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July 2, 2025 • 121 mins

Marcus collects ideas on minor ways to improve sports, inaccurate speedometers, buying clothes online, and making (or buying) the best scones.

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus Lush Nights podcast from News Talks.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
That'd be.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Since we're coming in after the sports show one day,
someone might explain to me why we have crossbars and rugby.
Wouldn't it be better without that? Just the two poles
kick the ball between and I'm thinking about but like
our Ossie rules, you kick it low and hard and
people were trying to fit. You can get high and
people couldn't defend it. Just a thought, what's the point
of the crossbar? None whatsoever? It's not structural, is it?

(00:36):
So have two big poles that would do it every time,
it's not going to ruin the games it without a crossbar?
Often think about that, well, just yeah, because I think
about how can you simple things to improve sports get
rid of the crossbar and rugby that would be the

(00:56):
start for me. That would be about it. Actually I
do that in league as well. Two questions from me
till that's three actually questions. I don'e that question already,
So three questions from me. Reading about Steve Prefontaine, has
it ever been a bit of surname than Prefontaine? He
was the runner of course that died tragically. There was
a movie about him called Prefontaine. I'm reading about that
because it is the Prefontaine Classics soon up there and

(01:21):
or probably Seattle, is it because the key we's going
the Kiwi young guy that went sub four minutes under sixteen,
he's going to try and be the youngest sub four
in the States. He'll be sixteen, but sixteen and not much.
But yeah, the Prefontaine Classics on soon Oregon. So there

(01:42):
we go. Steve Prefontaine, Google hi if you don't know
about him, people love him iconic. Look anyway, that's the
one question. What do we get with the crossbus? But
my two real questions today are as follows. How do
you know your cars doing the speed at speed OC

(02:09):
Because every time I drive into bluff right is one
of those things that tells you how fast you're going.
And if I'm going fifty five, it'll tell me I'm
going fifty And I do get overtaken a lot, and
I wonder if it's because I'm going slower than I
think i'm going. Although I have had speeding tickets, it's

(02:34):
probably a good thing. They would have been worse if
my car didn't do that. But why would it do that?
Why would it go slower than its speedometer? Is it
tire pressure? Is it wind resistance? Can't work it out.
I'm not losing sleep over it. That's question one. That's

(02:56):
a good question. Question two. Now, I've wondered about this
for a while. Often on trade Me in the clothing
section there will be clothing items that say be in WT,

(03:28):
meaning brand new with tags. Does that mean it's stolen?
Because I can't work out how else anyone would have
an item that's brand new with tags that they're trying
to sell. Because if you want to buy a new

(03:51):
pair of pants, you try them on at the shop
and you take them home if they fit, You wouldn't
get them home and then decide leave the tags on
then decide to sell it, would you? So I can't
work out the scenario where anyone would own something and
be selling it brand new with tags on trade me.
Does that mean it's stolen? And if so, is that

(04:14):
a problem buying stuff that's stolen? I don't know. I'm
sure some people are, Oh, that's brand new with tags.
That must be brand new, that must be stolen. That
must be a bargain. So it's a two part question.
That one a bit like the Aarin Patterson jury question.
But the question is does brand new with tags mean
it's stolen? And if so, do you have a problem

(04:35):
buying that? I've got no idea. So there's actually three
questions I said it was two minutes three and all
extremely good questions. The crossbar and rugby, why do we
bother with it in other ways to improve sport? How

(04:58):
do you know your car's loyal to your dometer when
it comes to speed? And on trade me, what is
brand you with tags?

Speaker 4 (05:07):
Bean?

Speaker 3 (05:07):
Does that mean not nod? When when gets stolen? You're
getting a deal a good bargain. Could like to know
how trade me reconcile that, because basically they are becoming
the people that sell stolen goods? Are they not? They're
the questions for you tonight to start the whole ball rolling,

(05:33):
and anyone that actually happened to meet Steve Prefontatum always
up for the discussion. Brand new with tags? Yeah, unless
people are going around buying stuff at sales and then

(05:55):
selling it online for closer to a retail price, that
perhaps is another scenario. Oh well, Marcus, so who'd you
start the show of the new sports rules? New rule
in the English Premier League. If the keeper holds the
ball too long, the opposing team get a penalty kick

(06:18):
a corner kick. Wow, they must be trying to cricken
up the game, because sometimes the goalies hold the ball,
they pretend to roll to someone and then they stop
and they pretend to throw it. Then they don't anyway.
Get in touch one names Marcus, welcome, thirteen past eight.

(06:39):
I'll keep you updated with the news. There will be
no jury. There will be no jury. Verdant on the
mushroom woman today, she might have dodged a bullet this one.
I'd be surprised. I'd be furious if she walks free.
I don't think it'll happen, but I wouldn't be surprised

(07:00):
if it does. The fact that they've deliberated a lot
longer than I thought they would, So get in touch.
Marcus till twelve oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty and
nine text eight fourteen, Good evening, Grant, it's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
Oh Marcus, how are you good?

Speaker 3 (07:22):
Thank you? Grant.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
With the tags on clothes, they're obviously just talking about
the size and price tags and things like that, not
the security tag.

Speaker 3 (07:34):
Oh yes, yes, yes.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
Generally, when you buy clothes, you don't take the tags
ofstull you get them home, because if you decide that
you're not handing percent happy with them, all the size
isn't quite right, it's easier when you take them back.
So but sometimes you might have some hiding in your
drawer that you didn't do that with and then you
decide to sell them on or something because you're not

(07:58):
wearing them. So yeah, so yeah, it's pretty easy to
end that with stuff was still tags on.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
I've never had that. I've never had I've never had
stuff that I've left the tags on.

Speaker 5 (08:08):
Grant Nah.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
Well yeah, but you're more organized than me, probably, Marcus,
so that you know, I'll get some go oh yeah,
that was a bad idea.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
And so you'd buy stuff and just leave it in
the cupboard with the tags on, then sell it later on.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Well yeah you think, oh, I might take that back,
you know, because you don't have to take it back
straight the way.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
But yeah, then you end up okay, So why would
they not Why would they not why would they not
take it back? And why would they sell it on trade? Me?

Speaker 2 (08:35):
Uh, Sometimes I don't know, you know, some of us
don't go to the shop heaps, and you might go
once and then decide, oh, you know, if I go back,
I'll take it back. But you know I'm not talking
about high end stuff. Yeah, but I reckon. That's why
it happens. Quite a bit I've had that has happened

(08:55):
with me anyways.

Speaker 3 (08:56):
Happened happened to others. Great, I appreciate your honesty, you
Boxy Caliber to Marcus, Welcome.

Speaker 4 (09:01):
There you're going.

Speaker 6 (09:02):
I was just wondering and that your question with the spinometer.
Have you got to different systems in your car where
one reads like an I drive system and one you
just spreading off the cars speedometer.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
No, I think it's just a CAS speedometer, Okay.

Speaker 6 (09:18):
Because in my car, I've got like a GPS system
that tells me how fast I'm driving, and then I've
got the speedometer in my car, and they're always about
ten k's difference or five k's difference than what I'm
actually driving. So I was at the sort of same
question as you, where, well, what one's correct here? Am
I driving over the speed limit or am I driving

(09:40):
at the speed limit? Because Google was telling me I'm
driving at ninety five and my speedometer is telling me,
I'm driving at one hundred.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
And they never checked your warrants or anything, are they? They
never recalibrated. That's the thing that weeds me out.

Speaker 6 (09:53):
So I would if I work in it as a profession,
I would trust Google more than I would trust my
speedometer because Google is tracking you down to a cheer point, right.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
Even if it tells me how I'm going on Google Maps,
I take that.

Speaker 6 (10:09):
Yeah, I would.

Speaker 7 (10:10):
I would.

Speaker 6 (10:10):
But you know, the real the real one that's going
to test you with the cop with the radar machine.

Speaker 8 (10:16):
At the end of the day.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
Yeah, although I'm not normally looking at my speed when
he pulls me over, she pulls me over, I think
my car is reading team case faster than it's going.

Speaker 9 (10:26):
Oh that's see.

Speaker 6 (10:27):
The thing is if I go, if I'm going one
hundred and ten and I'm overtaking a car, might myst
speed omitor or say I'm going one hundred and ten,
but Google or say I'm doing a hundred. So I'm like, well,
what am I actually doing here?

Speaker 3 (10:39):
So you know it's so what you're saying, mister it
is that all cars should be doing it off GPS A.

Speaker 6 (10:47):
Well, I think that would be more accurate. Yea GPS
measuring you to ten meter radius as you're going. So
I would trust my eye drive system and my BMW.
Then I would trust the speed honitor in the BMW
if that makes sense.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Well, I don't want to have the reputation of the
guy that's going so on the bluff road holding up
traffic because that people just get anoyed about that. And
I don't know how fast I'm going.

Speaker 6 (11:10):
Yeah, and that's the problem. So you've got two different
technology telling you two different things, and the only real
one that's going to you know, if you had some
radar on you to tell you it would be one
of like, what was that problem that used to be
on TV where they did a lot of tests and
I can't remember the name of it now. No, no, no,

(11:31):
it was Lethbusters them ticking off. Yeah, they would solve
that problem by doing a radar test and thing, yeah that.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
Knowing guy and that that knowing guy in the beret
with the mustache, Yeah, well he was here.

Speaker 10 (11:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
So I just go off, I go off what Google
tells me. And it's a little bit distracting because you've
got to look at your middle screen rather than right
in front of you. But I would trust that if
a cop was going to pull me over, I'd say, well,
I was doing what you know my eye drive said.
So yeah, I understand the problem and it probably affects
a lot of peop people. You've got two different systems

(12:08):
telling you two different business information.

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Nice to talk, Thanks so much, Kellum A twenty one
Roger Marcus.

Speaker 4 (12:13):
Welcome, Oh Marcus today.

Speaker 11 (12:15):
Hey, I'm just reading about improving sport. You mentioned any
ideas where you might have about making changes to improve Yes,
and I've been thinking about the penalty laws in rugby.

Speaker 3 (12:30):
Yes, going back in.

Speaker 11 (12:33):
The day, I can remember when you know, you get
a penalty, the team that was penalized, they would lose
the ball, obviously lose possession, and then the other team
would usually you know, kick for the sidelines. But the
team that lost possession would get the throw in so
they would be able to compete again. But the changes

(12:55):
that have been made essentially a double penalizing the team
because now they not only lose the possession, but they
also the other team get the possession, you know, inside
the twenty five and it's I'm talking about ways of
being able to manage the rolling mall which is becoming

(13:15):
a real offensive weapon. And I reckon that any team
that should, you know, take a penalty and kick inside
the twenty five, they shouldn't get the position back the
defensive teams to get the possession back.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
You think, as it is now, that's now too much
of a penalty. It's too much of an advantage for
that team.

Speaker 11 (13:36):
Absolutely, it's you know how many games you have seen
these rolling malls are basically the offensive weapon of choice.
So and you know these random penalties that come up
from you know, the refs, and these international games with
you know, in overtime and next thing you know, you know,
you're lost by a point because of the rolling mall.

Speaker 12 (13:54):
Try.

Speaker 11 (13:54):
So I reckon it's you should actually give the defensive
team an opportunity. They should get the throw in if
it goes out inside the twenty five, the twenty two, right,
and that way you're sort of evening and up and giving,
giving and bringing balance back. Because the way it is
at the moment, it is really a double penalty. It's

(14:16):
a double penalty.

Speaker 3 (14:18):
I don't necessarily disagree. Roger, A good point, Thank you,
Andrew Marcus welcome.

Speaker 12 (14:23):
Oh you know, I guess just on the you know
tags on clothes thing. Oh yeah, I mean I must
have like dozens of suits with tags on them, and
they're still like, no, some of them probably like fifteen
years old. And one of the problems is that you

(14:48):
lose the receipt and it's just like oh god, you know,
try and take it back, and then you just chuck
it in the wardrobe and you just leave the tag
on it. You might want to give it. I've given
some away to you know, what do you and all
that sort of stuff, and and and it's just like

(15:08):
it looks good when you give it away because it's
got a tag. It's got your brand new tag on it,
you know.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
So why do you buy suits and not wear them?

Speaker 12 (15:19):
Well, because I had an addiction with buying suits, Okay,
I was working in banking at the time.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
You know a lot of people, because I would have
thought if you brought your clothes, part of the addiction
would be the excitement of then wearing it.

Speaker 12 (15:40):
Oh yeah, I just honestly, man, it's just the whole
circle of the environment that you're working in. And you know,
you you know, people identify you with a Georgia Amani
suit or a yeah, Ralph Lauran or whatever it is.
You know, it's just sort of like, I'm not in

(16:01):
that environment anymore.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
I'm please, I'm pleased, Andrew.

