Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
You're listening to a podcast from News Talks ed B.
Follow this and our Wide Ranger podcasts now on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Hello are you great news innas and welcome to Matt
and Tyler Afternoons Full Show podcast number fifty nine for
the thirty first of January twenty twenty five. Great show today, huge,
Oh my god, I can't remember what was on it.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
New Zealander of the Week man the winner there, controversial
but well deserved to me. You're going to look forward
to that.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
And we had some great callers, so I hope you
enjoy the show. Set to download, follow, subscribe.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
And give them a taste to key.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
We love you. Have a great weekend. To see you Monday.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Talking with you all afternoon.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
It's Matt Heath and Taylor Adams Afternoons with the Volvo
XC ninety News Talks EDB.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
Hello, good afternoon, Welcome into Friday. I hope you're having
a great afternoon. I am Hiday Maddie.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
Oh and then once again my brand new cheers. It's
my headphones around. This is happening every day.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
The floor and the design isn't It's great for the
lumbar support, but when it comes to the headphone cord.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
Yeah, yeah, I think we.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Need what you call them bluetooth headphones.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
Yeah, I think we do. Once you're demandless. As I say,
the other day, I demanded cheer parody with Mike Costking
and I got it. But it's causing me all kinds
of problems. Careful what you wish for? You got around,
you got another one. That's the workings. There's so many
places for you to catch. But look, that's not a
problem that anyone else is worry about. I probably shouldn't
(01:42):
have bought it up. But what have we got on
the show today?
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Tyler Big Show today? Well, you know, I know I
say that often, but it is because it's Friday after
three o'clock.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
We've got that's right. We have the Matt and Tyler
Afternoons New Zealander of the Week. Who will it be?
Speaker 3 (01:57):
Yeah, that's going to be huge. Some big nominations this week.
Also Topical Tunes. This is when Matt and I each
pick a song related to a story or theme of
the week. The first to three it's via phone takes
it out. I won it last week. That was the
first week back. I'm on a roll. Can you call
that a roll?
Speaker 2 (02:15):
You call that role, Yeah, call that a roll? What one? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (02:19):
One?
Speaker 3 (02:20):
No, I had a good start, is what I say.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
So look, I'll take suggestions on nine two nine two
for my song I'm struggling this week.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
Come here, we're look at you. We're looking through the
stories of the week saying jeep is what am we
going to do? But looking forward to that that is
just after three point thirty. We're also going to ask
the question how often should you wash your sheets? A
massive study it has just been completed in the UK,
very detailed, very in depth, and they've come up with
the magic number on how often you should wash your sheets,
(02:48):
your dove, your pillow slip, how often you should change
your pillow full stop as and chuck it out and
buy a new one.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Yeah right, And you think that what's the question you're
asking people? Should we wash our sheets at all?
Speaker 3 (03:02):
We are we just a bunch of filthy, filthy pigs
in New Zealand? How often do you wash your sheets?
How often do you wash your sheets?
Speaker 2 (03:07):
How my sheet's never washing sheets? Is for the week
and our ancestors slept outside under the stars. We didn't
even have sheets. We're not evolved to have sheets it's weak.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
Where you've got those nice linen sheets as well? Did
you get evolved to get those sheets?
Speaker 2 (03:23):
I'm back on the Egyptian Goden.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
Oh very good. Yeah, yeah, yeah, one hundred hundred.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
Three yeah, hundred thousand three good.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
That's after three o'clock.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
After two o'clock?
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Is Facebook marketplace more trouble than it's worth? A warning
from police about those who buy things off Facebook marketplace
and many listening You would have purchased something off the
Facebook marketplace, you know, the drill that somebody wants to
sell something, you holk up with them, pay the price
that you've agreed to. But it appears more often than
not some people are getting robbed. There's assaults taking place,
(03:55):
and it's a bit of the wild West.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Mat Yeah, I think Facebook Marketplace is down and dirty.
It's anarchy out there. And look, I'm just a trade
me guy. I think trade me is a good, honest
way to go. You know. Also the trade and exchange
was great back in its day. But yeah, Facebook marketplace,
(04:18):
what advantages does it have over trade me? Cheaper? But
the protections you know, trade trade me has got your back.
They're originally a New Zealand company. Their officers are here,
great company.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Everything I've heard about Facebook Marketplace just seems like a
massive pain in the backside, I mean time wasts. Obviously,
you could get the scammers a lot more scammers on
Facebook Marketplace, But that is the discussion after two o'clock,
because right now we want to talk about posting children
on social media. This week, the New Zealand Police issued
a warning reminding parents to think safely when posting back
(04:50):
to school photos of their kids online. This time of year,
of course, means a steady parade of images, usually posted
by proud parents on social media of smiling kids in
their school uniforms, sometimes in front of the family home
or a child's school. But police are saying these seemingly
innocent images can contain information that could be maliciously used
(05:10):
to target kids online or in rare cases, real life.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
Why do you need to do that? Why do you
need to post pictures of your kids on their first
day school? I mean send it to their grandparents, seeing
it to brothers and sisters, you know, people that care
or guess like a WhatsApp group. But what's the advantage
in blasting it out into the world. What do you
get out of that.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
But isn't that just modern life? As my parents took
a picture of me when I first started primary school
at age five and I look chaffed ass, a big
smile on my face, a backpack it was bigger than me.
Speaker 2 (05:42):
How many copies that did they get printed?
Speaker 3 (05:45):
I think three or four? So the grandparents got one?
Who else got Mum had a couple of these?
Speaker 2 (05:50):
Nothing wrong with that. I'm just saying it's kind of
an odd thing we do. And I look, I'm not
being too judgmentally because I'm pretty sure we did it
on the first day of my one of my sons
going to school when he was five. I think there's
a photo went out of us. I'm not sure where
it went out. I should look it up. Actually, so
there's a long time ago now. But what why would
you do that? Why do you need to put a
picture up of your kids? And I think, especially as
(06:13):
they get older, I think a kid over ten that's
starting to invade into their privacy and their social life.
Isn't it putting kids up with them?
Speaker 3 (06:21):
Because we're talking about them, We're talking about photos that
just have children in them. We're not talking about family
photos here, which is a bit different. And the reason
I said modern life is you're quite right. There was
no social media when I was a five year old,
but now it is just commonplace. That is what we do.
We don't get photos printed, We don't take it down
to a photo shop to get a whole bunch for
the grandparents. We chuck it up on Facebook, We check
(06:43):
it up on Instagram.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Yeah, why why do you put them up on Instagram?
Why do you put them on Facebook? And I don't know.
It seems to me that this is a bit of
this is a bit of a bit fear hungery.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
I agree.
Speaker 2 (06:57):
I think it's unlikely to cause any major problems for you.
But you are kind of taking pictures of people without
their consent. Their kids grow up and their pictures are
out there for the whole world to see. I don't know.
I think it's a bad idea.
Speaker 3 (07:09):
Do you not like seeing pictures of your friends kids
on on social media? If you're sort of just scrolling
through and you see a nice picture of I'd say
my situation. So a lot of my friends are having
children for the first time and posting some nice photos
from time to time of their new child. And I'll
give it a like or give it a week comment.
That's that to me is kind of a nice aspect that.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
You want to give them a we like? No, I
like your kids are at school. What am I liking?
Speaker 3 (07:38):
You're giving them some coud ice for their lovely family
and the friends of yours, and they're quite proud of
their child going to school.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
You can be proud of that posting it online. Just
be proud, be proud, seend the picture of the grandma.
You don't need to post it online. But what's wrong
with you? What do you need? What are you looking
for in life?
Speaker 3 (07:54):
But if you don't get the kudos from your community
on social media, you know, is it.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
Really the same?
Speaker 4 (07:59):
Hi?
Speaker 2 (07:59):
Guys, we have a rule in our house. My daughter
is eight and we have never posted a pick online
of her, as she can post when she's old enough
to decide. Our extended family think we are weird for
not doing this, But I don't. It's from Elizabeth, Yeah,
because I've got nothing wrong with you share with your
family and closed groups and look, I don't know. I
just think it's I think it's a bit weird, but
(08:20):
but but everyone does it, so maybe I'm a bit weird.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
Well, give us it.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Maybe I'm a bit weird. For thing is weird?
Speaker 3 (08:26):
Give us a call, I W eight hundred eighty ten eighty.
Do you have any problem with posting pictures of your
children on social media? Or are you worth Matt? Do
you think it is a bit weird or is it
just a bit of harmless parading your child in front
of your community and your friends because you're proud. Give
us a buss O. Eight hundred eighty ten eighty is
a number to call. Nine two ninety two is the
text number. It's fourteen past one, Bagtory. Shortly. You're listening
(08:49):
to Matt and Tyler.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
The big stories, the big issues, the big trends, and
everything in between.
Speaker 4 (08:57):
Matt and Taylor.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
Afternoons with the Volvo XC ninety, attention to detail and
a commitment to comfort.
Speaker 4 (09:03):
News talks dead B.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
News Talks. There B, we're talking about posting your children
on on social media. There was a warning from police
this week with many kids back to school, kids going
to school for the first time, the age old taking
a photo of a five year old child their first
day at school, smiling with a massive backpack on. That
has been a tradition for decades, if not longer, but
(09:26):
it's different these days, is that parents would post it
on social media rather than give a photo to the
grand parents.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Yeah, I got no problem for taking of the picture.
I'm just thinking it is odd to Why would you
need to post that out for everyone to see your kids?
It seems strange to me people that have no skin
in the game, you know, not grandparents or your brothers
and sisters or whatever, getting so many texts on this
in nine two nine two. I'm with Matt here. Why
do people feel the need to show their kids photos
(09:51):
with the world and get some likes on socials? It
would appear they are looking for some sort of gratification.
Why can't people just be happy with themselves. It almost
appears selfish.
Speaker 3 (10:01):
And this one similar vein hold the line, you were
certainly not weird, Matt. Harmless parading question mark equals living
vicariously through your five year old without their permission. I
don't let people post pics of me on social media.
Not their right to take my image for their own grandiosity.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
Yeah, and look, I don't have a problem with people
that have privacy settings on and only share it with
the family. Look, I don't have a problem with anyone. Actually,
to be fair, I just find it a little bit
weird when I'm flicking through when I see a bunch
of people's shots of their kids, I'm like, I don't
get it. Why, But but if you're sharing it with
a family, you've got a WhatsApp group that you're sharing
with people, or privacy settings on there's lots of different
(10:41):
privacy settings you can set up. Then then that's that's who.
That's no different than mailing them to people, if only
if you get to select who seize them. But just
blasting them out onto the wider social media.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
I find that ot you think it's a young person,
So it certainly is. And I mentioned my friend group,
not all of them, but some of them. And I'm
not on social media that much personally, and I don't
have children to post. But whether it is, you know,
almost a look at how great our life is situation.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
But there wouldn't be too many people I know that
don't post a lot of photos of nice things on
social media, and they probably do want some comments or
some likes, and it's not just about going out to
their extended family. They want some kudos for the lives
that they're living and you know, and I know that
might not be healthy, but is there anything really wrong
with it? You don't have to engage in that.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
Well, there's absolutely something wrong with one in kudos for
the life you're living. Just the kudos is the life
you're living. What do you need other people's approval for
what you're doing?
Speaker 3 (11:37):
You don't. Yeah, but if they want to do that,
that's harmless. I mean, look, that might not be healthy
in the way that they view the world, but it
is harmless to them.
Speaker 2 (11:45):
I'm saying. It's weird. It's all I'm saying. I think
it's a weird aspect of life that you would want
to have the approval of strangers on your family. Oh,
eight hundred eighty But you know, lock your profile, your
Facebook profile, go for your life absolutely and look, And
that's what the police are saying here, the police aren't.
I mean, the warning here is obviously for people that
(12:07):
are just putting it out for the entire world to
see what their kids are up to.
Speaker 5 (12:10):
You know.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
Yeah, O one hundred eighty ten eighties the number to
call John, How are you this afternoon?
Speaker 6 (12:15):
I'm good.
Speaker 7 (12:16):
Hey, I'm really for the police because I've actually tangled
with a creep likeness, and I know what they do
with your photos, and I think the police know exactly
what they're talking about. I would never put stuff like
that in social media, no way. Like these guys, mate,
they take no prisoners. They and I won't go into
the details of the whole incident, but they are scary
dudes and nap it is not worth the risk, I
(12:38):
can assure you.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
What do you think about it in general? Even outside
of the risk though, so so.
Speaker 7 (12:46):
I just think, why do you need to do it?
Like I come from the era of printed stuff, like
you've been talking about, you know, when you had film
and cameras, et cetera. I just think, why do we
need to put all this on social media? Like why
why why do we do this? Like I know it's
handy to share photos if you're an overseas trip. I
get all there, but like, I keep my profile really
(13:07):
really and I know that there's only one place you
can find one photo of me. It was on the newspaper,
and I need to take that away. I must go
to them and say get rid of it. But yeah,
like I'm really nah, no, I Like I say, these
guys are scary let's just say quote, I've got your photo,
I know where you live, and I'm going to get you.
This is how they roll. They are scary scary dudes.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
Yeah, okay, well, thank you so much of it for
you for your call there, John, appreciate.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
It, certainly. I know that there's you know, some some
very deranged people out there. Absolutely, and it's a strange
old world. And I get your argument. And I don't
personally post anything. I mean, you can ever look at
my Facebook now where mates on there, And the last
time I personally posted anything would have been probably five
years ago.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
But I to accept you as a friend, did you
request me? Yeah, I'll unaccepted. Sorry, I don't know what
that must have been an anwer instantly.
Speaker 3 (13:57):
It might have been when you're on your energy duras
you were.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
So bored and it was alert Adams.
Speaker 3 (14:05):
But if you go have a look, I haven't personally
posted anything from my life in the last four years.
And you might argue that, man, you live a bore
in existence, and maybe I do, but I don't get
any gratification from that. I never have. That's just me.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
Yeah, no, no, no, I get that. Yeah, but that's
what I'm saying was it weird? But absolutely one hundred
percent support sharing pictures of your kids with grandparents and
other and family members overseas and all that kind of stuff. Absolutely,
and social media technology has made that available. I'm just saying,
don't just throw it out to the entire world. That's weird.
Just lock it down to people that you want to
(14:38):
actually see it, which is very simple to do. If
you're putting it out there to get the maximum likes
on the back of your kids personally, I think that's odd.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Yeah, good point. Oh, one hundred and eighty ten eighty.
If you've got a family member, if you're a grandparent
or indeed a parent, and your children are posting pictures
of their children, love to hear from you, do you
think it's weird? Have you had a chat to your
your children to say, hey, maybe that's not such a
good idea to make that public.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Hey, And can I just say that I feel guilt
every single day because my dad, who lives in Duneda,
has been asking for a picture of me and my
sons for so long so we can put it up
on the wall and replace the last one that's ancient.
And I keep forgetting to do it. I keep forgetting
it to be printed. I totally think that their grandparents
deserve pictures of your kids. But I've just been a
(15:20):
bit lame to do that. So if you're listening, Dad,
which I know you're not, that's coming.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
Just accept as friendship on Facebook.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
I can't believe I'm letting people like you through.
