Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus lush Night's podcast from News
Talk zed B.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
And you said, a good evening and welcome. It is Tuesday.
My name is Marcus Hittl Midnight tonight. The number is
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nine to nine two
to Texas is of course the first Tuesday of September.
A lot of emails to me today, and that's good.
A lot of emails about Lois.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
I don't normally go back in time, but I'm just
gonna tell a little about Lowis. Last night there was
some discussion about the rugby. I think people are still
processing it. I see there's been a lot more in
fact and form discussion on Darcy Show tonight. But last
night we talked a little about the hacker, talked a
bit about the eligibility rules for all black stiffs. In fact,
they should loosen that out whether they get to thirty
(00:53):
or played so many texts or tests. Sorry rather but
then about nine to thirty women came through called what
about nine twenty? I think a woman came through called
Lois and Lowis have to be one of the most
opinionated people on rugby. You've heard in your life. It
was like time travel. It's like a call from the
nineteen thirties. But Lois was not happy. She wasn't happy
(01:17):
with Scott Robertson at Wall and in fact, if they
win the next test, I suspect you'll be even less happy.
She's furious, basically absolutely furious he was ever given the job,
as she kept saying, no international experience. Anyway, for those
people that want to know more about Lois, Dan's going
(01:39):
to put her well. She's featured in the podcast, which
one Texter has referred to as the ipodcast, which I
quite like. It's good covering together the things the iPod.
On the podcast, Dan will get that call up so
you can go and can go and listen to her
because she was pretty strident. I'm going to spend some
of the day thinking it's pretty nice that people still
(02:00):
get passionate about rugby, because for most of us we
feel we've all got into perspective. But what she's going
to do. She has promised to call again on Monday,
and I imagine if we lose in the weekend she
will be ecstatic. And imagine if we win, and of
(02:21):
course I'm on the playing fifteen or on the bench.
If we went on Saturday or Sunday or whatever the
damn thing is, we won't hear from her. But there
we go. If you do want to hear from Lois,
go to the Facebook page Marcus Lush Nights and she
is all there. Anyway, onwards and upwards eight hundred and
eighty twenty ninety nine do to text. By the way,
we are on the brand new studio today. I won't
(02:42):
go on about this much, but that's kind of exciting.
So in a new room. We've moved from the old
building which we've been a ninth since we've been in
since nineteen sixty three. We're now in a brand new building.
This is the first show that's going out from the
studio with callers. So if you want to be on air,
give us a eight hundred eighty ten eighty and I've
(03:03):
got it within the first hour. Preck, in the first hour,
I've got to check the dump button, so we'll see
how that goes. So I might get you if you're
one of the first callers to we might go through
and see how quickly I can dump you. So anyway, oh,
eight hundred eighty ten eighty nine to two nine two texts.
If you want to come through a non curator talk
you might want to suedesce the topic or they might
be something I want to suggest, and feel free to
(03:25):
get in touch. If there is breaking news where you are,
let us know. And there's two things in the south
on the kind of ongoing stories. One are the fires
around around Wipter. The other thing is the tag we're
not the tug the barge, the self propelled barge on
the beach south of Westport. I had my riga mate
(03:48):
around I was asking him about it is easy. Giant
bags underneath should be fine, but I don't even know
when they're intending to move that. But if you've got
any updates about that, about the fire or the barge,
get in touch. The number is oh eight hundred eighty
ten eighty and nine to nine two to text and
any breaking news who's where you are, whether it be
(04:08):
tsunamis or sint Elmo's fire, or whales strandings or wallabies
beyond their normal range or anything like that, let us
know up pretty discussions that you have got about breaking
news theres now and back at you if anything that's
happening around the world, I will bring that to you.
So yeah, onwards and upwards, as I say, oh, eight
hundred eighty ten eighty nine to nine two detection. In fact,
(04:32):
here's the email. High Marcus. So glad that Dan replayed
Lois's conversation with you on iPod replayed it. Haven't laughed
so long for hours ages. Definitely caller of the year.
You should have a trophy Best call of Year. Mark
my words, Kathy, Mark my words. She was saying to
(04:54):
me quite the passion of a strident talk back caller.
It's like the way the world should be. Twelve past eight,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty year Market's Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 4 (05:05):
Well, I wanted to be one of the first, and
and you you were.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
We are the first, Mark, and you're sending good.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
Anyway. I'll just bringing up about the weather in the
Hawk's Bay. She's absolutely superlative at the moment with twenty
four degrees actually quite unusual.
Speaker 2 (05:23):
With some of the year right September twenty four degrees.
That's high now, So we're just one of them.
Speaker 5 (05:30):
Both about the weather in the Hawksbury region have been
gassy win today. But yeah, congratulations joining new Judio.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Hey Mark, do you guys in the hawks By you
seem to just sit around the whole time, weather bregging,
oh je with the South we'll find here in hawks By,
Oh jave pouring up in northern fine here in Hawksby
Bering And mind you guys got pelted last year, didn't you.
I'm not saying that to make light of it. But
it's not always good.
Speaker 5 (05:59):
No, we got hit with the floods. But we've we've
got the Mediterraneans that are clumbing here in hawks Bay.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
Don't know the Mediterranean climates? Like you sit around? Have olives?
Do you in like a in Sicily?
Speaker 5 (06:14):
A very salubrious, healthy lifestyle.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
How long you've been there? Mark? You sound like you're
having in the lap luxury.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
Well knows we've been here in my life, so one
hundred years in the farm, on the farm with the family.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Why would you go anywhere else? How's lemmon? You ever
got lembs?
Speaker 4 (06:32):
We're fruit farmers.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
Ah, what sort of fruit? Not those black doris.
Speaker 5 (06:36):
Plums, apples and kiwis?
Speaker 2 (06:39):
Really yeah, kind of sounds kind of unexciting. The apples
and keepa fru?
Speaker 4 (06:45):
Doesn't it very exciting?
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Okay, I'll tell you a Mark, can you say, can
you I'm going to dump you. Okay, how can we hanging?
Speaker 6 (06:57):
I'll dump that.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
There you go, I've dumped it. We've practiced that. Here
we go. Done that, well, Mark, thank you for that.
That work for it kind of well for me. Keep
those texts coming through people nine to nine to if
you do want to text end on midnightlight. I do
find that with Hawks Bay people that they're weather bragg ards.
I'm thinking cheap as creepers. Why would you go on
about the whole time everyone knows now that you know.
(07:21):
I think someone's quite like the variety of weather. Someone says,
new studio sounds better, new microphone too. I don't think
the microphone is better, but it certainly sounds like it's absorbing.
It's got felt on all the walls.
Speaker 4 (07:38):
Real.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
Yeah, it looks like it's a lot greater at absorbing
the sound. I think you're right. New studio sounds better,
new microphone too, question Mark. Perhaps Marcus podcasts are called
that because are originally to be downloaded to an iPod
for people to listen to. I'm learning that's good. Thank you.
It's Steve Marcus on plow. Oh that's the person that
(08:02):
wants to know the song. Hey, Marcus epsom Our Outage
Market road through to Cornwall Park area. Thanks Greg, I'll
get on the website and see if we've got some
more information about that. Also eight hundred and eighty ten
eighty nine to two dime to detext Hey, the topics
for tonight will kick off with and as I say,
(08:23):
these are non cure, these are suggestions. Only one's the
couple in christ Church, I say couple a family seems
seen a but heteronormative of me. They found two and
thirty two thousand in the home ceiling, which I don't
get to keep. It's a lot of money though, And
(08:47):
what's interesting they didn't find the money but the spark
He went into the roof and found it. How would
you know if the electrician found a lot of money
in the roof because they just carried out their bags,
wouldn't They'd have no idea. So so that's the situation there.
So the electrician fest up and well there's money up there,
(09:08):
two hundred and thirty two thousand dollars and they don't
get to keep it. What's before the courts. So I
want to know the most contentious thing you've found, or
the thing you've found that caused you a lot of hassle. Yeah,
(09:30):
that might be the way I'm going to frame it tonight.
The hassle find I don't know what mine would. I
haven't had a refinedy life. Actually, I've never found bundles
of cash or anything that caused me a great moral hazard.
So the things you've found that have caused you a
moral hazard or caused you a great deal of concern
(09:53):
or constellation in your life. The other topic I want
to bang at you too quickly, and because you guys
love this one. The situation in Australia Gloria Jenes, which
are the cafes I think they had the cafes that
had the Hillsong connection. Don't you know it? But Gloria
(10:14):
Jeans cafe in Australia they're going cashless for the safety
for their workers. And I'll tell you what the Aussies
are really kicking on about it. It says a beloved
cafe chain has made a controversial move to create a
stay for environment for staff and serve customers more efficiently,
(10:36):
which I think is just wrong. I just think they're
sick of cash. How many times you heard of Gloria
Jeans getting robbed. They probably don't trust their staff, that's
what it's about, even though they're close to the lord.
But yeah, that's what they're doing. They're going cashless. If
that happened here, and it probably will because they are
franchised over here. I have seen a Gloria Jeans in
(10:59):
Queen Street and one in Queenstown. If Gloria Jeans went cashless,
would you go elsewhere?
Speaker 7 (11:07):
So?
Speaker 2 (11:08):
I know some of you people are really strong about
cash not entirely sure why, but if they went cashless,
would you go and take your money, your cash to
buy your coffees and your ten slice? Would you go
elsewhere for that? Because apparently Australia is leading the way
(11:28):
globally ongoing cashless, and particularly Gloria Jeans is getting involved
with that. Oh eight hundred eighty twenty nine nine to
de text. So the thing you found that's called you
the most consternation, and Gloria Jean's going cashless, what would
(11:50):
you do about that? I think the guy Catter that
e MP and Australia with a hat, the ten gallon hat,
he's kind of the human headline. But I think he's
he's called for an end to no cash policies. But
basically what he's doing is tapping into the can cospiracy
people that think it's been preordained that when go cashless,
the devil's going to come riding in and then I
(12:13):
don't know what happens, and it's the rapture. I think, Marcus,
our ten year old listens to every night when you
come on at eight and goes to bed listening to you.
Surprise her. Her name's Willow McCarley. She's from Gisbone, Hi Willow.
She's an awesome young gymnast and represents gisber Now. So
proud of her, Marcus re looist, you should give her
(12:38):
a lifetime membership to your show. She was so adamant,
never laughed so hard in a long time. A good
show made better letting her venture. Opinions Inter Islander is
going cashless too? Well, would the End Island to go cashless?
Mojo at Wellington Airport already cashless? So if cafes go casius,
(13:01):
will your boycott them and go elsewhere? I wouldn't. I
wouldn't even know because I love the fact you can
pay everything with your phone. And by the way, I
was talking to someone I forget who it was. The
other day. They recon soon that car keys will become redundant.
We'll just use our cell phones to unlock our cars.
(13:23):
So we're not giving up in our cell phones too soon,
are we. Although I'll tell you what I've done. I've
given up on my cell phone. I've gone back to
the Rubik's cube to occupy my moments, finding it quite beneficial.
By the end of the week, I've relearned how to
solve it. Pauline, Marcus, Welcome, good evening, Hello Marcus.
Speaker 8 (13:41):
Just a quick query. Glorious Jean coffee shops. When there's
a power cut and they can't use their machines, do
they have generators out the back because it's not accepting cash.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
You think that need to have, wouldn't you, because otherwise
they'll be stuffed.
Speaker 8 (14:07):
Yeah, they will, mind.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
You, Pauling. If there's a power cut. They're not gonna
be making coffee, are.
Speaker 8 (14:12):
They, But they'll want to.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
If there's a power cut, they won't be open, will they.
I mean there might be a few cabinet treats.
Speaker 8 (14:24):
Well, this is what my question is. In Canterbury, sometimes
people go to the cafes and they've got it. They'll say,
I'm sorry, you have to go and get cash. We
can only use we can only do it with cash.
So their coffee machines are obviously still working, but their
technology has gone down.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
Happens quite often. Ift pauses down. They say, like happened
with that crowd strike virus four or five weeks ago?
Remember that? Yes, yes, I do, yeah, and is it
peck and save? And it was cash only. I tried
to give the guy next to me cash, he was
too humble to take it. The guy read, it's a
(15:04):
good call, though, pulling in a good point. Love you, Marcus,
My girl and a hockey teamer in your Nick of
the Woods Sunday having a look at bluff playing in
the hockey tournament and invery cargle. Yeay, Marcus. The day
I see the day I proud my now ex husband
has been on the dating site for ten years? What
(15:26):
does that mean? This day had proofed by now ex
husband has been on dating sites for ten years. Marcus
loved the show. Our nine year old son listens to
his show every night. He's listening now. His name is Ollie.