Speaker 12 (16:07):
But the Liftovers are all tags. And then even recently,
I brought myself a new motorbike and and it's not
a motorbike that I want to ride anymore. I look
at it. It's got zero miles on the clock, and
I'm selling it, you know with the receipts.

Speaker 3 (16:30):
Wow, could you take it back?

Speaker 13 (16:34):
No?

Speaker 12 (16:34):
I mean they're going to like sharp me if I
sent it back to them. So I'm going to put
it on trade me.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
Good on you. Thank you, Andrew, being ats Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 7 (16:45):
Hey vocus yea, the last call had just struck a
nerve with the reefs and the shoulder on shoulder contact
the chiefs and crusaders game.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
Yes, but.

Speaker 7 (17:02):
Listen you you were talking about the speed them for
and you remember back in the day, Marcus, you would
come from that generation where if it was a handy,
you do one hundred and twenty, if it was fifty,
you do sixty. You know, and these I've found that

(17:23):
by a found out from a few sources. One was
a police officer and one was a mechanic and the
and they I said that your cars calibrated for five
kilometers under what the actual speed of it is or
what you're actually doing.

Speaker 3 (17:41):
Yeah, which is a nonsense, don't it because you think
it should be the acurate as it is. This is it?

Speaker 14 (17:48):
You know.

Speaker 7 (17:48):
I got done one time doing Yeah I was doing
it was a fifty and a forty past the school.
But yeah, I wasn't actually up to fifty, so I
don't know what's happening there. And yeah, mane it's yeah,
it's okay.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
So you were forty, you were forty five.

Speaker 7 (18:10):
I was, well according to me, I was doing fifty
on my on my well, no, I was just I
would have been forty eight according to my car, but
yeah I was. I was over the speed limit. I
got done go through a school zone. So yeah, it's

(18:31):
I wouldn't try any more these days, you know, like
it's just the police. There's more police on the road now,
there's more police presence, you know, and and it's yeah.

Speaker 3 (18:44):
An we'll leave it then, thank you don't have there
have more police on the road. Down we're down on
police anyway, good on you get in touch. I like
how I was stopped saying trade being saying trade me.
That's good brand new with tags. What's that about? Makes
no sense to me? I forgot about the texts um

(19:13):
to improve rugby, they could give each play of their
own ball to stop them fighting over the only bull
on the field. Oh yes, goodness. Speed amitter issue was
revealed years ago, with the likes of manufacturers not wanting
to be sued by road users used. I don't know
that's true, Marcus. The reason your car is speed I
wasn't reading truth is probably because it's now got different
sized ties from those which it was manufactured. The speed

(19:36):
I was actually connect to the gearbox. If you've got
taller tires, increased dam and it would likely correct the discrepancy.
So if your tires were bigger, that would say you're
going slower right, not faster. I'm sure there's an app
for it. My name is Marcus. Welcome eight hundred and

(20:00):
eighty ten eighty and nine to nine to the texts.

Speaker 15 (20:03):
You want to be part of the show, and a
heads up if you're planning a euro summer. Paris has
banned smoking in outdoor areas like parks, beaches and sport venues,
and you could be hit with a ninety euro fine
for lighting up. I thought that's a bit harsh in
France because twenty three percent of French people still smoke
every day. That's sixteen point four million of them and

(20:24):
the third most smoky country in the whole of Europe.
Who's above that Bulgaria and Turkey Apparently.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
I think you can still vape.

Speaker 15 (20:33):
You probably can, but yeah, ninety euro tough. This is
at the beach, No, yeah, it says parks beaches, Yeah,
parks beaches, sports venues, so yeah, I don't know about
the old outdoor bar. You still get the gour wars
out and he would they go?

Speaker 3 (20:49):
Boy tell you what, I wouldn't turn out a gala
if I was offered one tremendous cigarette.

Speaker 15 (20:53):
Absolutely one of the best. Yeah, very strong, but with
the old value.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
You watch one of those French movies, well I forget
what they're called, those ones who watched in the eighties,
or watch smoking those you know what it's like. Exactly brilliant.
Thanks Tony twenty nine away from nine oh eight hundred
and eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two to
text welcome head at midnight. Yeah goodness, don't even start.
But jeepers, creepers. I'd someone offer me a box of

(21:19):
clove cigarettes, which my partner politely declined, but jeep as creepers.
I wasn't there.

Speaker 16 (21:26):
I said, you should have got them flipp what I've
loved to have smoked those. Oh and they popped too,
as the Ah, jeepers. A clove cigarette h one of
the very great. Sometimes I'll walk down the street and
there was someone smoking one. I stopped a guy the
other day and I say, is they had a clothes cigarette?

(21:47):
But I think we had a language language barrier.

Speaker 3 (21:49):
Didn't go down well the whole conversation, but I wish
I could have actually reversed. The conversation wasn't good at all.
Ah ha Gosh Tata bed twenty eight to nine. My
name is Marcus. Welcome, the topics are still live. Marcus.
A lot of the eye with tags on her online
who got it slightly wrong size? And when they turned up,

(22:09):
we're not quite what they thought they were buying. Oh,
don ling stuff?

Speaker 8 (22:14):
Is it?

Speaker 3 (22:16):
I know someone who regular travels over since will work
while she's away. She shops for designer brand outlet shops
for end of season stuff that's coming just coming out
in New Zealand, or she buys designer collaboration garments from
the likes of Zara that never get really tear, sells
them on trade and it's a good side hustle anyway, Marcus,
and enjoy your show. All speed dominant under red by

(22:39):
default GPS's are came to your travel between hills and mountains.
GPS has to have a straight line of sight to
your vehicle ec on the flat road. Though sheers Steve
regards Steve. My partner goes to close shops, buys new wheeze,
but leaves the tags on as she'll try them on
again when she gets home to make sure she is

(22:59):
happy with the purchase, and if not, they are sold
or given away, sometimes to the kids or friends. Marcus
of the man's If the mushroom made has found this
in the murder, she should be found guilty of man's slaughter.
Man's laughter. Well, there's no other way she killed them.

(23:21):
Could be a gift while the tags are still on, Marcus.
The crossbar needs to be twice as high as it
currently is, making it more difficult for kids to kicks
to be successful and discouraging time wasting long range attempts,
but no one's really explain why people have the clothes

(23:43):
with the tags on. These people are buying a lot
of clothes. Marcus bort Rugby juicy online and clearance sale.
No raturns, it was rubbish sold BNWT on train me
to recover costs. Some will be a five finger discount.
There we go, Marcus. Sometimes are my clothes I never

(24:04):
end up wearing. I usually give them to family or friends.
Too lazy to try and sell online. But perhaps someone's
just selling whatever it is. However, it makes me suspicious
when I see something that's brand new with tags. I'd
always ask to see the receipts. I don't want to
get charged with receiving stolen goods. Cheers Gilly. I don't
think you can get charged with receiving stolen goods on
trade me, can you. I hope my sport idea is

(24:28):
for Rugby, get rid of the crossbar. It's not gonna
make the best. It doesn't add anything. It must be
a hassle to put up. And I don't think it's structural,
is it. Maddie Marcus welcome.

Speaker 17 (24:44):
Oh hello, Hi, Maddie, Hey home Marcus d okay, I
was just fooling because I think they should take away halftime,
you know.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
Oh yeah, because.

Speaker 17 (24:59):
Because it just gives the team, you know, the first half,
they see how you play it, discuss the teams. They're extra,
You're fifteen minutes to beat the other team. It's the
take away halftime. They just have to go almost the
game plan and trust trust, trust the plan to work.

Speaker 3 (25:16):
Okay, good on you, thank you. I think probably, I
think they. I think the thing about halftime, it's getting
longer and long because they're craming the heads into it.
Someone will know Summer story. It seemed to me that
rugby and rugby league halftimes used to be five minutes.
Now it seems like they're twenty minutes. Listen to Justin Marshall.
Then you got to see eds and a comeback for highlights,

(25:37):
and the say come back for a wrap up. Then
they come back the wrap up. Then there's more ads
in the game itself. I would kind to agree with you, Mary,
I want much much quicker. Oh wait, one hundred and
eighty today in nineteen ninety the text if you got
to come through? So what's interesting ian watching and listening now?
I've been reading about Kai about Kyle Sanderland's right, Who's

(26:03):
the Australian broadcaster and he broadcasts in Sydney and they've
syndicated to Melbourne but it hasn't gone well and they're
losing market share. They get paid a fortune forty million
dollars or something. But anyway, so what happens on his
show is that he was broadcasting yesterday talking about the

(26:24):
Mushroom Woman, and their producer has a dump button, and
the producer dumped what he said, right, And when you

(26:48):
dump something right, when the producer dumped something, recorded voice says,
this means someone who's said something inappropriate and is currently
getting in trouble. The broadcast will return in seconds. So
I can't work out why they just wouldn't go from
delay to life. I can't work out why it does that. Anyway,
stormed off, not coming back all week. I say, good honor.
I'd be furious if someone dumped what I was saying

(27:11):
when broadcasters know the boundaries and know when they're pushing
the boundaries. Anyway, I thought that was very interesting. But yes,
because on this show I have a dump button and
Dan can dump things too if I've missed something. But yeah,
you wouldn't have a third person that's dumping things you're
saying and censoring your program. Yeah, I m'd be furious.

(27:34):
He said, you know what, I'm going home. But then
he realized he broadcasts from homes. He said, sorry, I'm
already home. But anyway, I thought that was quite good.
So yeah, anyway, that's a bit of a radio inside
a story for you. He's clearly stressed about the whole
Melbourne thing not paying off. But yeah, they have someone
else to dump them. Why would you agree to that

(27:58):
in your contract? There'd be a question for you, Kyle Marcus.
My wife has inherited several clothing items with tags from
her uncle's life, one hundreds of dollars, some of them
never worn. She was a regular clear out its madness, Marcus.
If you want to make rugby better, just revert to
back to how it was played in nineteen ninety five
nineteen ninety six, when professional rugby start to keep rocking

(28:20):
in the game, get rid of the tamode, all the technology,
and just let the referees make a decision on the ground.
Leave the replay for replays, but no mushroom verdict. Tonight,
I've been checking the phone all day thinking it must
be there should be an app that you can actually,
someone should invent an app that you can get the

(28:41):
mushroom verdict when it happens. I'm sure there's news alerts,
but it's not the same. But yes, no verdict and
the verdicts only happened during the Melbourne court hours between
ten thirty and six thirty I think, which is between
twelve between ten thirty and four thirty, which is twelve
thirty and six thirty New Zealand time. Hopefully it's before

(29:05):
the weekend anyway. Anyways, anyways, anyways, now if you're are
the copper on the railway, we haven't answered that yet.
For tonight, there was a question from me and how
do you know how fast your car's going? What's the
app you download? People? I'll be into that. I'll be

(29:26):
well into that. Get in touch Marcus till midnight.

Speaker 18 (29:29):
Ah.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
These are all good topics. Keep it going. Some of
the other stuff I can tell you about for tonight, woo,
it's world UFO day. Every single person with a cell
phone with a camera and it's still no good shots.
What's that about? They're gone quiet this day. Amelia Earhart
disappeared over the Central Pacific Ocean nineteen thirty seven. Yep,

(30:00):
the tennis is on from ten pm tonight. It's still
the minor league.

Speaker 8 (30:06):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
By the way, the Ikea store is opening in Auckland
around Christmas. Gosh, that will make the Karmageddon around the
opening of the Manawa second factory outlet shop. That will
seem like a Christmas picnic compared to when Ikea opens.
That is going to be fantastic. It's all around or

(30:29):
it's all around Sylvia Park. So yeah, brilliant, extraordary number
of people are going to work there sometime late December,
maybe Christmas, maybe not Christmas. At when that's opening. Oh,

(30:53):
there be special people directing traffic for that something. Auckland
will cope anyway. I forget how many staff they're looking for.
It was a lot. But if you're not in Auckland,
you will be able to shop online. So that's exciting.
It'll be good for the couriers. Give them a break

(31:15):
from their little Tamu parcels. They'll be delivering kind of
flat pack furniture ha ha, Hitdle twelve minameers, Marcus walking
the Line, Marcus, all the fifteen rugby players plus those
on the bench should be able to come and go
from the field of play at the coach's discretion. Football

(31:37):
will be more watchable if they use a rugby ball.
Noel Edmonds always has the chance the luxury of going
back to England. As problems he will be solved crime
a flooded river, Marcus and rugby. If you score if
by a driving mall, you must kick the conversion from

(31:57):
either the far touch line or the halfway line. People
hate the rolling mall. It's a lazy try. The rolling all,
isn't it. I don't mind it, but sort of the
commentators to get a bit excited, don't they rolling all?