Speaker 3 (15:28):
Eighty is another to call. It is twenty three past one.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Putting the tough questions to the newspeakers, the mic asking Breakfast, turns.
Speaker 8 (15:37):
Out the United States now our second biggest export market
were wonce. Australia was everything now else third so China,
the US now Australia trade mins Tom mclos, well, there's look, I.
Speaker 9 (15:44):
Think there's softness in the Australian market. So that's helped
us through to sort of our trade. But it's still
very very important to us. But what's happened in America
is they are consuming more and as their economy is
growing quickly, they're looking towards many countries of the world
and New Zealand. Incidentally, although this isn't to do with
President Trump. When he became president last time, our trade
with the US grew.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
Very very quickly.
Speaker 9 (16:04):
And although there's a bit of uncertainty about what he
might or might not do around tariffs. My prediction is
New Zealand expeers will do very, very well in the
US market.
Speaker 8 (16:13):
Back Monday from six am, the Mic asking Breakfast with
Bailey's Real Estate News Talk ZB.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
Twenty six past one. Is it strange to post your
children on social media to the whole world?
Speaker 2 (16:23):
And is it dangerous?
Speaker 3 (16:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Because the police saying is.
Speaker 3 (16:26):
Oh, one hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number
to call, love to hear from you. Now, how are
you this afternoon?
Speaker 10 (16:32):
Very good?
Speaker 11 (16:32):
How are you?
Speaker 6 (16:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (16:33):
Good?
Speaker 3 (16:34):
You think it is dangerous to post your children to
social media when it's public?
Speaker 6 (16:41):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (16:41):
Highly.
Speaker 11 (16:42):
When my daughter was very young, we were at the
Sydney Opera House and my mother and I were sitting
there at the CFA and US Sea of tourists Asian.
We're standing around the glass taking a photo of my
blonde haired, live little girl and it just freaked me
out from that stage. And what now can happen is
(17:03):
that was the Google Photo photo app. You can grab
somebody's photo and if you're tu ldren inside that photo
with you know a bit of your background of your house,
or anything like that. They can actually get your address
straight away, and so I just find and at a
sports field anything like that, and then there's an algorithm
that they can kind.
Speaker 12 (17:22):
Of start following.
Speaker 11 (17:24):
And so we stopped pretty quickly. I mean, I have
a Friends of It background, so it was definitely something
that we looked into and we were just like, look,
at the end of the day, we've got what's that,
We've got private messaging, you know, that's where our photoes
of our kids are going to go. And if it
was a family photo or anything like that, I just
kind of changed the background or did something different in
(17:45):
the background. So our essentially our location wasn't realistically shared.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Boy, I would fire up if someone just came up
when my kids were little, if someone just came up
and started taking photos of my kids.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
So gross, isn't it gross?
Speaker 10 (18:00):
Like it was?
Speaker 11 (18:01):
But the thing is for me to go, you know,
run from the top of it, turn the opera house
all the way out to kind of get rid of them.
And it's just yeah, I mean I talk all the time,
like I don't stop talking. I was silent.
Speaker 10 (18:13):
Mum was just like a.
Speaker 11 (18:14):
UK and I'm like, I don't know what I didn't
quite understand what had literally gone on right then. And yeah, yeah,
it shook me a wee bit the fact that all
these people.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
A human is not a site, a zoo, not even
a look at the bands.
Speaker 11 (18:34):
Seriously, it was seriously like we were sitting in this
like caged box, glass box, and they were like, yeah,
let's just take a photo. And yeah, it was quite given.
So I just think, yeah, for parents, I think it's great.
Or you just got to have your profiles really on
private and really kind of lock down, get a VPN
and scramble.
Speaker 2 (18:52):
It, but you share it, but you share a lot
a lot of photos sort of in a lockdown fashion
with family members.
Speaker 11 (18:59):
Yeah, definitely. So we've got a tiny pot that you know,
when the kids were born, so it's kind of like,
you know, follow your journey. And then there's obviously WhatsApp,
but look we've kind of gone off Facebook. We've you know,
on the social media stuff. Anything business fires doesn't have
any of the kids, and anything that I do, I
always get can think from you know, parents or whatever
(19:19):
to say, he is it okay if I've tracked and stuff,
you know, this is what we've done for an event
or whatever.
Speaker 13 (19:22):
But other than that.
Speaker 14 (19:23):
No, I'm pretty.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
Private now, mail. I heard someone knocking at the door.
Is that right?
Speaker 11 (19:28):
Is this someone you knocking someone?
Speaker 2 (19:31):
Oh, you're knocking at someone else's out.
Speaker 3 (19:34):
Around them.
Speaker 2 (19:35):
I'd worried someone attract you from this phone call using
something of algorithm and knocking on your door.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
Yeah, all right.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Hey, thanks so much for sharing, Mel, Thanks for you call.
Speaker 11 (19:44):
Okay, thank you you too.
Speaker 3 (19:46):
Have a good afternoon. One hundred and eighty ten eighty
is and un we call nine two niney two is
the text number. It is bang on how past one
will take more of your calls very shortly.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
Hey, boys, I've had friend who has more or less
documented her children's life on so Meta from day one.
At times she has looked to monetize the posts and
use her kids for that. She encourages friends to like
and share all her posts and order to maximize the likes.
To me, it's wrong and I'm waiting for the day
her kids revoltigates what she is doing. Cheers John. Yeah, see,
that's the bit that I think is weird.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
You're using your children, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
Posting your kid when it moves over to your posting
your kids to get more following and to you know,
to sort of this isn't a word I know before
the nineteen and begin yourself, but I like it.
Speaker 3 (20:31):
And begin yourself.
Speaker 2 (20:32):
I think that's from the Simpsons Noble and Spirit and
begins everyone something like that. Anyway, you know, to get
play for yourself. Then I think that's weird. If you know,
pictures of your kids to said to your family so
everyone can go, oh beautiful, it's great to see the kids.
And you know, for people out of town to experience
what your family's up to, that's great. To try and
(20:53):
increase your reach using your children. I don't, I don't,
I don't. I think that's weird. I get a bit
judge about that.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
Yeah, I'd go but a step further and say that's twisted.
Those influences doing that, Yeah, that is twisted. Oh eight
hundred eighty ten eighty is the number to call. It's
twenty nine to two.
Speaker 15 (21:13):
Deuce talks at the headlines with blue bubble taxis it's
no trouble with a blue bubble. The Government's confirmed it'll
bill Dunedin's new hospital in patient building at the old
A Cadbury chocolate factory. It'll have up to four hundred beds,
as many as twenty four theaters and fifty eight ed spaces.
Greenpeace says government plans to boost mineral exports and focus
(21:36):
on mining will cost New Zealand more in the long run.
It's citing the four hundred million dollar cleanup bill when
offshore company Tammar and Oil went bankrupt. A thirty four
year old woman's being charged with driving in a dangerous
manner after an eleven year old girl cycling in Hawks
Bay's Flaxmere died in a crash last night. More charges
(21:57):
are possible. Racing Minister Winston Peters has announced GST policy
proposals for racehorse buyers, suggesting not imposing compliance costs for
joint venture bloodstock breeders. All meals to Auckland students today
provided under the new cut price lunch program, arrived late
because of oven issues. Caitlin Clark. Transgender issues are transgender athletes,
(22:22):
I'm sorry, and the black ferns the big issues in
women's sport in twenty twenty five. You can see more
at inz and here. All premium back to matt Eathan
Tyler Adams.
Speaker 3 (22:32):
Thank you very much. Raylean and we are discussing posting
of a children's photos on social media. This is on
the back of the New Zealand Police issuing a warning
to parents saying it's probably not a good idea to
make those photos public.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Susan says weird because I said it was weird. I
said it's weird to post pictures of your family for
the general public to see, not at all if it's
in a private group, or to show with your family
that's absolutely wholesome and wonderful and above board. Weird. No,
some people's family are their friends, and we live in
a digital world now, whise No, I'd do something creative
like take a photo of a school accessories such as
a school bag, drink bottle and lunch box, maybe with
(23:07):
a pair of big boys shoes which always doesn't show
any name of the school or child extension teacher, and
me invite the child to input into the content of
the photo and thereby creating a teaching moment of what
is wise and not wise to publicly post on social media.
Good topic, guys, Yeah, I mean cool? Or you could
not do that.
Speaker 3 (23:28):
Yeah, So that's a lot of thinking for something that
you said wasn't weird, Susan, I mean, look, it's a
great text because clearly you've thought about all the avenues
of the dangers if you post a photo of a
child and make a public to anybody to see it.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
The Texas is seriously get a life. I'm six foot
six and Asians love getting their photos with me when
I'm in Tokyo. A Chinese tourist wouldn't be interested in
abducting your child. Also, fact check, Google isn't going to
be able to identify your house and share the coshin
of where you live unless you live in the White
House or the Sydney Opera House, or if you share
a location with the image data. I don't think this
is a This isn't Apple's Rascals comparison, because you may
(24:07):
be six foot certain comes and gets a photo with you,
then you're consenting for it, and you're an adult. That's
very different than someone just running up and taking snaps
of your kid.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
I'm sure the Japanese don't do that with a small
blonde child. Is just rock up to them without the
parents approval, just to start taking photos.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
Look, sometimes people come up to me and they say,
can I get a photo with you? Just yeah, they go,
You're just such a spectacularly handsome person. It's like like
getting a photo with the Mona.
Speaker 3 (24:30):
Lisa, You've got a beautiful what do you say?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
I say, absolutely, go for it. But if they came
up and start and if someone came up and asked
if they get a photo with one of my kids
when they were little, I would have said the coffee crep,
I would I would have said, here's a first ride
up your face.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
They were here this afternoon.
Speaker 16 (24:50):
I'm good.
Speaker 10 (24:50):
Thanks, I'm just laughing at him hanging so taking off
requesting photos. Sorry, I've been on the end of a
feln had the Asian tourists come up to us young
and one of them was a very blonde, very blue
away and it is actually quite common that they are
(25:12):
so different to what they used to do that they
asked us they would mind having a photo of us.
Speaker 6 (25:16):
With our child.
Speaker 10 (25:18):
We were absolutely fine with it. Now whether they'd ended
up on Instagram or something as a possibility, but they
didn't ask a name or anything other than the fact
that there which just some random tourists that have to
take a photo of them, And then they asked if
they could take a photo of our child. So I
don't have a big issue with it. I'm from a
foreign country. I lived in New Zealand for over thirty years.
All my family, all my friends in England are in
(25:40):
England that I obviously left when I was quite young.
My husband has a lot of family in Australia. We
started using Facebook, and you know, once it sort of
became regularly, it's quite a normal thing to do. And
to begin with, I think we had friends and friends
of friends in the settings. Now as we all become
more aware, yes, of Titan, the settings and estry have
(26:02):
locked profiles, but it's further than just family. We do
have friends on there too. Yes, quite comfortable bringing my
kids up and having photos of them on there. I
think there's a lot of paranoia. I have two sisters
in England. One said she wouldn't have Facebook because she
was a teacher and has only got Facebook since she's retired,
(26:24):
but doesn't post anything. She just talks to other people,
which I think.
Speaker 14 (26:28):
Is even weirder.
Speaker 10 (26:30):
And then the other one has a profile but rarely
posts and keeps it very age if you would say so.
There's not photos of children and that sort of thing
on there, but you know, a children have now grown
up and have had Facebook accounts since have been old
enough too, and I think it's just a really good
learning tool, you know, teaching them about locking things, teaching
(26:52):
them what to post and what not to post, because
it's going to stay there online, potentially in fetuity or
whatever it's thought. But I think it's as long as
you are managing, as well as you're aware of what
children are posting. I don't have a problem. And as
a parent you control lots of things. Whether your child
(27:13):
can have an injection, whether your child can have a
blood transfusion. That's part of being an adult, and so
I think making that choice to post a picture of
your child is no different to that. You are the adults,
you are the parents, and it is all right in
my opinion. You're not going to post anything unto all
about them. You're not going to post anything of them naked.
But as long as they are a normal photo of
(27:33):
a kid going to school or getting a prize at school,
or a proud moment when they graduate or whatever you know,
to me, it's perfectly normal.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Do you think do you think that's normal? Do you
think that's normal if it goes out to the whole world.
Speaker 10 (27:48):
No, No, not now. But I think when perhaps we started,
we didn't know what we know now. So I think
as long as you keep abreast of the security and
you tighten it to limit to either just friends or
friends or friends, or lock your profile or whatever the
settings are, you know, I've tried to learn. I'm not
a huge technology perst them, but I've tried to keep
(28:08):
a breast of that sort of thing and do it.
And now my children are old enough they can.
Speaker 13 (28:12):
Make their own choices.
Speaker 10 (28:13):
But I think there's people out there saying, oh, you know,
they can look at the background and tell where you live.
I don't believe that. I think if you tag where
you live in the photo, yes that could be seen
if you didn't have a lot of profile. But you know,
if you take something vague like a whole valley, or
you tag something like the Sydney operhaps you're unlikely to
be there when that post goes back.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
They'd be very unlucky if they came to find you
and you're just you're just having to be back there
at the same time.
Speaker 10 (28:41):
Yes, someone randomly comes and takes the phot over your child,
it potentially could end up online, but the chances of
being linked through AI facial recognition to your child some
years later are fairly unlikely.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
But I guess, I guess the thing the problem is
for kids. You know, you say you can give the
consent to the kids, but sometimes you get a situation
where the parents monetizing it potentially, or you get a
situation where the parents getting you know, sort of furthering
themselves social by getting out there. But then that's available
in class for all the other kids can just pull
(29:12):
that up and go, here's a picture of you with
stupid heir when you were younger. And then that becomes
a little bit of a problem for me, because we've
all got humiliating photos at home of ourselves that get
brought out so the family can laugh at you. But
having them out there for the whole world to see,
or even the wider world to see outside of I know,
I think that needs that should be quite limited.
Speaker 3 (29:33):
Really, at least the album is in the safety of
your own family home.
Speaker 10 (29:38):
I do agree with that to a certain extent, But
I think children are children. I've had children with special needs,
and you know, children that don't have special needs, and
the one that didn't have special needs was called handicap
because their sister's handicaps. So kids will always find something.
Speaker 6 (29:52):
To bully over.
Speaker 10 (29:53):
It doesn't have to be a bad haircut in a
photo that they found in line don't find your name.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
That's true. Yeah, that's true. That that is absolutely true.
Speaker 14 (30:03):
Okay, I am with you.
Speaker 10 (30:05):
I don't think the idea of using your children to
monetize it is great anymore than it used to be
to parade them and little women and do them in
beauty patterns and stuff as kids. I don't agree with
that at all. And I'm not into the whole Instagram
models just to get forwards to make money. But I
think where you're just sharing it and keeping bonds alive
(30:25):
with people that live in a different hemisphere, and you
would have no contact and I would have lost contact
with a lot of those people. And I did lose
contact with a lot of those people because there wasn't
the Internet, and have been able to reconnect through things
like Facebook. So I think it is a hugely valuable tool.