It's not good Ollie, Jason Marcus, Welcome here.
Speaker 9 (15:46):
How are you good?
Speaker 2 (15:47):
Thank you Jason, welcome, here's.
Speaker 10 (15:51):
A young fellow.
Speaker 4 (15:51):
We used to.
Speaker 10 (15:53):
Beach coy map kevity Ghast and we've found little vials
which always intrigued me. Is like a five year old.
There were like a sealed there was sealed or maybe
hundred mile long by as the twenty mile wide. And
(16:14):
well now I know they were medical morphine. Well goodness, yeah,
but they were like a sealed What in dreaming was
you would you'd grant them?
Speaker 2 (16:24):
I've never I've never seen a vile of medical morphine,
apart I think in that movie The Deep. Do you
remember that when all that stuff was on the seafloor.
Speaker 3 (16:35):
Mmm?
Speaker 10 (16:36):
Not really, I've never seen them, Okay, but I think, oh,
it was quite quite strong.
Speaker 11 (16:48):
Strong.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
It's got the middle, it's got the middle top, it's
got the whole, the seal where you put the needle
through to take it up into the syringe.
Speaker 10 (16:56):
No, it was pure grass.
Speaker 11 (16:58):
It was No.
Speaker 10 (16:59):
I don't know how they sealed it in there.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
I can't even get the visual of what that would
look like. Anyway, what do you do with it?
Speaker 10 (17:08):
I don't know where it went, but I'd be a
millionaire if I had it you didn't pick it up. No,
I don't know it was in the cabinet, and mean
it wasn't as I'd be worried.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
Nice to talk, Jason, thank you things that you have found.
And will you how serious are you anti anti cash people?
Will you start taking your business each where or is
this just kind of performative your anger? And actually really
you don't care if they don't take cash. But I
(17:43):
can't image anyway out there is operating just on cash?
Are they? Unless you're six years old and two young?
Devin f Pil's card, let me know. Eight hundred and
eighty ten nine to nine to de text Hittle twelve o'clock.
I looking forward to your calls. Anything goes and if
there is breaking news, I'll bring that to you. Whatever
(18:07):
you got, we're here for it. Oh, eight hundred and
eighty ten eighty and nine to nine to text. So
looking forward to your calls. I know hips of you
people that have experienced the quake in christ Church go
on and on about cash, but I reckon next time
it might be different. I'm kind of not sure how,
(18:30):
and it's hope there's not a next time. I suppose
I should say Marcus Graham here sitting on a beach
in Crete, enjoying your dissertation stream of consciousness. Almost feel homesick.
Wonder how many other key we's listening to you from
far flung places have had an amazing time away. But
at the end Homer's home, we were severely impacted by cyclone.
(18:50):
Gabriel worked our guts out to get back to square one,
hence the holiday. Keep up the good work, my friend.
You go well at Crete. It's one of the places
I'd love to be too, and we'll get to one
day before too long. Great fan of crete, thanks for that.
(19:11):
Be the morning there is it be warm too, I
despect Oh, eight hundred and eighty to twenty seven to nine,
Marcus till twelve, looking forward to what you've got to hear,
what you've got to say tonight. Fines and cashless and
morphing sulfate and vials that disappeared from the cabinet. Huh goodness,
(19:42):
even it's Marcus, welcome Hihaven area.
Speaker 4 (19:45):
Marcus.
Speaker 12 (19:48):
I bought a steel craig fishing boat from the Chatterm
Islands and did it up, and I had a safe
on there with those vials, and.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
They would be for the part of the medical emergency kit.
Speaker 12 (20:01):
Would they Oh yeah, if you look lost a hand
or something near great.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
Ahead, how do you administer it?
Speaker 12 (20:10):
I think they were just drinkable ones because they looked like,
you know, keimpin bowling pins.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
Yeah, sure, yep, boy, do I know them?
Speaker 3 (20:18):
Yep?
Speaker 13 (20:18):
Like that.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
And you just you just smash it the top off
and drink it. Is that right?
Speaker 13 (20:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (20:27):
Sort of like that. I think you might have ran
a knife around the sort of the rim of it, yeah, okay,
and broke it open and yeah, what'd you do with that?
I'm not too sure on how your ministered it, actually,
but I'm picking that that was like it was like that,
or put the needle in after that or something?
Speaker 2 (20:46):
Did you toss it?
Speaker 3 (20:48):
No?
Speaker 12 (20:49):
I sold the boat and was still in the had
a little mini safe on it.
Speaker 2 (20:55):
It must be something. It must be something common on
fishing boats, I suppose, because you wouldn't wonder You wouldn't
want your dickies to excess in case they were Yeah, yeah, okay,
I'm sort of looking at now. Do look like a
tenpin bowling thing? Doesn't it a glass thing? And there's
a bit of a waste around the top of it.
Where it's a bit thinner and you must snap it there,
do you?
Speaker 6 (21:14):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (21:14):
I guess, sir.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Okay, how'd your crayfish and go?
Speaker 12 (21:18):
And I just bought a next chattermil and crayboats and
then sold it full refut on it not brilliant.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Oh nice to hear from you, even thanks for that
right on top about this barge? So anything about this
barge that's a reinterest of a great deal of interest
to me. Two offshore tugs en route to Westport? Could
a tie X napier currently off Tura Turakiri head Eta
(21:46):
twenty five hours mma vision next to you Plymouth currently
midfomin we bite Eta ten o'clock tomorrow morning, so it'll
be tomorrow night they're both down there. And then I
don't know what happens. I think you can do something
complicated with triangulation. They might put a line between those
(22:09):
two tags. And anyway, the Marcus the vial just stepped
the top off and syringed it out. They injected, then injected.
Cheers Robin Marcus. Come on, don't you remember saving Private
Ryan never saw it? Remember how in some soldiers got
(22:32):
shot that had an ampul of morphine with a needle
on top of which they could administer morphing directly to
the blood scream to the victim themselves. I'm pretty sure
that most of the year Inventory used to carry such devices. Well,
I imagine too, it's kind of for its kind of
makes sense that he found that at Capiti. It must
have come off some boat and they would fly, wouldn't they. Marcus.
(22:54):
My wife is in for the first time and thought
news took as he'd be was just for the news
and it is having the best time listening. And now
please say hid to Casey high Casey Marcus Kesh the
society loll haha, Charlie ash will never die. Hi, Marcus,
Mucketoo fish and chip shop have been cashed only for
about two years. Shop next door is where you go
(23:16):
to get cash. Well, I'm kind of at that stage
with the children too, that they are getting themselves ift
pause cards because their parents never have any cash, and
you can't do pocket money if you've got no cash,
So really, I would imagine that they will be cash
free their whole lives, the children. You know, Grandma will
(23:37):
sends some money in the post, but apart from that,
I even wonder why they're giving kids pockets on their
pants these days, with no cash to carry anyway. Marcus
the English patient Ralph Fines was given morphine from the
files and Loose was getting what appeared to be a
nail file sized saw to carf the tops lines Free
(23:59):
Cash List Society, The Charlie Ash also tonight to the
weird things you found, including morphine. Seems to be a
particularly large amount of interest in morphine, which is good.
Keeping it real and get in touch if you want
to add also too, I can tell you that the
tugs are on the way for this barge, biggest tourist
(24:21):
attraction on the West Coast for a long, long while.
Some of the photos online of people wandering around it
are sensational. Yeah, get in touch, Marcus to but not
anything else you want to mention or go round about
looking forward to it people. Oh eight hundred and eighty
(24:41):
eighty nine text someone says cash is still legal, tender
must be accepted. Well, how could that be if Gloria
Jenes can go cashless. I don't know if it has
got to be accepted. I wonder if that's one of
(25:04):
those sovereigns. This is a sovereign citizen kind of bits
of misinformation. So maybe they don't have to accept cash.
That'd be my understanding, because otherwise they wouldn't have done it.
(25:31):
There's this expread in Australia that predicts by twenty thirty
Australia will be functionally cashless, percentage of cash and payments
will be over ninety percent, making cash payments rare. So
I don't know about the whole thing about having to
be legal tender. And also in those places, I think
(25:53):
there's no search charge anymore, that they're over that they
just take it. Marcus, I found an unused flare and
a shit at the old flat of mine, one of
the ones you put in a gun and shoot out
if you lost at sea. Perhaps the crew on the
barge could have used it. I don't think anyone could
have answered where they were a liner. If I got
(26:13):
a layer, I'm going to call you. Is that right?
It's Marcus welcome.
Speaker 14 (26:16):
That's right?
Speaker 2 (26:17):
Yeah, Hi, Hi, nice to hear from you. Did I
get that right?
Speaker 14 (26:21):
Yes, it's perfect?
Speaker 2 (26:24):
Okay. What did you want to say, Elena?
Speaker 14 (26:28):
Well, I you're talking about Glory Jean's going cash list.
These series are also going cashalists are into your Islander series?
Speaker 2 (26:38):
How have you heard that.
Speaker 14 (26:41):
A news item? Actually just in a couple of weeks,
in the last couple of weeks, so I actually haven't
got the details, and I can't remember the details with
a new bottom. And yes, the interno the theories are gooing.
Speaker 15 (26:53):
Cash list.
Speaker 14 (26:54):
I'm not entirely sure what the timeframe is or any
of that stuff, but yeah, that's happening. Someone can google it.
Speaker 15 (27:00):
I'm sure.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
Would that concern you, No, No, not at all. No,
I wouldn't concern me either. I'll be more concerned. I'd
be more consumer, So I just because i'd be more
concerner got to where it's going to go, that'd be
my thing.
Speaker 14 (27:18):
Yes, that's right. But I'm also concerned that there's a
percentage charge every time you use your cards. So as
long as they don't have that, and I'm all good.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
I think they're getting rid of that in time, Yeah,
I hope.
Speaker 14 (27:31):
So we're reducing it at least or having a standard.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
I'm never quite sure how much it is, but it's
a hassle. Thanks Elena, nice to hear from you. Thirty
away from nine the numbers eight hundred and eighty eight,
twenty and nineteen nine to the dexts things you've found
in cashless society. Marcus Pauline is still living in the
seventies and not twenty twenty four. Ift piles goes down
once in a blue moon, So should rather hand over
dirty cash which has been touched by God only knows
(27:56):
who and the store is to hold that cash and
make a trip of the back of the posit those
grubby bits of paper AVENU use cash about ten years
and never will again. Cheers Allie Marcus. I'm an electrician
in the eighties, went to do some electrical work at
a house. Found nearly one thousand dollars and twenty dollar
bills in the hot water cylinder under the under the lineoleum.
(28:17):
When I went to access the manhi under the house,
told the owner, who had just purchased the house a
few months earlier. John Marcus from OZ mate, we have
a cash only Tuesday most weeks. Tip jars are getting
full in cafes. We've had some major outages of internet,
(28:37):
so cash has come into its own. By the way,
the OZ news you get here is largely incorrect. What
does that mean? Neil Oi Oi Oi mate. Marcus is
someone who lived through the christ Church earthquake at cash
(28:57):
is society to stupid idea? What happens when the power
goes out? Alpine fault is overdue, Marcus. About the cash
list topic, the last edition of Monopoly I bought didn't
have any colorful, funny money, just cards and an eight
M type banker, Marcus, I encourage people to continue to
(29:20):
use cash. The planners for us to start going digital
next year. Once it happens, our privacy has gone dangerous, Marcus.
Of cash is dirty, then using cards is disgusting because
every card user is touching the buttons, the button pad
every other card user has touched, Steve. I don't think
(29:40):
so if you are using payWave on your phone, which
seems to be stand upriating procedure, Marcus. In twenty nineteen,
San Francisco officials ruled all businesses must except cash. The
ruling was made due to a being discriminately against people
who had low income, who are low income immigrants, and
(30:01):
people who are homeless New Jersey, Philadelphia, Massachusetts, the name
of if you have also followed suit, so I guess
some say that being cassious will discriminate against people that
are on the streets asking for money, it's right about tonight.
If you want to come through, take one call before
(30:21):
the news eight hundred eighty, ten eighty. If you want
to text, it's nine to nine too. As I say, oh,
eight hundred and eighty. Things you've found And Gloria Jean's
the cafe going cashless? Is that something that would you'd
boycott because of that? I'm not saying that they're going
(30:46):
to turn back their decision, so Semprearty certain their ways,
Gloria Jean, But yeah, I'm wondering about that. Hi, Michael,
it's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 4 (30:58):
Hey on the.