(32:21):
Did you did? I read today that we haven't beaten
the French since twenty eighteen. I couldn't believe that. I
thought jeep as creepers. They're good, eh, I can't believe
that was true. I mean to fact check. It might

(32:51):
be right, though, I'll fact check that now on Wikipedia.
It didn't seem to be right to me. Twenty twenty four,
thirty twenty nine loss by one chee. It's right we've

(33:11):
only played them three times twenty twenty four, twenty twenty
three and twenty three one The last time we beat
them was at Forsyth Bar in twenty eighteen. Gosh, I
wish they'd send a better team, and apparently they're Their
local season is like twice as long as Super Rugby,
so yeah, and they make money with that competition over there. Anyway,

(33:33):
Marcus for rugby, bring back rucking. You can take down
the rolling mall anyway you want. Marcus, sirah here from
christ Church are high tomorrow it's going to be six
so cold powerbill is high. Well, people are staying in bed,
aren't they. I saw pensioners staying in bed. They can't
afford the power for goodness sake, something's gone wrong with
this country. Marcus. Is just called GPS speederwapp. I use

(33:57):
it for checking speed after charging wheel sides. Most cars
are five to seven k's slow. Yeah, miners, GPS speeder wapp.
I got right there down on my wrist, Mark, Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 8 (34:16):
You know mar guess look, I was interested to hear
you mention Steve Prefonte earlier and preus fantastic, and I
think that was part. I think that was part of
the mystique. So when I was a little kid, I
mean very little kid, it was five when he died. So,

(34:39):
but my dad was a runner. He ran at Menuua
Athletic with the John Walker and all these guys in
the early seventies when I was a small child. He
was part of that group, that sort of cadre of
men and women that were trying to be athletes. And

(35:01):
so I knew the name. I'd heard about the name,
and I knew there was admiration around the And then
I saw the seventy two Olympic five thousand meter final
where he's so inexperienced in many respects against one more
season competitors in terms of match racing in Europe, and

(35:22):
he puts on a performance that is pretty remarkable. Really,
he doesn't win fades, but it's such it's full of
such guts. It just really is. And it's the circumstances
around his passing have obviously been I did a bit

(35:43):
of research for Arona when I heard you talk earlier,
I thought, well, I'll wiki his name, and up came
about his death a couple of archived articles, and one
of them from the La Times back in nineteen eighty five,
and it's ten years after, and it takes into account
there's claims about his passing and about the investigation and

(36:07):
things that went on, but putting that to one side
and looking at the athlete himself, it was an interesting
character like this Beers in terms of after the event,
not in relation when he passed it. There was the

(36:28):
controversy around his buddy alcohol, but he was a guy
of his time, young fella, didn't like authority, was very
down on the n C Double A and their amateur rules,
so well ahead of his time in terms of recognition
of an athlete's worse and the fact that the Prefontaine

(36:48):
Classic still exists is estimating to the fact that of
an athlete's worth and their name. The association with Bouerman
and Oregon that turned into Nikes is remarkable.

Speaker 3 (37:03):
And is the movie is a movie? Any good?

Speaker 5 (37:06):
Mark?

Speaker 8 (37:08):
Well, there's a couple of movies, so it wasn't there.

Speaker 19 (37:10):
Ye.

Speaker 4 (37:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (37:12):
There's the Billy Kudrup playing him, which is augmented with
the seventy two Olympic footage. Really quite well, really quite well,
apart from Billy doesn't look in any way tiet in
any portion of the film, and when he's running a
five thousand meter rais And then there's the second one
with Jared Letto that Tom Cruise produced, and I wondered

(37:34):
this when I was watching it. Tom Cruise is famed
for his running You've been running for years in his movies.
Was he looking for another runner? Because I looked at
Jared Leto and I thought, was he this is a
screen test for Leto to be an action hero in
some ways? But it was that long than even at
that time. But no, a fascinating character, an.

Speaker 3 (37:57):
American lore of the north.

Speaker 8 (38:02):
West.

Speaker 20 (38:03):
What was the.

Speaker 3 (38:05):
One movie was on? Without Limits? Was the other movie?

Speaker 19 (38:07):
Was it?

Speaker 8 (38:09):
I think they both called that?

Speaker 19 (38:11):
Well, one was called.

Speaker 3 (38:12):
One, one was called called All that were they both
called Prefontaine?

Speaker 8 (38:17):
Well without Limits is the thing that comes up on
the on the on the YouTube, Yeah, okay, without Limits Prefontaine.
And then there's another one that's I can't remember the
So that's the Donald Sutherland fronted one.

Speaker 3 (38:31):
And let's just remind people how he was twenty four
when he died, which for a middle distance rutter is
incredibly young to die, because I mean they're just starting
out at that age.

Speaker 8 (38:38):
Aren't they? Look how long genre walk around?

Speaker 3 (38:42):
Exactly?

Speaker 8 (38:42):
The thing is he was going to run into quacks
and he was going to run into Rod Digson at
seventy six. He was going to run into Verin again
in seventy six.

Speaker 3 (38:51):
He was going to run last Day ver Last. Vern
won one the five thousand, correct, Vern did the double double.

Speaker 8 (38:58):
Give me give me sixty one five and ten both
both events.

Speaker 3 (39:02):
Did your dad go on? Did your dad do it?
Very good?

Speaker 8 (39:06):
Dad graduated to a distance running, and he suffered from
since they had had a singing that sort of couldn't
how do I put it? He didn't know that he
wasn't well, okay, and he ran and ran and ran
and ran and ran beautifully. He broke three hours for

(39:27):
the American beautifully in an amazing event where he broke three.

Speaker 3 (39:32):
So yeah, oh it's a good time. And what acually
break three in the thirties.

Speaker 8 (39:37):
Yeah, I think he was, go, you'll kick me off.
I don't mean that's right. I think it's eighty one,
so I think he's thirty three. It was in Hamilton,
he did it, and he did. Look he come into
part stadium and the four hundred meter finish too, fifty

(39:59):
nine thirty eight?

Speaker 3 (40:01):
Prettyant? You were there for? Were you there for?

Speaker 21 (40:04):
It?

Speaker 8 (40:06):
Ran the last one hundred with them.

Speaker 3 (40:10):
That's a nice story. That's it. And I presume the
way you're the way you're saying that he's no longer around?
Is that right?

Speaker 9 (40:17):
Oh no, no he's here.

Speaker 3 (40:19):
I thought you got tear up and he's here.

Speaker 8 (40:23):
Look, no, no you cannot you know, Look there'll be
Tim and Keith richards Man.

Speaker 3 (40:30):
How old were you when you did the final left
with him?

Speaker 19 (40:34):
Ah?

Speaker 8 (40:35):
So I would have been eleven. And when I say that,
keep up, I run along. I ran alongside the edge
of the track. I wasn't on the track.

Speaker 3 (40:45):
That's quite moving. Did he know? Did he know how
close he do you know how close he was to
cracking three? He would have been year?

Speaker 20 (40:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (40:54):
Sorry, yeah, yeah he knew he dug it in because
it was he it was. It was an awesome time.
We used to go away to We went to the
road or a marathon a couple of times from we
lived in Pepperca and Auckland and we went camp down
there and he ran that. It was awesome because you know, right,

(41:15):
rule was pretty speish as a little kid back then.
Nineteen eighty yep, maybe seventy nine, eighty eighty one round
good stories.

Speaker 3 (41:25):
I've got to move on, Mark with Thanks. I love that,
love that a lot. Edit's Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 10 (41:30):
I make I said tonight it thanks, I.

Speaker 3 (41:34):
Think, thanks for asking. Do you know how I'm doing?

Speaker 10 (41:39):
Yeah, doing really well.

Speaker 3 (41:41):
Thank you for asking.

Speaker 10 (41:43):
Hey, listen, I'd like to Canter Brig play here in
a rolling role, but the best in the country role
in rust and mother Champions, I mean one four twelve.
But when it isn't easy, but they they just they're
just too good. You know, they've been trained over rolling.

Speaker 3 (42:03):
You know what married boys, you know what married Deka said.
Day what if you win, say little, if you lose,
say less. You don't gloat. It doesn't go down well,
it doesn't go No. One likes the cantabri and the gloats.

Speaker 10 (42:17):
Don't say we have a best mate, we have a
best the best of the best of Cabary.

Speaker 3 (42:25):
But you're not. But the way you go on about
it makes you feel like you're actually unbelievably insecure with
your place in the world.

Speaker 10 (42:34):
I don't think.

Speaker 3 (42:36):
It's textbook insecurity is over celebrating your successes.

Speaker 10 (42:41):
No, look, you can't take anything of January of a
great team. They've been trained, all the best and it's
all I tell the rest of the country and go Canary.

Speaker 3 (42:55):
You need counseling, Why now you do? They're still there,
d You're gone. It's gone a counseling anyway, Marcus, How

(43:17):
many Superman movies do we need? Exactly? Although I do
remember going to the original Superman movie, well, not the original,
the original for my generation when it was Marlon Branda
was Superman's father. He land in the desert. It was
quite good. He did feel that you'd sort of watched
the birth of the remake of comic books. But I
don't see the other stuff that. I'm not into any
of it, but I might go see this new one anyway,

(43:41):
get in touch. We are talking about how would you
improve a sport? And we didn't even have anything to say.
Did he to think we were a had Mark so
beautifully took like a movie to a home, running that
final lap and almost tearing up with his dad, I
mean everything. They're running with John Walker and moder Dawa,
living in Papakuda, going to the marathon. I note that
they were doing the Hamilton. It's all great stuff, cracking

(44:06):
three hours hours. I love it all, and in here
it's just old Gary glow cheepers. Yeah, I've started muttering
pull the levels down myself. I stortn't know how Kyle
Sandlin gets dumped by his producer, who'd agree to that.

(44:30):
It'd be the it'd be the the board and say, hey,
we we're going to have him and we're going to
have do a safety valve in case we get sued.
I couldn't believe it anyway. I think Australian radio is
slightly different. Nine twenty one. Susette, it's Marcus.

Speaker 8 (44:48):
Welcome, Hi be Marcus.

Speaker 22 (44:50):
How are you going?

Speaker 3 (44:51):
Yeah, good, Suzette, real good.

Speaker 14 (44:54):
Good.

Speaker 22 (44:55):
Are you cold?

Speaker 3 (44:56):
Nope?

Speaker 22 (44:57):
Oh that's good. Do you have to go out in
the freezing cold and drive home?

Speaker 9 (45:03):
No?

Speaker 22 (45:05):
Oh that's all right then?

Speaker 8 (45:07):
Yes?

Speaker 12 (45:08):
Good.

Speaker 22 (45:09):
You were talking about John Walker. He used to flat
with Bruce Batten. Do you ever remember Bruce Batten?

Speaker 3 (45:19):
No? But was he a runner too?

Speaker 20 (45:21):
Yeah?

Speaker 22 (45:22):
And Dick Quax. It was a whole flat of them.

Speaker 3 (45:26):
Were you involved in them? Were you involved in middle
distance running?

Speaker 22 (45:30):
No? But I used to go down to the place
where they all ran. I was going out with Bruce Batten.

Speaker 23 (45:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 22 (45:40):
So I used to go down to the track with
all of them early in the morning and they got
me to be the ice pack girl. If they started
getting cramp or something and their legs you'd have to
pack them up with the icebags. Didn't give them a
good rubdown, which was quite interesting. Yeah, Bruce Batton went

(46:08):
over to Belfast and Ireland and I think he's still
He might have retired now, but he used to be
a j P. No, what do you call it?

Speaker 19 (46:21):
Radio?

Speaker 8 (46:23):
D J d J?

Speaker 3 (46:25):
How do you how do you spell Betton.

Speaker 24 (46:29):
B A T O?

Speaker 3 (46:30):
Nah?

Speaker 22 (46:33):
Very handsome young man. Anyway, it turned out he was gay,
so goodness that didn't go anywhere.

Speaker 3 (46:41):
No, well, what the have you? Have you connected with
him on Facebook or anything after all these years?

Speaker 22 (46:52):
No, they wouldn't even remember me, wouldn't. No, probably not.
It wasn't busy flat?

Speaker 3 (47:00):
Where was the flat? Where was the flat? Suit? Which city?

Speaker 22 (47:04):
Wellington?

Speaker 8 (47:05):
Brilliant?

