All Episodes

March 9, 2026 133 mins

Marcus talks the flashy food trend for 2026, keeping DST, and losing traditional bars of soap.

LISTEN ABOVE 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Listen
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus lush Night's podcast from News Talks.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
I'd be reading's welcome hit'd to have. I hope it's good.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
We year.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
If it's not good, I hope it gets better other
time I go home at midnight. I actually watched the
Formula one years so I thought it was quite enjoyable. Gee,
one hundred and fifty thousand people, there was something in Melbourne. Wow.
Kind of staggered by that. Actually, I know it as
a sport, certain realize that would go for I don't
know what the expectacle would be like to be there pertinently,
but what I thought was interesting. I watched it on
my phone because the children were dominating. I don't know

(00:38):
what they were watching, were washed on my phone. I
thought it was pretty good, So there we go. I've
always struggled with that as a sport, but there was
overtaking and it was quite good fun. I struggle with
the commentators. They seem to be a bit clicking and smug,
but that's just me. I'm sure there's probably alternative commentaries.
I can tune into anyone that has just been pivot

(01:00):
with the sport people. So there we go. Let's just
mention that there is a lot to talk about tonight.
I think we're gonna have a bit of a Monday
about ten different things to talk about. There's a lot happening.
There is a Vogel's bread shortage which has got people tents,
mainly for Aucklanders. I'm a Vogals man. I like Vogels thin,
very thin. You see you have the very thin and

(01:21):
then two bits of bread is equal to one, Yeah,
twice as much. I'm looking for one that's the triple threat,
with a third of it for slice. But anyway, that's it.
So there is a Vogel. I don't know who owns
Vogals anymore. It's I think a Singaporean company or something.
It's not like I mean, it's made here, but it's
not like. It's not like Key we owned, I don't
think anymore. So there we go. That's the Vogels. The
other thing too. I wouldn't mind your opinion on both these.

(01:44):
Both these are topics I could talk about forever. The
food trend of twenty twenty six is tinned fish. Hello,
we're early on that one. There's a guy with a
faiz hat who runs a blog and he just reviews.
Tin Fish got she's some There's some great podcast ideas,
aren't there once you've hear someone else do it, or

(02:06):
I wouldn't mind doing that myself with tin fish. So
tinfish is the fish idea of is the food trend
of twenty twenty six. So there we go. We're across
that with our seat side. I think we're in. Twenty
twenty four was our starting and special And the other
thing that is of interest to me is that they're

(02:29):
now saying the bar of soap is under the threat
of extinction. A lot of people are going for soap
from a dispenser, which seems to me to be a
terrible waste of plastic to me, just so you know
where I stand. I hate plunge soap, don't like it

(02:52):
at all. I'm a soap bar guy, so I'll be stockpiling.
I imagine it keeps for a long time while I
bear it in the back garden or keep it in
the freezer. I can't say I love a bar of soap.
I like nostalgia soap. I like soap from the part,
like Knights Casteele, like pal Mile of Gold, like Life Boy.
Lot of them. You can't get but once in a

(03:13):
while you'll get a whiff of someone, I'll take you
right back yep, like a novel, like a proofed novel,
like Times past. Anyway, So that's me with spars of soap.
So yeah, I don't know if we can do anything.
These are market forces. I'm sure you could make your
own from whale fat. Where would you get whale fat?

(03:35):
I'm sure you could make your own from something that's
not whale fat. I think the whole key to making
soap is to get fat, which will break down the
dirt and then disguising the smell. So yeah, that's at
the bar of soaps out of the way. So there
we go. And the other thing that I was reading
a reinteresting article about today was cars. When car owners

(04:00):
acknowledge other car owners of the same make And apparently
if you've got a Porsche, which I have, and if
you've got a Porsche, you only acknowledge other Porsche owners
if they have the same type of Porsche as you,

(04:21):
and what I mean? And I didn't understand this. There
are two tiers of Porsches, the air cooled and the
ones with the Have I got this right? I don't
really know much about Porsches, but I don't know which
is the more upmarket one that they acknowledge each other with.
The ones with the radiators are the ones that the
air cooled. But one of them you acknowledge the other
one and the other one you don't. So I thought

(04:41):
that was real interesting. So I can tell you more
about the Porsche. And there is something called a Jeep
wave that Jeep owners. This is an American article. So
drivers of rare engined air cooled nine to elevens tend
to look at scan s at water cooled variations like
the nine nine six be almost worth having a Porsche

(05:05):
that's water couled. Just you could ignore those with the
or port. It's echal to ignore those with the water
cooled ones. But what else is interesting is the car
that's taken this to the extreme is the Mazda Miata.
And that's got the lights in the front that are

(05:27):
tucked into the bonnet and they jump up, they open
and it looks like a face. I think they're one
of those cars. Movies has got a Mastermata the cars
is that right, They've got a smiley face. So what
they do is, if you've got a Mazda Miata when
another car comes you actually open your lights and look

(05:50):
at the other car with your lights and duck it down.
But the lightning and the lightning McQueen movie Cars is
twins that are mea and Tea that the mastermatas. But
now you can get an app on a cell phone
that can plug into your car and you can act
actually open them side by side. It looks like the

(06:10):
car is winking. And that's what you do with the
Master Miata as you pop up one side then pop
up the other side. Yeah, it's a wink module. I'm
quite excited about that. It's not something I would have.
Terrible looking car. But anyway, if you have something to
say about your own brand of cars and whether there

(06:33):
is a camaraderie, a brotherhood, a sisterhood, a hood, and
what is that that the cars do to each other?
Have you got a Master Miata and do you do
the wink at other mes to I don't even know
if there's many in the roads in New Zealand might
be rebadged as something else. So yes, we've got a
lot to talk about tonight. We've got tin fish, we've
got the end of soap, we've got vogels Bred. We've

(06:54):
got cars that acknowledge each other. We've also got the
fact that the sheer markets through the floor and the
price of oils through the roof. Everything's going to get
much much more expensive until Trump sorts out the straight
of hor moves. And I don't realon they have an
easy thing to sort out. Things that look easy when
you're in the war room, or actually things that look

(07:15):
easy when you're at al Lago are probably more complicated
half a world away. So jeez, a lot to talk
about tonight. Maybe someone will talk about the car acknowledgement
while they're adding tinfish. But I've frightened about the bar
of soap going west. If Liam Lawson does not improve
his performance next Grandfriend Shanghai prediction, this could be his

(07:37):
final year. Thank you, Andrew. I don't think he's got
the battery thought. The developments in the car are quite good.
I quite like the battery technology.

Speaker 4 (07:46):
Thought.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
That's quite good fun Johnny Marcus, Welcome, good evening, Oh.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
Good evening.

Speaker 4 (07:51):
Before the Porsche drivers were fighting over whether they e
called or or or called whatever it used to be
with who hid the real body and who had the
fiberglass body on a feed up. Yeah, and nineties quite
a few sort of ky we built pushes that went
Reunald pushes and fiberglass shell just like the acy Cobra

(08:14):
is a five BLUs shell.

Speaker 2 (08:16):
People doing that themselves or was there was there a
manufacturer making them.

Speaker 4 (08:21):
There's a few people making them. A few places around
your cella. We're doing them, and some of your peoplests
will know for sure. There's one behavior that truck drivers do.
The big grig Class five drivers won't acknowledge the class
two drivers when they go past the person in the
smaller truck driving the light truck who's still got to
have a heavy truck license. If they give give the

(08:46):
raised eyebrow or the hollow or whatever to to the
to the class five tanker going past the class five guy,
nine times out of teen, just ignore the person on
the lower grade of license. Really and yeah, yeah, And
I was talked about the truck schill and then actually
saw it out on the raid and I see a
few people and you know, say a and most of

(09:07):
them just like drive past the annoyion. And then you
get a bigger truck as you go through your licenses.
And I started off for a four hour and you know,
now I've got all my licenses. You know, everybody says
this is today was the motor home. It's no issue.
Everyone sort of waves out and says alloy from the
motor home perspectivity. But I've never seen anyone not wave
out because they don't have a Caravan Association sticker.

Speaker 2 (09:30):
Well, the carry of the people. The Caravan Association stickers
are in quite a bad way because someone nearly took
out a did you read this story? There was a
father and son cycled around the world from England and
they nearly got taken out in the Bull of the Reckon.
The worst drivers in the world are Kiwis and they
nearly got taken out by someone with a Caravan Association
sticker and the Bull of Gorge.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
Like the biggest motives in the world of the Pomps.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
But yeah, well no I did the footage did to
be fair, the footage looked quite bad.

Speaker 4 (09:59):
Yeah, well, we do have some pretty inexperienced drivers. So
like I've got a ten ton vehicle and you know,
on my life and so I could drive there on
a past two license just coming out of of getting
your license. They're not really understand the dynamics of.

Speaker 5 (10:14):
It on the road.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
And you've got a lot of people who've had their
truck and trailer license for years or you know, and
they get it renewed for another ten years, but they
really haven't been out driving. And it's one of the
issues we've got a on the road. There's people taking
on far more than they can handle.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Agreed, Hey, just about it, cyclist. Last year on U
zingand roads, six cyclists got killed by cars. And how
many people do you think the cyclists killed? Zero exactly,
So they're no one threat, they're not the triple threat.
The car drivers are getting. Touch markets till midnight eight
hundred and eighty eight a Tinfish soap. It's all go, people,

(10:52):
everything's on, everything's up for discussion tonight. We drive trucks
that transport supermarket. We drive trucks that transport supermarket and
hard hardware still good. So I'd like to let you
people know if they wish to make some big purchases
at the supermarket door this week. As from the sixteenth,
our company we're passing high transport costs you to rise

(11:13):
and fuel cost to our customers. Well then turn past
them to consumers your supermarket. Bill is about to jump
it to James. Thank you James. When who's driving the
end of the soap? I gotta lot go around my
head tonight. But I am concerned about that. Was it
say approved sign and request for the texts? Anyway they're
going to send your number? It's twenty I can't do that.

(11:35):
I can't get the text. I'll find them if I
can in a sec. But get in touch, Marcus Still twelve.
I'm across the Middle East. Well I'm not across the
Middle East, but if this stuff happened, I'll keep you
posted on that eight hundred and nine text you want
to come through, Marcus Still twelve, Get in touch, twenty
past eight seventy one, Gav Marcus, welcome, good evening, Hi Gav.

Speaker 6 (11:58):
Yeah, good home Marcus.

Speaker 7 (12:01):
How are y?

Speaker 8 (12:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (12:02):
Good?

Speaker 2 (12:02):
Real good.

Speaker 5 (12:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (12:03):
That's the story, you know, the v dub thing. And
when they talk about supercars and whatnot. When you're talking
about that, it's if the engine is behind the back diiff.
That's a rare amount of sports car and that's pretty
much critical part of it. The engine must be behind

(12:26):
the differential. Okay, a rare amounted sports car.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
And then what where do you go with that?

Speaker 6 (12:32):
Put them in front of the Corvette have just done
and they call it mid mounted?

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Oh yeah, are you a mechanic?

Speaker 6 (12:42):
You no, but John Brittain wants he wasn't a mechanic.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
No, it wasn't either, and either was. Did they make
a lot of those Volkswagen Porsches in New Zealand?

Speaker 6 (12:57):
They never made them here, but averted them into beach buggies,
you know, fither of us bodies?

Speaker 2 (13:03):
But what about the what about the Porsche body on
the Folkswagen that's what we're talking about. Did they do that?

Speaker 6 (13:09):
I would doubt unless it was some superior bodybuilders around.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
We'll look into it. Kip, thank you being Marcus.

Speaker 5 (13:16):
Good evening, you get a Marcus.