Speaker 16 (30:59):
Whole cashless thing. I am Nando's gone cashless, and okay,
I have something from there a little while ago, and
there was a point where it was it was just
before payday and I had some catch in my wallet,
but I had nothing in my bank account, went to
order and then discovered that there was cashless And what
(31:20):
am I going to do at the cancel by order
and go buy some food somewhere else?
Speaker 2 (31:24):
What could you what could you do? Could have you
gone to an if possi machine and put it into
the bank.
Speaker 16 (31:31):
Well maybe we could have dound someone and put it
down someone of the shop and said, oh, look if
I give you, I give you fourteen dollars, but you
pay them a meal for me. But you know, it
was just like I just was south a bit awkward,
and I just thought, I'll go to where everyone else
(31:51):
was nearby. Yeah, I'll go there instead. Then you go, yep, look,
there's a cost to it to them that that sort
of thing happens. But then it means like no one's
going to rock them because they've got no cash. They
don't have to tell you up at the end of
the day. They don't have the issues of you know,
(32:14):
some of the issues of this. No staffing was going
to be able to put this hand in the pill
and take out them.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
And I'm sure that's I'm sure that's what it is
for Glory Jeans. They just don't trust their staff, and
that potentially could be you know, yeah.
Speaker 16 (32:29):
Look, it could be that. It's also it's difficult doing banking.
Like I've worked on a camping ground. You know, you
have to take them to the cash run twice a
week where you took the cash to the bank and
had to get it all counter and it was it's
basically three or four hours of labor every week. Sure,
sporting out just cash handling, and that's I mean, labour's
(32:51):
not cheat, but it's not free.
Speaker 9 (32:52):
You got to pay that time.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
And I'm sure when companies say it's for safety, they're
actually mean because it's so that their staff don't rob them.
That would be my take. The US are quite tricky
because I've also the last time I went to Nandos
and and admittedly it's since closed down, this was the
one in Dunedin. They didn't have staff. You just order
from your table with a QR code, which I thought
wasn't a bad idea, but they certainly went a lot
(33:16):
of staff running the place.
Speaker 16 (33:19):
Yeah, quite regularly.
Speaker 17 (33:24):
It was quite good.
Speaker 16 (33:24):
It was quite a good thing. But there's everything in
that little stretch seems to be closed, seem to be
closing down. There was places were closing down all the
time around there. Obviously it's not as good as it
looks in terms of a place to run a business.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
Might be the rents. I mean, the guy looks stressed.
The time we were there, just happened to be up
there for the women's football match when we had to
beat Sweden or something. We went up there and try
to explain the kids the joy of petty petty sauce.
But yeah, and then they said they're desperate to go it.
The next time was no longer there talking about the
(33:59):
cafes and Australia, Gloria Jean's been one of them. They've
decided their thing is to be cash free. How do
you feel about that? Would you start not going to
because I know some of you already passionate, but I
just wonder how if that passion means should actually start
not going to those sorts of cafes. Stephen ats Marcus, Welcome.
Speaker 18 (34:21):
Good evening, Good evening the Marcus.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
Stephen here, Stephen with a pH.
Speaker 18 (34:30):
No if with an f if. Oh yeah, oh forty
ard years ago.
Speaker 19 (34:41):
Stephen, my late wife and my late father in law
and late parents and my still existing life. We're having
dinner out in a hotel at the top end of
Craig Craig Ap my glass and Bridge. And when I
(35:03):
went to pay the bill, I thought, years three or
four people are the cash register. I'll go up there's
betting at tended to. So I walked up there and
I had to wait, of course, only a few minutes,
and I felt something rough and uneven under my foot,
so I just shifted the foot a bit and I
(35:26):
saw some stuff that I didn't regularize.
Speaker 11 (35:30):
So I picked it.
Speaker 18 (35:31):
Up and looked at it, and he's there, yeah, and anyway,
I looked at it. It was an American money and
I thought, wow, it's a fair wad. Oh well, it's
a good place to find it. So I said that.
When there was light started to go up to the
cash register. I said, oh, I just found a face
(35:53):
on the floor behind me here, and she said, oh,
how have that? And I said, well, I'll tell you
what i'll do. I'll leave you my name and address
and I'll hand it into the police station. She said, no,
I'll do it for you. And I suspected that she
was not being exactly up front, so to speak. So
(36:16):
on the way home, my father in law and parents
of my life called into the Orc Central police station
left there and they were very, very meticulous about it
and counted it all out in front of me, gave
me a receipt that was nearly three thousand American dollars.
Speaker 2 (36:37):
Oh goodness me. And what was the name of the
place was it?
Speaker 3 (36:39):
That?
Speaker 2 (36:39):
Was it that bar inside that hotel? Was it the Sheratan?
Speaker 18 (36:44):
Yes, that's right someplace else, the Hot Biscuit factory, I
think it was cool.
Speaker 2 (36:51):
The steam biscuit factory, Yes, the Hot biscuit.
Speaker 18 (36:54):
Steam biscuit factory.
Speaker 2 (36:56):
Yeah, that's right, okay, and did you get it back?
Speaker 18 (37:00):
Eventually HY drove home. Then I never thought anything about
They said, I will know. The chances are I could
be leaving in the morning to go back to America.
You might have a better luck here, and so I said, oh,
I've never had much luck in my life. So I
just read home and never thought about it. Several months
(37:23):
whout four months later, I had a phone call one
Sunday morning saying, look, you left. We've like to return
that money that you sit down to do us. We've
got it here if you'd like to come and pick
it up. So I said, oh, yeah, this is all right.
So if I made a special trip into the Oakland
(37:44):
Central from Henderson, and when I went to get it,
they said, oh, no, we've got no record of it.
And I said, well, here's the receipt you people gave me.
I said there must be a record somewhere in writing,
and the woman sayid, no, I'm sorry, I can't find
(38:08):
it anywhere. There's no paperwork for it, like I can't
don't know anything at all about it. So I suspect that,
or the starf or something, I'd have died up between them,
you'd never know.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
You're saying the police took it.
Speaker 18 (38:25):
Yes, I suspect that.
Speaker 2 (38:28):
As creepers, I would have gone to the onbards when
I've gone to the top. Hey, Steve or Steffan Stiffen
Stiffen Stephen with an it is your name is Steffan
with an F?
Speaker 18 (38:37):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (38:38):
Can you do me a favor? Steff And I've just
got to test a button. I'm going to count to
ten right here, and you tell me what number I stop. Okay,
I'm going to count to ten. I'm gonna I'm gonna
push a button. They're going to come back to you,
and you tell me which which number between one and ten?
I stopped at Okay? Are you ready?
Speaker 18 (38:57):
Yeah, I'm ready.
Speaker 2 (38:58):
I'm going to count to ten. I'm going to push
a button during it, and you're gonna tell me when
I push the button, you can stop hearing me one,
two three? The we did you stop hearing it?
Speaker 4 (39:14):
Three?
Speaker 2 (39:15):
You heard one? Two three? Yes? And you're chip yep,
brilliant Okay, that's working. That's great. Okay what.
Speaker 11 (39:27):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (39:28):
Yeah, okay, dB? What numbers? Did you hear?
Speaker 9 (39:33):
You failed on three?
Speaker 2 (39:35):
Ok that's good. That's what we need. That's the test
that's signed, sealed, delivered, dB. Good evening, Welcome Marcus. What's happening?
Speaker 9 (39:42):
And your microphone was working over the top of the
news as well?
Speaker 4 (39:45):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (39:46):
Oh was it?
Speaker 17 (39:47):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (39:48):
Yeah, yep, yep.
Speaker 9 (39:53):
Anyway, I was talling around and I and the candle
bus is the driver, and the passenger brought me up
and my wallet, and in the spallet was not only
the guys passport, but nine thousand dollars were one than cash.
I thought was quite good. It was just by accident
(40:18):
that I actually had a conversation with the passenger because
I know it's photos that has in his passport, and
I knew what he was up to.
Speaker 4 (40:30):
So I spent.
Speaker 9 (40:32):
Finished at five o'clock and I sit an hour or
so checking him down. I rang him up and said,
I'm the driver. You had your bust it's yes, I
remember that. I said you left your want of the bus.
He says, no, I didn't, Yes, you did, and I'll
return it to you. I just need to know where
you are, because it was easy for me to take
(40:54):
it to him directly.
Speaker 16 (40:56):
And he didn't believe I had his.
Speaker 9 (40:59):
Passport until I delivered it to his hand. He didn't
even know he'd lost it.
Speaker 2 (41:05):
Goodness to the conversion for nine thousand Rwandan dollars seven
years seven US dollars.
Speaker 9 (41:16):
Well it was even less that goods out of print.
Speaker 20 (41:21):
Okay.
Speaker 9 (41:22):
So he had the notes, but he kept them as
a piece of memory.
Speaker 2 (41:29):
That makes sense, Okay. What was he doing in Vocago?
Speaker 8 (41:33):
All right?
Speaker 2 (41:34):
Was he on holiday and in Vcago or living there?
Speaker 4 (41:36):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (41:37):
He just got a job down here.
Speaker 2 (41:38):
He was the Durst oh copy okay, it makes sense,
and he.
Speaker 9 (41:42):
Was doing some business and we just got talking about
the business he was about when he got off. Because
I knew where he was going to go. I managed
to track them down get a phone from before and
regular not the first time I've done that trick. So
I used to run lost property at trans Metro at Willington.
(42:04):
I've tracked down some wonderful licens there as well.
Speaker 2 (42:08):
Yeah. I left my wallet on a bus in Sydney,
the bus and from La Peru's and everything in it.
I left my wallet, everything, the hop card that I
had no money, had to find get my way out
to Paramatt and actually had to wring some get some
money through Wells Fargo, I think, And then I was
(42:29):
just wut another the airport. I thought, well, actually, before
I go, I'll just make sure it wasn't at the
transport depot. And I got a taxi out there and
went to the transport dep in the middle of nowhere,
and there was my wallet. I was so excited. I
took it. And it's to my eternal shame that I
didn't leave a reward for the driver that had handed
(42:51):
it in. I felt bad about that for a long time.
I don't know whether they would have what their policy
would be, But if it's a drive that hands it
back and you left money for them, would they then
get that money.
Speaker 9 (43:03):
It certainly was the habit of trans Metro to do
it if someone offered us, but it very rarely happened.
Speaker 2 (43:10):
Did it. Okay, that's interesting. But they would identify the
driver and return it to the end. That's operating procedure,
is it.
Speaker 9 (43:19):
Yeah, once we had the wallet, if we never if
the owner never turned up, we then took the wallet
to the police.
Speaker 2 (43:28):
Okay, that makes sense. Nice to talk to TV. Thanks
very much about seventeen past nine. Keep your text. Also
about cash places going cashless, Marcus, All Press Coffee Company
owned cafes have gone cashless. I went to their christ
Church cafe in Montreal Street. They told me it was
to avoid staff theft, hold up and saved hold ups
(43:49):
and saved time not even to go to the bank.
Along with not letting needing a cash register. I found
will scouting from the wallaby's wallet at Sydney Airport. Haha, Marcus.
Our young people use cash's payments as a way of life,
as older people need to keep up or get left behind.
(44:09):
Nothing like a fistful of dollars tangible Emmitt Marcus. There
are vets that don't accept cash either. Glenfield vets in
Auckland don't accept cash, Marcus. Some and Nelson every six
seconds there is interpherence coming through. Not sure if it's
our radio or not. Thank you, having a good night.
(44:31):
Someone's texted through and said that they are aware there's
interference in Nelson that's coming through every six seconds. I
have gone to the diagnostics and we are aware of
that and we're trying to get a fix. Okay, just
so you know Nelson Roger take the broadcasting free seriously.
(44:56):
Twenty past nine, Marcus Otaga University is cashless. Just got
back from Japan. Rugby trick mate left wallet with fifteen
n Z dollars inside on train, got handed in track
back to our hotel four with all money in it.
Beautiful country. Marcus dropped wallet and sind him A guy
who found it managed to contact me. He wouldn't take
(45:17):
the twenty dollars I offered. I found a wallet up
Bluff Hill and it seemed to be a young guy student,
soot card, all those things, no cash in it. We
put money in it and gave it back to him.