Speaker 3 (47:06):
Good? Sorry, thank you, Susan Gee. Not to unpick from
that little sports? How to improve them? Maybe improve sport
by nestly going to feeling towards the referee. It seems
to be the talking point of every game. I'll tell
you what, Enorel have gotten much better at not begging
the referee. It's quite tiresome to listen to commentary. I

(47:28):
know that Justin Marshall does it a lot. You don't
turn in to hear commentators go on about the referees
and about the rules. It's boring to listen to because
I think normally the referees are more o fae with
the news the next players with head knocks. I'm not
saying Justin Marshall's head head knocks, but I'm saying that generally.

(47:54):
So yeah, but I think the Naral have actually realized that.

Speaker 8 (47:57):
Well.

Speaker 3 (47:57):
They seem to be a cozier club there. They don't
want to bite the hand that feeds it. But you
don't hear them going on and on about the referee
so much. They sometimes relapse, but it's not exhausting like
it is in rugby. Oh now no, that was fair?
Now do that was fair enough?

Speaker 12 (48:12):
All day long?

Speaker 3 (48:13):
Do you get away with that? You always going on
our day? Jeep a screamers now day? Carry on anyway, Dan,
it's Marcus.

Speaker 25 (48:23):
Good evening, Good evening, How are you, Marcus?

Speaker 21 (48:26):
Good?

Speaker 3 (48:26):
Thank you?

Speaker 9 (48:26):
Dan?

Speaker 25 (48:28):
Love the topic about sports? What could we do differently?
My two cents worth and I'm sure I'll probably rile
a few people up. But as a dad of young kids,
the sports membership phase and the costs. I mean everyone
talks about costs of living, food and all those sorts
of things, but actually a membership for sports events, the
term you know, we're talking anywhere between six seven hundred
dollars a term for two sports for two kids starts

(48:52):
becoming really unaffordable.

Speaker 3 (48:53):
What sports are those?

Speaker 25 (48:57):
Well, anything from And I know this sounds terrible, but
a Christian gmnastics, soccer, I don't think.

Speaker 3 (49:04):
I don't think. I don't think our kids would pay.
I mean we need that for the sports that we play.

Speaker 25 (49:09):
But we pay three Yeah, we pay three hundred of
term for one child in gymnastics alone.

Speaker 3 (49:17):
Have they got like Russian coaches?

Speaker 25 (49:20):
I wish No, Probably gymnastic kids from the classes engraved
from years above them. But yeah, I've just watched over
the years just the cost per term of some of
the sports increased. So I think things are becoming a
lot more cost prohibitors in that sense. The other idea
I have, and I know that in some parts of
New Zealand there's some amazing sports ambassadors from the different sports.

(49:45):
I recently came across the group called the Sports Epic
Sports Project in Canterbury led by a former white firm
from cricket and supported by a colleague that come from
South African cricket, and they are bringing sports on so
many different levels to youth across schools and different things.

(50:08):
But they're also taking it back into the prison and
they're trying to connect with the youth side in prison
to connect them with sports as part of how do
you reconnect and get pro social choices going forward with
New Zealand and the unlimited market of the different sports personalities,
you know, just saying how do they get coordinated to

(50:28):
share their experiences and really support communities do something different? So,
you know, how do we make it different? How do
we make it more attractive, more accessible, access to some
of our elite sports people and trying to reduce the
cost of running these things and or understanding why it
costs so much to have your kids involved in things.

Speaker 3 (50:51):
Do your kids do a questrian.

Speaker 25 (50:55):
Used to but the cost has just come too much.

Speaker 13 (50:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (50:57):
Well actually, I mean you can tell from mile away
that sport looks pricey.

Speaker 25 (51:03):
Well not as prices what probably people think. It does
have a price if you own the horse, but you
can lease them for a lot, lease but yeah, it's
the time commitment. You've really got to commit to it.
But gymnastics, you know that's three hundred backs to ten
four teams in the year. There's twelve hundred bucks before
you buy outfits competition phase.

Speaker 3 (51:25):
Nice to talk and thanks so much. Twenty five a
way from ten oh. By the way, it's bad rain coming,
heavy rain and strong winds for central northern New Zealand
and heavy snow for parts of the south. A large
lower of the Tasman Sea as associated Front brings heavy,
strong winds to central northern parts of the country from

(51:48):
Thursday onwards. Heavy snow as possible for higher ovations of
Otago and South Canterbury. Warnings and watches are enforced for
heavy rain, heavy snow, snow and strong winds. That's happening,
so get in touch. Also, by the way, it's Territory

(52:11):
Day in the northern territories. It's not really a hole
that I know about, actually, but people travel from all
over Australia to take part in the celebration forty seventh
anniversary of self government and to revel in their rights
to legally buy and set off fireworks. So while the

(52:34):
rest of Australia banned personal fireworks decades ago. The territory
has tightly held onto the controversial tradition. So July one,
that was yesterday the only day time Australians can legally
buy and whose five out a permit, so anyone over
eighteen can buy them Krack a night brilliant. You get

(52:58):
five hours to set them off. Of course you want
to set them off, for it'll be tender dry. There
they are at Mindle Beach six to eleven pm. No
one got injured, well done, No thirty injured, down from
forty one last year. It's not bad, Marcus. Archias staff
get to buy retail price less years. T Oh, that's

(53:21):
not that much, is it, Marcus? Just a question for
the wise one. Do you consider darts as sport? Yes?

Speaker 15 (53:27):
I do.

Speaker 3 (53:29):
Although they don't look like athletes, feels like a low
center of gravity helps them be. In fact, some of
those players have lost a lot of weight and they
say it takes a long time to recalibrate. Marcus reduced
in game kicking and rugby, get rid of the box kick.
How would you do that? Although Super Rugby Super Finn

(53:54):
was exciting by closest of school game itself was average
only three points and second half defense now too good
to bring fatigue back into game, reduced replacements. Love the show, cheers.
John has just been to a civil defense meeting here
in Wakefield along with the Tasman Council. We have been
told to self evacuate but no centers here. Told to

(54:16):
go to Motuwaca. That's a forty minute drive away on
a good day. Idiots at till I can say you say,
have had a bit of discussion about that. People aren't
happy people to take food to people in tupple winter,
people complaining about no It seems like, by the way,
who's your mayor in Wakefield? Are you part of Nick

(54:39):
Smith's crowd? Have you got your own leader? It seems
to be poorly handled because still a state of emergency,
but yeah, are you how BIG's the Nelson area or
are you your own mayoralty there? Mark is surprised and
shocked to travel to walk over the weekend and find
South Thornton had many trail riders doing wheelies and no

(55:02):
helmets or registration bikes in Otata. How would you know
if they weren't registered? Also still police just watching bikers
get away with it. Thank you, Berry. I haven't seen
that myself, but certainly certainly darts as a sport. But

(55:23):
how would you improve darts? I think it's pretty good
as it is. It improve darts by giving them better
walk on songs. Some of them are terrible. That's just
miny way to improved arts. Oh, here we go. Marcus

(55:45):
Batman is a superhero according to Mariam Webster, but not
according to difference of dictionary dot com. Yes, I don't
think your superhero if it's advanced technology. That's my take.
So you might want to get on that debate. But Superman,
I don't know how many movies have done with Superman.

(56:07):
But it's coming back. This is the origin story when
he arrives from Crypton Planet Crypton? Is that right? Is
a planet going to end? Is that when they send
them away? It's adopted Midwest America. I don't know if
it's going to be different that. I don't know how
much it can change the original story. Actually, home, May,

(56:28):
it's Marcus welcome. Thanks for calling. May It's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 23 (56:35):
Yeah, Hi, Hi, I'm Marcus Now Tim King. He was
on TV tonight Tasman District Council.

Speaker 3 (56:45):
So it's Tedmand right down from Collingwood, Right down.

Speaker 13 (56:49):
Is it?

Speaker 23 (56:49):
It goes right down to Murchison from.

Speaker 3 (56:51):
From Collingwood and then how far east like across to he.

Speaker 23 (56:55):
Goes down the coast. Takkay and Nelson have always wanted
to amalgamate. Would would be a smaller fish.

Speaker 11 (57:06):
And our little apol Are you.

Speaker 3 (57:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 23 (57:10):
Are you affiing Richmond? Yes, not Chuaka and all the
other areas that have been affected with the flood flooding Tapewerry,
Are you affected yourself?

Speaker 14 (57:28):
Ah?

Speaker 23 (57:29):
Yeah, I'm up Mostrache Valley clovered.

Speaker 3 (57:31):
Okay, so the ground is saturated, so the rain tomorrow
is going to cause flooding quite quickly, is that right?
Say again the rain tomorrow, the ground will be quite saturated,
so it will be a real worry tomorrow.

Speaker 23 (57:47):
Yeah, it's just it's just really receded now and it'll
it's a bit of a worry actually because this has happened.
This happened in twenty twenty one and the same thing.

Speaker 19 (57:58):
To one up the other.

Speaker 3 (58:00):
Yeah, okay, okay, I appreciate you coming through. May thank
you for that. We just hand towards the news people
here till midnight. If you want to come through. How
are you welcome? I hope you're all warm. Get in touch.
I did hear some discussion today about people staying in
bed to save the power bill. I haven't really got

(58:20):
any solutions for that. I don't like those discussion about
how people should keep their cold houses warm, like putting
bubble rap on windows. It all sounds too mean spirited,
but I guess that's the world we live in these days.
But anyway, I think the great discussion on this show
we discussed those hot water bottles that we've read good

(58:43):
those German ones, remember those. It was a good discussion.
They seem to be good value. My ones work quite well.
They seem to I don't don't they recommend it, but
they seem to take hot of water better and don't burst.
I remember the name about them soon, but I have
had hot water bottles burst. It's not a pleasant feeling,

(59:05):
and once one go, you never have the same confidence.
Marcus Wind is starting to belt through now in Auckland
City Chairs. Petty Marcus sports tweak in the same way
cricket bales light up. When I'd like to see rugby
league goal post light up of the ballers on target
depending on camera angle, it's hard to determine. Sometimes, probably

(59:31):
use AA like the tennis does now, Glenn, Yeah, I
wouldn't mind a bit more rasmetas, a bit more technical
stuff and rugby. Maybe the sideline good light up when
you put your foot on it. Anyway, welcome to it, Marcus,

(59:59):
Darren Prentiss. Here, I've got two topics worth asking. Is
the run at the top over the warriors with Barnet
metcalf and chairs and down and out? Who's happy with
Winston's raw only having his inner flag on the government building?
Marcus and Wakefield, we still don't know where the evacuation
center is. Can you please help?

Speaker 5 (01:00:19):
That's crazy?

Speaker 3 (01:00:32):
Cure Marcus and Todaro Maori. We have a proverb car
or takumra accorded or more torna aquireka beautifully captures the
essence of humility interio. This means that kumra does not
boast of its own sweetness. Could be applied quite appropriately
to the cretadoes, don't you think, John? Thank you John?

(01:00:53):
Tekumra or corder or more tauna aquireka. Yeah, there we go.
I have I think heard that before? Yes, the struggle
for you to remember that though and today I think,
Oh well, I could struggle. Christen's Marcus welcome, good evening.

Speaker 18 (01:01:16):
Oh, good evening, Marcus the hot water bottle. The German
runners are fashy.

Speaker 3 (01:01:22):
I knew it was a weird word.

Speaker 18 (01:01:25):
Yeah, I thought you might have come up with it
before I got through.

Speaker 3 (01:01:28):
But I've got a new one here and they're very good.

Speaker 13 (01:01:32):
Oh they're excellent.

Speaker 18 (01:01:33):
My friend brought me one years ago, like many many
years ago, and I've bought several sins. But they almost
can take boiling water.

Speaker 3 (01:01:42):
It doesn't say it doesn't say that, though, does it.

Speaker 18 (01:01:47):
I've got the new tag on my new one hanging
in the subboard, and I'm just trying.

Speaker 3 (01:01:51):
To because people told me they couldn't. I bought them
thinking of that. I always felt slightly ginger fullding them
because I never wanted to burst and scold the back.

Speaker 18 (01:01:59):
Yeah. Well, it's say eighty degrees maximum. It's the diagram
of boiling hot water going in out of the jug
with eighty degrees next to them written beside it.

Speaker 3 (01:02:09):
How long would you have to leave? How long you will?
I put mine straight from the kill. It seemed to
be fine, and I presume that's one hundred degrees isn't it.

Speaker 18 (01:02:16):
I'm not sure, Marcus. I won't have a cane, not always.
But they don't burst, which is well. They can leak
around the thread sometimes, I think I tighten it to that. Yes,
it can wear the thread away if you keep tightening
it over tightening it. But they don't seem to burst

(01:02:38):
on me. But the thread here is worn on the screen.

Speaker 3 (01:02:40):
And they seem to last for about ten years, don't they?

Speaker 19 (01:02:43):
Oh?