And I think as long as you go into it
using your head a little bit, and you know, it's
no different to the Christmas newsletter you used to once
(30:49):
and send for the Christmas Cloud, except for one and
fifty dollars postage to send it.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
All right, I thank you so much for you called Judas. Yeah,
although that Christmas Leader can be a problem as well
if you start showing off on it. Some people saying
that sometimes that Christmas Leader that used to come out
was actually just Christmas propaganda trying to make other people
feel about their families. Hey, after the when we come back,
(31:14):
I'd like to talk about this are using your kids
and social media the absolute worst side of it. And
there was a post that a influencer did in September
of twenty twenty one that was shocking, and I'd like
to talk about that.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
This is going to be good. It is sixteen to two.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
Eat a fresh take on Talkback Matt and Taylor Afternoons
with the Volvo XC ninety turn every journey into something special.
Have your say on eight hundred and eighty ten eighty
Youth Talks.
Speaker 3 (31:44):
EDB New TALKSB. It is fourteen to two.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
So the most horrible end and look, we don't want
to be judgmental, but the most horrible end of social
media posting and using your children to gain you know,
followers and likes and get social play out there and
This is very different from people just putting pictures of
their kids going up to school for the first day.
So I'm not comparing to this. But in twenty twenty one,
you probably heard this story of Vlaga Jordan. She and
(32:12):
she put up a video of she she the dog
had been to the vet and had been and that
the vet had said that the dogs is unwell, and
so she filmed a video of her and her son
in the car, and she was meaning to edit that video,
but she didn't edit the video and she accidentally put
up the raw footage. And the footage is her trying
(32:34):
to make her son cry and telling him how to
cry and to cry in the camera around the dog
so she can get more play on her YouTube clips.
So we've got the audio of it here.
Speaker 4 (32:46):
We appreciate it.
Speaker 17 (32:49):
I mean, come closer for the video. Closer, closer, act
like you're crying, like.
Speaker 4 (33:06):
This film moment.
Speaker 17 (33:10):
For the video, like to put one hand up, let
them hear your mouth, let them your mouth.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
Wow, that is that is sick.
Speaker 2 (33:25):
But I am crying. I mean that's one of the
saddest lines ever. Yeah, So so he's not crying, right,
so he is legitimately upset about the dog, and why
they're filming that for play anyway, Why she's filming it anyway,
She's saying, Oh, my son's upset about the dog, so
this is a great way for me to get more followers,
more subscribers, more likes, get more play on social media.
She's filming him. He's upset, but he's not crying enough
(33:47):
to get the maximum amount of likes out of out
of out of the situation, yeah, she is. It's probably
gonna be a mental health issue for the kid as well,
the poor kid. Yeah. And so so you know when
she realized she was done, when she realized that she
had and you know, she had been doing that for
(34:07):
a long time, all these emotional moments, and you know,
her social media was all about the emotional key moments
of her child's life, and so she was editing them all.
She just put up the wrong file this time and
revealed what a terrible human being she is. And that's
whilst surporting to be the greatest mum of all time.
That was the whole thing she was. She was making
other people feel bad because they were as great as
(34:28):
mum as her, And meanwhile, she's an absolutely horrific human
being so that's the far end of it. That's the
far end of using your kids for social media for
yourself to gain something for yourself.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
She's not the only influencer to do that, though, I'm sure. Craig,
how are you this afternoon?
Speaker 5 (34:44):
Not too bad? How are you doing?
Speaker 2 (34:46):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (34:46):
Good?
Speaker 3 (34:46):
You reckon, You've got to be careful posting photos of
your children.
Speaker 5 (34:50):
Yeah, mind you.
Speaker 18 (34:51):
I have to say I did get a photo of
Matt years ago when I was in a little New
Zealand band quite years ago.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
That was that the massively successful band Deja Voodoo.
Speaker 5 (35:01):
Oh, the one that was the one that in its
life way too soon.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
But that was That's the and I was I was
more than happy to be in a photo with you,
and more than more than old enough to consent to it.
Speaker 5 (35:15):
Yeah, I was doing found at the times. That's why
I got it.
Speaker 18 (35:17):
But yeah, yeah, yeah, I believe that posting that Cads
I'm working met on this one. They shouldn't really be
posting apart from the immediate family, because you don't know
what sort of nut jobs you're rather they're going to
look at that and then pass around their community. But
I mean, I think it's a little wider thing that
because you get a lot of people now those singing
posts on Facebook about what they're having for lunch at
a cafe. It's like, really I need to know what
(35:38):
you're eating. It's just a lot of stuff. But I
work in I well, not well up till recently worked
in it. And we've set up for a few people
or customers ours and you're going to get a unit
from pbtich or mike Cloud, which basically is a little
harder things. Sits in your house and basically you can't
blow photos to the cloud, but the cloud's actually in
your house, not some third world country or who knows
(35:58):
where it is. So you're going to here we photo
stored in your actual proper house, in your residence, and
we'd set them up with what they call macadresses for
the PC, so only certain phones and computers could connect
to it. No one else could connect into it and
make it a really secure network for all the grandparents
and all that. But you've got to be really careful
and where you post stuff. But a lot of people
(36:19):
quite like the idea of the Actually they actually physically
own their short storage unit for the cloud in their
own property, right, I know, where it is and it
keeps it really secure. And if they do it, but
she's all the good is is unplugged and then it's gone.
So and I've really checked by from PBTCH not advertising them,
but yeah a lot of people will and we'll set
those up for them. So this means that the focals
(36:40):
their photos and all their own files and anything, they're
all local, rather than who knows where they are. We're
getting hacked into who knows where.
Speaker 5 (36:46):
So yeah, but yeah, it's a good show.
Speaker 18 (36:48):
But yeah, I think you've gotta be careful with the
young kids because you don't know who's out there copying
photos and whatever. But I mean make sure make the
sendity your grandparents stuff of that, not to everyone in
your social media because you want your friends.
Speaker 5 (37:01):
Can work going. Oh look you're at school. It doesn't
really apply to me.
Speaker 3 (37:03):
But yeah, cool, great, nice to see.
Speaker 2 (37:06):
Thank you so much for be cool, Craig. Appreciate that
I got a.
Speaker 3 (37:08):
Quick email here get a Fellers. My Facebook is completely
locked down, but I discovered that a close family member
had stolen personal photos from my Facebook page and got
them printed back in twenty eleven without my knowledge. My
two now adult children both over thirty made it quite
clear when teenagers mum, do not post anything about us
without our permission. I respected that and did always ask.
(37:30):
So a very rare picture from a family wedding or
molestone birthday has been it from Christine.
Speaker 2 (37:35):
Yeah, and a lot of people are saying I think
people are saying that they don't believe people can find
your location on a YouTube and on social media naive
and another text saying boys, I really do think that
you are underestimating the warnings from the police. Apart from
maybe being able to identify an address or a similar
the biggest and most worrisome concern is that pedophiles can
(37:57):
access these photos. Yeah, maybe our being a bit I'm
going for it's weird to post them, but a lot
of people are saying it's actually dangerous.
Speaker 3 (38:05):
To let us take it a bit more seriously. Yeah,
we're going to wrap this up very sly. It is
seven minutes to two. You're listening to Matt and Tyler
Good Afternoon.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
Mattith Taylor Adams taking your calls on eight hundred and
eighty ten eighty Matt and Taylor Afternoons with the Volvo
XC ninety tick every box a seamless experience awaits news dogs'd.
Speaker 3 (38:25):
Be five to two. Well, good discussion. I've changed my mind.
I do think it is weird now that if you
post your children to make it, make it, make it
public for everybody to see it. Who wants to see it? Yeah,
kind of strange and you don't need that community kudos.
Speaker 4 (38:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (38:41):
Yeah. And also you know it is potentially dangerous because
you know even I mean, it's dangerous now, but things
are only going to get more and more weird with
what people can do with AI and such.
Speaker 3 (38:51):
Yeah. Hey, and can you just accept my friend request
on Facebook?
Speaker 4 (38:55):
Police?
Speaker 3 (38:55):
Mayhe No, you've accepted four point three thousand other people.
Speaker 2 (39:00):
Well, they're very all, very close friends. Can I have
a photo you?
Speaker 5 (39:05):
You're like.
Speaker 2 (39:07):
Fifteen bucks?
Speaker 16 (39:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (39:08):
Talk money? All right, coming up after two o'clock, let's
have it chat about Facebook Marketplace again. The police have
issued a warning saying it's a bit like the Wild
West and there's more assaults happening, robbery happening. But if
you use Facebook Marketplace, why does it just come down
to cost?
Speaker 2 (39:23):
Yeah, it's a dirty, old, horrible old, anarchistic dumpster fire.
If you ask me, Facebook Marketplace, what do.
Speaker 3 (39:30):
You say to that. Oh eight one hundred and eighty
ten eighty is the number to call New Sport and
Weather on its way. Greatvy Company has always hope you
have in a great afternoon.
Speaker 1 (39:53):
Your new home for insightful and entertaining talk. It's Mattie
and Taylor Adams Afternoons with the Volvo XC ninety on
Youth Talk SEV.
Speaker 3 (40:04):
Good afternoon, Heavy Friday to you, welcome back into the show.
Let's have a chat about Facebook marketplace. Dirty old Facebook
marketplace that's been back in the news. It's often in
the news. Facebook marketplace.
Speaker 2 (40:14):
Hey, just before we go on to this, can I
just say what a hypocrite I am? Because when you
said that I had four point three thousand friends on Facebook, right,
and I went to my Facebook thing and you know,
and I've just been saying it's weird to post pictures
of your kids. O coda.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
I go, oh, you haven't you have a picture.
Speaker 2 (40:30):
You see when you go to my thing as a
picture of me and my two sons playing in a
band together when they were when they were little. What
an episode you dirty?
Speaker 3 (40:39):
And they look to be fairly young.
Speaker 2 (40:40):
There there you go and change it to a humiliating
picture of me that's even worse. But I'll just put
it there for a boy. Oh boy, what a hypocrite.
Speaker 3 (40:48):
Oh that's quite a nice photo, you mate.
Speaker 2 (40:50):
Yeah, underneath it there's a beautiful photo of me and
my guns in front of a tent. But anyway, that hypocrite,
you know, just just just to.
Speaker 3 (40:57):
We should say that at the start of last hour.
Speaker 2 (40:59):
Anyway, what a terrible human being spent an hour judging
something that you did yourself. Anyway, that's by the by.
Let's move on.
Speaker 3 (41:07):
Let's move on to Facebook mark So it's back in
the news, and it ofteners in the news. Facebook Marketplace,
some people are buying what they think i legitimate products,
turning up to the house and the products don't exist,
or sometimes even get a getting assaulting, assaulted rather or robbed.
But when it comes to Facebook Marketplace, I've never used it.
Have you ever used Facebook Marketplace?
Speaker 2 (41:28):
I have never. I have actually I've locked. I've never
actually bought something, but I've flicked on it to see it,
and it's just it just looks like a dumpster fire
out of me as opposed to trade me.
Speaker 3 (41:38):
You've got scammers, yep, you've got time wasters.
Speaker 2 (41:41):
You've got stolen property.
Speaker 3 (41:43):
Yep, you're meeting up with quite often some very dodgy people.
I mean, Facebook Marketplace to me looks like an absolute
dumpster fire, as you say, And why would you use
it when you've got something like trade me and trade
me is not perfect, but surely that's got more security features,
a hell of a lot more security features than something
(42:03):
like Facebook Marketplace. You've got a rating system, so you
can see what they've traded in the past. You hopefully
know that what are selling is legitimate. You can ask
more questions. To me, trade me is just a superior product.
Speaker 2 (42:17):
Yeah, absolutely, And you know you brought up a reputation
over time. You know you can easily see whether someone's
good or bad. Yeah, I mean it's got its problems.
Trade me obviously. I get annoyed now that when you
go to search something it's just what do they call them,
drop shipping or whatever, Just you're searching for something and
all you get is people that are just going to
bring it in from some Chinese warehouse dumping on you.
(42:39):
I will never order one of those things, but as
soon as I see that, I'm like, if you don't
have it on stock, ready to send it? To me
across town. Then I'm not going to buy it. And
also I don't really like buying new stuff on there.
It's supposed to be secondhand stuff if you asked me.
But I'm a purist. I'm a purist when it comes
to trading.
Speaker 3 (42:53):
I pictured something off trade me the other day, actually
portable aircorn, and it was a perfect trade. Paid the
money instantly, had the buy now, went to go meet
them that night. Did the transfer. He had a bit
of trust. Actually, you said, if you transferred the money?
Said yes, I have tried to show on my we
internet banking and it didn't really show that I transferred
the money.
Speaker 2 (43:12):
But he accepted it.
Speaker 3 (43:13):
He said, I trust you. I've got your details. If
you stitch me up, I know where you live.
Speaker 2 (43:17):
Yeah. Well, there's complaints about Facebook marketplace all over the
show in the news today. What do you think about it?
Is it worthwhile? Is trade me better? Is the Trade
and Exchange where to go? Or should you just run
a garage sale like god and tend it?
Speaker 6 (43:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (43:31):
The Trade and Exchange? Bring back that newspaper? Does it
still exist? Oh? Eight hundred and eighty ten eighty is
the number to call. It is ten past two. You're
listening to Matt and Tyler Good Afternoon.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
Wow your new home of afternoon Talk. Matt and Taylor
Afternoon with the Volvo XC ninety turn every journey into
something special. Call Oh, eight hundred eighty ten eighty News
Talk sai'd be.
Speaker 3 (43:54):
Good afternoon. It is thirteen past two. We're talking about
Facebook Marketplace. If you use it, love to hear from you.
It's back in the news. Certainly doesn't seem like a
safe avenue for trading for sun people with salts and
robberies happening on an increasing basis. But if you use it,
what is your experience. I've never used Facebook Marketplace. To me,
(44:15):
it just looks like an absolute dumpster fire. The wild West,
as you said, man, yeah, and trade me just feels
a whole lot safer.
Speaker 2 (44:21):
But maybe some people like the wild West. Maybe that's
where you make money. There was a lot to be
made in the wild West, you know. Just get your
six shooter and go out there and rustle something up.
Speaker 3 (44:30):
Yep, find you a little patch of gold mine and
go for gold. Yeah, Jason, how are you mate?
Speaker 2 (44:35):
Don't miss the opportunity to grab a little gold.
Speaker 14 (44:38):
How do you guys?
Speaker 2 (44:39):
Very good. Thank you. So we'd love to hear your
perspective on Facebook Marketplace because you you make your living there.
Speaker 6 (44:47):
I do, absolutely. I actually I actually used to solely
trade on trade me for a number of years and
I was sitting in a I was sitting natually in
the hospital waiting room one day and the TV was
on one of the breakfast program and they had a
lady on there who was using Facebook Marketplace and she
was talking about how much yes she was having on there,
(45:09):
and I thought, I think I'm missing a pep here,
And so I went home and had a look at it,
started using it, and to be honest, I haven't looked back.
I would say that Facebook Marketplace out sells trade me
at least ten to one.
Speaker 2 (45:24):
Oh really, and so is that is that the reason
why you like it? Or is that the way it works,
the fees, the functionality.
Speaker 6 (45:32):
It's much easier to use than trade me. Trade me
have with their with their their upgrades of their site
made it pretty unuser friendly, to be honest. So Facebook
Marketplace heaps easier. It's got no fees to be it's
a wider audience. I can really target my marketing to
(45:56):
specific to specific Facebook groups who are interested in the
things that I'm selling, which of course you can't do
on trade me. It's just a blanket site available to
whoever happens along to look at it.