Not quite sure how he worked out what had gone
on there, but anyway, I thought there was a nice
thing to do. Marcus news talks. He'd be received money
(45:39):
each time I send you a text. Does that all
stay with head office or does the host receiver cut?
We get none of that money. It's just for the
management of the tech service, so she gets none of it.
That's true story. I don't talk with forked tongue oh
Wa eight one hundred and eighty eight Teddy mon Namers
Marcus welcome, head of twelve cash to societies and the
(46:00):
things you've found. Marcus. High there, Marcus, a few calls
of you to go talk about nandos and not being
able to use cash and wanted to put the money
into his bank. I do this all the time. If
I have cash on me and need it in my
bank account straight away, it's free. I go to the
local tab, must be a branch or. Some pubs do this.
(46:21):
I put the money I want to in one of
their self service machines and get a voucher, say forty
two hundred and five or whatever, and then go to
the counter and I say I want the money refunded
on my card. They refund on your card and in
your bank straight away, and it's free. By the way,
having a delicious cookies and cream with chocolate milk drops
(46:42):
and milk thick shake. I made delicious. So go to
the tab, put the money I want to one of
the self service machines and get a voucher. Then go
to the counter and say I want the money refunded
on my card. It's a great life hack. I'm liking
all of this. Good evening, Adam, it's Marcus welcome.
Speaker 13 (47:05):
Oh hey mate, that's a game.
Speaker 2 (47:06):
Good things hit him.
Speaker 13 (47:08):
Yes, I just had a little story like, yeah, I
went to Auckland and I was heading back from Auckland
to Hamilton, and then I had a whole wat of
cash in my pocket, about four hundred bucks or something.
But and I was traveling from just out of Poka Koe,
and I thought I could make it to the next
gas station, and the next gas station happened to be
(47:29):
a goal, and the goal has no cash. So there
I was like four hundred bucks, but I couldn't get
the gats. So I thought, okay, I'll try to make
it to Coast Flutter and then so I tried to
make it to Coastbutter and I ran out of gas
on the way. It turned out there was no cash
place there either. But so there's no cash place all
the way from Pokakoee all the way back to Huntley basically.
(47:53):
So what I ended up having to do was I
had a dog in the car as well, but I
got the dog out, I hopped out, and then I
made my way on the motorway with my thumb out
and so I had to hitch. I was waving a
fifty at all the cars that were going past, and
somebody had the pullover, so I ended up giving him
a fifty, and it looked, man, if you can take
me the nut a way out, because that's actually where
(48:14):
I lived, it's a little bit out of Hamilton. But yeah,
then I'll give you the fifty. So the guy ends
up taking me all the way back to my house.
I get there, I've only got like two point fively
the bottle the coke to put the gas in the diesel,
so I end up getting on my motorbike riding all
the way back to the to coke futter, or just
(48:35):
past the coke futter to the gull. I ended up
getting some diesel from there. Once I put cash in
and stuff. It was kind of a big hassle, and
then I managed to get back to the van fill
it up with diesel. Then I made it to Huntley,
but I only made it to the out skirt the
Huntley and I had to put the bike in the
back of the van, so it was kind of real
disappointing because I made it there. Then I had to
(48:57):
take the bike out of the van again, drive to
a gas station again and fill up two bottles, and
then back to the van again until I could make
it for the Huntly and pay us for cash. But yeah,
it was just a bit of a nightmare. And yeah,
my friend was saying, cash is king, and then I
was explaining to him how I ended up stranded in
the middle of nowhere at about one in the morning,
(49:18):
and yeah, because it's the machines don't take cash, so
if you've only got cash, you just end up stuffed.
You know, you got no choice. But so yeah, I
did two missions on the motorbike with two two point
five liter bottles in the van, and but once I
got to the Huntly one I made at home after that, obviously,
but Jesus, it was.
Speaker 2 (49:36):
You almost need a backup can of guess in your
in your car.
Speaker 13 (49:42):
Oh yeah at the time, but you know, I had
the cash and I was thinking that diesel it makes
it quite a long way. And then but I just
you know how you you go, oh, I make it,
and then yeah, it just starts putting out at a
certain point and you go, man, I really should have
stopped at that go gas station.
Speaker 2 (49:58):
How old did'll it take, Adam.
Speaker 13 (50:02):
It was pretty late. It was about one in the
morning when I got my thumb out, and then I
think by the time I got back home. It was
about four thirty in the morning, but the sheep freaking
out about most of it. I didn't want to leave
the van there overnight, and then I didn't want to
leave the dogs there either, so I had to take
the dogs with me. And it was all just a
bit funny because it's really hard to get a ride
(50:23):
with a couple of dogs on the motorway. Oh it's
one dog, I have to say one dog. Actually here
got two now, But I.
Speaker 2 (50:31):
Can imagine a good story, Adam, Thank you for that.
Judith Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 21 (50:35):
Marcus.
Speaker 22 (50:36):
I'm Judas and I'm doing really well. It's bucketing down
here in Nelson.
Speaker 2 (50:41):
Okay, that might explain that some of the reception problems.
Is it thunder as well?
Speaker 4 (50:46):
No, in no thunders.
Speaker 12 (50:47):
There was thundering light in the other night, but not tonight.
Speaker 2 (50:51):
Okay. Thanks for the update, Judith, appreciate it. If I
can't pay with cash, I'd move on to another cafe.
Surprising how many of us still prefer this method can
keep trek of spending. I'm a good who loves I'm
a good who lives near a dairy and they have
made a dog dollar bag one dollar fifty, they are scammers.
They also sell a two fifty bag and lays for
(51:12):
eight dollars to expect us to buy it. Whilst running
comedy shows tickets either online or cash only at venues
as couldn't afford mobile f poss banks live cashless as
they make a fortune, and fees might be like cashless
Marcus regarding cafes, my friends and I don't worry about
(51:33):
cash or not. What we consider as whether there is
music or not. We hate too loud music. And as
we catch up to talking about a lot of places
with intrusive music, how are things going to work? For
the tooth theory of things go cashless? Marcus went to
Valentine's Yes day, it's gonebraless? What's that about? Text? Hey, Marcus?
(51:53):
I run every morning. I find phones and wallets on
the State Highway One. People's whole lives are in these things.
Truck drivers wallets, people leave their phones, cases with cards
on the rooftop of their cars, flying off the cars.
Before I hand them into the police, I go to
my socials and try and find them that way. They
don't always reply, so the alternative as the police. This
(52:14):
happens frequently. People take better care of your lives. Please
love Tea Marcus. Just before Christmas, once I'd filled my
car with petrol that was getting back to the car,
nows to wat of money five hundred dollars, thinking somebody's
going to miss out at Christmas, went back to the
service center and gave it to the young guy at
the counter. Five or so days later, I realized that
(52:35):
it was my money that I meant to bank. Went
back to the gas station that put it in their safe.
I was so impressed anyone of the people who worked
in there could have claimed it. Mary nice story, Mary
Laurie Marcus. Welcome here.
Speaker 21 (52:51):
Hi Marcus, you're talking about finding things out for a run.
I found out running I think you know the area
of pork Chop Hill there. There's some affluent suburbs that
have sort of connected to that now that I run
around there sometimes. And while back early in the morning,
I looked across up in the gutter as going on
(53:14):
and I said, neat the paper folded up, had a
closer look at it was a crisp new fifty dollars
note neatly fault, so I can pop and very done,
and not much further up the road in the same
story of just up against together as another one, and
UH started getting interested and then looked around. And then
(53:36):
I crossed over the other side of the road and
ran for a while and found another one there as well.
So scattered around for a bit. That was all of
the the money I found. But I saw a couple
of dog walking people coming by, and I see, to
keep your eyes open.
Speaker 4 (53:49):
You know, there's.
Speaker 21 (53:52):
There's money. There's money in the flying around here. There's
guy said on I'll be druggy druggies money. Yeah, but yeah,
I thought it was you know, triggered what sort of
amount you think you should report? So anyway, and I
got gone home from the right and I rang the
police station and explained, you know that there was money
(54:12):
flying around up there and in case people are reported
there's something anyway, he said, well, I'll give you a
case number and then when it's convenient you could bring
it in and nobody clicks it, then you can get it.
But so a couple of days later I did pop
(54:33):
into the cop shop and the guy come to the
counter mentioned this case number. He went off to the computer.
No sign of no number on file, so he thought
it was a bit mysterious because the guy had gone
I'd taken particular note, you know, writing the thing down probably,
(54:53):
but he said, oh well, well, initially he said, leave
the money here, we'll take the details and we'll see
what happens and we'll get let you know. And then
there's sort of a bit of a frack dropped cropped up,
you know, some individuals person and there were out. The
(55:14):
cops had to come out and arrest them in the
in the office there. So he said, oh no, I'll
tell you what. You take it home. We've got your details,
and yeah, just after six weeks, if nobody's claimed it,
you can handle it, which which was the case. But
not long after that about things on the running down
(55:36):
Cook Street, about half past five in the morning, I
came across a brand new mountaineering ice as still you know,
just out of the shop, still had labels on it,
and I know enough about it, you know it's worth
about three hundred bucks. So I picked that up and
carried it back. Eventually got at home and I did
(55:56):
take it into the cop shop. I didn't, you know,
there'd been a bit of an aggression at the police station.
I thought a bitter not wander in the carrying of
petty ice, as they might see the other camera and think,
you know, you're coming in to have a crackative. So
I put it in a paper paper rubbish bag and
even if given the length of it and that when
I got to the counter, the guy there was a
(56:18):
bit jumping and said, you know what are you what
do you got in there? And uh? Once again the
left leave it there for six weeks and it got
returned to me, So it's sort of h I've also
picked up at uh Watch down cook Street as well,
early in the morning. It's just a.
Speaker 2 (56:42):
It's the morning jogs are getting everything.
Speaker 21 (56:44):
Yeah, if you're first out on the road, you pick
him up. Once again, I took to watch him because
they it's a good brand, but a Philly blend looking watch.
Speaker 2 (56:54):
I can't stand watch. I know what you're saying, yep.
Speaker 21 (56:57):
But the lady that was at the watch, yes, she
had had a look at it and sort of virtually
spooned it. You know what do you worried? Bring? What
is you bringing that in foruner? I had looked on
and not that model was worth about nine hundred bucks,
but she thought it was just a cheapie. But once
again it was left after six weeks that yeah, got returned.
(57:20):
I had been thinking in the square in Palmers North
is a firm called gold Sack and Co. And the
specialists and to sit watchers, I probably could have gone
on near this cereal or not, they probably would have
been able to track down. But at that stage it
had been returned to me, So I go I had
gone to it. But you say, it's just with one
(57:41):
hundred and fifty dollars floating around that, you just wonder
what there's a margin of, Yes, what you take in
these days, if it had been just one fifty, perhaps,
you know, I wouldn't have worried reps.
Speaker 2 (57:57):
I'm also Laurie. I'm also wondering who'd go to the
police station to have a fight. Why would you have
a fight and get arrested just there?
Speaker 21 (58:04):
Well, it was strangely enough, I was doing my business
there and there's these other guys. So I won't stereotyped them,
but they looked like member. One guy come in the
company and hurry. He says, somebody's breaking and breaking into
my car. And the square, which is the police station,
(58:25):
is not far from the square, and so the guy
said the police said, what, what's the registration number?
Speaker 4 (58:32):
What's her name?
Speaker 21 (58:32):
So he passed it across and the cob win at
the back and suddenly, well, you know, after a few
minutes past for the biggest policemen you could in the
station come rushing out and grabbed this guy. Well it
was in the office there and uh put put a
(58:53):
handcuffs on him and marched him out. Obviously he was
a person of interest, but just from the registration number
and that that they they.
Speaker 2 (59:06):
But surprising anyway, it was quitedramatic.
Speaker 21 (59:13):
Yeah, yeah, funny at the at the end of it
was just as I was tailing off and coming out,
you know, they'd taken them to drag the sky at
the back, suddenly the doors opened and they came out
and let him go again.
Speaker 2 (59:26):
So yeah, maybe they were the ones that maybe they
were the ones that were stereotyping things there, Laura, that
might be my take on that one. Nineteen to ten Marcus.
I like to pay f poss on small transactions at
the takeaways and dairies. Reason why is that the transactions recorded,
so the vendor has to pay back the fifty percent GST.
(59:49):
I've been to fish and chip shops, other takeaways. When
after I placed an order and want to pay f pass,
they say, no, the internet is down, have to pay cash.