Speaker 20 (01:02:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 18 (01:02:45):
Mine, Mine would last there easy. And I would put
very hot water on it with the hot water cover
over it. If you get a red one and with
a rubbing on it, that not boiling water.

Speaker 8 (01:02:57):
That wouldn't be good.

Speaker 3 (01:02:59):
Yes, fishy, isn't it?

Speaker 26 (01:03:02):
Yes?

Speaker 18 (01:03:02):
Yeah, But I trust the more than I trust a
regular one. I rather pay the extra for a decent
one than buy several of the other one.

Speaker 3 (01:03:11):
Oh you know, you know they're very good. Once you
buy those, you wouldn't by another one. You don't want
to skip. You don't want to skimp on a hot
water bottle.

Speaker 18 (01:03:18):
No, there's nothing worse than the first hot water bottle night.

Speaker 3 (01:03:22):
Yeah, especially, I mean it'll be terrible hot, but even
if it's cold, it's terrb When you wake up in
a wet patch. It's horrible.

Speaker 17 (01:03:28):
Yeah it is.

Speaker 18 (01:03:29):
I just roll it up and move over.

Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
Would you buy Did you say you got given it?

Speaker 18 (01:03:35):
Well, I had my original ones given to me many
years ago, picked ten more years ago. But you just
find them at the pharmacy.

Speaker 3 (01:03:43):
Yeah, that I got mine, thanks Chris. Someone says, Marcus,
that guy was asking to help find out where the
evacuations seem to was you ignored him. Well, it was
a text. I don't know where it is, but I
read up the text hoping that someone else might come
in and tell us. That's what I thought was the
point of that was to read it to the public.

(01:04:05):
There won't be evacuating it. I don't think. I think
it still hasn't started yet. The Wayne Marcus, please can
he lists help us find a juven hot water bottle
in christ Church had one for thirty eight years, brilliant.
Need to replace. I'd go to a chemist. I'd go
to the Ricketon mall and go to a chemist, and
I reckon you'd find one there. I just bought mine

(01:04:29):
of a chemist. They're like on a display tree. Yep, fashi,
good evening, Jeff, it's Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 21 (01:04:48):
Yeah, good evening, Marcus jeff Ere Listen, Yeah, I heard
all on the radio about these sever penalties about guys
punching people and if they fall down and hit their
head and die, they can get up to seven years
in jail. What they what they didn't talk about was

(01:05:09):
he as a drunken driver if he gets on the
road and he kills somebody. There was nothing mentioned about that.

Speaker 4 (01:05:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:05:21):
I kind of am of the belief that the real
people belonging, the real people that ought to be in prison,
are acid of a drunk drivers because they are the
ones that are the most risk to everyone.

Speaker 4 (01:05:32):
Yeah, I agree.

Speaker 21 (01:05:34):
Now, what about that guy? What about that guy who
was drunk drunk somewhere up in Orckland went across the
road and hit that hit that girl in that car
and killed her. And what did he get? The judge
awarded him twelve months Home's attention, crazy, crazy mate, That's

(01:05:57):
just ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (01:05:58):
I do think, I do think. I do think the
recid of a strunk driver should be incarcerated, and that
might give them a chance to really look at the
behavior and make some changes.

Speaker 21 (01:06:10):
Yeah, I think drunk drivers are worse.

Speaker 3 (01:06:15):
The drunk The drunk drivers are the greatest risk to
you and me and our family, because that's the that's
the person that's most likely to kill us. Unless we're
in a gang or dealing drugs or something like that,
you know, we're probably not going to get murdered.

Speaker 19 (01:06:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 21 (01:06:30):
But the point is the government didn't talk about anything
on those lines.

Speaker 8 (01:06:36):
No.

Speaker 3 (01:06:36):
No, because the whole point of that, all these things
they're coming up with is just to look good, to
look tough on law in order for the next election,
because they didn't manage to get the extra police they promise.
That's all it is. It's just a it's just re
election panic policy.

Speaker 21 (01:06:52):
Yeah, but that's not going to bring that That's not
going to bring that guy's daughter back, is it.

Speaker 3 (01:06:57):
No. I don't really, I don't remember that case. We
wasn't in Auckland.

Speaker 21 (01:07:02):
I'm not quite sure all I was. I'm not sure
if he was on the motor whay or where he was.
But he went across the road and crashed into the
flipping car and killed that guy's daughter. I remember that.
And the judge awarded twelve months. What kind of a
flipping judge is he? He awarded him twelve months of

(01:07:25):
home's detention? What a bloody bullshit?

Speaker 3 (01:07:30):
Do you need to have that language?

Speaker 21 (01:07:32):
I'm sorry about that.

Speaker 3 (01:07:33):
Well, you can't be sorry because you otherwise you wouldn't
have done it. Well, he was drunk, but you're not drunk.

Speaker 8 (01:07:43):
What's that?

Speaker 3 (01:07:44):
You're not drunk?

Speaker 8 (01:07:45):
Are you?

Speaker 27 (01:07:47):
Am?

Speaker 3 (01:07:48):
I drunk?

Speaker 4 (01:07:48):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:07:50):
No, I'm.

Speaker 21 (01:07:54):
Sitting at home on my phone. I'm having a bear.

Speaker 3 (01:07:57):
Brilliant you go go well, sixteen past ten, So now
hang on, I'm gonna like tech. Suddenly it's got a
Texas person back where the evacuation center is. On the
Nelson Tasman Defense Facebook page, it states the Wakefield See
Civil Defense Center is at the Saint John's Worship Center.

(01:08:20):
We opened to row morning from nine am. Marcus bubble
wrap on windows, pinchers and beds hip replacements in India
gives me the absolute Collie Wobbles eighteen dollar dot eighteen
dollar button. USA is officially embarrassment unto itself, and two

(01:08:40):
of us are in denial, clinging to our clean, green,
pure and usine and rubbish. It's nothing but shameful, with
their general population as thick as three planks, best country
and the blah blah blah, just ridiculous. Cashmere Pharmacy and
Centaurus Ride has Fashi hot water bottles. Mind A Tenas
hot water bottle. I think they have Fashy So I

(01:09:05):
think this tex and Field Stadiums also an evacuation point,
and Saint John's Church. Marcus, I have a Fashy hot
water bottle for fifteen months. I fill it several times
during the night. I find it great for lower back pain.
It's also easy to undo and to do up. Nicky
lines have just scored score seven five. Kick to come, Tracy.
It's Marcus. Good evening.

Speaker 19 (01:09:27):
Hey, Marcus, how are you doing tonight?

Speaker 3 (01:09:28):
Good? Thanks Tracy.

Speaker 19 (01:09:30):
So I'm in Wakefield, yes, and yes, we are under
the state of immediency right about now. We're a little
bit contended at the next little ruin. It's going to
come through. But you're right, hey, we are what we are.
We are you know, we're resilient. I'd just like to
add that at the end of the day. Thank you
so much. The thing with Immergate dissemsers are because no

(01:09:51):
one here knows.

Speaker 3 (01:09:53):
What's the situation with Wakefield. Now, have you got transport
in and out? The roads are open?

Speaker 19 (01:09:58):
Are yes? The roads are open, Marcus. We've only just
got cell phone tower and cell phone. We're stored with
him about this four days maybe just going on five
days without cell phone and needs to go to the town.
And you go to the town, they set up what
they call a cow, which is a satellite cell phone.

(01:10:19):
And even next to that, we only had one bar.
It's actually we're actually quite isolated. We're in for a
lot more heavy rain. They're looking at steading meat up
said not meters millimeters from tomorrow from midday and then
peaking at eighty at the day midday after day after that.

(01:10:39):
So we're in for some more rain.

Speaker 3 (01:10:42):
Who would be would people now and Wakefield be requiring
evacuation centers now.

Speaker 19 (01:10:53):
We've required that over a week ago, Marcus. To be
quite fair, I have to be like, I'm going to
be quite brutal. The Tessman District Council and the civil descents,
we've heard nothing from them. We've seen nothing. We've got
where our petitt was. I mean, like we you know,
we've got land all around us. We don't have any more.

Speaker 14 (01:11:11):
Mate.

Speaker 19 (01:11:11):
We've got a river running past our house.

Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
So everything seems to bad.

Speaker 19 (01:11:17):
And that's the Pigeon Valley's stream. That's not the way
Easy River. We went to the evacuation, not the vaccation. Sorry,
so it was a fence meeting. Today we got out,
we went to town and although talked about was mochu acre?
I mean I get that, like my heart got out.
Given whatchu acre?

Speaker 24 (01:11:32):
We've come to?

Speaker 19 (01:11:32):
You come to talk to people in Wakefield?

Speaker 9 (01:11:35):
Will have what acre?

Speaker 3 (01:11:37):
Is this the mayor?

Speaker 19 (01:11:40):
Oh no, I've got I've got to be very fear there.
He's very cool. It wasn't the mayor, No, it was
a staff in this emisiency management.

Speaker 3 (01:11:49):
Okay, So what's the story at Taper Water? Is that
bad too?

Speaker 12 (01:11:52):
Well?

Speaker 3 (01:11:53):
I suppose you haven't been there.

Speaker 19 (01:11:54):
Look, no, no, we can't get there. There's there's sixty
road closures around us. Wrote about now and we're on Wakefield.

Speaker 3 (01:12:01):
So you can you get into Nelson?

Speaker 19 (01:12:04):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, that road's open.

Speaker 3 (01:12:06):
Okay, So you would have just like you would imagine
the rivers are up, and you would imagine the water
tomorrow when that comes down, we'll have nowhere to go
and the funny will get worse. Is that is that
the fear?

Speaker 19 (01:12:21):
Well? You said, I think there's one thing that we're
quite well, I should say we're quite blessed about. Oh no,
it sounds like really odd, but for the fake that,
like the Progean Valley stream has now cut out the river.
So it's I mean, like Marcus, I'd love to sind
you photos, but we've only just got cell phone back
on again. So our stream, which is probably about like

(01:12:41):
I know, like ten minutes across, is now probably about
three maybe four hundred meters. So we now have a
braid of river that runs past our property. So in
terms of that, absolutely blessed for the simple fact that
maybe when the river comes up as it does in
terms of the rain, it's got somewhere else to go, Like,
it's not going to come up so high.

Speaker 3 (01:13:01):
Are you farmers or lifestyle as homesteaders? Oh just lifestyle
and stuff you got lost in the stock.

Speaker 19 (01:13:08):
No, definitely not, thank goodness. The horses aren't here.

Speaker 8 (01:13:13):
Where are they across the road?

Speaker 3 (01:13:16):
Okay? Because of the Okay, so you put them elsewhere
because of the rain, right, yes.

Speaker 19 (01:13:22):
Absolutely, But I mean, like you know, like markets to
be quite there. You know, like my partner and I
can look out our kitchen window, which used to be
like a two point eight pitt pet it's gone.

Speaker 9 (01:13:35):
It's river.

Speaker 3 (01:13:38):
What will be there when it's subsides will Bill Grevelle.

Speaker 19 (01:13:42):
Grevell and the river Like I said, it was a stream,
this is now tuned into this is bigger. It's wear
to you, Marcus. This is now bigger than what the
ways He River is, which was the stream in Pidgeon Valley.
You know several defense tess them. District Council absolutely, like

(01:14:02):
I know they're being busy in terms of like even
it's been gone on top of the self. That what
a the stiric response. They have not even come to
see us.

Speaker 3 (01:14:12):
Yeah, okay, appreciate you anger Tracy, thank you. I think too.
The situation with Tasman, there's the media out there. The
south Old media was all based in christ Church. I
didn't see much footage of all of it. It's almost
like if the media is not there, you don't know
what's going on. Marcus is a pegget of RJ's Jeffers

(01:14:36):
on trade me going for a hundred bucks. Well, the
problem with Jeffers is that RJ weren't for good at
making them. There's other companies make them a lot better
that people are buying. That's the trouble. It was a
it was r J's just laid down missive for them.
I feel quite strongly about this that Jeffers are still
very much available, They're just not called Jeffers. And obviously

(01:14:57):
other companies are making good profit out of them because
they can make them a lot more efficiently. Marcus just
tuning in, Please explain fashy hot water bottle. We don't
need a hot water bottle currently lying in a Barmi
twenty six two degrees now fully Inchlan had ninety fifty

(01:15:19):
eight built house. Best wishes and luck to those in
the Upper South. Marcus love listening to yours podcast through
the day? Is Susette? Is Marcus love listening to your
podcast through the day? Is Susette? Flip? Marcus Love listening
to your podcast through the day? Is Susette jan Or?