Speaker 9 (13:19):
I took them over your listeners because we thought heaps
of diesel the other day. But they should go on
and like prepay for your guests and that, and like
she'd think. So I downloaded the ZP on Thursday night
and did it Friday morning, and I locked it in

(13:42):
at like the dollar eighty doll eighty four I think
it was, and now it's jumped to two twenty five.
But I locked them three hundred leaders. So I'm quite
happy with that.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
So you'd saved five hundred bucks, is that right?

Speaker 10 (13:56):
No?

Speaker 9 (13:56):
No, I haven't say five hundred bucks, but I think
it was. It was around five hundred bucks a paid.
But it just means that I get it at the
dollar eighty four, that I've prepaid for it.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Well, how much has it gone up to? How much
has it gone up to?

Speaker 9 (14:12):
Well, it's gone up to two dollars twenty six at
the Z. Yeah, so it's you know, it's jump forty ten.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
So did you what was that the most you could do?

Speaker 9 (14:26):
No, no, I think you do up to one thousand liders.
But I just did the month. Think that you're like
two hundred and eighty or three hundred letters.

Speaker 2 (14:34):
So if people sign up for it today, what's the
rate that they'll be paying.

Speaker 9 (14:39):
Well, they'll be paying the today's rate, which is well
from that from well two dollars twenty twenty six or
you know, it depends on what town you're in. It varies,
but they'll be paying tootles twenty six if they locked
them today. If they had locked it in last week,
they would only be paying because that's prepaid. You're basically
pre paying for it. And then you can use it whenever.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
Makes sense being Thanks for that, Conrad Marcus.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
Welcome, Hi Marcus.

Speaker 11 (15:05):
I'm just Trump looked launched this bombing on Iran. Okay,
thats and then in reaction to that, obviously the Straight
is closed. My point is it could be quite a
long time. They're talking months or years for it to
be open again, because I think the default time wise

(15:28):
at the moment is that for the Strait to be
opened by Iran, there needs to be some kind of
regime change or some kind of massive internal ship I have.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
To see in the navy, won't they and then that
navy's getting spread thin.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
No, No, I'm talking about within Iran forgured about the sea.
There has to be there has to be a internal
regime change that would then precipate no attacks on the
Straight of or Mars.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
No, I say the American Navy would have to go
there and to protect and escort ships. Would their ground,
would their ship to wear missiles?

Speaker 11 (16:03):
No? No, that's madness.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
So those to get blind, that's.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
What they're talking about. That's what they're talking about.

Speaker 3 (16:07):
Well, you know they the reason they are bombing Iran,
based on their argument is that regime.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
Change right, Well, they've had ten different reasons for the
reason they're bombing Iran. Conrad, there's been ten different things.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
Yeah, But what I'm the point I'm trying to make
is the military strategy the default in terms of time
if nothing happens, that straight stays closed. So something has
to This is why I think it's quite a tactical
mistake by the Art States. But there has to be
a massive internal regime change within Iran for the strait
to be opened.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Not necessary or not necessarily.

Speaker 7 (16:43):
Oh, I guess I'll leave.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
That's the listeners there. Thanks Marcus, feel.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Good, see you, comrade. Bye bye. I dont think it's
going to open anytime soon. But yeah, I mean there's
all sorts of I mean, wars have kind of expanding scenarios.
Interesting reading today about the concept of victory. What's it
called victory disease? You have a one more that goes well,

(17:06):
and you can keep kind of expanding. And the only
guy that didn't do that was the first Bush when
they got sad amount of kuwait chased him out and
then you just stopped. And probably was the first time,
well the last time in a long long while that
they haven't kind of thought. Okay, we're going well and
outrad of their ability and kept going. But yeah, look,
I don't think I don't think the price of fuel

(17:27):
is going to get down in the next six months.
I think it's going to be a quick thing. And now,
of course productions slowed down because in the Middle East
they've got no capacity to store it and they can't
ship it because the straight or the Strait is closed.
They've always pluralized it, but it's singular, I think the
Strait of Hor mooes. So there we go, eight hundred

(17:48):
and eighty tendy nine two nine to the text, looking
forward to what you've got to say, Tin Fish in
the Strait of Hor Moves. Anything else, we're all over,
we're all on. Keep in touch. Garriott's Marcus, good evening.

Speaker 12 (18:00):
Hey Gary, I was going to talk to you about
ten session, maybe a bit of a bit of Straight
of Moves.

Speaker 13 (18:05):
Good.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
Thank you.

Speaker 12 (18:07):
So the thing about tim Fish is the dog got
me into it.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
Did you start on the capt just start on the Yeah,
how did you start?

Speaker 13 (18:15):
No?

Speaker 12 (18:15):
I mean I've always been into a bit of tuna,
but but you know, the dog's are spoilt, silly dog
and doesn't quite like, just his biscuits for lunch. So
I've been mixing in a bit of sardine, you know,
but then he can eat the whole lot, so you know,
so that's kind of kicked me off as well.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
On toast or just out of the tin.

Speaker 12 (18:36):
No, just into the tin, you know, just mixing a
bit of the oil and the bit of the fish,
and eats his biscuits and he's quite happy. And then
so you know, I get, I get the dregs.

Speaker 2 (18:47):
But what did you just eat them straight?

Speaker 14 (18:48):
Or do you?

Speaker 15 (18:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (18:50):
Yeah, But I mean the funny thing is when you
go to the seat mate, they're quite hard to find.

Speaker 5 (18:55):
It's all about the.

Speaker 12 (18:56):
Tune, you know, it's like everywhere. But there's not much
sardine around anymore.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
I think there's some. There's some ones that have got
to see through circular, some scandy ones. They're not as good,
don't all for those.

Speaker 5 (19:08):
I haven't seen those ones.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
And the other thing I need to say about tin fish,
if you're having them in the workplace or stuff like that,
you need to be careful how you dispose of the
tin because that the smell does permeate the office, doesn't it.

Speaker 16 (19:21):
Oh?

Speaker 12 (19:21):
You know, you get your reputation goes around the office.
If fish thing it works, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
Yeah, it's got you.

Speaker 5 (19:27):
Ye.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
If I do it, you've really got to be careful.
You've got to sort of run a separate load in
the dishwasher of the tin to clean the tin before
you dispose. That's that's the way I run it. A
spokesman for Iran's Revolutionary Guard challenged US President Donald Trump
to deploy US naval vessels to escorts oil tangets through
the Stradah moves. The US Navy could begin escorting oil

(19:47):
tankers through the Straight of Horror moves if necessary, Trump
said on Tuesday, So whether escorts would work the escorts service,
I don't know. It's tolling. Everyone knows about the Strait
of hor moos. Have you been to Abu Dhabi? Can
you see Iran? I guess you're probably you can. How
far How wide is the straight of her moves? I'm

(20:10):
not very wide on Google Maps. I do wonder we're
going to outfish all the sardines too. Don't wait? How
wide is the strait of her moves hor moves? Oh?
At its narrowest point thirty three k's there you go?

(20:31):
The straight of her moos at its narrowest point. Get
in touch if you want to be on air. All
in here for it, King, Oscar Sardines, Marcus, give them
a go, absolutely beautiful. What a bill tell me to
give things to go? When, of course I would have
given that a go. If we have twenty eight days
of fuel and stock, why is the price risen already
when the fuel has been here for a while, Jay

(20:54):
the big truck, I got on your Jay. Can we
talk about Trump having plastic surgery on his nipples and
talking about on live TV? What's going on over there
in the US. I didn't hear about that. The only
ones gaining from this war are barons and use toyota
ute dealers when it moves to ground warfare. Fair enough
if you want to talk about this, oh eight hundred
eighty ten eighty and nineteen nine two detext Marcus still twelve.

(21:21):
Sorry Marx, but you're doing norm me sometimes. You know
there are lots of roads and you're doing that are
quite simply too dangerous for cyclists. Well, they've got every
right to be there. Anyway. Do get in touch if
you want to talk. Twenty five to nine oh eight
hundred eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two de
text and I will do what I can to keep
you informed about news around the world, particularly from the

(21:44):
Middle East. Of course, Iran has a new leader, mot Jaba,
who is the sun. Not the eldest son, but the
second eldest. Oil's gone to one hundred bucks of barrel.
That's the Brent crude, although it doesn't come in the barrel,
does it. I don't think get in touch Marcus Still
twelve oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty. Of course it

(22:07):
one hundred I was a barrel in twenty twenty two
and it's gone back to that. I think it was
when the Russia went into the Ukraine.

Speaker 5 (22:16):
Was it?

Speaker 2 (22:17):
And a bit of COVID probably overhang twenty four to
nine twenty two from nine, Yeah, I would I want
to talk about the mass of the arts and the
cars talking to each other. I am keen to talk
about the Volkswagen Porsche kit things. I don't really know
much about that. That was sort of at the beginning of
my at the beginning of my what my adulthood, I

(22:38):
wasn't really that interested in cars, but yeah, I have
been curious to know about that. I know that some
we're done with that. But yeah, if you want to
talk about that would be good to hear from you.
I'll que you updated through news with news for news
throughout the course of the evening and I'll be in touch. Oh,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine to nine

(22:59):
two de text if you've got anything else to say,
tin fish and I reckon soaps on the way out.
Sometimes you go stay in a hotel. I get to
go stay Resils and Auckland for work and they just
have those in the showers. It things you got to squeeze. Yeah,
I don't know about that. It's always an unsatisfactor in it.
It's quite who knows what it is. I just it's

(23:19):
not for me if I can say that. But get
in touch if you've got anything else to add to
this topic or any others tonight. And how worried about
you are for the price of fuel and what do
you think that that's going to do? What do you
think the ramifications of that are going to be? Are
people are going to want to sell their double care
buttes is suddenly people living in the commuter suburbs that

(23:44):
no longer works out because it's going to be expensive
to get to work. I know that's what happened last time.
By the ways the weather system coming unpredictable autumn, whether
it's here to stay yep. So there's a big precious
en off the coast too that's coming to I think
it's an next tropical cyclone. So these big swells are coming.

(24:04):
And I did want to say too, that was on
here this show. Someone was talking about we don't have
enough track and field stadiums if we want to go
for Commonwealth Games? Bid? Can I just say? And I
know no one's asking me. I could not think of
anything I'd less like New Zealand to do than go
for Commonwealth Games. Bid. Yes, it might have worked in

(24:24):
nineteen seventy four, It was kind of okay in nineteen ninety,
but certainly the last thirty years the Common Games have
been a bit of a bit of a yawn and
we'd be crazy. I have raised this topic before it
goes Oh it'd be great for our profile. It wouldn't
be great for our profile. And I think people travel
on the basis of Commonwealth Games, and as everyone's booking

(24:47):
a holiday to Birmingham, forget where the last ones where?

Speaker 5 (24:50):
Was it.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
That's how memorable that. Oh by the way, the other
thing also is that British Columbia have just switched to
permanent daylight saving, which is what we should do. So
next summer or ring when we go forward, we just
leave at Ford forever be every every good thing. And

(25:12):
I am into that. I might be to the calm Games,
but I'm very into moving the daylight savings permanently. Anyway,
eighteen from nine back soon. Hi, Jamie, it's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 9 (25:24):
Yeah, Marcus Man. I thought you were a saying person
until you just just come up with a whole let's
keep daylight savings. I understand your work at night time
and stuff, but you know it's like dark at seven
o'clock in the morning at the moment.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
What time should it be dark?

Speaker 9 (25:39):
Not seven in the morning when I meant to be working, mate,
you know what I mean? Like, let's say six o'clock
is a good time for sunrise because to those of
us that actually work early in the mornings, you know,
once it's dark, it's just it's a rubbish, mate. You know,
give us some daylight.