I always say, don't worry about it and call them
out for only one in cash payments. So it's hidden
off the box. They can protect the GST or even
more as an unrecord a cash transaction. Tomo, the you plymouth, Fancy,
(01:00:10):
the runners finding some fancy finding a compound bow the
Roger eyeser, good evening, Marcus, Welcome.
Speaker 15 (01:00:19):
You've got a good memory, haven't you.
Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
No, you you got on my line of work. You're
only as good as your last callback you remembered, anyway,
Roger Eyes of what's happening?
Speaker 15 (01:00:29):
Okay, So I buddy sort of roughly got an idea
talking about things that people have found happened. So I
was doing a job at the Shoey Launch hotel actually
on a Saturday morning, and walk around the track and
I found a roll leg spot. This is about nineteen
eighty six, nineteen eighty seven. And I found this watch
(01:00:54):
in the car park and I took it in and
went into their reception or whatever and looked at the
guy and I already had it in my hand. I
have found this in the car park and I looked
at the guy and I thought, you know what, this
isn't going to go any further than his hands. But
I couldn't say anything. I was pretty reasonably young, so
(01:01:17):
I gave him the watch. But I went back about
a week or so later and saw the guy and
he goes, oh, no, a guy came in and took it.
I said he leave.
Speaker 23 (01:01:28):
A name or anything.
Speaker 4 (01:01:28):
Goes no, no, no, no, nothing.
Speaker 15 (01:01:31):
Okay, I'm pretty sure this guy would have kept it.
I should have taken it to the cops.
Speaker 2 (01:01:38):
Yeah, well, we don't know. We don't know. When we're young,
we're always excited about finding something in handing. And of
course we're not cynical like that, are we. We just say, oh, well,
that's going to get to the right person. I'm glad
you did this.
Speaker 15 (01:01:49):
Yeah. So years ago, I was playing in a bar
up in Auckland on New Year's Eve and I got
a beer. It was very busy place, and I got
a beer and the barman and the change. He gave
me a half dollar bill. Yes, And so I walked
away and to the name. I saw its one hundred
dollar bill and I thought, wow, well that you could
(01:02:11):
get him in the crap with till, et cetera. So
I went back up and your door, how you gave
me this? And the change? And he goes, all right,
it just snapped it out of my hand and carried
on after we finished, plane was gone home.
Speaker 3 (01:02:26):
Ill.
Speaker 15 (01:02:27):
Do you know what, he probably should have given me
ten bucks change.
Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
Yeah, it's a good point. What bar was it?
Speaker 8 (01:02:35):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
What? What bar was it? Just out of interest?
Speaker 15 (01:02:38):
Oh man, it was back in the eighties. I couldn't
tell you. It was a long time ago.
Speaker 2 (01:02:44):
Well where was it? We love a bit of nostalgia.
Speaker 15 (01:02:51):
Okay, so it's deep in down. I couldn't tell you
what it was cool?
Speaker 2 (01:02:59):
What was shortened street? Queen Street? Victoria Street?
Speaker 15 (01:03:04):
Honestly, Marcus, I couldn't tell you. It was years ago,
and I used to go up and do a lot
of rehearsals. Would be there, used to fly out from
christ Huge to rehearse and then go and play with
some and being places of know.
Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
Where the heck was, such as the challenge of a
job in musician ah, not knowing where they are.
Speaker 15 (01:03:29):
Wow, I mean, it's all a long time ago. But
for a few of them I'd go up there and
rehearse with them and they come back down here to
christ Hugure. We did a lawyer's convention in Dunedin and
rehearsed uff and they packed me up on the way
(01:03:50):
through out of Christ Huge. He had put them through
down to the meat and I played one turn. They
put us up to two nights in the hotel, free
food foods. That played one turn with John Grenow think
he might have been called John Woolback even the fact,
oh the wife was pregnant at the So it was
(01:04:10):
good money.
Speaker 2 (01:04:12):
Was it welcome to our world?
Speaker 15 (01:04:14):
Probably was? Yeah, probably was. I don't think paid anything else.
I might have been another tune as well, but that
was that. It was really sure here, pretty.
Speaker 2 (01:04:24):
Good money, great money. Roger. Nice to hear from the
Roger Isaac Ah. So everyone's enjoying lowis a great deal
and I didn't know about that. But people are loving
Lois online. So if you want to say something about
that Facebook page, Marcus Lush and nights. But here's what
people are saying. Just got this text through Marcus mate
(01:04:46):
slightly off topic and just tuned in for the Tuesday
night debrief. But have you heard back from Lowest tonight?
Just thought she might have a mature response to Dalton.
Pupaly Eve been available this weekend. I actually can't to
recap on lowest. I think she just thought that Scott
Robertson was terrible. Basically. I don't think there was any
(01:05:06):
about the players. I think she was happy with the players,
wasn't you Dan, It was just it was just if
it's just hated Scott hated him, and I suspect she
hated him because he's from christ Church and because he breakdancers.
I'll tell you what, and I've often said that I've no,
(01:05:30):
I won't even go to that long, boring anecdote. Anyway,
Lois is going to watch the game on Sunday and
she's going to call us back on Monday. I've said
the All Blacks will win, but she doesn't want the
All Blacks to win. She wants him to lose because
she wants Scott Robertson to lose his job. She kept
(01:05:52):
going on about was it who's going about Wayne Gatland?
What was the caller? The caller after was going about
Wayne Gatland should have been the coach? I said, worry
she had him too anyway, But you know, I'm always
split because I love the fact that once upon a
(01:06:13):
time we were that passionate about rugby. But these days
you got weekend shopping, you got the Kadeshians, you got
selling sunset. There's so much more, Ah, there's so much
more love. That guy is thinking about getting cash from
the getting money and put into account at the tab Marcus,
(01:06:35):
my sister in orlives had picked in a friend's son
had been diving in Marlboroughs Sounds and found a go
pro camera. They knew the sister in law had a
cable to download. Curious to see if the any film
on was able to open and view films lots of
excited fishing shots, then zoomed in on the fishermen and
my sister and Lawso I know that person was a
friend from Auckland who had lost it six months earliest
whilst down on a fishing trip. What were the chances?
(01:06:57):
Small world love? A small world love, A small world story.
By the way, did anyone watch the Joey Chestnut competitive
eating special on Netflix? I'll watch that when I get home.
But I'm back on the Rubik's Cube. Guys. I put
it down four years ago, five years ago, and I
(01:07:18):
thought I will never ever manage to learn how to
solve that again. I've picked it up in the weekend
and I haven't quite managed to crack it yet. But geet,
it's coming easy. Never knew my mind to be so clear.
I need a new cube. I need one that moves
a bit. This one's a bit sort of. The kids
(01:07:43):
were complaining during their gaming that I was cubing too noisily.
It's the way to get off the cell phone is
on the Rubik's cube, much more RESTful. Here's a bit
of astronomical news for you. Huge asteroid twenty times large
(01:08:06):
and the one that wiped out the dinosaurs slammed into
the Solar System's biggest moon four billion years ago, shifting
its excess entirely. Scientists have discovered evidence an asteroid twenty
times larger than the one ending the dinosaurs slammed into
Jupiter's moon, gany Mead. This impact was so vast it
(01:08:28):
shifted ganny Mead's excess entirely. How can they find out
this stuff? This is extraordinary. While several questions about the
instant remain, the researchers hope to finally get some answers
when the European Space Agencies robot probe visits Genny Mead
in twenty thirty four. They must be able to see
the huge crater, that's what it must be about. With
(01:08:55):
a radius of sixteen hundred and thirty five miles, Ganny
Mead is the largest moon in the Solar system. Like
our own moon, it's tidy lock, which means it always
shows the same side to Jupiter. There you go, fascinating
article that, But right now you'll calls please oh eight
(01:09:17):
hundred and eighty tendy nine nine to text. You want
to bang on about anything, this is the show to
do it. Get in touch, Marcus Beck. In the early eighties,
my friend's eight year old brother found a one hundred
dollar check made out to cash his parents. Time to
take the police station, which he did. Three months later.
(01:09:39):
The police conjuent to say that no one had claimed
the check and it was his to click and keep.
Is a cash checks as good as the cash itself.
He took the chick the river Banger cash it for
one hundred dollars. One happy eight year old boy, Robbie,
it's Marcus, thanks for calling in. Welcome Hi, Robbie.
Speaker 22 (01:09:55):
Good good evening, Marcus.
Speaker 21 (01:09:57):
How are you?
Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 22 (01:09:58):
All good Robbie you you're obviously good. He cash mate, cash,
It's came all the time. Like I was in business
for forty years. I've got cash on me.
Speaker 24 (01:10:15):
Now.
Speaker 22 (01:10:16):
I'm living pool pretty modestly at the moment, but I'm
in a caravan at the moment. But cash is king.
You can not in big cities, maybe not, but you
can get anything done with cash, like holding you know,
(01:10:39):
mechanical things. It's always an all to me. I mean,
I'm sixty odd years of age, but to me, it's
it's always been the power. I used to go to
a fish and chip shop and I can't tell you
(01:11:00):
where it is or anything, but every time I'm in
there every week, is to buy you know, two bits
of fisher hamburger and chips and whatever. And whether it
was Mum or dad, Mum and Dad were normally cooking.
Young fellow would bring up one one one dollar and
(01:11:21):
I'll pay in cash. And it was always one dollar
that he ring up on the tour. I mean, I know,
and maybe you might know that was going somewhere, but
it wasn't going to the government. And I just always
think cash is king. You can do anything with cash.
Speaker 2 (01:11:46):
Yeah, that's not something I've ever done is to go. Yeah,
I looked at you.
Speaker 22 (01:11:50):
I realized that, and you in you know your world,
you're like, I wouldn't call it a corporate world, but
you know, like it's pretty cool when you've got a
wallet full of money or a belt full of money.
Someone earlier was mentioning, but.
Speaker 2 (01:12:10):
Should places like that takeaway pay the GSD and pay
the tax on their runing? Should it go through the
book or you think.
Speaker 22 (01:12:16):
They're probably making so much money. They are always paying
their taxes anywhere and in my environment and what I've
done in my life, we've always paid tax. And in
this country they say the smaller businesses which they class
(01:12:49):
as ten employees or under pay the bulk of tax.
Now I've known that for years.
Speaker 24 (01:13:00):
We pay.
Speaker 22 (01:13:01):
Well, I don't now, but we pay. We paid just
we kept the country going and small businesses.
Speaker 2 (01:13:11):
Would you if a cafe like Gloria Jeans has gone
cash only, would you boycott that place?
Speaker 25 (01:13:16):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
Straightaway, You're not going there. That's not for you. Why
why the hell with it? Because you can so they
can't do the dodgy Yeah.
Speaker 22 (01:13:28):
Well, you know you said earlier, maybe the stuff for
taking money, you know, that's b yes, because they monitor
if they're so clever. They and bigger companies are. And
I've worked for big companies periodically, but you know, like, yeah, no,
(01:13:49):
I don't agree with.
Speaker 2 (01:13:52):
Okay, I'll live with there, Robbie, but thank you Marcus.
In the nineties. In the nineteen eighties, I was ten,
my parents were relevant renovating an old house and devenport
removing betting and plaster and terior is replace with Jim
found twenty grand in a box on the wall police investigator.
(01:14:12):
Belonged to an old family member of the Mills family,
traced along friendly descendants and was given to Les Mills
apparently was his great grandfather who used its start as
first gym. Ben Marc's I don't know how the old
wives tail is, but if you count between the flesh
of light and to the noise of the fun, that
will tell you how far away the storm is. I
think it's a wife's telling. It's just physics.
Speaker 9 (01:14:34):
That one.
Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Cafe Medici Martin bro used to call and offer from
muffing with loose change. They are now cash lists that
don't bother I pay my house cleaning with cash. She
hardly speaks English and struggles for work, so it's just
of an extra to help her get by might sing Rome,
but it was her preference. Any place that doesn't take
(01:14:56):
cash gets boycotted by me. I no longer go to
Vivo Hair Salon on principle. Gee, good evening, Louise, it's
mark Us, welcome.
Speaker 24 (01:15:08):
Hi Marcus. Gloria Jean's gone, cassules have they? I went
in there a few years ago and the coffee was terrible.
I can't remember if there was an issue with a
service or not or the food, but I swow when
I went out of there, I'll never ever go back
(01:15:30):
to another Gloria Jean. So you know, I don't know.
I would boys tell them that I'm already not going anywhere.
Speaker 9 (01:15:43):
So.