(01:15:41):
Do they sound alike? I don't know, but to me
they sound very alike. Although Susette seems to have there's
more of a self revealed from Susette, Like flating with
John Walker. All the blokes at the worksite are dying

(01:16:05):
to know. Thanks Adam, I get hundreds of texts asking
me the same question. Oh my god, that's Jen so yes,
I don't care what you call yourself. Everyone's welcome to
change the name, your non deplume, your radio depluma. It's

(01:16:27):
one of the joys of radio. You called yourself what
you want. So a great thing about radio. No one
knows your size, your height, if you're living in a
mention or in your car. Out of everything bad you
hear about talk about, the one thing is that you
can say it's extremely democratic. You're not judged on anything.

(01:16:48):
You're not judged on your name, you're not judged on
your wealth, you're not judged on where you live. Because
it's all anonymous. You could be a captain of industry,
or you could be on your first day of self
release from present. No one would know. That's the strength.
Everyone's got the same rights to the airwaves. Yeah, it's

(01:17:15):
the ultimate democracy, as long as you're eighteen. By the way,
don't like children that ring up there their parents in
the background prompting them always sounds slightly, I want to
say to kendium and that's not the quite rid. It
always sounds slightly. Yeah, it's not for me, not the children.

(01:17:37):
So I guess you call me ages. I suppose I
one thing that rings true. You can call me what
you like. The Lions are seven, the Queens and Reds
are twelve. Although the Lions look like they're much better team.
They've got backs that are setting in the field of

(01:17:57):
light dynamic, so that's good. It's probably quite a good game. Actually,
not too much whistle. It seems the bait game has
been allowed to flow. There's another try there is it? Oh, yep,
blow your whistle, mate, that's a try. Hit the post.

(01:18:18):
Come on, Dan, what's that new thing on on our
board that's flashing? There's like a like something that you
use when you're filming a film, that clapper board and
then it's an orange it's got a flashing light beside it. Oh,

(01:18:40):
that's because that's because Tony's in the main studio.

Speaker 5 (01:18:42):
It's picking up his movement.

Speaker 3 (01:18:43):
Wow, I know where you are, Tony. Look at that.
I never noticed that before. Fascinating world be living, isn't it?
Although I spent some time in JB High Fire today,
extremely good staff. What do the kids get with their

(01:19:04):
video games? They get what's it called throttle wobble? Or
what do I get? What's the thing you get with
your joystick? What's it called stiff shift stick? Anyway, what's
the expression anyway, So anyways, in JB High five getting

(01:19:32):
the the controls for the Nintendo thing fixed stick shift
shift group, I figure what it's called that happens when
you can't play your games as well? Anyway, and great staff,

(01:19:55):
and I wandered around as Vanessa was talking to the
person behind the counter. It was quite a complicated process.
And I wandered around the shop JB High Fi anyone.
But I like how they're all handwritten all their signs.
I was quite impressed that all the self self all
their sign work. Anyway, I wanted around and wandering again.

(01:20:17):
I said to this, I said, this is not the
shop for me. There was nothing I wasn't. It was
all drones or video cameras for your house. It was
all that sort of stuff that just looks so complicated.
In fact, there was one thing I sort of sat
there trying to play. I don't know what it was,
some logi tech thing. I thought it was a design anyway.

(01:20:38):
But I'm just that that's just not me.

Speaker 1 (01:20:39):
I'm not.

Speaker 3 (01:20:39):
I'm not one of those. I mean, the kids are
mad for it when this is mad for it. But yeah,
it all just looked like it all just look like
a nightmare for me. Things hard to install, reading manuals
any offer. The vinyl section was quite good. He had
already been to a JB High five for any length
of time. But gee, the drones, goodness, stick drift, That's

(01:21:04):
what I'm thinking of. I think the show has lost
its structure tonight. Anyway, if you want to resurrect the show,
i'd appreciate that. Hot water bottles. You get those long
hot water bottles. They're not bad, but I don't think
you're that well belt. You don't want a novelty hot
water bottle, but the fascies are the ones you want.

(01:21:27):
I don't think the hot water bottle designer has changed
much over the years. The key is you fill it
and then you actually let it kind of all settle
before you put the plug in. It's always quite reassuring
how warm they still are in the morning. I've often
thought people saying, get electric ones, but that's not us people.

(01:21:48):
We don't want electric hot water bottle like a plugin one. God,
you want more cords and charges about the house. I
don't think so. Like you've already got hundreds welcome Hitdle twelve.
The numbers eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nineteen ninety two.
Detext be nice to hear from. If you want anything
to the show tonight, there's something if you want to

(01:22:10):
talk about, feel free to come through. Yes they're still
not good in Wakefield, but anger there. Anyway, let's hear
from you. No one could really explain to me why
things are sold on trade be brand new with tags,
but anyway someone might give us a go. It seems
to be some pretty crazy shopping habits out there. People

(01:22:31):
just buy stuff they don't use. Always, if you buy clothes,
you'd wear them that day because you'd be excited to
actually put them on. That was my thoughts anyway. And
if you could change one thing about sports to make
it better minor tweaks for sports, for me, it would

(01:22:54):
be removing the crossbar from rugby. I can't see the
point of it. I reckon they SHA's. They have the
two poles and you have it to go if you
want to. Actually, you either go lower or you go high.
If you go low, they might stop it. If you
go high they probably won't. This is a well thought

(01:23:15):
out policy. I look at all these stupid people on
their phones filming their kicker. Just watch the game. Why
do people film everything? Made you going to Rugby mentioned
filming it. You're not gonna watch it again, madness. I

(01:23:36):
saw them all at glaston breath video and everything. Just
get the BBC feed later on. It seemed pretty good.
Murray Marcus welcome, Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:23:46):
I Magus. Hopefully this won't drop out because you know,
Spark's pretty bad. The wrong size is being sold new
online is probably what it does. So in my field,
these other climbing shoes, right, everyone tries this stuff while
at the shop, or they might just order online because
they've got the same size two years ago or whatever.
But the MENUF says know that people go into retail shops,

(01:24:10):
right and the manufacturers change their size.

Speaker 3 (01:24:14):
They do, of course they do, right, And that way.

Speaker 14 (01:24:17):
The people too much of a hassle to send them
there can get a refund, so they flip them on
online and buy another pier. So the manufacturer has cynically
just sold two piers of the same thing.

Speaker 3 (01:24:28):
Right, Yeah, so they changed this. They changed these sizes
every year, so you can't go to a shop and
try them on.

Speaker 14 (01:24:37):
Well, you can't extinct the next time you order the
same thing for it to be the same fit, because.

Speaker 3 (01:24:41):
You'd be mad with climbing shoes to buy them retail.
They just would they make them Germany or where they
were the best ones made, most of them.

Speaker 14 (01:24:48):
They're all made in Italy or China. But the ones
with some morals manufactured it in the Solar Valley.

Speaker 3 (01:24:58):
And what's the case difference buying them from Italy and
buying them local?

Speaker 14 (01:25:04):
Hundreds of dollars?

Speaker 3 (01:25:05):
Yeah, okay, like twice the rice, Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:25:08):
Okay that and it will work for other you know,
other items.

Speaker 3 (01:25:15):
They need to They need to do that because otherwise
the whole retail thing is going to fall apart, isn't it?

Speaker 14 (01:25:20):
Exactly exactly? So, so you know, people they go to
retail shops and then they're going all them online. It's
just rather support your local retail. Then they wonder why
they don't have a shot.

Speaker 19 (01:25:29):
We do well.

Speaker 3 (01:25:30):
People are in the shop ordering online while actually in
the shop, aren't they, which must stick in.

Speaker 14 (01:25:34):
Your craw Exactly, they're on their phones in the retail shop.

Speaker 3 (01:25:38):
Good explanation, Mary, Thank if that's seventeen to eleven, Good evening, Calvin,
it's Marcus.

Speaker 4 (01:25:43):
Welcome, Marcus here you going good?

Speaker 3 (01:25:46):
Thank you? Calvin.

Speaker 4 (01:25:48):
Right, I've rang up two brief things, lollies and names.
Now what I've been missing for quite a long long
time now as lolly World has snifters, remember them.

Speaker 3 (01:26:00):
Yes, yes, o very good, but nobody in.

Speaker 4 (01:26:03):
The Solar system understands why they stopped making them. There
is a there is a round, ozzy sort of version
of them, which I bought from the sea market, but
not not quite, not quite the real thing. And another
thing which I've been missing, and a lot of people
nowadays don't even know what the hell I'm talking about.

(01:26:23):
Frosted peanuts, Hector, Do you remember them frosted?

Speaker 3 (01:26:29):
Did you say yes?

Speaker 4 (01:26:30):
Frosted peanuts and their difference the peanut and the peanut
world frosted peanuts. The actual difference for the peanut was
that it was fried, not roasted fried, so you got
a fried peanut. On the outside of it is an
extra hard like an icing, but wrinkly like orange skin, wrinkley.

(01:26:52):
And they were different colors on the outside. Some were white,
somewhere you know, pink or red or whatever.

Speaker 3 (01:26:58):
They sound. Delightful.

Speaker 4 (01:27:00):
They were delightful, and they went out of fashion for
a while. They come back for a little while. I
must go back to a shop not from where I
live and try and track them down and see what happened.
But frosted Peanuts is the name of the game and
Slifter's two wonderful things now in the in the name
of the game, and names now here in the tron.

(01:27:20):
A lot of Indian people, I know, my name isn't Calvin,
it's Calvinder.

Speaker 3 (01:27:25):
No, you got Kelvin. They put him and put him
down to Kilvenda, don't you.

Speaker 4 (01:27:29):
Yeah, And also Calvinder you had you were talking earlier
on about the Now what's her name? Now you're trying
to track down who she was? Was it it wasn't Jane?
What is it suz Yes, Suzette? And people telling you
they thought that that she sounded like what is the

(01:27:50):
other name?

Speaker 14 (01:27:50):
Jan?

Speaker 4 (01:27:52):
Jan? Yeah? Jen, that's right here. Well, anyway, about ten
days ago, Jen came on the radio and declared that
her name was Suzette. Wow, after midnight there. So her
real name is Suzette, she told us all. And for
some reason or other, I can't recall the exact reason there,
but she became Jen on on the radio.

Speaker 3 (01:28:14):
Is Calvin your real name?

Speaker 4 (01:28:17):
Yeah, one of my real names, just like your name, Marcus.

Speaker 3 (01:28:23):
I quite like Calvinder. That's quite humorous, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (01:28:27):
Yeah, well, yeah, there's there is a calvendar with a
V and also a Calvinda with a W.

Speaker 3 (01:28:33):
With a wobble You is Calvinder a common men's man's name.

Speaker 4 (01:28:38):
I would say it would be in the Indian world.

Speaker 3 (01:28:41):
Is that a word? Is that a world that you
exist in?

Speaker 4 (01:28:46):
It's I. I whenever, whenever I come across Indian Indian people,
you can either tell by looking at them or by
this speech. I then, after I've told them that my
name is Calvin, I then tell them that my Indian
name is Calvinder. And you can always guarantee to get
a chuckle out of them.

Speaker 3 (01:29:08):
It's good ice breaky You've got there, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (01:29:10):
Yes? Now what about you, Marcus, you've been behaving yourself.

Speaker 3 (01:29:14):
Yeah, you're not bad. School holidays so that's always an ordeal. Actually,
it's been delightful to school holidays. Yes, I've got not
much to report.

Speaker 4 (01:29:23):
Now. Well, I'm still waiting for the day you will
own up and confess that in Hamilton here, I'm.

Speaker 3 (01:29:29):
Not going to I won't convin I won't. I won't
confess that until I actually get to the seafood grotto,
because that's is that your place? Is that where you
hang out? Is it called the seafood grotto?

Speaker 4 (01:29:45):
That is one place here.

Speaker 3 (01:29:46):
Okay, I'm still determined to get there, and then once
I get there, then you can then you can come
clean on our little secret. But you understand why. You
understand why I can't divulge it, don't you?

Speaker 4 (01:29:59):
No, I can't really unless that unless you've been telling
everybody you're a vegan. But other what's the other word
for vegan?

Speaker 3 (01:30:08):
There's decency and taste and people take offense. And I
don't want you actually narking on other shows either, because
that would be that would be unscrupulous.

Speaker 4 (01:30:18):
I didn't know there were any other shows. Is there
other shows?

Speaker 3 (01:30:21):
Will you be listening to the other shows? Because you
talk about jan and Suzette that was after midnight?

Speaker 4 (01:30:26):
Yeah, but that's the same ZB station.

Speaker 3 (01:30:30):
Oh yes, no, but yeah, I don't want're ringing up
other hosts and sharing a little secret.

Speaker 4 (01:30:36):
Oh the non vegan, one vegetarian one. I enjoyed mine
that night. I enjoyed mine that night anyway.