Speaker 2 (25:54):
But while you're working early because it's light, then right,
you just wouldn't make the job babe. Yeah, I know,
I know you've got a job, Jamie.

Speaker 9 (26:03):
Not all of our jobs start night like you don't
have a job this day to the normal app you.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
Know, are you are you a trade? Are you on roofs?

Speaker 4 (26:11):
No?

Speaker 9 (26:11):
No, I'm a greenkeeper, mates. I've got to do all
my work before the people start playing their sports.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
But if the daylight savings is permit, they'd probably start
a bit later, would they.

Speaker 5 (26:20):
No?

Speaker 17 (26:21):
No?

Speaker 9 (26:22):
Yeah, because you no, you destroy all sports would be
in general, morning sports would be destroyed because the greenkeepers
wouldn't be able to start work until it's daylight. Mate.
But it's a horrible idea. I mean, there's nothing wrong
with daylights having.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
Yeah, people don't like the adjustment every year twice a
year to chug your body clock around.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Really, I mean, of.

Speaker 9 (26:48):
All the things in the world, you know, learning how
to get out of bed a little bit earlier, a
little bit later. It's not devastating. If you're working in
an office, I could probably understand how you probably don't
like it because you never notice the difference. But for
those of ours work out doors, you know you'd notice
the difference.

Speaker 5 (27:03):
Mane.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
So in the middle of winter, what time would it
be light?

Speaker 9 (27:08):
Well, if we if we had day like no da.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
The way the way it goes, Now, what time is
it light in the in the middle of winter? Oh,
cor And what type of people tuning up at the
golf course?

Speaker 9 (27:19):
Not a golf and greenkeeper, Marcus, but I'd be guessing,
you know, most golf courses at the eight thirty nine o'clock,
but whole tournament. So my tournaments started, say eight thirty.
They have to achieve all of my work before the
eight thirty nine o'clock mark. So if you're pitching me
out now, you're pushing them out now.

Speaker 12 (27:37):
That means when they.

Speaker 9 (27:38):
Finish the end of the day at four thirty, suddenly
it's fire thirty.

Speaker 2 (27:42):
There would be the same amount of sunlight.

Speaker 9 (27:45):
You're pushing them everyone out now instead of finishing at
four thirty in the afternoon, they're now finishing at five
thirty in the afternoon. Also, all because a few people
didn't want to have daylight saving.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
And I think most people don't want to have it.

Speaker 9 (27:56):
Oh see, and they're all office workers.

Speaker 2 (27:59):
No, no, well, British Club this week people, what would.

Speaker 9 (28:02):
People that work out doors that are actually affected, they
can vote. And those who just strives to work with
headlights on or off, and then you sit in an
office with the lights on or off. They don't get
a say to.

Speaker 2 (28:13):
Do the rest today. Sharpen your blades.

Speaker 9 (28:18):
I worth a couple of clubs and marketers. I'm silly,
busy me.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
Couple of clubs. Yeah, but you're not a golf grab
You're not a golf no.

Speaker 9 (28:28):
All right, I did my Apprentishi want golf course?

Speaker 2 (28:30):
Okay, thirteen to nine, nice to talk, thank you. Oh
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty Jamie wanted to hear
at headlights? Why not compromising? Go half an hour and
leave it. I'd be okay about that, Marcus. We've currently
stored fuel plus a tanker of fuel on the way
in New Zealand. But the government wants to rise the

(28:50):
cost anyway, This just proves the government is greedy, money hungry. Well,
maybe they're buying on the open market. I don't know.
Maybe they're buying at advance, but a pushback on daylight savings.
But there we go. Jeez, that guy's are dead. Be down?
He was down, wasn't he?

Speaker 18 (29:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (29:08):
Down?

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Emphasize words, be in touch if you want to be
a part of it. People are canceling trips to Bali
because of the war. Probably that's a thing. Yeah, a
lot of people in Australia anxious about going to Bali.
I don't quite know. I guess they don't want the
whole global air system to collapse in them to be

(29:32):
stuck there. So I don't know if you're reconsidering your
travel plans. I'm not, although I probably couldn't be further
away really from Iran. And this isn't Patagonia ten from nine,
eight to seven, seven to eight, seven to eight, eight
to nine. Let's call it that, dB, it's Marcus welcome, good.

Speaker 4 (29:49):
Evening, Good evening, And this is probably not going to
go well, but we'll give it a crack. I am
in the positive side for daylight saving great.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
I knew you well.

Speaker 4 (30:02):
I'm a great fan of daylight saving. But having said that,
before we get into the pros and cons, you came
up one of your listeners said go half an hour
and leave it there, and I could almost be bent
to that idea. It didn't sound too silly.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
The farmers will bleak, they'll kick out Bob's who die,
because they always do. We're in the ransom of the
ten thousand farmers.

Speaker 19 (30:25):
Well, no, because with.

Speaker 4 (30:26):
A farmer he could plan for daylight saving the cows
don't have watches.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
No, not yet.

Speaker 4 (30:32):
All the answer there was Luther's milking time ten minutes
a day.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
For why are farmers so hell being donkey? Is it
because what time the Fontira tanker arrives.

Speaker 4 (30:44):
Yeah, yeah, they're bab they're they're bent around the tanker
times and the tank of times will change as an
end mass as one block. But again a quick talk
with the milk companies that can be worked around. But
like tomorrow, morning was fun rising around about seven point
thirty seven four team, we haven't even met equinox yet,

(31:10):
so come mid winter, sunrise won't be until after nine
o'clock in the morning for us in the southern latitudes.
Now that means sending your children to school in the dark,
and everybody else's children. I won't just stick on yours. Yeah, yes,
it's a.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
It'd be like London when you're going around it's sort
of dark at about.

Speaker 4 (31:35):
Three I guess it would be. I know it's a
bit of a wrench for your body clock, but.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
You were supporting, supporting me, won't you No, no, no,
you you to save to go, I wanted to stay. No,
I want it permanent.

Speaker 4 (31:53):
Yeah, no, and I don't I believe in daylight save it.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
I believe in it's so much. I want it all
year round.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
But now you're not getting its benefits. The benefits are
that in winter it gets lighter in the morn morning
and you're not going out on cold night, so it's
darker at night. And in summer you're getting the benefit
of a really extended evening period for you to do
something like again down at our latitudes, but summer you're

(32:23):
talking ten o'clock at night, still not daylight, but you know,
bright enough to operate well in the middle of the winter.
You don't want to be outside, but you want about
to see some sort of morning at Are about eight
o'clock not nine, nine thirty you're.

Speaker 2 (32:41):
Not too fast?

Speaker 4 (32:44):
Yeah, And I know it's most hardest on people that
have set times. And I've been a shift work all
my life and at the clock is just a pack
of time to go to work.

Speaker 5 (32:55):
Used to be.

Speaker 4 (32:55):
I'm retired now. But I suspect a lot of the
pushback is because people don't like change.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
I can't believe they got through daylight saving in the beginning.
I'm amazed they even managed to agree to it. I
mean these days, I think probably they wouldn't do it
because people would be triggered.

Speaker 4 (33:19):
But it's been around. That wasn't started in Americas. I
didn't it under almost George Washington.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
Yeah, and we had a couple we had wondering World
War two and then started permit. Well that this regular
one we're into now in nineteen seventy three or something.
I think.

Speaker 4 (33:35):
Yeah, like I said, if people are really that anti it,
maybe the half hour trick and leave it halfway between
the two extremes. But come midwinter there will be people
morning it is so dark, so long in the mornings. Well,
all we can always have daylight saving.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
I guess that's just winter dB. But yeah, okay, we'll
see what people say about that. Thank you, greetings and welcome.
Oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine nine
two to text. A lot of people have texted me
about travel. How are you feeling about travel with the
war like it is so yes, A lot of texts.
I'll read those soon if you want to talk on air.

(34:18):
A lot of texts someone's saying that cakes of soap
are so seventies and eighties. Wow, I wouldn't have thought
that would be the answer. They've lasted for generations. Yes,
so get your text through eight hundred and eighty ten eighty.

(34:40):
I'm enjoying the wisdom of the messes. Roger says Marcus
Ballei slash Indonesia is mostly Muslim. That's why people aren't
keen to go there, not so much that aviation will collapse.
I don't think Ballei is majority Muslim. I think it's
almost exclusively Hindu, which is why I was curious by that.

(35:02):
But yeah, no, I don't think that's right. Roger Roger,
Roger Roger. Some of the other texts Marcus, I'm pretty
sure the Master Miata is known as the Master MX
five in New Zealand. Do they wave to each other?
Someone says I never knew that greenkeepers have so high
opinion to themselves. How hard is it to cut grass?
And Nathan? If Nestra want to scramble to get pole ratings,

(35:25):
they should reduce the annual sick days employers can have.
The ten days was based when COVID was ramp at
years ago. Too many employees taking sick leave at cost
of employees. Yes, for daylight saving, market gardener, pain in
the neck, harvesting of the dark. First thing people can
adapt Ffs and France is two hours for lunch and

(35:46):
they worked till six pm. T we news at eight
classic key, it won't work exactly. Appreciate the greenkeepers straight up.
Nature enjoyed it. I could work out where because he
said he works a number of clubs. Where at What
of the clubs could you be a greenkeeper at? Might
be a bowls club. Ah, we are already permanently half
an hour head of our actual time. Well did you

(36:07):
know that use in New zenand there used to be
different time zones in the cargo was twenty seven minutes
behind the rest of the country. Yeah, that's true. That's
why the clock took on great importance. Marcus. With the
position of u Zen on the planet, would make sense
to have daylight saving all the year to get the
sun exactly. Cakes of soap are so seventies eighties. They

(36:27):
get thin and then go to bits. Liquid soap is
the way to go. What a waste of plastic. The
reason the time lords introduced daylight savings is because fuel
consumption goes up twenty percent. Google says that most liquid
soaps contain parole. It contained petroleum derivatives. Thus the pending

(36:48):
petroleum shortage could force us could force up the price
of liquid soap. Anyway, it's only fake soap which doesn't
clean you properly with its only true value, but that
you can sniff it and get high and use it.
The Porsche runs out of petrol, I'm gonna stockpile English
leather parmel of gold protects and Night's Casteele. Someone say
how much how good that Narnia used to smell with

(37:09):
the sandal wood soap. That's the Narnia of the shop
and his Majesty's arcade. I think it was, Hello Pauline,
it's Marcus.

Speaker 20 (37:16):
Welcome, Hello Marcus. I just want to say how much
I enjoy going into a shop and looking at the
various cakes of soap. They're very good for little presents.
You can parcel Elevender cake of Levender soap up and
it's lovely wrapping, and when someone opens it, the smell
is attractive and you can actually pop it into your

(37:40):
drawer with your scar Yes, you know it gives off
this aroma. So there's still a place in my world
for cakes of soap.

Speaker 2 (37:50):
There you'd be a night's castile. Is it still a brand?