Speaker 20 (01:15:45):
Yeah, I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:15:46):
Yeah. I had one experience one in Queenstown and I
was yeah, but I think that it might have changed.
It was in one of the hotels.
Speaker 3 (01:15:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 24 (01:15:57):
Yeah, this was in Sydney, so yeah, not terrible.
Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
And I think they're always owned by Hillsong Church. Gloria Jeans.
I think that there was a restaurant connection there. I
don't know if they still are. Yeah, so I think
that they were. I think there was a church connection
with them, ah, okay, which I think has been I
(01:16:24):
think that's quite and I think they're giving money to
the yeah season. November twenty ten, the lead up to
the Australian federal election, Gloriajeans donated thirty thousand to the
Australian Christian Lobby, which is a Christian lobby group. The
Do Nation and Gloria Jeans, linked to the evangelical Hellsong Church,
led to a national boycott of its stores.
Speaker 24 (01:16:48):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (01:16:50):
Yeah, so they're not very popular.
Speaker 2 (01:16:55):
Well, and I know that they've been boycotted by the
LGBT members. But they're also yes, so they've also I
hope they've had quite a lively history. But I don't
know who I was and now. But so it seems
to be their background in Australia, don't they're originally an
(01:17:17):
American company.
Speaker 24 (01:17:19):
Yeah, Yeah, there's some in New Zealand, is there?
Speaker 2 (01:17:23):
Yes, I'm pretty sure there are.
Speaker 24 (01:17:26):
Okay, I don't send any down here at tom Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:17:29):
But I don't think there's anything evil about them going
cash free. I think good on them.
Speaker 24 (01:17:35):
Oh yeah, well, I I won't go for them anyway,
so I don't miss it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:39):
But you but but yeah, okay, yeah, fair enough, but
there aren't anywhere you live anyway, so you're not likely
to go to them because it was when you're in Australia,
right yeah.
Speaker 24 (01:17:46):
Well, yeah, well I will go back to the neither.
Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
I think it wasn't my coffee that was sketchy. I
had a biscuit that was a bit peculiar. That was
I remember strong. It was kind of a hard It
wasn't even quite sure what it.
Speaker 24 (01:17:59):
Was, right, Okay, there must have been something other than
the coffee, because I normally react that.
Speaker 18 (01:18:08):
No.
Speaker 2 (01:18:09):
Might have been some Bible vibes or something. Was it, Louise,
I don't know.
Speaker 24 (01:18:15):
There must have been something. I've been trying to remember
it for our cab. So yeah, it was a few
years ago.
Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Nice to hear from your Louise. Thank you, Oli, Marcus evening.
Speaker 17 (01:18:27):
Hey Marcus. Since I've I've listened and been busy, but
I thought i'd just share. I'm my mother's from Belgium,
and every time I go there, I remember that the
pub because obviously a big beer drinking culture in Belgium.
They the smaller pubs only except cash because apparently it's
(01:18:52):
the only way that they can actually keep their businesses aflood.
I thought it was just a bit of a difference
to what you're talking about.
Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
Why can they why can't they keep the businesses a
flat with cash? What's that about?
Speaker 17 (01:19:04):
I think it's just because the amount of text that
these small businesses get charged.
Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
Okay, so the only way they can get their businesses
going is through text avoidance.
Speaker 17 (01:19:16):
Yeah, through sort of. Yeah, but I do know. I
don't know what the text rates are there, but I
do know that they are fairly high. In fact, my
mother's a retired doctor and I think almost half a
pay he needs to go to text. Yeah, but you
know it's quite popular these more socialist countries. So yeah,
(01:19:40):
I guess it's a bit difficult because you know, you've
got to keep the economy afloats, not being an economist,
but sometimes it has. It's a detriment of smaller businesses.
You can't we can't afford to those high textes.
Speaker 2 (01:19:53):
Yeah, okay, nice to hear from you Onie. Thank you, Barnie, Marcus.
Speaker 17 (01:19:57):
Welcome him?
Speaker 26 (01:19:59):
Marcus? Sure are you might? I'm just sure? Right up
from taking a nineties I used to work for the
hand Seat and I was a rampagent and we used
to go into the planes and clean them as the
every time a plane came in and went out. Anyway,
I was cleaning one of the seats and crossing the
(01:20:21):
seat belts and put my hand down and found a wallet.
And because we had priority luggage and stuff, the first
class people used to get out of the airport really quick. Anyway,
I got it, got around the front with the wallet.
I opened it up and it was just full of
American one hundred dollar notes. So I closed it and
(01:20:42):
I gave it to the airport manager a seat. Airport
manager anyway, he got the passenger just as they were
going out the door, and he gave the person his wallet,
and the guy reached it. He goes, ah, I dive
the young fellow that got up this one hundred bucks man.
You know, I was like out of all the guys
(01:21:03):
in the small room there we're having a big laugh
about and the wallet, and everyone was going, well you
should have kept it and stuff like that. Well here
I hated it. Bacon, I've got a hundred American newsh work.
Speaker 2 (01:21:16):
Give the young fella like that, like the way we
of the young fella. Good on your body, Dave Marcus, Welcome.
Speaker 11 (01:21:24):
Marcus, Hey, I go shopping at the Hell's Factory shop
just over the YMT Bridsy maybe once a week, and
I know they've got a policy of cash free. In
other words, I just take me bank card out of
my wallet to go shopping there, and sometimes it's going.
But one thing about cash free is that how much
(01:21:48):
you earn over a year is more the authorities can can.
And you know it's without cash. They know how much
you earn every year. In other words, you've got nothing disposable.
That's one thing against having cash free. But I always
(01:22:09):
say that cash is king. During the earthquakes, I'll tell
you what, Marcus, we please, we had Keshail Wallace because
everything was down. And you've got to remember this.
Speaker 2 (01:22:17):
When people say kesh is king, what do they mean by.
Speaker 11 (01:22:20):
That, Well, it means that it's my bubb all others
and it's legal tender. And when imaging crashes and the
computers are down on electricity, well you pleased to have
kesh in your pocket. Of course.
Speaker 2 (01:22:37):
I just kind of think that, and I mean, God,
God help us. I don't think christ you is just
going to get another quake anytime soon. But I think
if they get a big quake. I mean, no two
quakes are the same. And you know that the hasting
that the nape, you're quite I just wonder if that's
going to be a problem this time. About the cash
and the lack of cash. I think things will be different.
Speaker 11 (01:22:58):
Well different, how Marcus, because more people are not carrying cash?
Is do I think these days?
Speaker 4 (01:23:05):
This day?
Speaker 11 (01:23:06):
And what I'm saying to you is that you'll be
pleased if you are here in cash.
Speaker 2 (01:23:12):
I believe, I believe. I believe they'd probably bring in
starlink and stuff like that that they didn't in Hawk's
Bay and Gisbon. So they've got internet straight away, they've
got I just believe the technology would have moved on that.
Look I don't know, And look I shouldn't. I shouldn't
take away your experience and say, okay, that's it wasn't traumatic.
(01:23:34):
But I don't necessarily know that that it would the
same thing would happen again. I've got no reason to
say that. I just suspecting it's been thirteen years. By
the time the next one comes along, it might be
twenty five years. You hope it's longer. Anyway, were you
and that did you experience that quake. Did you experience
the cash listeners?
Speaker 11 (01:23:54):
Yes, absolutely, And as I say, I was pleased that
I had cash in my pocket because a couple of
places I was over in Eddington there was no electricity
or some time I think I was almost two weeks. Yes,
So I was talking in the backyard and the fire
(01:24:15):
and I didn't mind that sebrury through the twenty second
it was warm. But you still had to get some supplies.
And you know when we had some super valued around
the corner from me, who of course was only except
in Kesh because you couldn't.
Speaker 4 (01:24:32):
What you can.
Speaker 2 (01:24:34):
Did you did you have cash or did you manage
to access some?
Speaker 11 (01:24:39):
I had cash, had Kesh a wallet enough?
Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
Did you have much? Did you have hundreds or thousands?
Speaker 11 (01:24:46):
Five hundred? I generally keep keep a cony in my wallet.
Speaker 2 (01:24:51):
Yeah, okay, And that last that enabled you, that enabled
you to eat and get through those those days.
Speaker 11 (01:24:58):
Yeah, and the cupboards you know, terms of this, in
terms of that, you know what I mean, Yeah, cooking
in the backyard. But you know what I'm saying to
you is that you please your head, you know, and
I warn't from that and opt to keep the supply
that I'll only go to get them to the mogency funds.
(01:25:21):
I keep those funds there for a reason.
Speaker 2 (01:25:24):
So christ people have a limited a certain amount of cash.
It's just so you could go cashless, but you'd always
want to have that stand.
Speaker 11 (01:25:33):
That's what I mentioned about Hallo's Factory shop. I know
that that shop predominantly cash free. In other words, swipey card,
bank card, because I can understand that they don't want
me to.
Speaker 6 (01:25:48):
Cash.
Speaker 2 (01:25:50):
Yeah, I don't want to be clever, and I'm not
asking you any but where do people keep there? Where's
a good place to keep that cash amount that you're
not going to spend it when the you know, when
you've got to give the kids lunch money or something.
Because whatever you got the cash in the house, for
those of Asians, you always got to end up spending it,
aren't you. Where do you keep it so you can't
(01:26:10):
get into it the whole time?
Speaker 11 (01:26:13):
Personally, I've got a little little zip compartment my wallet.
Speaker 2 (01:26:18):
It makes sense, and it's always there so it's always
on you.
Speaker 11 (01:26:21):
Yeah, And generally I've got another secret compartment I carry
in the car that I know about, but I never
see it. And I generally always carry a Marcus, because
you know, if you please, you've got it. And I've
learned that.
Speaker 2 (01:26:40):
And were you were you without power for two weeks?
Speaker 11 (01:26:44):
Two weeks? Yeah, yeah, that's right. And the experience tell
you what it bought the communities and brought people together,
Marcus going down getting fresh water at a local spring,
that's the sort of thing, and people looking at for
each other, very very very.
Speaker 2 (01:27:06):
Did they set up mobile did they set up mobile
banks or mobile lift post terminals? Was that something that
happened fairly quickly or that took a long time?
Speaker 3 (01:27:15):
No?
Speaker 11 (01:27:16):
Well, as I say, is that the necessities, if you like,
for two weeks you had to sort of go to
and bring your own bottles to fill up. The main
one for me was water free pure it's fresh drink
and water, you know, and the essential supplies for making
(01:27:37):
cup of tea. There was the main one with me.
I've got to have you capita in the once. Yeah,
but anyway, we live on a learn makers you know.
Speaker 2 (01:27:46):
Although imagine no one would have died for not having cash.
It'd always be you know, the social services were there
quite quickly, weren't they, that they would have that although
it's important to people, but it wouldn't have been. Yeah,
it's not life and death not to have money, was it?
Speaker 11 (01:28:02):
Well no, it wasn't worse and death. But I'll tell
you what is. I'll say where there is repeating myself,
you're lucky. You think yourself lucky that you have got
that people back on.
Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
Yep, okay, yeah, okay, nice haalf of your Dave. Thanks
for that. There we go the Keshla Society with cafes
now Gloria Jeans in Australia saying by the same time
of September eleventh, there's no cash, they're through with it,
just for staff safety, YadA yadya. But you know people
(01:28:32):
are boycotting it. But imagine the people that are boycotting it,
the people that probably don't go to Gloria Jeans anyway.
I mean, I don't want to sound disparaging to the
Keshns people, but I think they probably think they have
more influence than actually have. Where's the world's probably moving on,
Frank Marcus.
Speaker 20 (01:28:52):
Welcome, Yeah, pure Marcus, Sure, fan.
Speaker 6 (01:28:57):
Kesha society that was said when I was a kid,
does that say?
Speaker 20 (01:29:03):
Is that right?
Speaker 2 (01:29:03):
Wow?
Speaker 6 (01:29:05):
Yeah, Well it's all you know, you got to bidding
war or something. On something and you know you get
better out you can't afford them, and cacious king. If
you get all the case, you get it. Whef you
want everything, you want to be rich, and they have
the case you want as well. Before the well, before
the cards and stuff, the cads only been there. You will.
(01:29:26):
But I mean you're standing about the plastic cards in
your pocket, wings, circling and slip out. So with a
plastic cad, wouldn't it.
Speaker 2 (01:29:34):
Yeah, but then you're not gonna lose all your money,
are you, because you can get your card big. No
one's going to use your cad. You say the plastic
cards have been around that long. They've probably been around
fifty years. I don't know if would have been if
plus cards would have been around the late seventies.