Speaker 3 (01:30:45):
I think it was daytime Calvender seven to eleven. Here's
my rugby tweak. No lifting in the line out and
a time limit on the throw. No more cup of teas,
et cetera. You don't know why we do lifting. I
don't know why I acknowledged let that happen. I don't
think it made it any better. It was a line
out jumper. Does it make it better? I don't know

(01:31:11):
that it does, Marcus. Soccer football should have a differential
scoring system, like rugby, more for a try than a penalty,
so the brilliant goal and play does not get awarded
the same as a penalty goal awarded for a Hollywood dive. Gosh,
did never got over to the Hollywood? Have they wonder

(01:31:32):
when that tomb was first used for football, because boy,
that one has Oh look, I'll researched that during the news,
but bored they love calling it a Hollywood twenty one
twelve The Lions over the Reds. So British and Irish
Lions over the Queensland Reds. Good game, quite a good turnout.

(01:31:54):
But the Lions look really good, actually actually factually, so
that's happening tonight. Yes, Kelvin is right about the Sniffers,
because the trouble with Jeffers is they most of the

(01:32:14):
time they melted or sort of gave, and they weren't
tempt they'd get soft and everything, but the sniffers were,
Oh they're tremendous. They're more robust kind of a thing.
I don't think. I think the word snifter was a
little an off putting. But anyway, there's probably still making them,
just like they're still making making Jeffers, just not calling

(01:32:36):
them that. I've never seen such misreporting on that, in
misinformed comments on Facebook. Actually, anyway, Marcus, the football goal
should be twice with these teams should have two keepers.
It's a great idea. Never thought of two keepers. What
a brilliant idea. Someone did suggest they want Olympics for

(01:33:00):
people using their non dominant hands, but I guess people
would cheat, So come through if you've got something to
say about that. My name is Mark. Well that's a
nice heavy cut. What a good handle? Ah eight past
eleven water bottle secrets? What was old Calvinator? Kelvinder bang

(01:33:22):
on about? What were those frosted peanuts? I think I
can visualize them. I think we remember frosted almonds, don't we,
So frosted peanuts were probably And I'll tell you what
about Kelvin, who's got a good memory. Oh maybe it

(01:33:43):
was candied almonds, frosted peanuts. No one gets that excited
about peanuts anymore, do They kind of been forgotten?

Speaker 20 (01:33:59):
How they are?

Speaker 3 (01:33:59):
These fancy nuts have their pistachios and hazel nuts and cashews.
Peanut hard to get to looking, but like dates. No
one's into dates much these days, are they? Anyway? If
you want to be a part of the file, allow
would like to hear from your minum it's Marcus welcome
huddle twelve oh eight hundred and eighty to taty and

(01:34:22):
nineteen nine to ticks. They might be something entirely different
that it's your hour, this last hour, I remember that.
Just don't bore me to tears about driving anything but
how bad the kei we drivers are. Although I did
ever need to elevent of sympathy. Last night, I went
home thinking, yeah, probably the young drivers do get hard
having to sit the license so many times, particularly for
that person since you've got to hire a car from

(01:34:42):
AA for one forty dollars, so probably should make it
easier for them, like just correct them on the one
thing they do wrong. So yeah, I did listen to
people and felt a little bit of not for that guy.
That was the idiot who was blaming the signs around
the around the new stadium. But yet for most people

(01:35:03):
they needed to do that. Soccer would be better played
with two balls. At the same time, it's a good point.
See people are thinking that's got out of the window, thinking,
come on Eddle twelve Candled all by myself, Romance from Midnight.
So he's got a lot of nights in a row.

(01:35:24):
What's going on? Come on ten past eleven, oh, eight
hundred and eighty, ten eighty are get in touch? Be
marvelous to hear from you. Who's excited about the new
Superman movie? Andre's Batman a superhero and he's got no

(01:35:48):
special powers.

Speaker 21 (01:35:51):
He's just like.

Speaker 3 (01:35:55):
Virgilante, isn't he? Does he ever go bared?

Speaker 18 (01:35:59):
Batman?

Speaker 3 (01:35:59):
I suppose he breaks bad, does he? But yes, that's
what we have talking about. Twenty eight twelve, The Lions
over the Reds be a good victory for them. Oh yeah,
what else can I tell you?

Speaker 9 (01:36:16):
Not much?

Speaker 3 (01:36:17):
But yes, if you want to talk on air they
tak her about tonight, there might be something entirely different
you want to talk about. And I'm okay about that.
I'll enjoyed tonight very much. Marcus. I was wondering, was
that Tony Doe reading the news? I just thought it

(01:36:38):
sounded like him, but I thought he had retired. Yes,
Tony Doe has retired and he's real kindly come out
of retirement to fill in as we await our new newsreader.

Speaker 24 (01:36:57):
And she.

Speaker 3 (01:37:00):
Will be starting, and Dan will tell me my ear
when she's starting. She starts tomorrow. Wow, what auspicious today
tomorrow is turning into so will she be reading tomorrow?
Tony will be training her. She'll be reading tomorrow. We

(01:37:23):
won't ever sweepstate to guess who it is, but it
is a she, and that's better.

Speaker 20 (01:37:33):
I can tell you.

Speaker 3 (01:37:36):
Oh, yes, more will be revealed, Marcus. Don't like dates,
Rather be single. Someone wants show jumping doubles. Let two
people on one horse or two people on two horses
side by side, Marcus. Football great sport. Not enough goals,

(01:37:59):
make the goals two hundred mil higher and Turndred Mills wider.
It's a good idea that what about making the ball smaller?

Speaker 9 (01:38:13):
Good evening, Mark, Good evening, Marcus, Hi there, I'd like
to talk to you about dates. If I may I
want to go against the rain a little bit. You
say people are out of fashion with dates, and I'm not,
and I'd like to speak up on behalf of dates.
I think they're a great treat to have, and if

(01:38:35):
you're someone like me, I agree.

Speaker 3 (01:38:37):
I agree.

Speaker 9 (01:38:40):
They don't cost much, they're available in any supermarket. They
come in an convenient sized packet. If you're someone like
me who's trying to watch their weight, I think dates
make a nice little treat. You know, you sit down
in the evening watching TV. You feel like you'd like
to eat some chocolate or some biscuits or something, but

(01:39:02):
instead have some dates. They're much more healthy, but they
satisfy you.

Speaker 3 (01:39:07):
Although, would it be fair to acknowledge that dates used
to be everywhere and they're not. You don't see them
as much these I mean quite often you'd see people
people be cracking open a packet dates, but you've already
seen that anymore.

Speaker 9 (01:39:18):
That's quite right. Dates used to be something I associate
with Christmas used to display packets of dates with a
little wooden fork and you could eat them out of
the you know, out of the packet, and they were
wrapped with some sort of cellophane or something wrapping. It
was a really nice presentation with it with a picture

(01:39:40):
of the Arab date palms on the on the on
the box cover. Now they just come in a plain
little plastic wrapping. But I don't think you really have
to look hard for them. They're in every supermarket if
you go looking for them, and they only cost a
couple of bucks, and they're delicious.

Speaker 3 (01:39:56):
Once upon a time we would get solid blocks of
dates and you'd cut it with a knife.

Speaker 9 (01:40:02):
Yes, I remember those two. They were very compressed, and
I think that was just probably to they come a
minus the shipping.

Speaker 3 (01:40:08):
Yes, but it wasn't bad. You'd sort of have a
slice of dates as opposed to one date exactly.

Speaker 9 (01:40:12):
And they are moist and in that form that they're
really good in a scan and they spawn are the
best in that form.

Speaker 3 (01:40:19):
And there's something we used to get called red dates,
which were in pecks with sort of Chinese writing. They
were sort of a red date, quite wrinkly but lined
out like. They are quite a treat as well. But
kind of do you remember those?

Speaker 9 (01:40:32):
No, I don't. I'm not familiar with that. I'm afraid, okay, I'll.

Speaker 3 (01:40:35):
Find they're probably still a round Mark, But yeah, you go.

Speaker 9 (01:40:39):
But yeah, the loose ones they what I've tried to
find it from the packet where they actually come from,
where they originate from. I guess they're from Iran, but
the ones coming from New World Supermarket in the packet
don't label their country of origin. But historically they come
from Middle East and from Iran especially.

Speaker 3 (01:41:00):
I feel they're Pusian or something, aren't they? Can we Wispoosia?
Where was Poosia? Poosia was around, wasn't it?

Speaker 10 (01:41:05):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (01:41:06):
You still I'll get the occasional stone.

Speaker 9 (01:41:09):
No, and that's a good point. You did used to
get the occasional stone, but the quality controls improved a lot,
so even the cheapest dates now don't really have stones
in them, and that that's great.

Speaker 3 (01:41:18):
But you're a great used to be on the date boards.
You're a great advocate, Mark. I found that illuminating.

Speaker 21 (01:41:22):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (01:41:22):
Sixteen past eleven 'ron to dates as often as the thing.
It's a side comment that triggers people. Once in a while,
we'll get a big order of a upmarket date and gee,
then it's just not the medial but another one. I
get what its name is, But boy, oh boy, what
a great date. That was, Marcus. The puck and ice

(01:41:45):
hockey should have a flashing light on it more interesting
as you could see it. Still love a date's god, Nicky.
I've often thought about that. I can't see the puck.
Why doesn't it glow? The coverage of ice hockey is terrible.
I know all these purists that love it, but you can't.
Just I can't see it. So yet it should glow.

(01:42:08):
Be easy to do, Marcus, don't forget the dates done.
There's a best heated with butter? Who could afford that?

Speaker 4 (01:42:16):
Now?

Speaker 3 (01:42:19):
Come on, what twenty bucks for a date with gone
with butter?

Speaker 5 (01:42:24):
How much butter?

Speaker 3 (01:42:25):
Would you have? Twenty grams? Well, that's a dollar right there,
just for the butter, Marcus. Once you pass halfway, you
can't go back. Is that football or rugby? Probably football?
It's a good point. Not big on dates, but figs
am I go to snack. I got hooked on this

(01:42:47):
year on fresh dates at the supermarket. Boy they were good.
Gee they were good. Oh oh fresh a fresh frog
jeep as creep as they were good. Anyway, we're on
dates and the ways to make sports better. I'd like
to hear from you people, Marcus. They had check on
country calendar on Sunday growing thirty types of figs. They're

(01:43:10):
not a fruit but a flower with stamen inside spikes. Yes,
and I also think too, you can't be eat figs
if you're a vegetarian because there's involved with some fly
that's involved with the process.

Speaker 20 (01:43:22):
Or yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:43:25):
Yeah, it's kind of a bit of a technicality of
vegetarians figs. It'll freak some of who out, but it's true.
I think. Good evening, Jay, this is Marcus. Welcome, Greetings,
Greetings Jay.

Speaker 28 (01:43:41):
I'm enjoyed listening tonight.

Speaker 3 (01:43:43):
God.

Speaker 28 (01:43:45):
I've a lovely Sultana skane a little bit of date Scott,
which you're quite nice. But my aunt is to make
fantastic scones. But I need some help. I want to
make some fantastic fluffy gone Satana sky and some help
the secrets to make a really nice, fluffy, beautiful scorn.

(01:44:05):
So I want to make some some friends who do
a lot of volunteer work.

Speaker 3 (01:44:10):
She's got a date scone.

Speaker 28 (01:44:13):
I want to make some Sultana skys and I want
to get some help. How do I make a really
lovely fluffy got My aunt used to because I scurn
out a lot of rocks, and I want some help.

Speaker 3 (01:44:25):
Okay, what's the wonder? Keep listening. Jay wants fluffy scones.
What's the key? People? You don't want too much baking
powder either. They taste about like metal markets. Marcus good evening, Yeah, hey,
Marcus is Mike.

Speaker 18 (01:44:43):
How are you good?

Speaker 3 (01:44:43):
Thank you, Mike.

Speaker 29 (01:44:45):
It's good just for the how we can change sports.
I reckon bring in like royd Olmpics.

Speaker 3 (01:44:55):
Yes, I think that's I think that's about to happen.
Really yeah, I think Peter, I'm on into that. But
I think people are going to do that. I think
it's happen quite soon.

Speaker 29 (01:45:08):
Okay, that'd be quite interesting. It'd be interesting to say
just how you can cross the human.

Speaker 3 (01:45:15):
Body, you know, well until you die though of course
there'll be health consequences for it. When there's the trouble,
people will die with it. But anyway, Oh, high past eleven, exactly,
hyperper it's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 26 (01:45:28):
Oh hello Marcus. Now the caller that wants to make
SCons that aren't rock takes he needs to buy Edmund's
ready made scon mix and then just adds all talents
to it. I had the same problem making. SCons edmund
scon mix is the way to go. They're perfect every time.