Speaker 20 (37:54):
I don't know, Okay.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
I always enjoyed all the slogans. Don't wait to grow old,
use palmel of gold, life boy was good. Marcus have
two secret trips coming up in May, one to Brazil,
one to China. Pushing ahead as planned, no real concerns,
but could live to regret it. Paddy. Then Roger is
there with the old barley as mostly Muslim. USA has

(38:19):
just said an e sixty eighth plane to the Middle
as East and he does one thing. It transmits nuclear
codes to summarines. Oh they wouldn't, Nuka Rhan would They
just been to Malaysia and Turkey was supposed to go
through Dubai out of Kal but flight was canceled as
we're about to board. We never felt we're in any
danger or unsafe, but just crazy trimes. Truck it An,

(38:42):
then we're going. That's what track it. An's got to say.
Time zones that Chaddam Islands are forty five minutes ahead
of New Zealand's standard time. Yes, that's right, thirteen past nine.
If you want to talk sardines and soap. I don't
know why. I don't know why them price of fuel's
gone up when we haven't paid that more anyway, I

(39:02):
guess they there'd be some complicated algorithm. It'll be affected in.
Not that it serves a compute consumer well, but you
know the way it goes. Now the situation with soap,
one of soap and a rope will come back. The
article that's got me going. It's fallen so far out

(39:25):
of favor. There are fears it could soon become extinct
liquid soap. I don't think liquid soaps value. I mean,
I just think it's horrible stuff. Widespread fares bar soap
is contaminated with germs amongst millennials led to an increasing
number of Australia adaults who have washed their hands of
the once popular item. It's commonly insatiated with an older consumer. Oh,

(39:51):
I see, they think they're gonna get sick hard enough.
Death of soap. There you go. For some people, the
pump of liquid soap feels more modern. You got to
start stop piling when you get those kind of Oh.
I won't go into it. I don't want to give
all my soap habits away. But yeah, I think they'd

(40:12):
be a big move back to soap. I think soap?

Speaker 8 (40:15):
Do you ever?

Speaker 2 (40:15):
Does anyone want Johnline? That guy that's the etiquette guy.
I like him. Did you see him saying how to
eat spreadfa cereal to use a spoon and a fork. Ah, yeah,
spoon and a fork. You push your I think it's Williams' name.
He's always quite good. Yeah, they're big on not using

(40:37):
a knife for bread. But the guy, here's what he said.
I'll tell you his name. He's all over the internet,
which I can't find his I can't find the guy's name,
William Hanson. He says, here's how to eat breakfast cereal.

(41:01):
He's how to eat break for sale. First of all,
adds your milk of choice, and then with the spoon
held on your dominant hand and the fork in your
non damnant dominant hand, you will eat it. He lowers
the spoon to the bowl and pushes the corn flakes
on the spoon with his fork. He says the key
is using two pieces of cutlery for maximum control, and
a lot of viewers didn't agree with him. Yeah, he's

(41:23):
pretty out there. People say in hotel banquets have never
anyone any time seen someone use a fork for breakfast cereal,
although last year he did say and polite to side
it was more correct to eat hot chips with a
knife and fork. I think I agree with everything he says.
Hettel twelve. My late father always carried a cake of

(41:45):
soap around his pocket. Who is obsessed with clean hands?
Or who wants to tell us what the price of
fuel is where they are, Marcus, it's bread. The price
of ninety one and waikanai is currently three dollars per
liter exorbitant. Oh it's don't wait to be told. You
need palmele of gold. Oh it's don't wait to be told.
Yet I wish it was no way to crow old

(42:12):
to be told good Ona, Gary and carry. Why is
it called a cake of soap? What else would you
call it a bar of soap or a nugget of soap?
Speaking of online, I'd say see something online that said
that there's this guy's in America and the review Food
and their review America's best chicken nuggets, and they voted
the best chicken nuggets to be the ones from Popeye.

(42:34):
So it's with one of the kids. How I thought
would try Popeye chicken nuggets terrible. They made my mouth
feel very, very and unpleasant afterwards. Not good at all?
Are other bog standon McDonald ones? I think than that.
There you go. Welcome people, if you want to talk.
Marcus till midnight eight hundred and eighty ten eighty diesel

(42:56):
two thirty two twenty three and one NCA today diesel
and fung aparrah two dollars forty and then you got
your rock on top of that, haven't you? Nineteen past nine?
Any topics so little time?

Speaker 21 (43:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Funny me misremembering. I can't remember all the slogans for
the soaps. Most of them haven't survived, have they? Nights
castillas that still around, The old sunlight soap that had
a peculiar spell with its own charmed and the old yeah,
the old generic bars. Someone said they used to use
sunlight soap to wash your hair. Came out nice and

(43:30):
shiney for a good wouldn't complain about that. Got a
bit of nostalgia. Marcus is soap gonna be extincted to
clean your body way better than liquid. All the liquid
stuff's terrible. It all slips through your fingers. It's a disaster.
I can imagine people might be a little bit funny
about bars of soap out in public places, but you know,
apart from that, just take your own. I love a

(43:52):
bar of soap, or soap on a rope, or soap
shaped like an animal. I can't think of anything else like.
It is interesting about soap, sandal wood, soap, fantastic, don't
wait to be told, don't wait till you're old. What
was the sort of the one that smelled of lime?
Was that life boy like green? I can't remember all

(44:14):
of them. Twenty two past nine. It is the golden
age of tin fish too, by the way, and soaps
on its way out? And what about the mas de
cars that signals to it to each other? A lot
of topics tonight. I don't quite know what the point
of soap on the rope was a part. I guess
it was easy to fight in the shower. But that's
so long as such a thing, is it? Anyway you

(44:35):
want to speak to the nation, this is a good
chance to do it. There's something else you want to mention? Oh,
so thank you, clan. I'm keya talking about porch Porsche
copies and Porsche replica kits that would be built on
a Volkswagen CHESSI did many of those happen in New Zealand?

(44:59):
And how would you go about that? So if anyone
knows the history about those in New Zealand, I would
find that for every interesting because I believe that was
probably a thing for a while. Now that any still around,
you might see them at the VW con conventions. So
eight hundred and eighty nine nine to text you want

(45:20):
to talk about that or anything else tonight too. I
remember the beach buggies. I know that was the same
kind of thing also, and keep you updated on news
of the world tonight. Australians not wanting to go to
Ballei because of the perceived problem. So I think it's
not because of Bali. I think it's they're worried they're
going to get stuck there because I mean, every day
the conflict seems to be to escalate with more countries involved.

(45:44):
Pete Hesketh has guaranteed that Iran will surrender. As oil
prices saw past one hundred dollars a barrel driven by war,
so sort of a month ago it was probably sixty five,
so it's up fifty percent, So that's happening and get
in touch if you want to talk, and daylight savings
making it permanent. I just don't want the chain. That's

(46:06):
what would be the thing for me dieing. It's Marcus,
good evening, Good.

Speaker 22 (46:11):
Evening, Marcus.

Speaker 9 (46:12):
Hang on.

Speaker 22 (46:12):
I just switched to the TV off because I won't.

Speaker 2 (46:15):
Be able to hear what's on? What are you watching?

Speaker 22 (46:19):
Nothing? I'm actually getting ready for bed, and I've got
When I know that the TV's off, the dog will
come to bed as well, without yes to go to
look after them, so you know when things go off
and the heat pump goes off. It's so cold down
here with that lovely that the weather was when I

(46:41):
rang about is daylight saving? That should be gone now
because we're getting up in the dark in the morning.

Speaker 2 (46:48):
I like that though, Did you like that? I like
the light. I just like it kept straight the whole
year round.

Speaker 22 (46:55):
Oh yeah, thing down here, it's here. It's too dark
in the mornings, and even for kids going to school,
it's a bit too dangerous and icy roads. And got
to think about that.

Speaker 2 (47:08):
There wouldn't be many kids on icy roads, would there?

Speaker 23 (47:12):
Oh?

Speaker 22 (47:13):
Yes, this through one school around here, and that's Mountain
View and Saint Joseph's down the road and then this
mark well and there's you know what, what's you in
the good old Tomorrow?

Speaker 2 (47:30):
Is it ever snow there?

Speaker 22 (47:33):
Well, it hasn't for a few years, but it does, Yes,
it can do.

Speaker 19 (47:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 22 (47:39):
I think we did just about get snow last year,
but the flakes it were still a bit warm and
the flakes melted the way.

Speaker 2 (47:47):
It didn't settle.

Speaker 22 (47:50):
No, we have had snow here, yes, I can remember,
and you know, the snow and the people were coming there.
There were people volunteering. If you had to go to work,
they'd come and pick you.

Speaker 23 (48:05):
Up and there.

Speaker 2 (48:06):
Yeah, I don't think we've had snow down on Bluff
for five or six years. We used to get a
little bit, but it hasn't done. Yeah, but maybe it'll
still come back.

Speaker 22 (48:16):
Yeah, I'm not. I don't like snow anyway.

Speaker 2 (48:20):
Don't I think.

Speaker 22 (48:23):
You would because you've still got young kids. I mean
I used to. Yeah, I used to love the snow too,
And you have the snowman and make a snowman. And
I think we used to go up the back of
the Peeddix when we lived at Winscumb and we used
to use whatever we could find to make a sledge

(48:45):
and you'd even take the lid of the washerware scene
and you'd tie it. You know, you'd be tied on
the back of a truck and then you'd be on
that driving around.

Speaker 11 (48:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:00):
You don't hear much about Winskm these days, do you.

Speaker 9 (49:04):
No, you don't.

Speaker 22 (49:05):
It's still not like the days when I lived there.

Speaker 2 (49:08):
I would have been a railway town when you were there?
Is that right?

Speaker 22 (49:10):
Did the go the railway and then with the army
were taken through There was Burnham Military camp there and
they were going reckwards and forwards all the time those
days when I was there.

Speaker 2 (49:23):
I don't think there is there a pub? What's it
Winscom Is there a pub? And the school?

Speaker 8 (49:27):
Is there?

Speaker 22 (49:29):
No?

Speaker 2 (49:29):
That's not.

Speaker 22 (49:30):
You go to fay oh yeah ok? Yeah, or you
could bike to Fear. I used to bike sometimes and do.

Speaker 2 (49:38):
You buy gears?

Speaker 23 (49:40):
Yep?

Speaker 2 (49:42):
Just three?

Speaker 22 (49:44):
Yeah, probably that's available. But yeah, yeah yeah bike to
school and sometimes because I used to go and practice
my music before I went to school, because I might
have been going to play somewhere for this Sunday mass
or something, you know like that, what would you play
old Queen of here?

Speaker 2 (50:07):
But what instrument?

Speaker 22 (50:09):
Oh, where's an organ? One of those pedal one?

Speaker 2 (50:14):
Yeah, I know, how does hal Queen of what do
you call it?

Speaker 22 (50:16):
I'm not singing that tonight, so.

Speaker 2 (50:20):
Hail Queen of Heaven. It sounds like a banger.

Speaker 22 (50:22):
Yeah, old Queen of Heaven. I've just forgotten the words.

Speaker 2 (50:28):
I find someone to sing it for us, dying to
put us out of our Everyone can ring and see
Hail Queen of Heaven. That might be good for tonight.
It was the stop before Fairly Winskim. They went Winskim,
Fairly Eversley. A lot of people free passionate about bars
of soap. They treasure them as young people, keep them

(50:49):
in soft draws and things, which I'm into. Kelvin AND's
Marcus welcome.

Speaker 23 (50:55):
You can't buy now tubes of palmela of shaving cream.
You know, they're in a tube like toothpaste. They've stopped
making it. And it was very convenient too. Was what
I wrung up with?

Speaker 24 (51:06):
What?

Speaker 9 (51:06):
What?

Speaker 2 (51:06):
What was it?

Speaker 23 (51:07):
Calvin shaving cream? It was in a tube like toothpaste,
palm olive, It was to it was a green color.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
I don't like the stuff. I don't like the on
the rare occasions I shaved have to buy one of
those what's it called those? You know, those pressurized ones.

Speaker 23 (51:24):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (51:26):
Terrible. Too much comes out terrible, then you can't slippery terrible.

Speaker 23 (51:32):
Well, when you've got a little brush with the hot water,
the brush and the tube beautiful, no problem at all.

Speaker 2 (51:41):
What he would what here would that brush be made
out of?

Speaker 5 (51:46):
Well?

Speaker 23 (51:47):
I think at one time it used to be horse here,
but I'm not too sure. The real l Cheapo ones
are just plastic or nylon sort of stuff.

Speaker 2 (51:55):
It might be beggy here or something. I don't know
what a shaving brush anyway.

