:51):
and I stepped back and said, hey, Nigel, are you
threatening me? And he kind of realized where he was
going too, and so we're able to step back from
that moment, which was really good. But there was another
time we went taking my daughters out to the airport
and she had their friends. So got in the car
at five thirty in the morning and we had, in

(01:50:13):
a sense the boot slam five doors slammed because the
car was full, and we cruised down the driveway and
out the corner of my eye this Nigel standing with
his arms folded at his letterbol looking at me, and
I'm going, oh it said about it. It was really
creepy because it was dark. Anyway, we get that from
the airport later in the day and he comes around
up the driveway wants to talk to me. He says,

(01:50:36):
can't you close your door quietly? You slamming it? Purpose Angel,
It's just you know, and I had to live here.
I'm just closing the door. Well, close it quietly. And
he was getting elevated again, and the dog on the
other side could tell that his master was getting elevated.
And my wife wanted to get in, and I said, darling,

(01:50:59):
just get back in the house.

Speaker 2 (01:51:00):
I thought this.

Speaker 5 (01:51:02):
And again was threatening, and I said, and the only
way I could calm it down was I did the
body language drunk and I lowered myself. I opened my palms, ah, yes,
down the situation and say, look, you know this isn't working.
You know, we've got to coexist. And anyway, the nice

(01:51:24):
part of it when he did leave eventually he kind
of brought round my wife a bottle of wine and
and it was kind of his way of saying, Okay,
well maybe we didn't.

Speaker 7 (01:51:35):
Get on, but here's my peace of Well there you go.

Speaker 2 (01:51:38):
Lucky for nutting Nigel that Paul's a lover, not a
fighter exactly, but also happy ending.

Speaker 4 (01:51:42):
Yeah, I thought there was no coming back for old nige,
but that bottle of wine.

Speaker 2 (01:51:45):
But I mean, was that fuming in growing angry? Angry
at your neighbors. It's it's it's common, it is it's growing.
And everything they do is like, yeah, to get me there.
They're whatever they're doing is focused at annoying me, when
really the person is just trying to take their kids
to the airport.

Speaker 4 (01:52:01):
What if you don't know exactly Shrick. You had a crazy.

Speaker 15 (01:52:05):
Neighbor's granddaughter's birthday in Brisbane last weekend and one of
the one of my son's mates, was there and he
was sort of really uncomfortable and I said to him,
what's up? And he goes off. Just I was shot

(01:52:25):
a couple of weeks back, and he's got two three,
three bullets had gone through his chest. But because because
he was so close to the guy, they just went
straight through. They didn't, you know, shatter out the back
like they do, and it was all over. The old
neighbor reckons his dogs were barking. But the police went

(01:52:49):
through the CCT footage and all that and you can
clearly see the only time they were barking is the
old neighbor was shooting them with an air rifle. What
so then he this guy confronted the neighbor about it,
and yeah, he came over and shot them twice with

(01:53:10):
the three or three.

Speaker 4 (01:53:11):
Wow, that is that takes the case.

Speaker 2 (01:53:14):
That is terrifying, isn't it?

Speaker 5 (01:53:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:53:15):
But also what kind of psychosis is that? Psycho? So
you're shooting the dog to make it bark and then
complaining about it.

Speaker 4 (01:53:22):
Yeah, that man I thought Nigel was bad.

Speaker 2 (01:53:25):
That's Monchausen. It's kind of a version of Munchausen by
proxy kind of. There are some super crazy people out there,
and look, if you're unlucky, you end up living next
door to them.

Speaker 3 (01:53:35):
Exactly. We could have done four hours on that, Thank
you very much. The right who called right.

Speaker 4 (01:53:40):
We're going to play some messages, but back very shortly.
It is eight minutes to four.

Speaker 1 (01:53:45):
The big stories, the big issues, the big trends, and
everything in between.

Speaker 7 (01:53:50):
Matt Heath and Tyler Adams Afternoons Used TALKSB.

Speaker 4 (01:53:55):
News Talks THEREB it is six to four.

Speaker 2 (01:53:57):
Everyone is entitled to quiet enjoyment of their property. It's
law that includes being able to look from your property
and not see visual pollution, especially if the neighboring property
as a tip and devalues your property. I don't know
if that is. You're right, No, you just got to
be careful that you don't obsess over what your neighbors
are up to. You know, you know a lot of us.
You know it can ruin your life and they might

(01:54:19):
not even care. I mean, how many people just walk
around just so furious at their neighbors and everything their
neighbors do, and their neighbors are oblivious to it, and
you just tie yourself into knots.

Speaker 3 (01:54:29):
And how stressful to make an enemy out of your
neighbor and just be stressing about dog to sit in
your roof.

Speaker 2 (01:54:34):
I think you've got to decide whether it's worth it.
You've just got to take a few breaths and goes
this is worth because it can escalate. And if you're
going home to a war zone after work every night,
not great? Is it not good for anybody? This is
a great text here. Hi, guys, my neighbor got chickens
last year. They started coming to our property and we
realized they were putting eggs on our side of the fence.

(01:54:57):
She started complaining, we are not giving the eggs back
to her if she is the owner of the chickens.
We haven't bought a single egg for the last six months,
as the eggs are in our property.

Speaker 4 (01:55:07):
Happy days.

Speaker 2 (01:55:08):
Well that's an interest interesting legal I mean, if the
eggs come over to your property, if the chickens lay
the eggs and your property, those eggs are yours.

Speaker 3 (01:55:14):
Yep, are your eggs as far as anyone's concerned, that's
the law.

Speaker 2 (01:55:18):
Yeah, you'd be a really I mean you could hiff
them back across the fence. You could, you could return
them at pace towards the house, but that wouldn't be
very nice.

Speaker 3 (01:55:26):
Yeah, that is a great text. Thank you to everyone
who called antext on that one. What a great discussion.

Speaker 2 (01:55:31):
Yeah, and thank you so much for listening to the show.
We've we've loved talking to you and all your text.
The full show podcast will be out and about now.
So if you missed our chats on on neighbors at
war and what else did we chat about today, Tyler? Oh,
we chatted about a New zealand And CEO. So that
was a good yarn. Yeah, the newar New Zealand CEO.
We does he sit in the pentheon of important people

(01:55:53):
in New Zealand? Yes, turns out not as high as
I thought he was. No I thought he was just
below the PM and the All Blacks Captain far Apparently
not so. Yeah, if you want to hear those chats,
follow our podcast wherever you get your pods. The Poor
Homes broadcast over the Hither Dupas The Island is up next.
But Tyler, my good friend, tell me why I'm playing
this song from the Clash.

Speaker 4 (01:56:11):
Sis Bank Robert.

Speaker 3 (01:56:12):
Yes, I've got no Ah the old bank hopper is
don't be lazy change your bank, all.

Speaker 2 (01:56:19):
Right, Thanks so much for listening. If you're my neighbor,
I'll be in the conservatory I boiling people deep into
the night, so I'll see you then until tomorrow. Though
for the rest of you, give my taste to Keebi
from us.

Speaker 7 (01:56:31):
Thanks for listening, Mattie than Tyler Adams.

Speaker 1 (01:56:38):
For more from News Talk st B, listen live on
air or online, and keep our shows with you wherever
you go with our podcasts on iHeartRadio.
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