Speaker 3 (01:45:48):
Really good advice, Peppa, Thank you, high Rose. It's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 27 (01:45:53):
Oh hi Marcus.

Speaker 3 (01:45:54):
Now are you a good rose?

Speaker 19 (01:45:56):
Oh?

Speaker 27 (01:45:57):
Good about the guy calling on the scorn with the
liquid that you put in. You just put in cream
and lemonade and they come out flussy every time instead
of using water.

Speaker 3 (01:46:12):
Or milk, so equal parts or but are both bit
of both?

Speaker 19 (01:46:19):
More lemonade.

Speaker 3 (01:46:22):
I know there is recipes with them and a but
thank you for that, Beth. It's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 24 (01:46:26):
Hello, Scones. What you do, it's all in how you
put the butter in. You've got to do it really quickly.
You've got to chop up your butter and let it
get to room temperature before you let it get near
the flour, and then message it like it's something you

(01:46:46):
don't want to touch, and do it really quickly and
get the stone from the oven and under ten minutes.

Speaker 3 (01:46:54):
Yeah, I agree. I agree with you, Beth. I've got
another text that says very much the same thing.

Speaker 24 (01:47:00):
Yeah, and also Scones stones the goodies when they were
mining for jam and friends.

Speaker 3 (01:47:15):
Oh our God like it be think you're good, good goody.
Someone wants to know want to fig scone would be
like and they're going to give it a whirl. Here
is a clean paraphrase version in one single paragraph. No
steps to get fluffy scones, use cold butter and handle
the dough as little as possible to stays light and air.

(01:47:37):
He makes everything just enough to bring it together, avoiding
over working it, which can make the scones tough. Self
raising flower gives them a good rise. Who you can
had baking powder, fusing plain flour. Keeping the dough cool
before baking helps it puff up nicely in hot oven,
giving you soft fluffy scones with a tender crumb. Marcus

(01:47:58):
Wholemeel dates scones with a small dish of either lemon
or orange, grated rind and delicious wind barreling through here
An Auckland thanks on the great show. Regard Jenny Grate
the butter straight from the fridge or the vault we
call it now the other that was funny, Dan lock

(01:48:21):
on the fridge that have been. Won't be long before
people start robbing people's butter. You see burglars walking around
your neighborhood with chili bans. How dare they do that
to our butter? I see the butter price dropped on
the world market, but it won't drop here because that's
not the way it works. How dare they.

Speaker 13 (01:48:45):
Anyway?

Speaker 3 (01:48:49):
Forty six thousand at the line Red's game, the highest
Reds crowd since the last lines two in twenty thirteen.
Looks to be a very large contingent of British fans
who all look identical. They look like Clive Woodwards, sort
of ball with glasses. Apart from that guy looks like Gandalf.

(01:49:15):
His wife's dressed as a lion and she looks ridiculous. Anyway,
I'll tell you the score, forty seven to the Lions,
twelve to the Reds. One way traffic. New statistics revealed
that people who tied the knock thirty one years ago,
I'm more likely to now be divorced than any couple

(01:49:36):
of weeks before or since I went to some weddings
in nineteen ninety four. Actual factual, Good evening, Lorraine, this
is Marcus.

Speaker 20 (01:49:50):
Welcome, Good evening, Marcus. I'm in my eighties and I've
used every scone recipe that ever was lemonade scones, every thing.
And what I do now, I just buy a packet
of Edmund scone mix from the supermarket. You put water
with it and put it in the oven.

Speaker 14 (01:50:09):
That's all you do.

Speaker 20 (01:50:10):
It's done the most beautiful scones. And if you've always
got a packet in the cupboards, you can have hot
scones on the table in twenty minutes.

Speaker 3 (01:50:18):
Good advice.

Speaker 20 (01:50:20):
Yeah, it's just so simple and it's so easy, and
you don't have all the mixing and.

Speaker 3 (01:50:26):
The butter is in there. There's no butter obviously nothing.

Speaker 20 (01:50:29):
No, just buy a packet of the scon mix. You
add only water to it. But if you want Sultana
SCons or whatever, you do that and just mix on
quickly with a knife and the water and you can't
go wrong. They're absolutely perfect every time. So I've given
all the recipes away.

Speaker 3 (01:50:49):
Brilliant rain. Well, thank you for your contribution and thank
you for the thank you for the way you went
about that phone call with a positively and the smile
in your voice too. I love that, Lorraine, to thank
you for very much for that. You've made my night.
Straight to the point, she says, her age says, what's happened.
Here's what she does bang you new straightaway. She is

(01:51:10):
for real and we trust her. Someone said the best
gones are from the Hornygoat Cafe and Rua Tangata North
and I don't know where that is. I'm gonna have
to look that up. I thought I knew this country.
Rue are then tau m g a t a. I
think it is? Oh, where is that? Where's the Horny Goat?

(01:51:33):
Might be quite close, just to fang Aade. I'm not
quite sure though, that we'll go in the pilgrimage actually
effectually if we're getting the bus back up north this
Christmas the Horny Goat, I don't think we get there
by a bus. I'm gonna have to google the Horny
Goat to work out where it is. I do a
pilgrimage for a good scone Horny Goat. It exists, No,

(01:52:05):
I can't really find it on the I can find
it on Facebook, but not on Google Maps. Hornya Cafe
and takeaways. I can't really find it. Could someone tell

(01:52:25):
me where it is? Is? That's not the one in
pastings though?

Speaker 20 (01:52:37):
Is it.

Speaker 3 (01:52:40):
Thornburn Road?

Speaker 26 (01:52:47):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:52:47):
I don't think is that issure?

Speaker 9 (01:52:57):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:52:57):
I'm not going to spell that again. How do you
spell it? Are you are?

Speaker 4 (01:53:00):
Are you yep?

Speaker 3 (01:53:05):
Town at west? Oh? Jay okay? Looks looking at oh
the Horny Goat. It looks like in the middle of nowhere.
What would you be doing there getting a scorn? A

(01:53:26):
goat's scorn? Oh, it's not there, far west of fang Arde.
But that looks well, that's a discovery. It looks like
it's a gas station, doesn't it to you? Around the
back of the guessie, I'm pretty excited looking at this
on Google Maps now as Oh what's this? Here is

(01:53:51):
the takeaways? No, I've been that might might be recent
more recent anyway? Eighteen to twelve cylender as Marcus welcome, Oh, Michael.

Speaker 12 (01:54:02):
Is towards a d income or west?

Speaker 3 (01:54:06):
Would would many people live there?

Speaker 9 (01:54:09):
Yes?

Speaker 28 (01:54:09):
It is a long way is a big village.

Speaker 3 (01:54:13):
Have you been to the Horny Goat?

Speaker 12 (01:54:15):
No?

Speaker 14 (01:54:15):
I haven't.

Speaker 3 (01:54:17):
Do you think it might just be recent if I'm
not seeing on Google Maps, I don't know.

Speaker 14 (01:54:21):
I'm not sure about.

Speaker 24 (01:54:23):
But I'm just saying where where it is?

Speaker 3 (01:54:28):
Brilliant Nice to hear from Miss Lendra. Where's good? Dear
uber drover say not sure about Hornygoat. One of the
great quotes of what was that someone laughing in the
bed that I couldnt quite work it out? Sounded like today.
The Enhanced Olympics are on the twenty first of twenty
fourth of May next year in Las Vegas. They don't
go about as bad as you can imagine. Marcus best

(01:54:51):
date in orange scones at the drop Shot Cafe in Taradale.
Please be careful when you google the Horny Goat too late.
There's also a goat Horning Cafe and White Power, all
these cafe focusing on scones as they lost leader now
with a butter through the roof. I've been to the
Facebook page of the Horny Goat. There's no word on

(01:55:14):
the scones. The best scones are and Kaiapoi made by
a woman who was on my kitchen rules and she
operates the shop out of a caravan. Oh gosh, I've
been there. Didn't know she'd be on my kitchen rules.
Oh we had some food there. I thought it was
good too. Oh you're waiting for the bus and Kaiapoy

(01:55:35):
it was just by there out the gate. Didn't know
she was on my kitchen rules. Cheap That's when we
had to run on with Kaiapoi Karen that started yetting
at the kids for what they're doing on the playground.
Oh yeah, boy, oh boy. Yeah, what a karen she was.

(01:55:59):
And the kids were behaving very well. They're playing with
another kid that was behaving well as well. We've been profiled.
It wasn't good. I'm just checking out on Google Maps.
We certainly went to out the gate. No word about
my kitchen rolls to what we had there. Actually one
of the toasted sandwich. I think a little bit of

(01:56:21):
a hub there, old kaiapoy in it. There was a
good sort of a Turkish restaurant down there on that
corner too, that we went to. Very good. I'll tell
you what was called there in a second. Went there
a number of times. Excellent it was. Was it called Zarfran?

(01:56:43):
I think Moroccan delicious? I think we might add a Tarjin.
Very good. We're at the campground down the end of
the river. The car got a flat bat try to
get a taxi from work. Well, that was expensive one

(01:57:05):
hundred and forty dollars.

Speaker 8 (01:57:05):
I think.

Speaker 3 (01:57:07):
Anyway, I'll go in the next time for a chiefs gone.
Put that on the list then and the horny goat. Anyway,
it's ten from twelve. If you do want to talk
before the end, I'd love to hear from you, even
if you want to rent Ta has been preparing for

(01:57:29):
the worst. He'd have repeat torential downpall. That's tomorrow. So yeah,
there's gona be a lot of bad weather tomorrow, and
I think the mountain passes will close overnight tomorrow. The
Lindas the Lewis the Crown, so very strong winds in

(01:57:52):
Auckland at the moment. Also, but get in touch if
you got to be a part of it. I'm pleased
no one brought Winston's bait about the flags. Goodness gracious,
So no pride these no not, That's not the word

(01:58:12):
I'm looking for. No, I won't go there. Just a desperate,
desperate battle for re election.

Speaker 8 (01:58:22):
It's all.

Speaker 3 (01:58:22):
It's about power for power's sake. Drives me crazy. Our
Trump's awake with a giant who's done a giant message
on truth Soci're going on about sleepy Joe Biden's mess.

(01:58:45):
This is despite the fact that the dollar has dropped
ten percent, the biggest drop ever in his first six
months of leadership. Lowest, good evening, Hi, lowess, I just
get the lowest time to turn the radio off.

Speaker 8 (01:59:03):
The ship lowest sleeping Marcus hillis made my radio arm.

Speaker 4 (01:59:10):
Do you know we haven't?

Speaker 3 (01:59:10):
Do you know we haven't beat the for In since
twenty eighteen?

Speaker 13 (01:59:15):
We haven't beaten them. No, No, we probably weren't on
said they either.

Speaker 19 (01:59:24):
That's not what I run up.

Speaker 13 (01:59:27):
I don't know we will because those team haven't played together.
They've only been what two weeks before they.

Speaker 3 (01:59:37):
And they kept the captain's heart's not in it? What kit.

Speaker 14 (01:59:46):
Kitten?

Speaker 18 (01:59:47):
How can you call the the captain?

Speaker 3 (01:59:49):
I'm just winding you up? Lowers?

Speaker 20 (01:59:50):
What is I know? You are?

Speaker 19 (01:59:51):
You wind up all the time?

Speaker 3 (01:59:54):
Run yet if you go, you've got you've got thirty seconds?

Speaker 13 (01:59:59):
Oh god, they've got the ones? Was the edmund scom
Except lady, run up ye water and I put save resconds.
I put a little bit of bacon, a little bit
of cheese and onion, and it's bloody beautiful.

Speaker 3 (02:00:16):
Sounds delicious. Boy, that sounds good. Yeah. How much would
you pay for a peck of scone mix these days?

Speaker 14 (02:00:24):
Oh?

Speaker 13 (02:00:25):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:00:25):
I've a boarding you for you don't have you don't
have a scone for a while.

Speaker 13 (02:00:32):
No, I haven't had a scorne for a while.

Speaker 3 (02:00:33):
No want shut yourself tomorrow, get some for the rugby.

Speaker 13 (02:00:38):
I'll watch some scone mats in the country.

Speaker 3 (02:00:40):
Will you watch the rugby? Of course, brilliant. I look
forward to talk about the result anyway. Nice to talk
to you last. That's it for me. Everyone. Thanks for
you on the called and it was a part of
the show. Do you tune in tomorrow night? And I'm
not here, don't be alarmed, It's all part of the plane.

Speaker 1 (02:01:02):
For more from Mica Slash Nights, listen live and news
talk Said from eight pm weekdays, or follow the podcast
on iHeartRadio.
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