Speaker 23 (52:00):
Anyway, now with your magic buttons, you'll be able to
track it down and find out. But I seem to
recall cars with a new body top on, and they
were a few decades ago. They were buying up elderly
Triumph Heralds because the Triumph Herald motor car had a

(52:22):
full flat body all the way through for a floor level,
and they could easily fit on a fiberglass sports body
on top of it. So that was one thing what
they were using. Whatever buttons, you'll be able to crack
down what particular motor car they stuck on top. But
The other thing with acknowledging motor cars. When I'm driving around,

(52:47):
I acknowledge people who've got a black number plate, the
original black number plate.

Speaker 2 (52:51):
Like, wow, have you used to got the old black one?

Speaker 23 (52:54):
Yep, you can. You can go and buy a new
type of black number plate now advertise on television. But
mine is the original from ninety eighty four. Very good
goes are right?

Speaker 24 (53:06):
My car?

Speaker 25 (53:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 23 (53:08):
Yeah, it's in better condition than me my med car
you got.

Speaker 2 (53:12):
I'm strightly trying to work out what that Triumph Herald was.

Speaker 23 (53:16):
Yes, well, I think that you'll be able to track
that down or some of your listeners. I'm positive it
was a Triumph Herald motor car and they took the
top off completely and the idea was, as I said before,
it was a complete flat floor level body.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
I'm going to see if I can find out more
about that. Calvin, tell us you what I can do
about that. But I appreciate that. Did you have something
else to say?

Speaker 5 (53:41):
No?

Speaker 2 (53:41):
That was it brilliant, short and sharp, short and shop,
don't you go?

Speaker 19 (53:44):
Evon Marcus welcome, I've just come down the broadcast in
the christ Church.

Speaker 26 (53:51):
The VP is advertising ninety one at two seventy nine,
and I think that ninety eight. The Dera one is
three dollars and nine. It has gone up a little bit.

Speaker 2 (54:01):
How much was it.

Speaker 26 (54:02):
Tu seventy nine for ninety one which I buy, and
three dollars and nine for the dearest one?

Speaker 2 (54:09):
Yeah, I filled upstate and it was gone from one
hundred and fifteen one hundred and thirty. So it feels
like it's gone up ten percent. But yeah, how much
do you think that's gone up as a percent?

Speaker 26 (54:17):
Sidney nine? Are the truth? Simney nine? Then it's gone
up about forty two cents over since I looked. I
think it was yesterday and it was only true forty truth.

Speaker 2 (54:27):
Okay, Oh, thanks for being vigilant, Evan. I appreciate that.
Twenty four to ten. What do you do when the
soap gets too small to keep using it? Throw it away?
Marcus New World sells sunlight soap times for in a box. Anna.
I'm totally with you on daylight saving. Leave it as
nature intended. You don't think nature intended clocks, But anyway,

(54:48):
we interfere with it enough as it does. Don't have
it at all. Just your life for the light or
dark as it comes. Dad, was always given old spice
soap for Christmas from elderly aren't It was always in
a beautiful wrapping package to keep it in his wardrobe.
Quality shaving brushes are made from bores. Here. I have
a soap bar size open weave bag on a rope

(55:08):
from a soap. Never have scraps bags exfoliatxfoliates at the
same time. Soap cleansers, not ex foliates. But thank you,
Hudle twelve Marcus, what's up? Get in touch here the end?
But are end soap's on it? It's all that plunge stuff.
Not a fan obviously, or that packaging, all that plastic,

(55:33):
horrible and bulky. Airlines may look to cut flights as
fuel prices soar well, it's air chathams. Oh cope, Yeah,
it's not looking good, is it? None of it's good.
None of it's even close to good. Have you got
anything to add? That's what we're about. Twenty three to
ten Israeli military has detected you incoming Iranian missile attack.

(55:58):
I think they've got now bombs that split. I was
watching a bit of CNN and they've got a new
thing called what are they call a bombs that split?
Funny enough, the Americans have been using Ukrainian intael to
build droned to or to build things to blow up

(56:19):
the incoming missiles.

Speaker 5 (56:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (56:23):
I can't work out what they're called, the bombs that
that break up. You might know the expression for that.
I can't quite find it. Initially ten someone's emailed Marcus,
how good was sold though the original sand soap that
would get grubby hands sorted after a day? And this
she chairs alistair. I've replied, so good? How good was it, Louise,

(56:44):
it's Marcus. Welcome?

Speaker 13 (56:46):
Oh hi Marcus.

Speaker 27 (56:48):
Are they getting with a soap?

Speaker 18 (56:50):
Yep?

Speaker 8 (56:51):
Yep?

Speaker 7 (56:51):
Gone?

Speaker 2 (56:52):
What the millennials think it's dirty and they need that
stuff where you plunge?

Speaker 27 (57:00):
Oh no, yeah, well I'll go to supermarket tomorrow. I'll
get a whole lot.

Speaker 2 (57:05):
Will what brain? Will you bye?

Speaker 27 (57:07):
I usually get the Echo shop coconut a coconut oil
on it.

Speaker 28 (57:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (57:15):
After that, well yes, yes.

Speaker 27 (57:18):
And the other thing I rung up about was the Triumph.
My first love had one of those cars, and he
called it a Triumph Dart. It was a Triumph's body
that had that They took off the top and put
a fiberglass stop on it. And made it a bit
more sporty.

Speaker 5 (57:40):
Ow.

Speaker 13 (57:42):
Yeah, that was back in the early seventies.

Speaker 2 (57:47):
You shoe was called a dart.

Speaker 27 (57:50):
Yes, it definitely was. Yeah, it was in christ Church.
I think it was a local guy doing it. I
just yeah, it just came to me as soon as
that guy talked about it, I thought, oh, yes, I
remember that.

Speaker 16 (58:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (58:09):
Well, I don't know if it would be in there
around he purchased.

Speaker 2 (58:12):
Did he purchase it new?

Speaker 13 (58:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 29 (58:15):
No.

Speaker 13 (58:16):
I think it was secondhand because it was originally a
Triumph Herald, so it would have been second hand.

Speaker 2 (58:22):
And you said it was fiberglass. I can't see the
images of it.

Speaker 13 (58:26):
It was fiberglass. Yeah, yeah, it was definitely a Triumph dart,
that's what That's what he called it. Anyway, So I
don't know.

Speaker 2 (58:34):
Was it a rocket?

Speaker 20 (58:35):
Was quick?

Speaker 12 (58:36):
Not really remember?

Speaker 13 (58:40):
Relatively sporty looking. I think it was yellow. Full memory,
But that was a long.

Speaker 2 (58:45):
Time ago, when his early seventies.

Speaker 13 (58:49):
Yeah, seventy seventy three.

Speaker 2 (58:52):
What a time to be alive.

Speaker 13 (58:53):
Oh yes it was. It was wonderful.

Speaker 2 (58:56):
Christ seventy three. And try a converted car with a
fiberglass body.

Speaker 13 (59:01):
Yes, yes, those were the days.

Speaker 2 (59:05):
Wow, were your coconut soap tomorrow? Louise, thank you for
calling hello, Brian, Brian.

Speaker 14 (59:13):
The Triumph Herald had a full chessis and so you
could take the whole body off it.

Speaker 2 (59:20):
When I'm not a car person, Brian, IM sorry to
be the interrupting guy, but where you say full chessie,
what do you mean by that?

Speaker 14 (59:27):
Well, most cars today don't have a chessis like a
box section steel, but that holds the suspension and steering
and everything on it. Understand, we did take the body
of it completely and they come out with a body
the five of us body could in this minstrel, believe

(59:49):
it or not. But the Trump split file was faced
on the same chessis.

Speaker 2 (59:56):
So what was the what was the minstrel? Did Triumph
produce that body or did someone else produce.

Speaker 14 (01:00:01):
It was a homemade set up made by In fact,
that guy and Ashburton made one originally, and it was called.

Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
A Mistral, not minstrel Mistral Mistral.

Speaker 14 (01:00:14):
Yeah, And the Triumph Spitfire was based on the same design,
same Jesse And they could get a Spitfire with a
hard top or a soft top. Same with the Hero
you could get a hard top or a soft top
for that as well.

Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
Were many of them built?

Speaker 14 (01:00:33):
No, No, they weren't, and it wasn't called a dart.
Dart was another type of carrier. So telling the member
exactly what it was.

Speaker 2 (01:00:42):
I think that was. I think a dart was a Dodge.

Speaker 14 (01:00:45):
When there was a Dodge dart. But there was also
a sports car called a dart. It wasn't the name Jerry,
It was something like that called a dart as well.
Because one of my friends they went that was getting
back fifty years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
So is this just a New Zealand thing?

Speaker 5 (01:01:03):
Yeah, yeah it is.

Speaker 14 (01:01:04):
It's not a factory built so they look really stomach.
There's are not very many of them ever made. In fact,
the Nashburton guy had the molds for the for the
five glass body.

Speaker 2 (01:01:17):
Was there was there a metal frame inside the fiberglass?
Were they They're quite dangerous?

Speaker 14 (01:01:24):
Well you'd call the it's all yeah, No, no, So
the we held was a great big car because like
I say, they were very very few cars have a
chessie at all, but they did. They had a full chessie.
So you just unbolted the body through the body while
it bolted the five glass. This strong body on it

(01:01:45):
you had a for sports car?

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
Cool you wonder how would be curious that there's there'll
be some There'll be some fans that know how many
were built and where they all are, wouldn't they. That's
sort of sort of things that inspires passion, doesn't it.

Speaker 29 (01:01:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 14 (01:02:00):
I remember from sure, I think it was only about
fifty years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:02:06):
Okay years ago.

Speaker 5 (01:02:07):
When we're doing it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
Does the fiberglass age well? Or does it get? Does it.

Speaker 5 (01:02:14):
It goes big Bristol?

Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
Someone said, it's the day. It's the Daimler Dart.

Speaker 14 (01:02:21):
That's all right, there's a Dable of Dart. That's what
my friend had, He had a DA Dart.

Speaker 2 (01:02:27):
But that's not a fire That's not a fiberglass thing,
is it now?

Speaker 14 (01:02:30):
It's a different tail together, So that lady's the dart thing.
I mean, there's a Dodge Dart, but that's a totally
different thing altogether.

Speaker 2 (01:02:37):
Nice looking the Dame. It's a nice looking car of
the Dame of Dart. Beautiful sports car used by the police.

Speaker 14 (01:02:45):
There wouldn't be many of the inflat around now either.

Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
No, I haven't got one.

Speaker 5 (01:02:49):
Nothing.

Speaker 2 (01:02:49):
Oh the bye does to talk Brian, Thank you? Thirty
to ten eleven away from ten Pippert's Marcus Good Evening.

Speaker 30 (01:02:59):
I have ninety one at two dollars forty five. These
were at one dollar ninety three. And because if you
go to a New World supermarket and you and you
spend a dollar, your eighteenths off the Leader. Okay, if
that's a help for people. And today I went and
brought two twenty Leader diesel gerry cans and two twenty

(01:03:21):
Leaders petrol because I'm going.

Speaker 15 (01:03:22):
To start may have to start to hoard.

Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
Where will you keep it, Hannah, where will you keep it?

Speaker 30 (01:03:29):
I'd probably keep it somebody really safe with my garage
around a.

Speaker 15 (01:03:31):
Bung wall of some sort.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
What did you say after garage and what bungle?

Speaker 30 (01:03:37):
After bungwall? You just build You just built a sort
of a barrier around it of some sort. But it's
just yeah, you get it from mine to ten. That's
where I got them from. And I got to go
because I'm actually doing.

Speaker 4 (01:03:47):
Something good on hi Ken.