Speaker 2 (46:11):
Now, you're not you're not, So you're not dodgy, obviously, Jason.
You're an upstanding individual. But there is a bit of
dodgy activity on Facebook marketplace. Is that true?
Speaker 6 (46:22):
Yeah, I mean you do get you do get scammers.
I've only ever had a couple of scammers on trade
me over the years that I've been doing it. But
I mean, you get the scammers every week, try and
then they're well done because they all use they all
use the same pattern with the messages that they send you.
(46:42):
Nothing nothing changes. And so I just got a blanket
thing that I cut and taste. In my response to them,
something along the lines of, you know, get yourself an
honest job and make your family proud. Yeah, but I mean,
you know it's it's worth it. Yes, you do get
the scammers, but I mean, you know, I've never actually
(47:04):
been stung by one. They're pretty easy to spot. And
you know, just the amount that you sell on Facebook
makes it with it, you know, I operate both myself
for a business, and I also do the fundraising for Variety,
the children's charity, ye selling books to raise funds for
the work they do so disadvantage key we kids and
(47:26):
so you know I sell books for the M two
and yeah that that's also running both on trade me
and on Facebook Marketplace. But Facebook marketplace just it else
sells trade me, no end.
Speaker 2 (47:38):
Who was that again? What was the charity? Sorry, just
so Variety?
Speaker 6 (47:42):
Yeah, Variety, the children's.
Speaker 2 (47:43):
Charity, Variety, the children's tellty Hey yeah, Jason, what about
the bloody tire kickers? What about the bloody and the
time was? Are they worse on Facebook Marketplace or trade me?
Speaker 6 (47:55):
Pretty much the same to be honest. You know, you
get people asking, get people asking dumb asked questions just
easily on the on the trade meet question and answer
it to all as you do, you know, on on
on Facebook marketplace. But the advantage to Facebook Marketplace in
(48:15):
terms of those is that you can actually follow up
with them directly, whereas on trade me you can only
respond to that person if they message you, and you
get to message them back once and there's no other
way for you to actually have an ongoing conversation and
you know, quite often you can turn around those tire
kickers just with an ongoing conversation, you know, on Facebook Marketplace,
(48:41):
and they actually do end up going through the sale.
But you don't have the option to have that dialogue
on trade me.
Speaker 3 (48:47):
What have you got for sale at the moment, Jason?
Speaker 6 (48:49):
Are tens of thousands of books?
Speaker 3 (48:52):
Oh right, yep, So it's just as primarily books, nothing else,
not furniture.
Speaker 6 (48:56):
Books, No books is what we sell.
Speaker 2 (48:58):
Have you got it? Have you any got many copies
of A Lifeless Punishing by Matt Heath?
Speaker 6 (49:02):
I haven't had that book coming.
Speaker 12 (49:05):
People keep very much looking for.
Speaker 6 (49:07):
I think it's think it's one that people like put
on a special special shell.
Speaker 2 (49:12):
You're about to get You're about to get flatted with them. Jason. Hey,
one thing I've noticed about Facebook Marketplace is people will
put up half a shoe that people will put up
absolute gunk on Facebook Marketplace, And I'm like, why do
you bother?
Speaker 6 (49:28):
Yeah? Indeed, but haven't you seen the same thing happen on.
Speaker 2 (49:31):
Tradeing probably, although right now on tradeire right now? Yeah, Well,
wherever you go this dumbass people, that's that's that's the
truth of trouble. Yeah, although right now I'm looking at
a rhino on trade me. That's pread.
Speaker 3 (49:47):
How much do they want for the rhino?
Speaker 2 (49:49):
One thousand and thirteen dollars.
Speaker 3 (49:50):
I'll give them a cat hundred bucks my way.
Speaker 2 (49:52):
It's a baby rhino. And you don't you don't get
to take it home though, I think you just get
to spend some time with it.
Speaker 6 (49:57):
Yeah. I've got space in the garden.
Speaker 3 (49:59):
For people sell some big ticket items, though, don't they.
I'm looking at it now, and the Today's picks is
a thirty four thousand dollars cow yacht which looks very nice.
Speaker 6 (50:10):
Yeah. Yeah. And are you looking on Facebook marketplace or
dragged me for that?
Speaker 3 (50:14):
No? No, this is on Facebook Marketplace. Someone wants to
sell their way Hikey Island cottage in the trees for
seven hundred and eighty thousand dollars.
Speaker 6 (50:21):
Yeah. There's some yeah, some lovely stuff on there.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
Yeah yeah, Jason, great to chat to you. That's awesome,
all right mate, go well.
Speaker 6 (50:29):
And I just can I just say I love you.
I love your ghost show. And when those other two left,
I thought the world was going to end, but you
two have just taken it to another level.
Speaker 3 (50:40):
Well, well, love you too, mate.
Speaker 2 (50:41):
You know what, Jason, you absolutely can say that and
thank you. We recorded it and we're going to back
on a daily basis. We appreciate it. Thank you, thank you,
thank you, Jason.
Speaker 12 (50:50):
You go well.
Speaker 2 (50:50):
Hey. Update on my Facebook page yep, from the previous
hour when I was discovered to be an absolute hypocrite
after I was judging people having pictures of their kids up. Yes,
I've changed to a picture of my dog. Okay. Oh
good Colin, good, good boy.
Speaker 3 (51:05):
You're a good boy, Colin.
Speaker 2 (51:06):
Yeah, there's no no, no problems with posting pictures of
your dog.
Speaker 3 (51:09):
Oh that's a that's a nice picture of Colin as well.
I'll eight one hundred eighty ten eighty. I'll tell you what.
I'm gonna pop my Facebook marketplace, Cherry. I've just had
a look. I'm in the market for a nice coffee
table and I've found one here, thirty bucks heavywood coffee table.
Shall I mention this because I might get out bit now?
Speaker 2 (51:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (51:27):
No, no, go for Okay, perfect condition apart from a
two centimeter dent as in the photo. Perfect apart from that,
maybe remu as it's heavy.
Speaker 2 (51:35):
That's a goodbye.
Speaker 3 (51:36):
Thirty bus for a remove table, pick up blockhouse bay
cash only. See that looks a bit of me. Oh
you look at that. That's beautiful. So I'm gonna put
a bit in and we'll see how fast this seller
gets back to me. Seve, we can do the deal
before the hour's done.
Speaker 2 (51:50):
Okay, I've got an ass. Whereas croc just the left,
just the left, Croc for sale now reserve two hundred
and fifty bucks.
Speaker 3 (51:59):
That's a steal. I wait, one hundred eighty ten eighty.
If you're a massive Facebook Marketplace user, we want to
hear from ye. It's twenty one past two.
Speaker 1 (52:11):
Matt Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons call oh eight hundred
eighty eight on News Talk ZB.
Speaker 2 (52:16):
We were talking to Jason before about Facebook Marketplace and
he has a lot of stuff up there, and I said,
don't people just sell a bunch of junk on the
air And someone's text through a nine to two nine two.
I don't see what's dumb ass about selling broken things.
People take them away for nothing, saves a trip to
the dump. You might get a lazy two dollars for
your trouble or a lazy twenty dollars for the trouble.
(52:38):
That's a very good point. Actually, yeah, that's a very
good point. Because I was talking the other day, so
I've been hoisted on my own part again. Eppens every day.
So I say the other day that you know, the
best cup of recycling is to you know, move your
stuff onto other people to fix it.
Speaker 5 (52:52):
Right.
Speaker 3 (52:53):
One mean's trash is another tree.
Speaker 2 (52:55):
If you want to put that stuff on on Facebook marketplace,
I might scroll past and laugh at it. But maybe
someone else needs that. They've lost their right shoe and they.
Speaker 3 (53:03):
Need they need that left croc.
Speaker 2 (53:06):
They need it. But also, someone was telling me, and
someone might know the information about that. Someone was telling me,
and someone might know the information nineteen nine two Ike
one undred and eighty ten eighty. But I understand there's
some businesses or people that will go out and if
you've got an attic or a garage full of crap
that you've collected for years, someone will come in and
their job is to put it all on Facebook marketplace
(53:28):
or on trade me and sell it and they take
seventy percent and you get thirty percent. I'm not sure. No,
you'd get seventy percent and they get thirty percent or whatever.
The percent, it is that genius. So their professionals come
in and clear that rubbish out of your attic, because
I'm pretty sure in my attic they'd be fifty grand
worth of crap that I can't be bothered taking pictures
of and putting up on a trade site.
Speaker 3 (53:49):
I definitely use their services. But you're quite right. When
I was shifting up here and we were getting rid
of a whole bunch of stuff down in christ Jute,
and I couldn't be bothered with the admin of Facebook marketplace,
but I felt really bad about some of the stuff
I just pushed into that massive hole in the ground.
Someone said to me right next to me as I
was pushing the catch, and she looked at me and
she said, that's a real shame. See you orders, do
(54:10):
you want to take it in the whole?
Speaker 2 (54:12):
You're a man of contradiction. So you're putting your your
cans and your jars through the dishwatcher to recycle properly,
and then you're throwing out a perfectly good couch.
Speaker 3 (54:20):
Yeah, I hate to get up here.
Speaker 2 (54:21):
In a couple of weeks, I needed to do something.
And also a text here says, pop your cherry might
not mean what you think it does, Tyler. All right, okay,
let's go to the phones.
Speaker 4 (54:30):
Ryan.
Speaker 2 (54:30):
You're a big fan of Facebook Marketplace.
Speaker 19 (54:33):
Yeah, lads, I love it.
Speaker 3 (54:35):
Ay, I'm on it every day, buying, selling and dealing.
Speaker 5 (54:39):
A bit of both.
Speaker 19 (54:41):
I like finding deals and I like buying stuff.
Speaker 2 (54:45):
And yeah, Ryan, is it for the stuff or is
it for or you're making money?
Speaker 5 (54:53):
A bit of both.
Speaker 19 (54:54):
Sometimes I'm looking for stuff, like at the moment, I'm
in the garden and face I'm looking for stuff that
I can either replant in my garden or you know,
plant to boxes that look nice. Might as well buy
it if it's a good price.
Speaker 2 (55:05):
You know, you're not getting you're not getting selling. Oh sorry,
it's going to say you're not getting into a hoarding situation,
are you?
Speaker 6 (55:14):
No?
Speaker 19 (55:14):
No, I'm actually in the in the uh I'm currently
decluttering the hell.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
Oh you good on you.
Speaker 19 (55:20):
The wife's been selling a lot on marketplace as well.
Speaker 4 (55:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (55:24):
Yeah, it's been of more more going out and game.
Speaker 19 (55:26):
I find great about it as you can sit your radius.
So currently mine's just been on buy and it's the
twenty ks.
Speaker 2 (55:35):
Oh yeah yeah, yeah, that makes things lest punishing.
Speaker 3 (55:38):
I'm just doing that now.
Speaker 19 (55:39):
Yeah, and then like the brother, he might be going, Oh,
I'm going to funk it a this weekend. I'll set
my Facebook to fung today and I'll have a lock
and I'll be like, pick me this up while you're there,
will you?
Speaker 2 (55:48):
All right? It's like it's like I'm setting your Tinder
radius go in new Town and seeing.
Speaker 4 (55:53):
What you get back.
Speaker 2 (55:54):
You've got to be careful that with trading, Ryan, don't you.
Because I came home once and a member of my
family extended family that was staying at the house had
bought a toilet for one dollar. They said, I found
this toilet on on on the trading site for one dollar,
so I bought it and I was like, and there
was excited about I said, but we don't need a toilet. Yeah,
(56:15):
so a toilet for one dollar is that doesn't mean anything?
Speaker 3 (56:17):
We don't need to deal. How often do you come
across a toilet for a buck? But I want to have
taken that.
Speaker 2 (56:21):
But it's not a steal if you don't need it,
it's just a waste of everyone's time.
Speaker 3 (56:24):
You never know where you're going to need a replacement.
Speaker 2 (56:26):
But there's a centain type person that just comes across things,
thinks it's a good deal and buys it even if
they don't need it, need it, right.
Speaker 19 (56:34):
I still make sure it has the use before I
purchased them. A bit tight one of money like that.
I'm not going to just go, oh, I'll use it
one day. But the other good thing I found is
you can click on their profiles and you can leave
reviews on people we've bought from. And you can also
see how long their Facebook's been active stef it's like
fairly new and they're selling some stuff that they're too cheap.
(56:57):
Then you can be like this could be a throwaway account, etc.
Speaker 2 (57:01):
Yeah, you've got to be a bit careful.
Speaker 5 (57:05):
Yeah, yeah, all.
Speaker 2 (57:06):
Right, thank you so much, Thank you so much for
you can deal there. Yeah, thank you so much for
you call Ryan and good luck with your trading. Quite
a couple of teach great call would call again? No,
great call, would talk to you again. Yeah, I'm trying
to do it some kind of trade me reference, but
I'm failing badly. Some great tast trade would trade again?
What great?
Speaker 4 (57:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (57:23):
Trade would trade again? Big smiley face and is it
out of five or it's just a smiley face, isn't it?
You can go happy, neutral or angry. Yeah, that was
definitely happy.
Speaker 2 (57:32):
I'm sitting it hard a stand approval.
Speaker 3 (57:33):
Yeah, yeah, this this sticks to sears guys. Facebook Marketplace
is great if you can deal with the time wasters.
Have sold hundreds of items via marketplace with no worries
and zero sales fees from Max.
Speaker 2 (57:46):
So my original complain claim that Facebook Marketplace is a
burning dumpster fire of wild worst anarchy. Yeah, it doesn't
seem to be playing out from what we're getting on
the text machine or the calls.
Speaker 3 (57:58):
Certainly hasn't. I've sent a message about this heavy wood
coffee table, haven't had a response yet, but I'll update you.
It's a good deal for thirty bucks, oh, one hundred
and eighty ten eighty. If you use Facebook Marketplace, how
has it gone for you? There has been some warnings
this week about using the Facebook Marketplace with robberies and
assaults going on. But if it's worked well for you,
love to hear from you.
Speaker 6 (58:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (58:18):
And also if you know someone with a trading addiction
that's bringing home stuff because it's a good bargain that
they don't need, I'd like to hear from that as well,
because I think that's a real problem in our community.
Speaker 3 (58:26):
Well, Tony's just text here. Old toilets make great planters,
it's fair point.
Speaker 2 (58:30):
Well, well, they probably work as planters, but they're not
very aesthetically pleasing having like your front deck covenant, it's
just by it plans. It doesn't matter how beautiful the
plant is. If it's sticking out of a toilet, I'm
not happy with it.
Speaker 3 (58:42):
Headlines on its way with ray Lean, it's twenty nine
past two US talks.
Speaker 15 (58:50):
The headlines with Blue bubble taxis It's no trouble with
a blue bubble. Simeon Brown says, the government's listen to
the very clear message on Dunedin Hospital and now it's
about completing contracts and beginning construction. The new and patient
building will be the old Cadbury Chocolate factory, with up
to four one hundred beds, as many as twenty four
(59:10):
theaters and fifty eight ed spaces. Greenpeace says it's ridiculous
for the government to claim renewing focus on mining and
coal will result in more money for conservation projects while
lifting mineral exports to three billion dollars by twenty thirty five.