Speaker 6 (01:29:56):
Well, yeah, I don't know. Better. I mean jovaslocense. You
don't think plastic jovislots, you know. But the big the
thing is is with a casher society, it's total control.
And a bank a bank is a private individual company.
You know, they can do what they want. And the
(01:30:17):
thing is is the some of like we want to
have your photograph these days to show you identification, even
though you got their cards because they don't know you,
and even code words whatever. They want your photograph and
once you get to them, they can do whatever they want.
But it's a control to Marcus, you know. And as
for the cafe, the people will probably go there just
(01:30:39):
off off the cafter because it's cash lists. They probably go, oh,
we'll just avoid it.
Speaker 11 (01:30:45):
You know.
Speaker 6 (01:30:46):
They probably would have stopped the need with your mammal
friends or something, but now they just go, I know you.
Speaker 2 (01:30:52):
Would you would you would you boycott a cafe that
might't take cash?
Speaker 26 (01:30:58):
Uh?
Speaker 17 (01:31:01):
People?
Speaker 6 (01:31:01):
Do you think?
Speaker 2 (01:31:02):
People you think that are tracing how many cups of
coffee you have? The coffee police are going to come
down to your or something.
Speaker 6 (01:31:08):
I don't know. It's all about Tacon who it's all
about Heaven. You know, I'd just say no, I'll go
somewhere else. I wait, you know, just if I find
out not interested?
Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
Okay, Yeah, so I think they've made a big, a
big mistake.
Speaker 6 (01:31:28):
Uh you know, No, I don't know. I want to
get grumpy about it, and it's like that, you know, well,
you know some people do. But yeah, I don't think
Lawis was grumpy the other day, mate. I think she
was just speaking in mind, she hasn't been crappy. I
really enjoyed the conversation, the nice from.
Speaker 2 (01:31:46):
You, Frank, thank you. We love Lois. We love Lois
and Rugby. She's passionate. It's what the all Blacks need
is passion like here. But she needs to come around
to the old way of the old We need to
come around to the old way of Scott Robertson, he
(01:32:12):
know midnight. My name is Marcus. Welcome eight hundred and
eighty ten eighty and nine two nine to the text,
what have you got? We are here for it. Let's
be hearing from you cash things that you've found, money
you've found and you're given back or haven't given back,
or whatever you've done with that. That's sort of interest
to me. But anything else you want to mention the
last forty minutes, keep those texts coming through. They've gone
(01:32:32):
a bit quite and I've seen a clearing text. I
might seend a text through myself. Actually got to trying
to work at what the guy's seen me at bluff. Hello,
I was going to have a says you won't remember
this well, jeepers, creepers really with me that won't remember it?
Marcus I got my first visa card early on nineteen
eighty one, the old ZIPSEP machines. I didn't get F
(01:32:55):
postcards about ten years later, fol and christ Ditch. I
got my first F postcard in the fourth form or
the third form. That would have been nineteen seventy nine,
nineteen eighty. I've still We've got the same pin zero
zero zero one, Marcus. I wonder how many of these
cash activists use checks before they were stopped. I think
(01:33:18):
most of this cash, this stuff is just people winding
them up on the internet, conspiracy people. I mean, it's
right material for them. Louis Vuitton cup this morning. That's
right a Dan, I believe. So all Blacks three a m.
Sunday Daylight Savings twenty ninth September, too far away. There
(01:33:45):
is a road snowfall warning for Arthur's Parsing Porters pass.
It's Bowling League Day, says US. Bowling League Day shines
a spotlight on the excitement of bowling. I have become
a bit of a fan of ten pin bowling. Actually,
(01:34:09):
I'm getting progressively better. I'm not fantastic, but I've got
my ball and I've got the whay. I'm getting consistency
one four eight's my best score is that? Or order
that was pretty good. Louis Vaton scheduled for after midnight,
(01:34:31):
although as Steve mckiva calls it, Louis wooton, which I
think probably is the right way to pronounce it, but
always sounds slightly affected. Are you're missing checkbooks, Matthew?
Speaker 23 (01:34:50):
Well, I was raised up around check books.
Speaker 2 (01:34:52):
Actually, I wonder if you were. You got that sense
about the old checkbook, Mathew? Yah, I thought you might
be raised around chickbooks.
Speaker 23 (01:34:58):
Oh, definitely, definitely, because there was a red pen and
a blue pen, and there was a whole lot of
minus and whole lot of pluses. And ah, I don't
know what else to say. It's just become or.
Speaker 2 (01:35:15):
Don't say it. That's good method. I've enjoyed that. Are
you giving me a bit of energy? Andrew Marcus? Welcome?
Speaker 17 (01:35:20):
Hi?
Speaker 2 (01:35:20):
How are you to welcome?
Speaker 25 (01:35:23):
I've been a bit stressed over the last couple of
years with depending cash for society. Yeah, but I've just
figured it out. But I think I might have figured
it out. Say I come around to your house and say, look,
I'll replace your water cylinder, and you say how much?
(01:35:45):
Bloody blass, So we go through the whole you know,
negotiations and also tell you what, just give us a
two thousand dollars Preezy card. That way you get a
job done cheap. I get a Praezy card and I
can spend the money and it's not cash, but it's
as it's as good as to me.
Speaker 2 (01:36:02):
I don't Yeah, I'm a bit innocent about these ways.
What is the advantage of a Prezzy card to cash
because the person can.
Speaker 25 (01:36:13):
Haden, isn't it's as good as cash because you can
still spend it on different things, but you it's not
going through the banking system. So you still get a
three thousand dollars job done for two thousand dollars and
you just give me a two thousand dollars Prazzy card.
Speaker 2 (01:36:33):
So why is a Prezzy card better than two thousand
dollars cash?
Speaker 6 (01:36:37):
Well, but what case for society?
Speaker 25 (01:36:39):
Because they won't be cash will bear?
Speaker 2 (01:36:41):
Oh, I see what you're saying. I see what you're saying.
I understand what you're saying. Now, So you're saying cash
is pretty well gone and no one's doing cashless. You
just pay things with a Prizzy card.
Speaker 25 (01:36:51):
He just asks for a prizzy card. Then it's still cashless,
but it's non traceable, and then yeah, or you know,
just yes, I mean you can only do it for
a limited way amount.
Speaker 2 (01:37:00):
But I just people people already dealing in prizzy cards.
Speaker 25 (01:37:04):
But I don't know. I'm not because I've only just
thought of it, but I dare say it could happen,
you know.
Speaker 2 (01:37:11):
So did you hear that guy that was trying to
work out how to get cash if you from the
T A B. Did you hear that earlier?
Speaker 11 (01:37:19):
No?
Speaker 25 (01:37:19):
No, one just turned off the telly and come to be.
Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
So this guy was This guy was saying, right because
someone went to Nandos and they wouldn't accept cash, and
the guy only had cash, And I said, why don't
you go put it in an if possible machine? He said, well,
they take a while to clear it, right, And someone
text and what they do if they've got cash, but
they need to only buy something by cashless by phone banking.
(01:37:47):
You go to a T a B.
Speaker 25 (01:37:51):
Oh, you're living in any T a B. You can
and they could they could cross it onto you.
Speaker 2 (01:37:57):
I've got to work out where I've I've got to
google back there. Oh, I just I'm just trying trying
to work out with my search is to find out
what time the text came through.
Speaker 25 (01:38:11):
Yeah, but we're living in tricky times though, Marcus, this
cray Dan.
Speaker 2 (01:38:15):
What's the keyword to find that text?
Speaker 3 (01:38:19):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:38:19):
I be an email A good point, that might be
the answer. Oh yeah, here go. A few years ago
you had a few calls to get a guy talking
about nandos is not able to use cash and wanting
to put the money into his bank. I do this
all the time. I have cash on me and need
it in my bank account straight away. It's free. I
go to the local tab must be a branch or.
(01:38:40):
Some pubs do this. I put the money I want
into one of the self service machines to get a voucher,
say forty two D five hundred or whatever. Then go
to the counter and say I want the money refunded
on my card. They refund on your card and and
your bank straight away, and it's free. It's a good trick.
Speaker 1 (01:38:57):
In it.
Speaker 2 (01:38:58):
Good evening, Mike, it's Marcus. Welcome Michael, tell you good,
Thank you, Mike.
Speaker 9 (01:39:04):
It's God.
Speaker 2 (01:39:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 27 (01:39:05):
Yeah, that's so. We've just finished playing squash and we're
heaving Yann around the table after a bear or two
and about what's got on Netflix, and I'll sort of.
I get to the point where I spend twenty minutes
scrolling through and I can't find something worth watching, so
I need to have an update on what's good.
Speaker 2 (01:39:28):
I couldn't find anything the last time I locked, and
there's not that much there. Have you seen that. There's
that guy that eats hot dogs in a hurry. Have
you seen him?
Speaker 9 (01:39:40):
It's not the bedded guy, is it?
Speaker 21 (01:39:42):
I now?
Speaker 2 (01:39:43):
Joey Chestnud He always won the July the Fourth thing,
but then he got sponsored by a vegan sausage and
they dropped him from that event. So he's done something
for Netflix, which just dropped today.
Speaker 4 (01:39:56):
I think, okay, because I ended up.
Speaker 27 (01:39:59):
I've started Afterlife again and it's like a great program.
But I want to watch something, you know, I don't
to keep watching retreats.
Speaker 2 (01:40:06):
Okay, Well, my guilty pleasures are useless, right, Like I've
watched Selling Sunset.
Speaker 27 (01:40:13):
I haven't seen that.
Speaker 2 (01:40:15):
Oh, you will do yourself a favor, don't watch it.
I've watched. I've watched Emily in Paris terrible.
Speaker 27 (01:40:21):
I tried to I tried to watch that.
Speaker 2 (01:40:24):
I watched my founder self spending more time on my phone.
That was just like background noise.
Speaker 27 (01:40:30):
I've had a leaning, as much as I hate to
admit it, I've been leaning towards the Australian programs. Some
of those are quite good.
Speaker 2 (01:40:41):
I like a show like Alone when You've Got to
Be But but sometimes if you watch those ones, we've
got to survive for as long as you can for
a quarter of a million dollars, I can't do that.
Speaker 3 (01:40:53):
Eh.
Speaker 2 (01:40:55):
Was actually quite sad because a lot of these people
are quite desperate.
Speaker 27 (01:40:59):
Yeah, yeah, I can imagine.
Speaker 2 (01:41:03):
What about Slow Horses? What about Slow Horses is a
new series of.
Speaker 15 (01:41:06):
That I haven't see.
Speaker 27 (01:41:08):
I'm not familiar with that one.
Speaker 2 (01:41:11):
Okay too, you haven't really watched much.
Speaker 26 (01:41:13):
No, there's there's a.
Speaker 27 (01:41:14):
Couple of like I ended up watching going down. You
go down that rabbit hole and you end up watching
the same genre, like ones like Fisk. Have you seen Fisk? No,
that's that's as a scream, that's a riot, absolute laugh,
really good, Izy Won, And so you end up sort
of chasing those ones and then you know you you
(01:41:36):
want to keep on that same genre, and then you
don't want to go to something else, and then I
got trapped into the Korean ones. I watched a ton
of Korean programs.
Speaker 2 (01:41:46):
Like squid Games or I couldn't.
Speaker 27 (01:41:48):
Do squid games too scary, but Glory and all those things.
Speaker 2 (01:41:54):
Someone's ticks through, Someone's ticks through the suit. The Rookie
is a great series on Netflix.
Speaker 27 (01:42:01):
Rookie, but they've only done three seasons on Netflix, and
and it's like seven seasons all up, so I've got
to wait for it. The Rookie is really good. I
liked on back in the day when it used to
be Neon and whatever they were The Good Wife. That
was really good.
Speaker 2 (01:42:23):
But yeah, i'll see if anyone's got any more to Mike,
I'll see what I was like, Did you win your squash?
Speaker 24 (01:42:33):
No?
Speaker 27 (01:42:33):
No, no, I won the free beer out towards because
I lost and he had to buy me one.
Speaker 2 (01:42:38):
Oh yeah, is it the way it goes?
Speaker 9 (01:42:40):
Well?
Speaker 27 (01:42:40):
I was, Yeah, I'm happy with that because I'm pretty
pretty bad at squash.
Speaker 17 (01:42:46):
So.
Speaker 2 (01:42:48):
Yeah, why would you play if you're not good? Or
it seems brutal.