Speaker 31 (01:03:50):
Yes, the twelve Heralds, they made thousands, and I worked
at this one hundred and twelve Leadership and they came
out in nineteen fifty nine. It was nine to eight
CC and they made the salute and they made a
coupe which had a hard top with the sloping back,
and they had a convertible, and then they made the

(01:04:12):
twelve hundred and that game was available in all the
same models, and they also made the station wagon of
the same and then then they made a Triumph to
tests which had a two liter mojor same sort of
the bonnet was a different trape rather than that. The
rest of the car was mostly the Signe two leads major.

(01:04:33):
They put sixteen hundred major in first, and then they
went to the two thousand later and then the later
ones became a Triumph thirteen sixty. They changed them just
a little bit down the grill and slightly bigger major.
And then the other thing they did with them as well,
there was a back off from the UK. There was

(01:04:55):
an outfit called Bond Equipped and what they used to
do they used to put a fiber glass body on
the Trio Feral chassis. It was like a more multi
version with twin that's all the briby glass Bond different
models of that.

Speaker 2 (01:05:10):
Bond equip Yeah, yeah, got it. I'm so a beautiful
looking thing.

Speaker 18 (01:05:15):
Wow yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:05:17):
Any any news were you in New Zealand or in England, Ken,
I was.

Speaker 31 (01:05:21):
I was in England and Greens at the time.

Speaker 2 (01:05:23):
Have you seen any bond equip in New Zealand?

Speaker 31 (01:05:26):
No, No, I've never seen any out there.

Speaker 2 (01:05:28):
I'm going to look into and run for commercials. But
nice to talk to you, Ken. Thank you. Hello, Malcolm,
it's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 7 (01:05:35):
How are you going, Marcus? Good?

Speaker 2 (01:05:36):
Thank you Malcolm. How are you going?

Speaker 6 (01:05:38):
God good.

Speaker 32 (01:05:38):
I've got a little moan to have about GST and fuel,
But firstly I will say it. I mean, since you're
talking about Trump heralds or some people are. I went
from my license in the Trump field actually Beck in
nineteen seventy nine manual. Yes you're you don't think they've
had an automatic one, but near my sister's car ten
days after I was fifteen.

Speaker 2 (01:05:59):
Four on the floor column shift. I don't know where
their gears were.

Speaker 5 (01:06:02):
Yeah, four on the floor the head.

Speaker 32 (01:06:04):
We've done a bit of work on it for my sister.
The extra shoes a few years older than me, but
bought as a wreck and done it up for me
and my brother did. Mainly they had like a cardboard
pressed cardboard women hump over the gearbox which you could
take out from inside the vehicle, you know, a thick
cardboardy type stuff. It wasn't wood and it wasn't cardboard,

(01:06:26):
but it was somewhere in between. The funny old thing.

Speaker 7 (01:06:30):
Horrible.

Speaker 2 (01:06:31):
Where did you do your hell start?

Speaker 32 (01:06:33):
Uh hillstart Maungreki hill m hmm. Yeah, but they done
Actually they made me do a hill start end a
three point turn from memory on the hill. But the
blomen Trump fields they could turn in one in one lane.
They had such a tight steering.

Speaker 9 (01:06:50):
Lock on them.

Speaker 2 (01:06:51):
It's low had is it?

Speaker 20 (01:06:53):
Yes?

Speaker 32 (01:06:53):
Yeh Mungreky normandale Mungreki overby just above Lower Heart City.

Speaker 12 (01:06:59):
Yes, there was that one.

Speaker 32 (01:07:00):
But my my biggest split here in this has been
recking me for every time that fuel goes up, and
you know, you get the government saying no, you know,
we don't know what we can do it, don't know
what we can do about it. But the GST that
they get every time fuel goes up is an incredible way.
Ye do people think about that and.

Speaker 2 (01:07:20):
The road use it and or the text on it.

Speaker 32 (01:07:23):
Yeah, but that the text the text is stays the same.
The GST changes as it goes up.

Speaker 2 (01:07:29):
So we're talking about texts. Is a percentage isn't.

Speaker 32 (01:07:31):
It done by dollar value?

Speaker 4 (01:07:36):
I think.

Speaker 32 (01:07:38):
I would have hoped it was only an amount per
per liter, not not change. If that changes as well,
it's even more drastic.

Speaker 3 (01:07:45):
But just you might be right.

Speaker 2 (01:07:48):
I don't know if the percentage just leave. It's a
good point you make.

Speaker 32 (01:07:51):
Yeah, but you know the ges they say the fuel
goes up a dollar, so they get fifteen cents more
per liter. That's right, A so saying it not an
average fill, but a good fill fifty liters, it turns
into seven dollars seven dollars fifty is it turns into
five thousand, five thousand cars full up in a day?

(01:08:15):
Five thousand cars fill up in a day, and much
more than that, easy, yeah, easy, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:08:20):
I think I think every car, yeah, ten percent of
the cars would fill up every yeah yeah, certainly so.

Speaker 32 (01:08:27):
That five thousand vehicles filling up if it goes up
a dollar turns in. This is based on five thousand vehicles.
That's thirty seven thousand and thirty seven and a half
thousand a day, turns into thirteen point six million per year.

Speaker 2 (01:08:42):
I think it'd be a lot more than that.

Speaker 13 (01:08:44):
Mac.

Speaker 2 (01:08:44):
We'll see if I get something to do the math,
but yeah, I think there'd be a fortune. I think
it probably be a couple of hundred thousand cars every week.
Someone might know. But thanks, nice to talk. Good evening
seven past I'm just reading about VW Carkets. I don't
know what ones there were or how many there would
be on the roads in New Zealand that were with Carkets.

(01:09:05):
I'm looking about the d W Taipan, which is a
pretty remarkable looking car. I don't know how many would
be in New Zealand. I've never I'm not aware of
seeing one on the road, but yeah, I'm always in
for Carket discussions. They kind of look not weird anyway.
That's what we are talking about tonight. Oh extra about everything.

(01:09:25):
It's been a very broad show, which I like, and
they reckon soap's god bars of soap. It's all plun
what do they call it? Sort of is it called
floats on? We have it at our house. But I'm
not a fan. I'm a soap guy. Old school hotels
are changing to pump soap because there's less waste, that's right.
I think we all realize that, but we don't want
to invade all our lives oh, having a battle with

(01:09:56):
someone online about percentages. I don't know how much price
has gone up a barrel, but it feels like it's
about a third. But yeah, a lot of hurt coming
as far as well, not the hurt that's going to
happen to the people of a rain around it and
getting bombed. But you know what I'm saying. So if
you want to be on a part of the show,

(01:10:17):
that's the discussion. Oh, eight hundred eighty ten eighty. Forget
what all the famous brands of soap were the of
the seventies that we no longer Life Boy seemed to
be a fairly full on one. Don't even know. I
couldn't really describe the flavor of Life Boy. I don't

(01:10:37):
know how you describe it. There was one that was
sort of lime flavor. That sounds wrong as I'm saying that, though,
would you call it a flavor? They were making their
own soap phonolic or strong carbolic acid. You see, they've
said it's I always thought it was red. What was
the green soap? I don't know the answer to these questions. Oh,

(01:11:00):
eight hundred eighty ten eight if you want to it,
there's anything else they're talking about the death of soap
on the way out. Yep, I wouldn't believe it myself
if I hadn't read it. But yeah, she's gone burger.
It's all out of favor. Oh, Iran has had a
near total internet blackout for ten days, and Israel has

(01:11:24):
carried out more strikes en be route. What was the
green soap? Richard, good evening, it's Marcus, welcome reading.

Speaker 5 (01:11:33):
I just tuned in an hour ago and heard no soap.

Speaker 2 (01:11:36):
Yeah, no soulvol No, no one wants to They all
want that stuff. You plunge.

Speaker 5 (01:11:43):
Oh, it's kind of rude, but you really want to
get rid of an old timey thing from way back
is dishwashing liquid and the teaspoon of sugar. So if
you've got oil and crusted hands, Oh.

Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
Yeah, the sugar is the abrasion, is it?

Speaker 5 (01:12:01):
It certainly works. You need a couple of minutes and
it's not order.

Speaker 2 (01:12:06):
You can make it yourself.

Speaker 5 (01:12:08):
Yeah, just washing could squirt in the hands of a
tea spoons. Sugar.

Speaker 2 (01:12:14):
There's a thing. There is a thing called sugar soap,
isn't there.

Speaker 5 (01:12:17):
Yeah, you're not quite as harsh as disrushing quid.

Speaker 2 (01:12:24):
Okay, nice to talk Richard Paul at to Marcus welcome
Wood evening.

Speaker 7 (01:12:28):
Oh, hello, yeah, they're already sorry about that. I was
expecially to take longer. Yeah, Paul here from Woodwell, hey,
I just heard all the news before that the fans
for Emergency in New Zealand was looking at doing a
bit of a strike to not attend any houses that

(01:12:49):
are bending down while they're bending down, which I've done
very much that any of those men would do. It's
a very interesting point I take to her examine and
I would like.

Speaker 2 (01:12:58):
To when you say, mister word, you said something.

Speaker 14 (01:13:03):
What was that?

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
Sorry, Marcus, keep going, I just missed, and would you said.

Speaker 7 (01:13:08):
Oh, yeah, the fire Emergency in New Zealand they're having
a strike.

Speaker 5 (01:13:13):
Heard that.

Speaker 2 (01:13:14):
You said, you'd be very surprised.

Speaker 7 (01:13:16):
If they that's right, did I said, it'd be very
surprised if those guys actually did that when there was
a house bending down and effectively they said no, we're
not going to go there, We'll let it burn down.
I can't see any of them doing that, and that's
a very very good point of.

Speaker 5 (01:13:37):
Focus.

Speaker 7 (01:13:37):
I think that could create an interesting point of proper.

Speaker 2 (01:13:41):
Are you a volunteer fireman?

Speaker 29 (01:13:44):
No?

Speaker 7 (01:13:45):
No, I just But I have known fire fighters in
the past, and these guys are brave men as roma,
and there's no way when they're hearing that your house
is burning down, they're going to go not wear a stroke.
We will just let it burn down.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
Thanks for that, Paul Pete Marcus welcome.

Speaker 7 (01:14:03):
Yeah, Marcus.

Speaker 33 (01:14:04):
Regarding the soap, I reckon the government should maybe I
get into that industry, you know, only it's aw as.
You always need soap, just normal soap, Like you're heavy
your head for years a cake of soap. You know
you're just doing it now on me. You haven't look
at those dispens things expensive. You imagine kids, how much
they'd waste, be a hell of a lot more expensive

(01:14:25):
than the normal soap.

Speaker 2 (01:14:27):
It's terrible. And then you got to because you're supposed
to refill them. But you're never anything to throw that
damn thing away. And the soap doesn't seem to have
much guts to it. It seems to be quite a
liquid kind of a Thing's terrible stuff.

Speaker 33 (01:14:38):
You just can't beat a block of soap, come close to.

Speaker 2 (01:14:42):
But you can't have ben come close to beating it.

Speaker 33 (01:14:45):
No, I reckon the government should. No, you can't be
much about it.

Speaker 2 (01:14:48):
I should become an eleaktion issue. Whoever's going to vote
for just keeping the soap? That's that's terrible.

Speaker 33 (01:14:54):
Oh it's going back. I don't understand. And for hospitals
and stuff like, for hygiene you.

Speaker 2 (01:14:59):
Don't want to well, if you want to do it
with your elbows, if you're a surgeon. But but hell's bells,
that's not many people.