More than forty bodies have been recovered from the Potomac River.
(59:31):
After yesterday's midair crash between a passenger plane and a
helicopter in Washington, d C. There were reports in air
traffic controller was working two jobs simultaneously. Five people have
moderate injuries after a bus crashed into a parpole in
Wellington's Winuia Mata, reportedly knocking out power to some parts
of the suburb. American Venture Capitalists to lead four x
(59:55):
four tour around New Zealand. You can find out more
at Enzien Herald Premium. Now back to Matt Heath and
Tyler Adams.
Speaker 3 (01:00:03):
Thank you very much, Raylean.
Speaker 2 (01:00:04):
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And a lot of you will say that's a bold
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Yeah by that we mean Google Maps, Google Assistant and
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Especially with the air suspension system that constantly adjusts the
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Speaker 3 (01:00:48):
We reckon. You need to visit Volvo cars and see
why the Volvo XC ninety is the SUV for you.
Right now, Matt Tyler. Right, so we are talking about
Facebook Marketplace and are you starting to change your mind
about the usage of Facebook Marketplace sounds amazing. Actually you
called it a dumpster fire. Now it seems like utopia.
Speaker 2 (01:01:08):
Yeah, yeah, do that seem very good? People are loving it.
Speaker 3 (01:01:10):
Oh, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty is the number
to called John. You use it every day?
Speaker 12 (01:01:15):
Yep, every day. I've got a bit of a niche
that I know how to play the marketplace system and
and but of trade me, I buy and sell stuff
on the every day. I don't want to tell you
what I'm buying and what I'm selling because everybody else
will start jumping on it and they having no fun. Yeah,
but with marketplace you do have to be careful. But
(01:01:36):
what I usually do is I'll look at their profile
and if even if it's lot, you can get a
little look at just even the profile picture and you'll
know whether to proceed or not. You'll see them there.
There could be somebody doing gang signs or something like that.
Speaker 6 (01:01:50):
You know.
Speaker 12 (01:01:51):
Oh right, yeah, yeah, yeah, you cut it off, you know,
just cut the cut it right off right there.
Speaker 2 (01:01:56):
That's an interesting thing that I hadn't thought of. So
you can go and just have a look through what.
Speaker 12 (01:02:00):
You Let's have the profile attle open a little bit
and you can you see more pictures. So yeah, it
shows even more about the person. They got a lovely
family and all that. You think, oh, perfect, this is
going to be easy, good.
Speaker 3 (01:02:12):
Straight trade Yeah, that's safe. That is safer than trade
me because you don't know who you're really dealing with
on trade me, apart from their using that, which is
sometimes a bit out there.
Speaker 12 (01:02:22):
And i'd bounce BacT from marketplace to trade me. So
if something that I'm selling doesn't sell on trade me,
or go to marketplace and throw it on me in
the same vice versa the fingerbit trade me the worse thing.
You always get that dreaded off, that's for it. I've
got to pay a bloody feed. You know, in every
hundred dollars that you put on something to sell for
(01:02:44):
ever one hundred dollars, you going to pay about ten
dollars you keep.
Speaker 3 (01:02:48):
The things that you're purchasing would be at the lower
end of value, would they John You know, you wouldn't
do a massive purchase like I saw a yacht there
and someone was trying to sell their house on Facebook marketplace.
That seems incredibly risky.
Speaker 12 (01:03:02):
Well, the things that I go after is I've even
had been given free And I'll tell you what a
lot of people want to get rid of stuff so
fast and so bad that they won't put the price
on what it's actually ruth, but they'll drop it right
down to almost nothing just to force somebody to come
along and take it away. And see them putting it
in the trailer taking it to the dumb.
Speaker 2 (01:03:22):
Yeah, drawn blah blah blah. That's quality reciting.
Speaker 12 (01:03:26):
I sensed it so every day and I just go
whoa jump on it and other people have already done
it and it's only been on there for four minutes.
Speaker 2 (01:03:35):
And essentialy when you say with that checking the profile,
because have you come across a fake profile. They're really interesting.
They tend to have all the pictures in the same
age group. So you see twenty pictures and it's all
of like it was one photo shoot because they've just
they've just grabbed them off the Internet of someone else.
Speaker 12 (01:03:55):
Well there you get on there and in suddenly their
profile picture is nothing. But then you go onto the
photos and there are all these people from Nigeria and
the you know, and they don't even a state where
they're living and all that sort of stuff, and you
just just get rid of it straight away. But it's
amazing when you save a post and marketplace to see
(01:04:18):
how fast it goes.
Speaker 3 (01:04:20):
What do you reckon? Is your is your best purchase
on Facebook? Marketplace?
Speaker 2 (01:04:23):
John?
Speaker 12 (01:04:24):
Well, what do I do every day?
Speaker 2 (01:04:26):
Yep? You don't want to talk about it though.
Speaker 3 (01:04:30):
It's a very coy John.
Speaker 12 (01:04:32):
If I open up that up that everybody's going to
want the peena man.
Speaker 3 (01:04:35):
On the tree? Can we talk to you off here?
I've decided to really want to know.
Speaker 4 (01:04:38):
What this is.
Speaker 12 (01:04:39):
Hey, Now I might be in the market table, you
know that coffee table you guys talking about it for
feity Bucks. Is that on a marketplace or face?
Speaker 16 (01:04:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:04:47):
I've screwed myself there, and I there's already been a
few tips saying they're going to jump in and out
bid me. It looks like a good deal though. If
anyone's in the market for a heavywood coffee table, that
may be remove, check it out, maybe remove. Hey, thanks
so much for your cool John. Good luck out there.
Speaker 2 (01:05:02):
Hey, someone here has just said, Hey, I've got a
fifteen hundred dollars beer tap if you want it in
the studio. Yeah, so no, we don't. I mean I do,
but I don't know if with my costing and hear
the dupacy Allen want us to be running a bar
in here.
Speaker 3 (01:05:17):
We'll get them across the line. Yeah, fifteen hundred bucks. Yeah,
sounds like a good deal. Oh eight hundred eighty ten
eighty is the number to call. I sold a fifteen
hundred liter milk vat for one hundred bucks last week.
Rather than taking it to the tip, the fella bought
it in plans of making a spar out of it.
Speaker 2 (01:05:35):
Oh, well, there you go. Okay. And this person here
said we found an expandable home on Marketplace last week.
They imported from China. Would you live in an expandable
home that you bought on Facebook marketplace. What do they
mean by expandable home. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:05:49):
It's like I can see at home.
Speaker 2 (01:05:51):
You blow up home. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:05:53):
Jeez, that's ballsy. Oh undred eighty ten eighty is the
number to call. It is twenty one to three.
Speaker 1 (01:06:00):
The big stories, the big issues, the big trends, and
everything in between.
Speaker 4 (01:06:05):
Matt and Taylor.
Speaker 1 (01:06:06):
Afternoons with the Volvo ninety attention to detail and a
commitment to comfort.
Speaker 2 (01:06:11):
News Talk said, be we're talking about Facebook Marketplace after
police have raised concerns around meetups and the dangers around
that and asking people to be careful. I see it
at the start that I thought Facebook Marketplace was a
dumpster fire of anarchy and wild West behavior. Some people agree,
(01:06:31):
some people don't do this Textron nine two nine two.
Marketplace is full of cheek copies. That's why they don't
use trade me, because you can't post it there marketplaces.
For all the people that have been banned from trade me,
I only ever put ads in the Trade and Exchange
solid publication man, the Trade and Exchange mister trick. When
trade me came along. They must be like that. They
(01:06:52):
must be like Skype and Zoom. Those guys are like God.
It was right in front of us.
Speaker 3 (01:06:55):
That was a great paper, though, always free chickens. For
some reason, every time I picked up a copy of
the people were trying to give away chickens.
Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
You've been looking at a coffee table that maybe Cody.
Speaker 3 (01:07:05):
Was it remove remove Someone said.
Speaker 2 (01:07:08):
That coffee table is more likely Bosal would with four
bricks strap to the bottom.
Speaker 3 (01:07:12):
It's pretty cheap for thirty bucks. Yeah, Ross, how are
you mate?
Speaker 13 (01:07:16):
Yeah he don't.
Speaker 3 (01:07:19):
Matt, Yeah, very good for a Friday. Now you want
to have a chat about Facebook versus trade me?
Speaker 13 (01:07:24):
Yeah, I sell garden sheets on and trade me. So
it might say if I sell one with two thousand,
trade me take two hundred dollars. But if the person
sells a car with ten thousand, they take about three
hundred and fifty. So that outweghed me to about four
to one.
Speaker 3 (01:07:42):
They take ten percent of your what you get.
Speaker 13 (01:07:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:07:46):
Yeah, it's a messive chunt.
Speaker 13 (01:07:48):
That is a messive chunk. And that's one thing I
noticed before COVID come along. Everybody was going through tradeing
now at shops that everyone's going to the nash a
place if I just had a guy come here's fifteen
minutes ago to check your sheet out. He was a
businessman in the ute to check it.
Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
What out you said? You say a shed? Were you
selling a shed?
Speaker 13 (01:08:09):
Yeah? I sell sheets on the side. There's a business.
Speaker 5 (01:08:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:08:13):
Yeah, we're about we're.
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
About to you. I'm in the I'm in the on
the market for.
Speaker 13 (01:08:16):
A ship, Yeah, I'm in question.
Speaker 3 (01:08:19):
What's your name on trade me? How can I find you? Seven?
Speaker 13 (01:08:26):
Double z the seven?
Speaker 2 (01:08:29):
And there's and Ross's Facebook marketplace. Got no fees at all, No,
not so they they're just they just they just get
you for the engagement, I guess, in the same way
as they want you to have profiles there and everything else. Yeah,
they're probably minding you. They're probably minding you for information
and selling to someone else. You know, if you're if
you're not paying, you become the product, as they say.
(01:08:50):
But it seems to be working out for you, Ross,
Oh it does.
Speaker 13 (01:08:53):
Because like you talk about the quality of person. Last
week and I sold she to a lady in Marlstone
and she was a salesman for Peter ray Holmes.
Speaker 12 (01:09:02):
Oh and.
Speaker 13 (01:09:05):
How's the how's how's the mark down? You're not bad
of God when you're on the books at the moment
and I'm selling this is so, And I didn't tell
you a hundred stories where I've met people who are
just your normal class cisms that they're out to the
good thing about is with makepace the Bible singers to
if you're in if you're in Auckland and someone selling,
(01:09:27):
she'd not make sure you go to your place and
know what it's like and how it's manufaction.
Speaker 12 (01:09:32):
Then they'll give you.
Speaker 13 (01:09:33):
The nine yards. But if you go on and tow
or white shadow, it's not really it could be got to,
you know. And that's that's where I say, if she'd
come around, cheat it out and when you come pick
it up or I drop it off to you, you
can pay cash or a bank friends for and Aggie
might it's great like some weekends on some seven rights
(01:09:55):
sheets the weekend, ah right?
Speaker 3 (01:09:57):
And so is this your job ross or is this
just a wee side?
Speaker 13 (01:10:00):
No, I've got a full time job on the on
the sheet middle cread bricator. But this is just a
side made up.
Speaker 6 (01:10:07):
And then wat I only saw one type on Facebook office,
I could probably go given eight nine So styles you know,
sis I just I wouldn't know what breeding was about
because i'd be just out yeah, and I don't really want.
Speaker 5 (01:10:27):
To be like that.
Speaker 13 (01:10:29):
I do want to have some sort of life.
Speaker 6 (01:10:33):
Trade Me I bought a motibike that I've got the
garage now, probably about three or four years ago told
me about having now to get it because it was
bit after bid after bid.
Speaker 5 (01:10:44):
Held in near to buy it.
Speaker 13 (01:10:47):
They got in contact with guy and it says i'll
make a payment, made the payment, didn't hear anything from
for three weeks, and I thought, oh, this ain't good.
It's not good at all. So I got in contact
with Trade Me and then they got in contact with
him and it turns out that he sold the bike,
jumped and has vehicle, went to Stuart Island for hunting
for about three weeks. So then he was off the grid,
(01:11:08):
is under radars or the thing, you know, right.
Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
So it wasn't trying to it wasn't trying to screw
you over. He was just he'd just gone bush.
Speaker 13 (01:11:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Well, I mean, but you know it's still tardy. You're
still gonna you're still gonna write him down for that.
Neutral be a minimum pay you pay before you go, mate.
Speaker 6 (01:11:27):
Probably I've probably bought and told about six motivates on
Trading in the last teams, and I've neither either had
a problem, even if like I just bought too over
your holidays winning Christ's one in Auckland. I was lucky
with the Auckland because I was in an Auckland. Daughter
loves in Auckland.
Speaker 13 (01:11:44):
So I was sort of hunting around Neil Weaver. But yeah,
I mean.
Speaker 6 (01:11:51):
Trade me is that I think trading is the number
one place to sell sealth vehicles on, But anything else
I'm not sure.
Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
Yeah, well that that's that's interesting to say because you
could ring someone and that's definitely not the case with
Facebook marketplace, is it. If if if things go wrong,
you're on on your own lack Aboog's not going to
jump over here, and as privately you cant and sort
things out.
Speaker 13 (01:12:10):
You can go on my postile on Facebook now and
you can ring me straight away.
Speaker 3 (01:12:14):
Well that's good, And yeah, you've got you've got a
better competition by someone called go Slash. Do you know
who go slashes selling garden sheds and kenary?
Speaker 7 (01:12:24):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:12:24):
Okay Slash? Yeah, man, he's muscling in your territory, man, Yeah,
take him out. Thank you so much for your call.
Speaker 13 (01:12:33):
Ross, I'm bringing thee Yeah, good man.
Speaker 2 (01:12:36):
If you ever move your business up to Auckland with
your sheds, then I'll then I'll go, I'll I'll go
up with you.
Speaker 3 (01:12:40):
You'll squeeze them down there.
Speaker 5 (01:12:44):
To the wall.
Speaker 3 (01:12:44):
Eighty ten eighty is a number to call.
Speaker 2 (01:12:46):
Some great texts coming through you guys are too young
to remember By selling Exchange Saturday mornings on z B. Oh, Yes, yeah,
I'll tell you got radio radio trading as is gone
by the wayside.
Speaker 3 (01:12:58):
It was so good, wasn't it. Who was the host
of that Andrew by selling Exchange Wellington z B? Remember
when someone ring up? So I've got a car to sell. Okay,
what kind of car is it? Dat's in?
Speaker 2 (01:13:08):
Yeah, I've got I've got some I've got five jousting sticks.
But I can't unbundle. I can't unbundle. They're bundled up
with some ski boots.
Speaker 3 (01:13:16):
It's so good, right, eleven to three will take a
few more phone calls. Very shortly you're listening to Matt
and Tyler Good afternoon.
Speaker 4 (01:13:24):
The issues that affect you and a bit of fun
along the way.
Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
Matt and Taylor Afternoons with the Volvo XC eighty innovation,
style and design, have it all New Talk SEDB.
Speaker 3 (01:13:35):
News Talks d B eight to three. And we've been
talking about Facebook Marketplace.
Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
Yeah, interesting enough. I thought we were going to get
flooded with people calling and texting, calling, oh, one hundred
and eighty ten eighty and texting nine two ninety two
around people with trading addictions, because I've seen a lot
of people hoarding stuff and buying stuff they don't need.
Speaker 3 (01:13:54):
Oh, it's dangerous, isn't it. Even I've never bought anything
off Facebook Marketplace, but I've already been for that table.
There's a lot of stuff I've already seen that. Hey,
that would be handy.
Speaker 2 (01:14:02):
Hey, and I was talking to Ross before about a
shared because I'm in the market for a shared. This
Texas says for Matt try goober Shears garden sheds were
recently brought one and fitted one at Dad's place. Great
kit sets Google, Simon goober garden chads, Gubba garden sheds. Google.
Look there we go. We are running the trade again.
Speaker 3 (01:14:25):
Julie, how are you?
Speaker 20 (01:14:27):
I'm very well, thank you, but I am hopping that.
Speaker 3 (01:14:30):
Oh good? Tell us why this morning or yes?
Speaker 20 (01:14:35):
This morning, I put an article on Tradeing Marketplace or sorry,
Facebook marketplace. It's sort of a specialized.
Speaker 6 (01:14:43):
Thing for a bike.
Speaker 20 (01:14:44):
It's a remote control of garm and remote control for
a bike. Anyway, within about an hour, I had a
lady come on the marketplace say yes, she will have it.
Speaker 6 (01:14:56):
She won't.
Speaker 20 (01:14:58):
I said, we'll send me your details and when do
you want my bank account? And she says no, she says,
I don't won't do it that way because of scammers.
She says, I've been scammed in the past. So I
I'll send you a link to the post office. My
brother works at the post office and he can get
it done sooner.
Speaker 14 (01:15:14):
Okay.
Speaker 20 (01:15:14):
So she sent me the link and I went, oh, yeah,
I don't know about this. So I looked it up
and it looked legitimate.
Speaker 14 (01:15:21):
I looked her up.
Speaker 6 (01:15:22):
She looked legitimate, and I.
Speaker 20 (01:15:24):
Sent through the details or some of it. They were
asking for my credit card details. I thought, okay, yeah,
she's going to put it in the post office. So
called was going to put it in my account. So
I sent through the.
Speaker 10 (01:15:36):
Details and I was waiting for it to.
Speaker 20 (01:15:39):
Process, and then the back phone mean they said, we've got.
Speaker 6 (01:15:42):
Some usual activity on your account.
Speaker 3 (01:15:45):
Oh is that you?
Speaker 20 (01:15:47):
And I said, well yes, he said, that is a scam.
We have just canceled all your accounts.
Speaker 19 (01:15:55):
So what it was, it was reverse.
Speaker 20 (01:15:57):
They were trying to put money in my account. But
what in fact they were probably doing is fishing for
my account details.
Speaker 2 (01:16:03):
Oh yeah, you got to be very careful giving that
those account detail.
Speaker 14 (01:16:06):
Oh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 20 (01:16:07):
Anyway, thank fusted out, but I'm now worried about all
my other bank accounts I have on my phone, so
I've had to go and buy a virus checker, get
all the checked.
Speaker 17 (01:16:19):
That's yeah.
Speaker 20 (01:16:21):
I can even give you the name of the woman,
so cool. Her name is Charlotte her Namu.
Speaker 13 (01:16:26):
And I've even got the.
Speaker 3 (01:16:27):
Address, but no, don't, don't do the address. Don't do
the address. But no, that's the problem, Julie, already address.
Speaker 20 (01:16:35):
The address is legitimate. That it's probably a scam. She's
probably used somebody else's and somebody else's name as well,
no doubt.
Speaker 3 (01:16:43):
Yeah, yeah, all right, well.
Speaker 10 (01:16:46):
I fell for it.
Speaker 20 (01:16:46):
I knew she's very very careful because they did all
the checks and I looked legitimate.
Speaker 3 (01:16:50):
And no, got to be careful out there, Julie. I
mean that in itself. Just seems like he's for Edmund
and I hate Edmund.
Speaker 2 (01:16:57):
Hey, so I've given I've given out. I've been involved
in scamming people in a way because I've misspelled guber
guber sheds. Yeah it's goober g o o b er,
not gubba.
Speaker 3 (01:17:11):
Okay, right, but I.
Speaker 2 (01:17:12):
Was only reading what someone texted me, you know. Yeah,
but you've got to be careful. You can't believe anything
I say. I can't be trusted, this person says. I.
Me and my brother have a trading addiction. We're constantly
buying boats and cars that we don't need. That's a
major trading addiction.
Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
H care where are you putting all these boats and cars?
Have we got time for? Mohammed's no? Not quite a
couple of teks to wrap this one up, guys, a
mass of Facebook Marketplace user. I've had some great buys
over the last couple of years, including a yacht that
I picked up for five thousand dollars. Was a little
(01:17:49):
bit nervous, but the yacht has been fantastic, Love it,
and it was a great buy. The seller was an
older gentleman who just needed to get rid of it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:58):
There you go on there again. All right, Okay, so
I feel a little bit better about Facebook Marketplace.
Speaker 3 (01:18:03):
I still haven't heard back about my heavy wooden table.
Let's just double check. Note she hasn't got back to me.
So I live in hope. Hopefully I'm not going to
get scammed here.
Speaker 2 (01:18:12):
I've just made a bid on this baby rhino. How
much do they want trade me?
Speaker 5 (01:18:17):
Well?
Speaker 2 (01:18:17):
Current bid is one thy and thirteen dollars. It's so
cute though, yeah, yeah, you don't even get to keep it,
You only get to hang out with it for a bit.
Oh what's the Auckland Zoo?
Speaker 5 (01:18:27):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:18:28):
Very cute though, yeah, bit that. There's been a good
discussion right after three o'clock New Zealander of the week.
Speaker 2 (01:18:35):
Ah, that's right, New Zealand of the Week. And you
are discusting if you don't change your bed sheets every week,
according to a British scientist.
Speaker 4 (01:18:49):
Talking with you all afternoon.
Speaker 1 (01:18:51):
It's Matt Heath and Taylor Adams Afternoons with the Volvo
XC ninety News Talk ZB.
Speaker 3 (01:18:57):
Good afternoon, welcome back into the show.
Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
We're talking about scams last hour hour a little bit
around Facebook, marketplace and such, and I just thought it'd
share I saw this thing, this little documentary. This will
interview with Frank Abigail Junior, who was the subject of
the movie Catch Me if you can the Leo DiCaprio. Yeah,
Steven spiel We're a great movie. So his autobiography was
(01:19:19):
used to turn into that movie. And n look, there's
been some questions about the accuracy of his well the
honesty of his writing. But you get there with a scammer.
But he's been working for the FBI for the last
forty years. I think since then. You've seen the movie.
At the end he gets off with this job to
work with Tom Hanks. But he was saying that the
most obvious thing ever to work out look for in
(01:19:41):
a scam. The first thing that you got to look for,
and this is coming from a guy that's scammed as
wanted into being a fake doctor, airline pilot, lawyer, etc.
Is the immediate need for money, the imminent need for money.
Just look out for that. And those are romance scams
because yeah, well, no one needs money off you straight away.
(01:20:03):
If they need your credit cards, no matter how much
you think you're in love with this person, if they
need money off you, they're scamming because no one would
ask for money off someone in the first year that
you know, someone like I've known you since we started
the show, Tyler last year.
Speaker 3 (01:20:17):
Yep, And I asked for money yesterday and you said,
bugger off your scammer.
Speaker 2 (01:20:20):
I said, this is a romence.
Speaker 3 (01:20:22):
No, you're in the honey trap.
Speaker 2 (01:20:23):
But you know what I mean. Like, if I asked
of money off you right now, would be very odd.
Speaker 3 (01:20:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:20:27):
If we went to the pub after the show today
and I went, hey, Tyler, mate, look, I'd like this situation.
I've just got some money that's coming in from overseas
and I just need to tide it over for a
little bit. Can I just get fifteen hundred dollars off you?
Speaker 5 (01:20:41):
Then?
Speaker 2 (01:20:41):
And that would be very weird. So the imminent need
for money is a red flag. It would be an
elaborate ruse though. So you've spent the last twenty years
of your life in media just to work your way
up into new stalks. Z'd be to try and scam
money off me and maybe my coskin. Yeah, and that's right, Yeah,
Zibi host notoriously in need of money.
Speaker 3 (01:21:04):
But yes, of course he would know. Frank Ebgnahale, one
of the greatest scam of all time. Yep, you've got
to listen to that guy when it comes to what
to look out for.
Speaker 2 (01:21:11):
I hope and you think about that, you know, with
some poor person and they're so lonely and they need love,
and then someone comes along and offers them all their
dreams to come through and then asks for money.
Speaker 4 (01:21:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:21:22):
God, if you just got to know at that point
this gamming. Ask some questions. Yeah, right on to this
particular topic, and this is going to be a good discussion.
It's a massive study out of the UK, very in depth,
almost like a longitudinal study into how often you should
change your bed clothes and your sheets and your pillows.
(01:21:43):
So they've spent a lot of money doing this research
and they have concluded are we going to say right now.
Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
Should we keep people?
Speaker 3 (01:21:51):
Yeah, we'll keep you in suspense on what they have
concluded on how often you should wash these various aspects
of your bed clothes and sheets. But it raises a
question for New Zealanders because I've got the stats here
on how often we change our sheets here in New Zealand.
How often should you be in your pillow slips your
sheets and how often should you be throwing out your pillow.
Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
Yeah, And my opinion is that we're too clean and tidy,
and we're worried about germs too much, and I think
we need more germs in our life. The more germs
we get in life, the better we're over cleaning. We're
using bacteria killing sprays on our desktops and our and
(01:22:34):
our kitchen tops, and we're cleaning our sheets too much,
and we're cleaning our houses too much, and I think
that's bad for humans. I think humans need to be
getting bugs and germs and filth and dirty and they
need to be sleeping in their own filth flat God intended.
Speaker 3 (01:22:50):
Well is that what you do?
Speaker 2 (01:22:52):
Yeah, well, i'd like to, but my partner's constantly cleaning
our sheets and buying more expensive sheets as we talked
about last year.
Speaker 3 (01:22:58):
Yeah, honestly called that we would change or wash our sheets.
We don't use sheets. We've just got the fitted sheet
and then the douvet, so we don't actually have the
sheets in between there, but we would change it once
every two weeks. The douve cheapers that wouldn't get a
wash for probably a month. And in terms of the pillows,
(01:23:19):
because they mentioned you should throw out your pillows after
a certain amount of time. I've never thrown out a pillow.
I've got a pillow that I've had for fifteen years.
Speaker 16 (01:23:27):
I love that.
Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
Do they say that you should throw out the pillows
because they, you know, get germs inside the pillows? Or
are they saying they throw out the pillows because it
gets all bunched up?
Speaker 3 (01:23:36):
No, no, on the duty side the germs. It doesn't
matter about the bunching up. They are worried that you
are going to get incredibly sick of You've had a
pillow for more than a couple of.
Speaker 2 (01:23:46):
Years, right right, I've got a brand new wall pillow
from kind Face, the New Zealand Company, and that is
very nice to sleep on. I'm not going to be
thrown that after two years. I'll keep it for twenty
five years.
Speaker 3 (01:23:56):
Well, that to me is the crazy part. I get
washing your bed sheets and your douvets and all the
rest of it, But checking out a good pillow even
after a couple of years.
Speaker 2 (01:24:03):
It's crazy. My question for you on eight hundred and
eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two it might
be a different question than what so asking. You could
ask another one. Mine is are we too clean. Should
you just be sleeping in your sheets a little bit
longer and building up some immunity to the world.
Speaker 3 (01:24:18):
Yeap, just be a little bit dirty. In New Zealand No.
Eight hundred eight ten eighty. How often do you think
we should be changing our bead sheets? And as I said,
I've got figures here on how often we as New
Zealanders do change that And you're going to be shocked.
Speaker 2 (01:24:32):
Changing your sheets every week is for the week.
Speaker 3 (01:24:34):
There's twelve past three. But right now it is time.
Speaker 4 (01:24:38):
For news Talk zibby.
Speaker 2 (01:24:44):
Every Friday on Matt and Tyler Afternoons on zeb we
name the New Zealand of the Week and honor that
we bestow on your behalf to a Newsmaker has had
an outsized effect on our great and beautiful nation over
the previous week. As always, there'll be three nominees, but
only one winner. And remember, the New Zealander of the
Week isn't always an agent of good. Sometimes the nominations
are lame. Often they aren't even a human or even
(01:25:05):
a New Zealander. So, without further ado, the nominees for
Matt and Tyler Afternoon New Zealand of the Week ah
nominee one also receives the give Them a Taste a
Kiwi Award. She's won eleven gold, seven silver and one
bronze medal and has done it all with her left
leg amputated below the knee. To be fair, she wouldn't
have been able to compete in her particular races if
she hadn't, but still she is the best of the
(01:25:25):
best in the water and now she's retiring from swimming
to focus more on being an amazing mum. Dame Sophie Pasco,
you are nominated for New Zealander of the Week.
Speaker 3 (01:25:35):
Surtiful.
Speaker 2 (01:25:36):
Nomine two also receives the Downstairs Focused Award. During an
attempted serious half hour chat on tattoo taboos in New
Zealand Society yesterday, Matt and Tyler afternoons received three calls
talking about amusing genital tattoos, one call about a nude
ossie and a shower, one about a nude Britain a bar,
and a call in about four hundred text about internal
polyup tats. Keep it classing news tooks. He'd be listeners.
(01:25:58):
You are nominated for New Zealander of the Week, right,
and there can be only one here?
Speaker 4 (01:26:06):
We go.
Speaker 2 (01:26:06):
The winner of Matt and Tyler Afternoons New Zealand of
the Week also receives the Beautiful Fat Bastard Award. Demand
for cheap beef to make burger patties has pushed the
US above Australia to become our second biggest trading partner.
Americans can't get enough of our New Zealand lean trimmings
in their burgers. We've shipped the hungry Buggers eighty six
million dollars more than last year for helping our balance
(01:26:28):
of trade deficits big boned Americans. You are the Matt
and Tyler Afternoons.
Speaker 3 (01:26:34):
New Zealanders of the Week.
Speaker 21 (01:26:37):
He congratulations and drive them a taste of Kiwi.
Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
Good Afternoons seventeen passed. So make you've asked the question, well,
we just too clean in this country, which is it's
an odd question, but I think it's a fear question.
Speaker 2 (01:27:15):
Yeah, because we've got this article today saying that we
need to clean our sheets our bed clothes more often. Yeah,
and I say do it less and hard en up.
Speaker 3 (01:27:23):
Well, I've got the figures here on how how often
Kiwi's wash their sheets and pillow slips. Do you want
to hear that.
Speaker 2 (01:27:30):
Now, Yeah, sure, go for it, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:27:31):
So single males under forty on average in New Zealand
wash their sheets once every two months.
Speaker 2 (01:27:39):
That's that's bit wealthy. That's better than I thought it
would be for a single male. I thought it'd be
once every decade. Yeah, yeah, no, but single males like students. Yeah,
I guess single males can be single miles and under forty.