Speaker 27 (01:42:52):
Because yeah, you're in a beer afterwards.
Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
Nice to hear from you, Mike, Thank you, Soundra Marcus welcome.
Speaker 3 (01:42:59):
Oh good, I was going to say, good morning, good,
good evening evening.
Speaker 4 (01:43:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 19 (01:43:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:43:06):
Two things. First of all, cash, I wouldn't boycott a
cafe or a restaurant or establishment. If they said that
they wouldn't take cash. Let's their preference, that's their entitlement
(01:43:27):
to do so. And if I really felt strongly about it,
I just put down the road to another place that
would take cash. So that's how I feel about things.
That's that's how I roll reasonable yeah, yeah. And the
(01:43:49):
other thing is sundial. I have just been offered a
sundial that my father gifted two. Well it's Norma Brown
and she has just offered me back the sundial that
(01:44:12):
my father gifted her. And I am over the moon,
Marcus over the moon, as she said, this is more
value to you, and I'll buy one off trade me.
Speaker 2 (01:44:29):
So who tell me about the sundial?
Speaker 3 (01:44:33):
Well, my father made them and imported them.
Speaker 2 (01:44:38):
And have I spoke to you about this before?
Speaker 3 (01:44:43):
Yes, you had?
Speaker 2 (01:44:45):
And was it his full time job? He did that
as a hobby.
Speaker 3 (01:44:50):
No, he was a builder, and.
Speaker 4 (01:44:53):
Then he.
Speaker 3 (01:44:57):
Got into a situation that he.
Speaker 6 (01:45:02):
Was attacked.
Speaker 3 (01:45:04):
And he could no longer build, okay, and he went
into copper work because it was all the rage at
the time. He had a great mind, great mind, and
he established a business with copper fire screens, range hoods,
(01:45:31):
wood boxes, tables, pictures. He worked in with charities with And.
Speaker 2 (01:45:40):
Who did you say? Who did you say? That he
was given one backward like someone Norma Norma.
Speaker 3 (01:45:47):
Brown Brown on Raccino Island talking about yes, yes, And
he gifted her a a sundial which I absolutely love.
And I haven't got any of his sundials, and she
(01:46:09):
has offered it back to me.
Speaker 2 (01:46:12):
I reco the name when you said that, I wasn't
quite sure. If you could do me a favor, could
you see see me a picture of I'd love to
I'd love to see that. What that looks like? Sas
it'd be nice to hear get an image if you
can send one. Thank you and give my regards to
her too, A very special person. Dean, it's Marcus.
Speaker 4 (01:46:29):
Good evening, Oh good evening.
Speaker 9 (01:46:32):
Here are you good things?
Speaker 6 (01:46:33):
Dean? That's good.
Speaker 28 (01:46:34):
I just need to account the things that are castles society.
I think do you think it's a good thing or
a bad thing?
Speaker 2 (01:46:40):
I just think it's the way it is. I don't
even really have any strong thoughts on it. I I like,
I find it convenient for me not having any God,
I never go to the bank.
Speaker 28 (01:46:52):
Yeah, I think it's quite a good thing. I mean
it lean that being as a number on a computer.
It'll also you know, eliminate robberies and stuff like that.
I think robberies I suppose, well, you won't even have
the there won't be any need things will they.
Speaker 2 (01:47:08):
And start might be online. The only thing for me
I belong to a group that meets occasionally and the
and the plate goes round, and if you're in charge
of the banking or running that club, jet becomes difficult
to deposit cash and banks and stuff like that. That's
what I feel sorry for banks when they're working with
voluntary organizations because it's just little amounts of money that
(01:47:29):
get bank just to pay the rent. There can be
no upside for the banks. But man, there's a lot
of theffing around with to get around the money ladering
laundering room rules and having different signatories. It'd be much
better of people just pay waves. And yeah, there must
be a bit of solution.
Speaker 28 (01:47:46):
I mean I've splaining to people about this and they're like,
oh yeah, But then people getting ripped off online and stuff. Well,
it's already happening now anyway, So it's it doesn't really
it's not really going to make too much of a difference,
is And the other thing I was just saying that
guy was talking about, were they movies or TV series
they talking about it?
Speaker 2 (01:48:07):
I think it's I think it's talk about TV series.
Speaker 8 (01:48:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 28 (01:48:10):
I think the best ones I either saw and you've
probably seen the South, was Breaking Bad and Shameless. The
American one. I think that was very good.
Speaker 2 (01:48:19):
Breaking Bad was extraordinary, and people always talk about it.
People talk, but find that what was the one? The prequel?
I've never always meant to go back and watch that.
The Soul one?
Speaker 28 (01:48:30):
Oh yeah, I bet it Paul Soul.
Speaker 2 (01:48:32):
Yeah, and I've never seen have you seen that yet?
Speaker 3 (01:48:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 28 (01:48:36):
I watched a little bit of it.
Speaker 4 (01:48:38):
Yeah, people bored with it.
Speaker 2 (01:48:41):
Some people said it was better, but Breaking Bad is?
It stayed with me? It was, it was extraordinary.
Speaker 28 (01:48:47):
It was, wasn't it course old Shameless? Some people have
preferred the English Shameless, but I think the American one
was much better.
Speaker 2 (01:48:56):
I haven't heard of Shameless, haven't you?
Speaker 28 (01:48:59):
But the American one. I think it's on Netflix. Show
you've got to watch that's you'll have a few laughs.
Put it that way.
Speaker 17 (01:49:08):
Well, if I never heard of it, I don't know
the start.
Speaker 28 (01:49:12):
I think the English one come out first and then
the American one come out, and everyone swears by the
English ones.
Speaker 2 (01:49:19):
There's a lot of there's a lot of shows that
a lot of shows like that one that with the ghosts,
that's what English and now the Americans have done that
with the Haunted, the woman that got the Airbnb, and
then there's the She Can See the Dead people.
Speaker 28 (01:49:35):
Okay, don't attle with mesh.
Speaker 2 (01:49:37):
It's funny. It's funny. But just back to what I
what you said earlier. Indeed, you made a really good point,
and I think it needs to be acknowledged that people,
particularly people they are elderly, are told the whole time,
are warned about the dangers of online banking, and then
(01:50:00):
by the same token, they're told that they've got to
get with the future because that's the way of the future.
So of course they're gonna feel trepidation about getting involved
with it on my bank, because I spent the whole
time by ads telling them to beware of scammers, so
I can understand the fear around it and it's a
really legitimate fair A.
Speaker 11 (01:50:19):
Yeah, it is.
Speaker 28 (01:50:20):
I think obviously with that coming in, they'll just have
to be both whole thing about part of security around
online banking and stuff. So it'll, yeah, it'll happen, and
I think the things will just you know, things will
get better, but there's always going to be loopholes. People
(01:50:41):
will be able to get in. People very clever now.
Speaker 2 (01:50:44):
Especially with AI when they get your voice off your
answerphone and actually becomes someone like you and bring you
up and SAI, it's Marcus here giving all your money.
Hi Jim Marcus, Welcome, Hi Marcus.
Speaker 7 (01:50:56):
Just to found wild stories but unusual. I was driving
along and there's a police came in front of me
about fifty meters ahead, and the caravan over something black,
you know, on the road, and he didn't stop, but
it was a black wallet, so I stopped, picked it
up and took it straight to the police station. It
hadn't bet tur undred dollars cash in it, but no address,
(01:51:18):
so I couldn't return it to the person. That's why
I went to the police station. Turned out to be
a young mother who'd come out of a supermarket and
she put the wallet on the roof of her car
while she's putting the baby, and the policeman wasn't very observant.
But yeah, so yeah, I was very very very pleased,
(01:51:43):
you know that that she finished up with it. You know,
being a young mother, she needed put in need of
their two hundred dollars. They for sure, this is quite
a few years ago, so it was, you know, according
to amount of money at that time, and.
Speaker 2 (01:51:53):
The police were had the police driven over it.
Speaker 7 (01:51:57):
Yeah I didn't know, but I not yeah quite quite so.
Speaker 20 (01:52:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:52:05):
Now now as fast case is considered, I reckon they're
already a place for cash around the place. You know,
I'm a regular at carrot sales and plea markets and
I'm a bit of a soft touch, and you know,
get keapped up walking down the main street of the
town I live in it. You know, there's the odd
bit of there and I take quite the light. They say, oh,
(01:52:26):
can you give me two dollars for a pie? And
I said, no, no, I can't. So I whip out
a five dollars they can stee it and give it
to them and just see the face right out face
you know it's worth the five dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:52:37):
Yeah, yeah, And look, I mentioned they're doing it tough
with the kind of the pivot away from cash too,
because what do they do?
Speaker 7 (01:52:46):
Yeah, and well you know older people in there are
you know, it's this love online there for years.
Speaker 2 (01:52:57):
Yeah, you just cut out of it there, Jim John
AT's Marcus, good evening.
Speaker 4 (01:53:03):
Good evening.
Speaker 9 (01:53:05):
Listen the cash Less Aciety.
Speaker 2 (01:53:07):
If you go to it, if you go to just
turn your right off there, John, if you could thank you.
Speaker 20 (01:53:16):
The cash of Society. You go to a co op
bank with cash and you want to put it into
somebody else's account, they will not accept it. Sure, And
that's why I had to pay some fees into for
a club we belong to into the co Op this
woman's account and they just said, no, we don't take cash.
(01:53:38):
It's going to be through direct debit from your bank.
So I went to my bag and ANSN and says, no,
we don't deal with co op. We're not doing it.
Speaker 2 (01:53:49):
So what's all that about banks just getting rid of
the business with There's no I mean because a lot
of the banks with those with those clubs and stuff.
I mean, the accounts must cost to be huge fortune
to run with no interest or Yeah, it's kind of Yeah,
there's a lot of accounts you keep going.
Speaker 20 (01:54:10):
The other one that gets me is Meridian Energy. Now
I pay my power through them. You cannot put cash
into their account. It's got to be a direct gibbot.
They stopped it because I refuse to pay the payer.
But it once day and they said, I will cut
you off as we'll go somewhere else. But it's a
direct debit to Meridian.
Speaker 2 (01:54:31):
So what do you say. They won't do.
Speaker 27 (01:54:33):
That.
Speaker 20 (01:54:34):
You can't pay cash into a Meridian account. You've got
to be a direct debit.
Speaker 2 (01:54:39):
Why would they do that? I can tell you, but
the one on the on ear, I don't know what
that means.
Speaker 20 (01:54:50):
Yeah, I'm sure you and also finding finding cash and
you and keep you it. Like I went to a
second hand shop and bought a second hand book. It
was a big, pretty big book, and inside it was
a whole pile of I'm not sure where it was, Korean,
Malaysian or whatever. Money.
Speaker 2 (01:55:10):
Wow a book? What was the book?
Speaker 20 (01:55:13):
Oh look, I can't really this because I do deal
with a lot of books from second air shops. So
I went to the bank and changed it and it
was I had chickens and there was enough Korean money.
It looked you know, your thousands and thousand on that
there's enough Korean money to buy me a bag of
chicken feed.
Speaker 2 (01:55:36):
So what's the moral of that?
Speaker 20 (01:55:39):
Keep buying checking out of books.
Speaker 2 (01:55:42):
But it seemed like a lot more money than they was.
Speaker 4 (01:55:44):
Did it.
Speaker 20 (01:55:45):
I'll look at I mean, you get a thousand bars
and tailighted, it's probably about fifty bucks.
Speaker 17 (01:55:52):
Yeah, okay, yeah, Well that's all I've got to say.
Speaker 20 (01:55:55):
You have a good night.
Speaker 2 (01:55:56):
Thanks John. Nice to hear from you all. Adelle's retired.
She's given up music. Seems surprising, isn't it, and definite
break from music ended her incredible one hundred million dollar
pound Munich residency last weekend. She's gonna take an incredibly
(01:56:17):
long break from music. No surprises there, but there you
have it. That's it for me, people, first night in
my new studio. I shall return tomorrow night. Tim's a
long after me. Enjoy your Wednesday, bindei bluff. I'll catch
you then. Thanks to everyone, see us soon. Good night.
(01:56:41):
If you need to email me, Marcus at newstalksb dot
co dot Indeed, catch you to morrow. People. Enjoy your Wednesday.
Speaker 1 (01:56:49):
For more from Marcus Slash nights. Listen live to News
Talks b from eight pm weekdays, or follow the podcast
on iHeartRadio