Speaker 33 (01:15:05):
But for normal elseholes, you know, you can imagine how
little cuss you're fortunately, you know, well, you know, kids
are light, they'll get in there enough. The user that
he core of a container and one buddy what and
one wash? You know, it's a certain thing. The gun
that's got a sort of step in there. Just it's
just going too far. I think what's happening is what
you say. You got all that, all those containers, all
that prest there, We're gonna have to another thing. We've

(01:15:27):
got to recycle.

Speaker 2 (01:15:29):
There's no point to recycling. I think everyone's realized that
recycling is just a dud. The amount of plastic produce,
the amount of presstick produced the last ten years has doubled,
and the picture chemical companies have tried to make out
the people that they recycle, but there's no point to it.
I'm convinced about that.

Speaker 16 (01:15:47):
I'm body sure.

Speaker 33 (01:15:48):
Do you read your clean on my containers? Do everything right,
put it in the recycling, But I think all my
hard works for nothing. At end of the debuts, you
actually watched where it went to. I think it's a
bit of a joke.

Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
No, it's a total joke. The idea is just not
to buy the plastic in the first place.

Speaker 33 (01:16:06):
Should we stopping from there? Should be stopping the gums
are stepping and say no, this is there's no need
for that, like parmle of soap. But notice years ago
and these got to back and save. They used to
have They used to have two or three different companies
making you know, you said Paramoley, You said, well, excuse me,
their lucks Saber used to have those cheaper ones, like
cheaper it's going to block of like eight pack.

Speaker 31 (01:16:28):
I used get those.

Speaker 33 (01:16:29):
Quite a bit. It's actually a bit of a competition
for Parmola. But I know this pack and say they
got rid of all it so basically hard.

Speaker 29 (01:16:35):
You know you got.

Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
You got cod, you got COVID.

Speaker 33 (01:16:40):
I don't think so, uh, but I just uh, you know,
you only got lux and you only got Paramola. Now
all the cheaper brands have gone on, all the monopolies
taken over, the smaller ones that try to keep Paramolar
and lux on the above the keep the mate honest.

Speaker 2 (01:16:58):
Now I can't remember what the green one was.

Speaker 33 (01:17:01):
Yeah yet Paramo you know you know the Lux say
lux of that that that was it? That was their
brand too. And then your head so I said before
and need you said quite a few of those. You're
back and say you had them. I think sometimes countdown
heading them as well. Without guy, there are slightly smaller
blocks than the normal par mile of block.

Speaker 2 (01:17:19):
So you you've already noticed that the supermarkets now that
there's not there's much fewer, much less choice.

Speaker 33 (01:17:25):
There's definitely is Yep, there are the normal cheaper ones
that obviously can't compete with I don't know with well
they might know. They might have retired or something got
out of it in the story. I don't know. But
I used to get it all the time, and I'm Dutch.
I always get the cheapest block of soap soap fars
in soaper soap, I don't keep if it's a paramole
of us or whatever. Soaper soap bars on the suit.

Speaker 2 (01:17:47):
Don't disagree, Pete, thank you. Sean Marcus welcome.

Speaker 16 (01:17:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:17:52):
About sixty more years ago they had a product called
sand soap. It was they made it in blocks about
half the size of a brick, a building brick, and
the it was mostly years for scrubbing claws and you
just drubbed the cake over the floor and for the

(01:18:13):
posted as well as cleaned it. But they haven't seen it. Well, yeah,
probably sixty years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:18:21):
Was replaced that.

Speaker 8 (01:18:24):
I wouldn't have a clue.

Speaker 2 (01:18:27):
No, I wouldn't know about that. I wouldn't We'll find out,
Thank you short. Malcolm Marcus welcome.

Speaker 34 (01:18:32):
Hey, here you going's a Marcus you.

Speaker 2 (01:18:34):
Well, you're good, thank you, Malcolm good good.

Speaker 34 (01:18:37):
I think Norska was that the green soap had a
Scandinavian head for the music and the people under the
rain showers and stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:18:48):
The one you're thinking Abousca was pretty full on. Yeah,
back in the day there a music festival or something,
didn't they they're pretty full.

Speaker 34 (01:18:57):
Yeah, yeah, hey, and just on the fence and things
talking about the strikes.

Speaker 5 (01:19:03):
And what have you.

Speaker 34 (01:19:05):
As a volunteered. A bigger issue is what people probably
don't realize is as volunteers. We're not even covered by ACC.
So we can go to a crash where a drink
or drunk drivers of course mayhem, they all get looked after.
We could get injured, anything could happen to us at

(01:19:25):
the scene. No acc cover for your for your day job. Yeah,
to cover us, yep, because of course we're volunteering when
we go. So yeah, that's all the other paid boys,
the professionals, they say, the paid ones trying to get
more money, trying to sort out issues with trucks and

(01:19:46):
on every But yeah, it's something that needs to be addressed,
I think because it's you know, they actually heard an
MP talking about it the other day, so maybe they will.
But it's pretty crazy that I'm a crash cause an accident,
I'll get acc and the guys trying to look after
everybody are in danger of something happening at and then

(01:20:07):
not getting ACALC themselves because we're not covered. We're not
covered as a volunteer.

Speaker 24 (01:20:15):
While we're on a call.

Speaker 2 (01:20:16):
Nice to hear from you, Malcolm, thank you for that.
Nineteen past ten. Say it's Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 25 (01:20:24):
Hello Marcus. I've got a couple of things for you.
Years ago, you used to get the yet bright yellow ones.
It was called Sunlight.

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
I think it's still good. That can you.

Speaker 16 (01:20:32):
They were in bad but.

Speaker 25 (01:20:33):
They came in a box. I think it was about
four or four or six in a box. But pam
Oliver is a green one. And at the moment I've
got a pink.

Speaker 2 (01:20:44):
But there's other ones I can't remember. But that's all right,
I am. It's hard to.

Speaker 5 (01:20:49):
Then.

Speaker 25 (01:20:50):
Yeah, I've got a green at the moment, I've got
a pinky green one. But I have had a blue Luxe.
But I washed my head the soup I don't use.
I'm shampoo. I always watched my e sop lad that
runs it. I'll do it again when it's that speaking.
While it's clean.

Speaker 2 (01:21:07):
That's it. With Sunlight soap or with some other brand.

Speaker 25 (01:21:10):
No, no soap, I've got. I've got lax at the moment.
Something he's done and lux Next week I'll get a panel.
I'm I'm rocking fine long panels.

Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
Wonder why you chop and change and just don't stick
with one's fair.

Speaker 25 (01:21:23):
Enough by I'll go shopping tomorrow and get some of
us coming off to Marcus.

Speaker 2 (01:21:29):
Good on you stop part keep well, keeping the freezer
Whendy Marcus welcome, Hi Marcus.

Speaker 35 (01:21:36):
Yeah, the green soap. Do you think it's small figure
you tried.

Speaker 17 (01:21:40):
To think, No, it's not, but there was.

Speaker 2 (01:21:42):
It was green and kind of white and marbled.

Speaker 35 (01:21:46):
Oh no, I thought we might have been talking about
small fee.

Speaker 36 (01:21:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:21:54):
Yeah, it's funny how you try and remember things for
your past and you can't. But yeah, they were. They
were like the hardcore Wednesday for like ye for your
mechanic shop and stuff. Yeah, yeah, you'd be you'd be
a you'd be a flo What do they call that soap?

(01:22:14):
You plunge for?

Speaker 9 (01:22:15):
What's that called flowing soap?

Speaker 5 (01:22:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:22:18):
Is it called flow? Is that kind of an Is
it called flow soap?

Speaker 30 (01:22:22):
Flowing?

Speaker 2 (01:22:23):
Okay, even that sounds wrong, doesn't it.

Speaker 35 (01:22:27):
Yeah, that's not right. Bring back the bar.

Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
Well yeah, well it hasn't gone yet, but it'll go soon.
By the sounds of things. When that's that, it's on
its way out. Sarah Marcus welcome.

Speaker 7 (01:22:37):
Yeah, thanks Marcus.

Speaker 16 (01:22:37):
Hello, good evening, Hello, good evening.

Speaker 21 (01:22:42):
First of all, it's liquid hand soap. Everything a pump
on your on your think that it's usually called a
liquid hand soap, or, as you say, a flowing soap.
Now I live a very old mansion and there's a
few pictures around the place is like a boarding house.
But in the laboratory there is a very old picture

(01:23:05):
with a couple of children and a bath with a dog,
and it says, don't tell mum, and the brand is Peers.
I was wondering if that might be the green one
you're talking about.

Speaker 2 (01:23:17):
Peers are still you still get that cancer? It's still
like an amber color, is it?

Speaker 21 (01:23:22):
I'm not sure, but I just thought Peers being peer
being color being greenish, and it's before my time. I
only warn a too.

Speaker 2 (01:23:29):
I think you can still get that.

Speaker 21 (01:23:31):
But you're talking about less less enjoyable topic the bomb
you're talking about. They also the name of them also
can be used as a prefix for the F word.

Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
Cluster R does a cluster bond that breaks up? Isn't it?
That seems to be effective?

Speaker 21 (01:23:52):
And I believe they're actually illegal. I think, aren't they
you know, nations or you in or something like that.
I think they've deem them to be illegal buster bombs
because they don't always blow up, and then after the
war's finished, children can be playing around and all the
rest of it. They look like they look like leaves,
small like sort of leave type things. From what I understand, Okay,

(01:24:15):
out of that whole frackr. You never know what's coming
up on your algorithm feed, whether it's B S or
if it's actually truthful. But if it's a yes, right, yeah, yeah, exactly,
if it's a I, or if it's spinning a different way.
But one thing I read was that the I g

(01:24:36):
C turned on their leader as there was everything when
Hay why and they shot him? They thought he was
a part of the muster.

Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
So who knows, sounds like propagated. Why would they turn
They thought he was.

Speaker 21 (01:24:46):
Part of what mazard. They thought he was part of
the you know they had assad and trade the left
right at the center.

Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
Okay, I'll investigate. Thank you, Sam, evening, Terry, Marcus welcome, and.

Speaker 16 (01:24:58):
Then you Marcus try you know, I'm ringing bed.

Speaker 2 (01:25:01):
I had a trans hill and more a kits town
on top on this fort a Kitsi how where we
had the calf perild.

Speaker 19 (01:25:09):
All right, the body is rested off. This is the
bec and eighties. And I put the body off and
I bought the pict town and it was a bit
like a visus. Yeah, sure they got they're really good
to drive because they had their co and pinion steering.

Speaker 2 (01:25:23):
What was it called, Terry, Well.

Speaker 19 (01:25:25):
It was I've got to look. It was righteous. There
was the lightious body on the on the CRT Field body. Yeah.
You took the body off the rest of the air
and it cut me, shortened the chase down. You naric
and you altered the chass and you put a virus.

Speaker 16 (01:25:45):
It was wasn't a very good quality.

Speaker 19 (01:25:47):
But you put a visious body on this. It looked
a bit like a visis.

Speaker 2 (01:25:51):
Did you buy that? Did someone make that body for you?

Speaker 20 (01:25:53):
Now?

Speaker 19 (01:25:54):
Yeah? Yeah, guy Interpi called fest bits but it wasn't
very good quarity gel and because the eight dollars decan eighties.

Speaker 2 (01:26:03):
What was his name?

Speaker 19 (01:26:05):
Well ses he used to he might used to make
five of glass boats. But they could go up, they
could sit on the cars hill or.

Speaker 2 (01:26:13):
Spit for Just tell me is similar Terry? Tell me
his name again? Really slowly set It is.

Speaker 19 (01:26:20):
Called hesh boats and capos.

Speaker 2 (01:26:22):
How do you spell?

Speaker 19 (01:26:23):
Says s I is no starts, I'm not two shirt
but hash boats. He might bat as well five graph
boats okay, but he didn't. It didn't make a good
Gail coat the top of it.

Speaker 16 (01:26:36):
He didn't.