Speaker 3 (01:27:53):
Did you say under forty under forty once every two months?
I suppose if a lady comes around a visit once
every couple of months and that's the time to wash
the sheets.
Speaker 2 (01:27:59):
I hope you're getting lucky more often than that.
Speaker 3 (01:28:01):
Uh, males over forty once a month, so that's slightly
getting better. Once you get older and get a bit
of mature, you'll wash your sheets once a month before
you go clean up my act eh yack. And females,
and this is kind of across the board. They've broken
it down via ages. But females are under the age
of forty every week, and females over the age of
(01:28:23):
forty every week, and that's for all of it.
Speaker 2 (01:28:25):
So females stay consistently clean their whole lives. Yeah, whereas
whereas men have some growth to do.
Speaker 3 (01:28:32):
So ladies you are the best of us.
Speaker 2 (01:28:34):
Yeah, although in my opinion, we're cleaning too much. We
need more bacteria in our life. We need to embrace
the immunity you get from being a full human with
the full spectrum of diseases and grubs and grottiness.
Speaker 3 (01:28:50):
Obviously, you know you're you're in the over forty brackets, yep.
And you've got a lovely lady in your household. So
in your household, you're probably or your lovely partner would
be cleaning the sheets on a fairly regular basis.
Speaker 2 (01:29:04):
Yeah, to the point where like so often, like I
reckon three or four times a week, to the point
I'm really shagged and I want to go to bed,
and then.
Speaker 3 (01:29:12):
You wait for it to be there.
Speaker 2 (01:29:14):
You're gonna wait for the sheets to get out of
the dryer, or worse, have to make the bed myself,
silting out the footed sheet. I can't get it around
the right way, never never get it right the first time,
Absolutely punishing, disgusting. If you, if any chance you, if
you change sheets any less than once a week, you
are a disgusting pig. I insist my wife changes the
(01:29:35):
sheets on a weekly minimum basis. Oh, good luck with that,
your luck consisting your wife does anything?
Speaker 3 (01:29:41):
Oh eight one hundred and eighty ten eighty. And my
follow up question was do you actually throw out pillows,
particularly if the pillows that you really love, because it's
kind of hard to find a good pillow in this
study out of the UK says you should throw out
your pillow regardless of whether it's been bunched up or
started to fall apart. You should throw it out every
six months.
Speaker 2 (01:30:00):
And it's crazy on what basis.
Speaker 3 (01:30:02):
Then it starts to build up a ridiculous amount of bacteria.
Speaker 2 (01:30:05):
Over bacteria, We need bacteria in our life.
Speaker 3 (01:30:08):
We shared. The study sees five hundred million skin cells
a day, a lot of it which gets absorbed not
only into the pillow slip, but the pillow itself. Not
throwing out your pillow after six months opens you up
to a raft of various bacteria.
Speaker 2 (01:30:26):
This is one of those knobs that that writes this
kind of stuff. It's don't even bother writing it. No
one's going to throw out their pillow every six months.
What an idiot that guy is.
Speaker 3 (01:30:38):
It's not one guy, there's a whole. There's a whole
team of scientists.
Speaker 2 (01:30:42):
What a team of scientific idiots? Why s did you
something no one will ever do? No one is come on,
oh eight, one hundred eighty ten eighty nine to nine two.
Is there anyone out there that seriously does or would
consider throwing out their pillow every six months six months
because they're scared of some bacteria. This text here supports
what I'm saying. I was the healthiest, not getting sick wise,
(01:31:03):
when I was in a job where I visited chicken
slaughter plants and was on the on the line meet
slaughter plants, etcetera. When I left for a disk job,
I got sick often. There we go, we need to
embrace more filth in our life, Nathan, how are.
Speaker 14 (01:31:17):
You They're not bad? Hey, it's not the bacteria, it's
the dust mites.
Speaker 3 (01:31:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 22 (01:31:24):
So as an a chronic childhood asthmatic and having to
go to hospital more than once, it's not the bacteria,
it's the dust might poo that causes that sort of
carry on and you've got to kill them.
Speaker 14 (01:31:38):
So we were very My mother in particular, was very
much onto washing every week hot water, getting getting the
pillow cases off the pillows, and doing that pretty much
right through to my early teens, and then I was
sort of more or less crew out of it along
with my sister. But yeah, honestly, it's it's not so
(01:32:01):
much the bacteria. I don't think it's got to be
the dust mites.
Speaker 2 (01:32:06):
And Nathan would, but she'll your mom and mom didn't
go as far as replacing the actual pillows every six months.
Speaker 14 (01:32:13):
Well, it comes down to no, it wouldn't be replacing.
I mean we're talking the eighties, early eighties, no one
had money, nothing was coming from China locally.
Speaker 2 (01:32:22):
Pillow was a major investment in the eighties.
Speaker 14 (01:32:24):
Yeah, you can buy a pillow for four dollars now
for crying out loud.
Speaker 2 (01:32:29):
So rubbish.
Speaker 3 (01:32:29):
Yeah they're pretty crappy.
Speaker 14 (01:32:31):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, but that's for the guests. You don't
want to stay now with your with your pillows. Yeah, again,
you've got to be washing the cases. And not every
pillow is created equal your material. Some some promote the
growth of not just that carrier, but also you dost
might and it's the skin coming off your head and
(01:32:53):
your body that goes into your sheets, your pillow cases,
and your mattresses that they're all banging on about.
Speaker 2 (01:33:01):
Yeah, but I mean, that's that's an issue for you
as an asthmatic, and I get that that you need
to look after your up and that's fair enough. But
for me, I'm not So should I be scared of
dust nights?
Speaker 3 (01:33:13):
Nah?
Speaker 2 (01:33:14):
I'm sweet?
Speaker 12 (01:33:15):
Wow, Okay, if.
Speaker 14 (01:33:16):
A constant exposure to something will will cause you to
have an allergic reaction, or it might cause you.
Speaker 2 (01:33:22):
To build up an immunity.
Speaker 14 (01:33:26):
Does with late ex elogies lot. My sister who worked
with in an ambulance for years, eventually one day she
needs an EPP and she had to quit a job.
But that's another story. So with with that sort of thing,
if you're looking at the materials, if you're going all natural,
you're going to be a bit better. And if she's
washing your pillows, there's nothing wrong with chucking them in
(01:33:47):
the washing machine on a warm or hot wash and
give them a few years. I'm not chucking them out
every twelve months or two years like they say. You know,
I give it six years before that thing's got holes
in it and it's only fit for the dog.
Speaker 2 (01:34:01):
As I saying before, Yeah, exactly as I was saying before, Nelson,
I'm in Nelson, Nathan, as I say before Nathan, I'm running.
I'm running a wool pillow. So it's a wool in
a pillow as opposed to cotton or down or whatever.
And that's got to be Wolve's the magic material, isn't it.
Think that's got to be great for the allergies.
Speaker 14 (01:34:19):
Yep draws the moisture away. It's fire retardant and it's
supporting New Zealand industry that you can know how borings are.
Speaker 2 (01:34:27):
Yeah, tell you need you need fire retardant in my bed.
It gets pretty hot.
Speaker 3 (01:34:31):
Time, Nathan, thank you very much. Question for you. I'm
sure it does get very hot. Yeah, it's some good
time the hear household. But when you're just.
Speaker 2 (01:34:42):
Talking about the temperature and the humidity, actually, Tyler, grow up.
Speaker 3 (01:34:45):
Keep it above board mates. When when you've got guests
coming round and you've got your pillows, your pads decades
stained yellow, crumpled up misses, and you just hand that
to a guess and see here you gave you a
good night's sleep.
Speaker 2 (01:34:57):
The natural rotation of pillows as they stay on the
master bedroom and the parent will bed for a while
and then when they get crappy they move upstairs to
the kids bed. They get moved up to childre because
children don't good pillows. Children wo just hardened up. I
mean children should be sleeping outside and the dirt built
up their immunity.
Speaker 3 (01:35:15):
Oh eight one hundred eighty ten eighty is a number
to call. It is twenty five past three. Back in
a month.
Speaker 1 (01:35:25):
Matt Heath and Tyler Adams afternoons call oh eight hundred
eighty ten eighty on used talk ZB.
Speaker 2 (01:35:30):
There's so much good advice coming through here that I
can't believe. So I can't believe I didn't think of this.
Speaker 4 (01:35:35):
The tech.
Speaker 2 (01:35:36):
So many texts coming through, and we've got full lines,
but some of texts coming through that I can't keep up.
So I'm just gonna have to paraphrase the texts. I
can't find it. It's just gone through about three pages back.
But I was talking about how when I'm changing footage sheep,
I get confused and always get it around the wrong
way right much pain. And I was always I wanted
footage sheets have that marking on them to tell you
(01:35:56):
which way is the right way, you know, like if
if you're not running a California King where it's completely square,
you've got you know, and I always see maybe I've
got bad luck. Always seem to get it around the
wrong way. And some are saying, next time you do it,
mark the sheet where it's the right direction, get a
pine or so something on there, so once you know
the direction the next time you do it. Why don't
ever think of that game change? That is absolutely brilliant.
(01:36:19):
Someone else here says, have your pillows in the freezer.
Speaker 3 (01:36:23):
Why would you have a pillow in a freezer?
Speaker 2 (01:36:24):
Put your pillows in the freezer for a couple of hours,
then out in the sun. It will kill mold, bacteria, mites.
Need to ear your extras regularly too.
Speaker 3 (01:36:31):
You mentioned before wall pillows and granted well as a
fantastic product, then we should be promoting it and be patriotic.
But have you found with the wall pillows super comfortable
when you first start using them? Then they start to
kind of break apart a little bit?
Speaker 4 (01:36:44):
Wow?
Speaker 2 (01:36:45):
I don't think so.
Speaker 3 (01:36:46):
Actually is this marino? This is high quality?
Speaker 2 (01:36:48):
I don't know. I got it from a New Zealand
company called coin Face. Got these these wool stuck pillows
and they are so comfy. Also got myself a wool
douve from them, and well, is the wonder.
Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
You're hit it out with wool, aren't you are asleep?
Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
Champion wall is the wonder wonder material, as we all
know in New Zealand, Roz good afternoon.
Speaker 3 (01:37:08):
You, Oh hi, how are you both very good? Now?
How often do you chuck away your pillows?
Speaker 14 (01:37:15):
Well?
Speaker 10 (01:37:16):
I was working out that I've had my fairry down
pillows and we brought about latism for I think about
twenty seven years.
Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
Wow, you've had your pillows for twenty seven years?
Speaker 4 (01:37:28):
Did you?
Speaker 2 (01:37:28):
What did you say? The ferry down?
Speaker 10 (01:37:30):
That's right exactly, And think usually you're just like a
little bit of protector, a pillow protector under your pillow case.
So twenty seven years. I worked out too. Engagements, a marriage,
some children, a hedgehog, to cats, the occasional doghog.
Speaker 2 (01:37:49):
What do you mean by that? What happened with the hedgehog?
Speaker 10 (01:37:51):
Oh, that's some wanted a hedgehog because we rescued a headshog.
He believes that you could domesticate them and the hedgehog.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
The hedgehog slipped on the ferry down pillow for a while.
Speaker 10 (01:38:02):
He slipped in his bed for about a week until
convinced him that you could not twiglet train hedgehogs.
Speaker 6 (01:38:07):
So I've got to that's.
Speaker 10 (01:38:08):
Probably about the only time that Pilo was regularly washed
was when Jerry the hedgehog was staying there.
Speaker 2 (01:38:15):
Oh Jerry r ip I imagine bless.
Speaker 3 (01:38:18):
Fary down that would have been they were would have
been expensive pillows when you purchased them twenty seven years ago.
That's a good brand.
Speaker 10 (01:38:24):
Yeah, absolutely, and that's probably part of the reason why,
you know, I'd never even considered giving them up, being
mostly Dutch. Do you worry? So?
Speaker 2 (01:38:32):
Do you agree with me that this this expert here
or these group of experts at telling us that you
should throw out and replace your pillow every six month,
That that is the most ridiculous thing.
Speaker 10 (01:38:44):
That's that's extreme. That sounds like, you know, risk averse behavior.
I wrote that works work safe.
Speaker 13 (01:38:52):
Or something like that.
Speaker 2 (01:38:53):
That's a terrified They're terrified human beings that think that
that you can that you have to throw about six men?
How weak are they are? They are they that they
can't stand, they can't handle what's coming out of their heads.
Speaker 3 (01:39:05):
It is a cost of living crisis. I mean, how
much pillow money have you got to? Yeah? Six monthly budget?
Speaker 10 (01:39:11):
Yeah, yeah, I mean that's that, that's silly. I think
that's probably at its in our hot households, you know,
correlation between how long we've had our colors and our
immunity system, as you suggested before.
Speaker 2 (01:39:23):
Yeah, all right, hey, thank you so much for your call,
and thank you for sharing that story about was it
Jerry the hedgehog?
Speaker 12 (01:39:30):
Yeah, yeah, Jerry, Jerry.
Speaker 2 (01:39:32):
Yeah you can you cannot.
Speaker 10 (01:39:33):
You can't domesticate them.
Speaker 2 (01:39:35):
And yeah you can't know we're everywhere. And look, as
much as I say, we need more bacteria in our life,
I've heard hedgehogs have a bit about the most amount
of bacteria.
Speaker 3 (01:39:45):
The animal is so cute, so cute, they're filthy.
Speaker 10 (01:39:50):
I have I have a rather bad rap and yeah,
lots of little something else.
Speaker 14 (01:39:55):
That's okay.
Speaker 10 (01:39:56):
On that note, I'm going to sign off.
Speaker 3 (01:40:02):
Josh, how are you?
Speaker 5 (01:40:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 23 (01:40:04):
Hey, boys, Yeah, I've got a kind of dreadful police.
I hate the stuff. Look, I don't have any myself.
I'd rather stick to the old feather and things like that.
You know, I know I can clean feather really well.
Speaker 3 (01:40:21):
Ye just stry to jump in there. How do you
clean feather very well? Josh? What's your technique?
Speaker 23 (01:40:28):
Oh look, I know they've all got care instructions, but
I'm just how cheap o man. Just freakin' wash it
and dry it, even if you have to hang it
out for three days and flip it over and turn
it inside out in all sorts, you know, get it all,
get all the clumps out. But that you only need
to wash it. Feather the douve not very often. I'm
(01:40:53):
not going to guess just in case you get it wrong,
but you know, a couple of times a year. But
now I want to like about feather as you can
er it out really well. And I think that even
if you have a blow that you're not sure you
want to wash, just hang out in the sun. Let
the UV kill those little devils, you know.
Speaker 2 (01:41:11):
But that's a good point.
Speaker 23 (01:41:14):
Hey, you guys done you know in science and like
fourth form you do the balloon static electricity thing.
Speaker 2 (01:41:21):
Yeah, yeah, I remember walking through the library and getting
giving mate shocks from the from the carpet.
Speaker 23 (01:41:31):
But yeah, anyway, cane, so like you can imagine a
polyester pillow is almost like a static magnets all those
dust particles.
Speaker 3 (01:41:39):
A good point.
Speaker 23 (01:41:39):
So it's probably quite disgusting. But another tip, there's a
famous homeware brand who has awesome sales in the holidays generally,
and that's the only time to go there, and you'll
get a you'll get one hundred dollars for about forty parks. Yeah,
and the feared down Yeah, good good stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:42:00):
Yeah, you've got a good tips on the holidays.
Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
You mean every single weekend. If you're talking about their place,
I think you're talking about Hey, thanks so much for
your call, Josh. Hey, guys, there is stick. It's a
great topic. Thank you. I just said. Someone just texted
and said it was a terrible topic.
Speaker 3 (01:42:13):
Well disagree.
Speaker 2 (01:42:17):
I choose Donna's opinion higas great topic. Ever since a
flatmate got scabies back in my flatting days in the nineties,
I've been fastidious about bad bead hygiene. On my God,
scabies are the worst. All one have precent cotton or linen,
fabric live wallace cotton linen. It's bloody expensive, so I
really look after it. But the quality is worth it. Yeah, man,
(01:42:41):
I uh, there was there was a run of scabies
through when I was flatting into Needin. Everyone got scabies
and I was so scared of scabies that I bought
the scavyes cream, and I covered myself with Scaby's cream
and covered myself with scabies cream and covered myself with
skavy scream. My whole body came up in these horrible welts,
and I went to the doctor and the doctor said
to me, you never had scabies? You you what you
(01:43:04):
have got us a terrible reaction to over scaby creaming.
Fear lead you into a It's right. I let fear
take what I was doing, and I ended up, Yeah,
some kind of Munchausen by proxy on myself.
Speaker 3 (01:43:19):
Right, good discussion, And as you said, Matt, we just
need to be a little bit filthier here in New
Zealand and it's going to work out all right. After
the headlines, it is time for topical Tune. So this
is where Matt and I each pick a song related
to a theme of the week. The first to three
votes via phone takes it out. We play the song
in its entirety. I won last week. Can I do
(01:43:40):
it again? That's coming up very shortly. It is twenty
four to four.
Speaker 4 (01:43:46):
You talk said the headlines with.
Speaker 15 (01:43:48):
Blue Bubble Taxis, it's no trouble with a Blue Bubble
Labour's criticizing final plans for a new Dunedin hospital having
less beds than they do now, more than Labour's original proposal.
The Health Minister's brushing that off, praising its new theaters,
extra ed space and additional imaging capacity. Jane Jones is
(01:44:09):
again slamming opposition to mining as woke riddled intimidation, saying
a focus on mining and coal will double our mineral
exports by twenty thirty five. Police have dismantled a Southland
drug operation after Auckland Customs intercepted crockery that turned out
to be MDMA pressed into the shape of plates and painted.
(01:44:31):
Police also sees cannabis and cash and arrested to invercargo.
Speaker 24 (01:44:35):
Men.
Speaker 15 (01:44:36):
Health New Zealand says it strenuously denies and inference by
the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation. It was offered bribes or
payments to buy Chinese made smoking cessation vapes, and power
is back on for twenty two thousand customers in Rotuduu
who lost electricity earlier this afternoon. Use it or Lose
(01:44:56):
it experts reveal key to combating cognitive decline. You can
read more at ens A Herald Premium. Now back to
matt Heath and Tyler Adams.
Speaker 3 (01:45:06):
Thank you very much, Rayleigh. Right TI for topical tunes,
where Matt and I each peck of song related to
a theme of the week.
Speaker 2 (01:45:14):
Yeah that's right. Oh wait, one hundred and eighty ten eighty,
first of three wins. We've only had one of these.
This is our second week back from holidays. I don't
even know anything that's going on.
Speaker 3 (01:45:21):
Yeah, I think it's week two.
Speaker 2 (01:45:22):
It's weak two. Okay, So you're your one nell for
twenty twenty five. I won twenty twenty four.
Speaker 3 (01:45:26):
Yeap? So can I do it again? So do I start?
Speaker 4 (01:45:28):
Ah?
Speaker 2 (01:45:28):
Yeah, you do so hundred and eighty ten eighty. This
is Tyler's song. So you both vote on do people
vote on? How good n look?
Speaker 3 (01:45:37):
Let me have my pitch? Okay, okay, So we were talking,
was it yesterday about the doomsday clock that was moving
closer to midnight? And you're quite right they'll back themselves
into the quarner because they're now down to seconds where
a couple of years ago they were moving up minutes.
But they think that the world's got more dangerous and.
Speaker 2 (01:45:53):
Only seven seconds to midnight they said it, well, seven
seconds to midnight.
Speaker 3 (01:45:56):
But after that conversation we were. I think we all
realized that the world is not dangerous. It's a good
place to live at the moment, and we should just
have no worries. And here's my choice today.
Speaker 4 (01:46:10):
You know.
Speaker 15 (01:46:13):
The world.
Speaker 2 (01:46:17):
Are in the world, feel far? Okay, it's a pretty
good churn.
Speaker 3 (01:46:23):
I'll give you my bed better. I can't all right, okay?
Speaker 2 (01:46:26):
So e one hundred and eighteen eighty Is that the
best topical tune or is it mine? Okay? So this
one's more topical than yours, because it's what we're just
talking about. Oh okay, some BBC scientists saying that we
have to clean our sheets more often.
Speaker 3 (01:46:38):
It's a fast turnaround because our beds are burning.
Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
Lay the oil's mate the oils.
Speaker 3 (01:46:54):
Oh, that is a cracky turn.
Speaker 2 (01:46:56):
Eight hundred eighty ten eighty Is it the end of
the world as we know it? But Tyler or bids
are burning for me? Mad he whose song is better
used to free call societes?
Speaker 3 (01:47:07):
Get on the phones now, we'll get into it very shortly.
It is eighteen to.
Speaker 1 (01:47:12):
Four Matt Heath Taylor Adams taking your calls on eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty Matt and Taylor afternoons with
the Volvo xc N eighty tick every box, a seamless experience,
awaits news talks'd be right.
Speaker 3 (01:47:27):
It is topical tunes. We're mad an aah. Pack a
song related to a theme of the week and take
it out full lines at the moment. But if you're
trying to get through, keep trying, because we're going to
get to it very shortly. But a quick recap.
Speaker 2 (01:47:38):
Yeah, that's right. What's your topical tune? Tyler?
Speaker 24 (01:47:41):
But ari em were et tune on the back of
the doomsday clock naysayers saying that we're close to the
end of the world.
Speaker 3 (01:47:53):
But great song. We should feel fine, it's all good.
Speaker 4 (01:47:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:47:56):
And my song is bids are Burning by MIDNIGHTA well
great song. And this is on the back of the
filthy nature of New Zealand's bed sheets.
Speaker 3 (01:48:08):
It's gonna be good.
Speaker 2 (01:48:09):
Bids up burning with.
Speaker 3 (01:48:10):
Bacteria right, Oh, eight one hundred and eighty ten eighty.
If you can't get through, keep trying. Matthew, how are
you this afternoon?
Speaker 4 (01:48:18):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (01:48:19):
Good old lamb Laddy both baggers yup, nailed it.
Speaker 10 (01:48:23):
They're both They're.
Speaker 5 (01:48:24):
Both very good.
Speaker 19 (01:48:25):
But being an Aussie, I'm going.
Speaker 2 (01:48:26):
To have to go with Naddy Eddy maddis unite right,
the old oil the Oils.
Speaker 3 (01:48:34):
Yeah, yeah, I love it. Right. One for Matt, zero
for me. Kelly, how are you this afternoon? I'm good?
Speaker 4 (01:48:41):
Thanks?
Speaker 10 (01:48:41):
Both awesome songs, Tylight Yours is just perfect.
Speaker 2 (01:48:46):
Okay, thank you, Kelly. I'm actually keeping school this week
because we No, that's that's fine, Kelly. Thank you for
your call, appreciate it. But we'll look. We're keeping Kelly
now she's gone. No, I'm mectually him score this week
because last week.
Speaker 3 (01:49:00):
Mass of stitch up, Mass of Stitcher by you and
Andrew when I had to get four across the line, right, Sharon,
how are you?
Speaker 7 (01:49:09):
Oh good? Thank you.
Speaker 6 (01:49:11):
I'm sorry Tyler, and it's meant for.
Speaker 2 (01:49:13):
Me, Sharon. I love you, Sharon.
Speaker 3 (01:49:17):
Yeah, don't be too sorry, love you, Sharon, Thank you
all right bye. I thought she was going to say
I love you back.
Speaker 2 (01:49:24):
It's always always hurts when you tell some of you
love you and then then crickets stuff stuff. But to
be fair, we've only just made on the phone, so
it was actually a bit foard of me.
Speaker 3 (01:49:33):
Yeah, it was Donna.
Speaker 2 (01:49:34):
How are you?
Speaker 3 (01:49:35):
We love you too, Donna? Yeah, good, right, what.
Speaker 10 (01:49:38):
Are you you. I love songs. You nearly need me.
Speaker 2 (01:49:42):
But there we go?
Speaker 3 (01:49:49):
Thank you?
Speaker 2 (01:49:50):
All right, there you go?
Speaker 3 (01:49:51):
Is there three Andrews just questioning it? Do we need to?
Shall we take one more?
Speaker 10 (01:49:55):
Three?
Speaker 3 (01:49:55):
Isn't it?
Speaker 2 (01:49:56):
Od's take one more? I think I don't think we
got three?
Speaker 16 (01:49:59):
Did we?
Speaker 2 (01:50:00):
Damn Chris? What are you reckon?
Speaker 14 (01:50:07):
It has to be there?
Speaker 3 (01:50:10):
We got this double big fire.
Speaker 2 (01:50:12):
Will you thank thank you, thank you for that. Yeah,
but look I'm all right youtobe. But yeah, look you
tried to touch me out there, but it.
Speaker 3 (01:50:19):
Was unstoppable, decisive victory. Well done and it's a cracking church.
Speaker 2 (01:50:24):
Yeah, thank you. So it's one all for twenty twenty five.
Speaker 16 (01:50:29):
How wow?
Speaker 25 (01:50:30):
The lever broke the blood wood and the desert. Oh
hold the RecA bi diesel steam and foies five degree.
Speaker 4 (01:50:44):
The time has come.
Speaker 11 (01:50:48):
To say that FA.
Speaker 4 (01:50:52):
Pay the.
Speaker 2 (01:50:56):
Pay chef.
Speaker 4 (01:51:00):
The time. It's the longest left me good.
Speaker 10 (01:51:19):
I'm gonna with.
Speaker 4 (01:51:20):
That's when our.
Speaker 22 (01:51:28):
How don't we speak.
Speaker 4 (01:51:29):
While my bed.
Speaker 2 (01:51:36):
I'm gonna with That's when another turn.
Speaker 24 (01:51:44):
I don't sleek.
Speaker 17 (01:51:45):
While the bedside. Time has come to.
Speaker 16 (01:51:54):
Say, bestap to pay the sad stuff to put out step.
Speaker 2 (01:52:10):
FO will stand a cop too.
Speaker 25 (01:52:13):
Some from Tent Topies, My Younger bu The Western Desert
Lives and Breeze by five Degree.
Speaker 17 (01:52:25):
A time up.
Speaker 6 (01:52:30):
To say that.
Speaker 4 (01:52:34):
To pay now lay the time.
Speaker 25 (01:52:46):
A fat alongside, Let's give it back.
Speaker 2 (01:53:01):
Nothing that's when this turn.
Speaker 3 (01:53:29):
Wow, well done Matt, great song, great song.
Speaker 2 (01:53:34):
Let's go textures throw a nine two nine. Rory started
a covers band called do They.
Speaker 3 (01:53:39):
That is a great for a band. Yeah, well done.
Well that's one apiece for twenty twenty five and cracking
tunes are well done mate. Coming up very shortly, we're
gonna wrap up the weekend of sport with Darcy Watergrave.
It is nine to four.
Speaker 1 (01:53:55):
The big stories, the big issues, the big trends and
everything in between.
Speaker 4 (01:54:00):
Matt and Taylor afternoons with.
Speaker 1 (01:54:02):
The Volvo XC ninety, attention to detail and a commitment
to comfort news talks.
Speaker 4 (01:54:07):
They'd be on News Dog ZIB.
Speaker 3 (01:54:10):
Six to four where we've got to mate Darcy Watergrave
back and David shad about what he's watching over the weekend.
When it comes to sportsk mates.
Speaker 16 (01:54:18):
You're too friendly. You're my colleague, Okay, no your place.
Speaker 3 (01:54:22):
You're a tough man, aren't ye. You're a tough man.
Speaker 2 (01:54:25):
That's what I said to me, wants me to accept
his friend request on Facebook, and I say, don't get
too close, tyme.
Speaker 16 (01:54:33):
What do you mean Jeffers from didn't we cover that
earlier on in the piece?
Speaker 5 (01:54:38):
Yes? We Dad?
Speaker 2 (01:54:38):
Right, what are you watching?
Speaker 10 (01:54:39):
D Well?
Speaker 2 (01:54:39):
I'd love to say a big weekend in sport.
Speaker 16 (01:54:41):
I have to say this isn't.
Speaker 3 (01:54:42):
There's the stuff on.
Speaker 16 (01:54:44):
We've got Supersmash Final coming out, which is I will
definitely take a look at that. One of the go
to to me will be Israel. He's playing, fighting, playing,
he's fighting EVOLV. This weekend big for him. There's no
title belt, but he's unencumbered by pressure and expectations, so
that would be good. I've got a tendency to look
(01:55:06):
toward the Toyota Cash Stroll formula Oceanani that's a ridiculous name.
It's the trs there and Tedor Tonga are this weekend
and only get that online, which which bothers me because
I've got to say the coverage it's is.
Speaker 3 (01:55:20):
That free free coverage online?
Speaker 16 (01:55:22):
I think TV three you might be able to find it.
I think there is some interest in there. I think
that the big one for me is going to be Israel,
Dusna and the Phoenix Women are playing this week in
not the Phoenix Men, but Auckland are playing MacArthur at
Home five o'clock tomorrow afternoons.
Speaker 3 (01:55:42):
Yeah, and no one will leave.
Speaker 16 (01:55:44):
To the final whistle because they've got this horrible tendency
of winning in the last fight. So I think when
you look at that Israel, Auckland FC and up after that,
I'd probably run to Super Smash Action there.
Speaker 4 (01:55:57):
I love it. I'll tell you what.
Speaker 2 (01:55:58):
I'll tell you what I recommend. This is a movie
from two thousand and six. You've probably seen that, but
I watched that last night Prestige.
Speaker 3 (01:56:03):
Oh, great movie.
Speaker 2 (01:56:04):
You're looking for a movie to revisit again over the
weekend of Prestige.
Speaker 6 (01:56:07):
It's on.
Speaker 3 (01:56:08):
Christopher Nolan, fantastic.
Speaker 2 (01:56:12):
Yeah, Hugh Jacksman, Christian Bale, David Bowie as Kiessler. Jeez,
that's a good movie. Oh drop it and I forgot
the twist. It's so good.
Speaker 3 (01:56:21):
Fantastic Rights for other weekends and give them a taste
of
Speaker 1 (01:56:25):
Kiwek for more from News Talks at b Listen live
(01:56:47):
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