Speaker 19 (01:26:37):
He wasn't He wasn't professional. He must have been still learning, right,
But like was there four panels a going candy kit
who used to live near Heady kit or town my undercry,
but his decon eighties in eighteen thought of what the
car the rest of the fund both of the body
and put the kipchick towel on it. But it's a

(01:26:58):
lot of work in it, and I didn't quite finish it.

Speaker 2 (01:27:01):
Did you sell?

Speaker 19 (01:27:03):
No, he didn't rip strip it down, but didn't tell
I couldn't get illegal. I didn't have a professional I'm
not a you know, I didn't worry he couldn't get
it illegal.

Speaker 2 (01:27:11):
Well, okay, I look at that, so I might have
some more information, Terry, But thank you for that alone
knows I'm pretty interested in those fiberglass bodies for cars.
Ron Ats Marcus, Good evening and welcome.

Speaker 23 (01:27:23):
Hi, Ron Yeah, Hi, Knight's Chess Steal was a great
soap that they used to you.

Speaker 18 (01:27:31):
Yeah, Night's tesh Steal.

Speaker 2 (01:27:33):
One of the greats.

Speaker 19 (01:27:34):
Yeah, I was enjoying your program.

Speaker 2 (01:27:37):
Was that your brand of choice?

Speaker 14 (01:27:38):
Yeah, that's what I used to use here.

Speaker 2 (01:27:41):
Good on, You're on Thank you, Kate. It's Marcus welcome. Ah.

Speaker 23 (01:27:45):
Hi.

Speaker 18 (01:27:45):
I just wanted to was wondering if the green soap
you were talking about like it might have been green
on flight it was called Ricksona.

Speaker 2 (01:27:54):
Ah, it was the Pine Rickson. I thought it was
Life Boy, but Lifeboy. People said Life Boy was red,
but I'm sure Life Boy was green as well.

Speaker 18 (01:28:05):
No, life it was red and it was horrible.

Speaker 2 (01:28:10):
You sure it wasn't green too?

Speaker 18 (01:28:12):
No, I don't think I was or a green Life Boy.

Speaker 2 (01:28:16):
Okay, funny how I give those brains. I appreciate they
probably were made by the same company.

Speaker 18 (01:28:21):
Yes, very likely, nothing changes.

Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Thank you very much, Kate, Ron Marcus welcome.

Speaker 37 (01:28:29):
Hi Marcus.

Speaker 38 (01:28:30):
How are you going there?

Speaker 2 (01:28:30):
Good Ron? How are you going all right?

Speaker 38 (01:28:32):
Yeah, you're good. Actually, the Vron just before me said
Knight's Castell, which I was going to mention as well.
But also I remember they spend TV commercial years ago
for a parmel of gold, and I think it's the
jingle saying don't wait to be told you need pamel
of gold.

Speaker 2 (01:28:51):
Yes, I thought it was don't don't wait to grow old.

Speaker 38 (01:28:55):
Okay, but they couldn't yeah, because they had bo or something.
So you don't don't wait to be told you need
to use the soap. And but my dad was just
to buy of some Imperial Liver, the Imperial Liver soap
and you can still yeah, and the fragrance is really nice.
It always reminds me of my dad.

Speaker 9 (01:29:15):
I used to visit him.

Speaker 38 (01:29:16):
And but talking about Sunlight soap as well, I got
my son to buy some from the supermarket a couple
of weeks ago because we grew up with my mother
used to always use it in the old Ringer washing machine,
you know, to need all the washing and all that
before you know when we had a Ringer washing machine
back in the day. But it used to be in

(01:29:37):
big long blocks. But now it's actually done like in cakes.
But you get about six or eight and like a
long box. But the good thing with the sunlight soap,
it's really versatile and you can use it for washing,
getting rid of like you know, stains off your collar,
use it on you hear everything, and you know, okay
for babies as well.

Speaker 2 (01:29:52):
So reversatile sunlight.

Speaker 5 (01:29:54):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (01:29:55):
I like the smell.

Speaker 38 (01:29:57):
Yeah, And I think it's been around longer than anything else,
way back to the early ten of the century. So
it's I'm always been yeah, but yeah, it was quite
disappointed he that they're going to be getting rid of soap.

Speaker 2 (01:30:07):
I mean, it's a lot of nostalgia and soap. You'd
always go with it, your grandparents to whatever. It always
be different. Soap should have different memories about it.

Speaker 38 (01:30:16):
Oh that's frogrance is like you know, you never forget
like a tune of a song, or that's right, a fragrance.
You remember a fragrance.

Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
That's you're right back your transport back to where you
were time. Pretty well, oh there we go, there you
go back in time.

Speaker 38 (01:30:28):
Yeah, no exactly. And you know what I don't like
about this liquid come soap. As soon as you put
on your hand, it just slipping and it runs off
your hand. If you can get it to your body
to start.

Speaker 2 (01:30:36):
Rubbing it of it, then it's got no body to it.
I think they just water it down. I think at
hotels and stuff, it's just a lot of it's been
watered down.

Speaker 16 (01:30:43):
Oh exactly.

Speaker 38 (01:30:44):
I mean I think on the modern sort of like
the younger kids and that all think it's a pretty
all good you know, but I mean I just can't.

Speaker 2 (01:30:51):
Be a gumofibes they're worried they're going to touch someone
else's soap that someone else's touch, which is rubbish.

Speaker 38 (01:30:57):
Oh yeah, you know, but I mean, and I know
that soap can mount if you leave it in a
dish somewhere that's got of water and you know, it
all sort of scrunches in the hand. But it's about
management really the end of the day. But you can't
beat a cake of soap. So is it common knowledge
or something that they're going to be facing soapoud all together.

Speaker 2 (01:31:14):
Or just just a train has just done its way out.

Speaker 38 (01:31:17):
Oh okay, okay, I don't know what's good for them.
I mean it's ridiculous. Yeah, oh that's no good. Oh well,
I hope they don't give it a sunlight soap because
I mean that's an all rounder.

Speaker 2 (01:31:29):
So yeah, no, I most certainly hope they don't.

Speaker 19 (01:31:32):
Yeah, yeah, no, oh.

Speaker 38 (01:31:34):
Well yeah, that's but the other one before me that
I pulled over, I was driving, so I pulled over
to say Night's g Steele but he beat me to it.
But good on them, now, that's good. Yeah, Night's g
Steele was a big brand life boy and well the one.

Speaker 2 (01:31:48):
I might have been thinking of is breeze anyway, but
ron that thank you, Hello, Pam, Marcus Good evening.

Speaker 39 (01:31:52):
Yes, hello, and I think the green soap was called breeze.

Speaker 2 (01:31:57):
Ye, I think you might be right there.

Speaker 39 (01:31:59):
It was sort of like a marble.

Speaker 2 (01:32:02):
It was marble like like marble. Yeah, what does smell like?

Speaker 39 (01:32:07):
It was a very fish smell.

Speaker 2 (01:32:10):
It was written like pine.

Speaker 39 (01:32:12):
Yes, yes it was. And it didn't last very long
on the shelfs that didn't. It wasn't a long long
term thing like la sort.

Speaker 2 (01:32:23):
Yeah, it was just have you gone for free flowing soap?

Speaker 25 (01:32:27):
No?

Speaker 39 (01:32:28):
No, I don't like the free flowing Yeah, but I
think you might find it was called breeze.

Speaker 2 (01:32:36):
Yeah, I think you might be right there. And I
don't know if I able to buy somehow to smell it,
but yeah, we're trying. But thank you for that. Twenty
four away from eleven twenty two to eleven Charene. It's
Marcus Good Evening.

Speaker 29 (01:32:46):
Oh high markers evening. Hi, Yes, the soap you're thinking about,
I just wonder is it shield?

Speaker 2 (01:32:56):
Well I can't even remember now. I don't know if
it was breeze or what, but yeah, I think my
memory is all confused with it now. Was it your
soap of choice in the day, Was it Shield?

Speaker 29 (01:33:05):
Not really? I used to like Came and the usual
you know, peerol, Leather and lux. The Came was always nice.

Speaker 2 (01:33:15):
Is it a New Zealand one?

Speaker 4 (01:33:17):
I don't know.

Speaker 38 (01:33:18):
I don't know if if you.

Speaker 29 (01:33:19):
Got it here or get it.

Speaker 2 (01:33:21):
Here or where were you getting it in the UK? Okay, k,
I think it's probably yeah, that.

Speaker 29 (01:33:28):
Was always a nice one. And but here I like
Dove of course, wasn't Yeah. I love the Love I
love the Dove range. Yeah, yeah, but that green one.
I was just thinking it might be Shield because in
the UK that was like a greeny Marbley.

Speaker 2 (01:33:47):
Are you someone that's moved to those liquid soaps, the
plunge soaps?

Speaker 8 (01:33:53):
No?

Speaker 29 (01:33:54):
No, I still love the bars.

Speaker 2 (01:33:57):
What's going on with the younger people?

Speaker 29 (01:33:59):
I know? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:34:01):
No, Maybe someone that can ring and tell us if
you use the plunge soap? Let us know, people your
daft things. Twenty to eleven David Good Evening. Welcome.

Speaker 5 (01:34:12):
Ah, hi Marcus.

Speaker 14 (01:34:14):
I even knew talking about soap could be so interesting,
but I was wondering if I might start stop piling it, and.

Speaker 2 (01:34:25):
You should, you should start collecting soap you better collecting beer.
I reckon it'd be a good thing to collect.

Speaker 14 (01:34:31):
Yeah, or putting it on the broncost, I might start
stop piling it and keep it safe, keep it for
a year and it might be a good investment.

Speaker 2 (01:34:41):
Yeah, although you have to store it somewhere.

Speaker 27 (01:34:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:34:44):
I don't even know why they're stopping selling it.

Speaker 5 (01:34:47):
Do you know?

Speaker 2 (01:34:47):
Because young people don't like soap. They think it's jermy.
They just want the stuff where you push the stuff
and it comes out liquid.

Speaker 14 (01:34:54):
Okay, all right, Well that's all I really wanted to say.

Speaker 2 (01:35:00):
Do you understand what I said about about why the young.

Speaker 14 (01:35:02):
People don't like it because it's a jeremy?

Speaker 25 (01:35:05):
Yeah? Stuff?

Speaker 40 (01:35:07):
Hello Marcus. Yeah, I use sunlight soap, the cake type.
It stops the fingers and hands from drying out and
cutting is spreading your skin?

Speaker 2 (01:35:27):
Is that because it's perfume free or it could be.

Speaker 40 (01:35:30):
I don't know. I'm just a ray person, but I
haven't been using it for a good number of years. Now.

Speaker 2 (01:35:39):
Do you use it for your dishes?

Speaker 40 (01:35:42):
No, there's something else I use the sunlight pairing the
bars and washing my hands.

Speaker 2 (01:35:51):
That's the stuff you used to put those wire cages
to agitate around to get some for doing dishes.

Speaker 40 (01:35:58):
What those crapings?

Speaker 2 (01:36:02):
You'd put a bar of sunlight soap in one of
those metal things you'd put into your sink and swish
it around to make it foam up. I don't use
you know what you're what they're called?

Speaker 20 (01:36:17):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:36:18):
Do you know what I'm talking about?

Speaker 23 (01:36:22):
How old are you?

Speaker 2 (01:36:23):
How old are you me?

Speaker 40 (01:36:27):
I'm nearly forty eight.

Speaker 2 (01:36:29):
Could you double it?

Speaker 23 (01:36:31):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:36:34):
Before you had left hang on, before you had dish
washing liquid?

Speaker 41 (01:36:42):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:36:43):
What would you use?

Speaker 40 (01:36:45):
Probably persal or one loaf.

Speaker 41 (01:36:47):
This is for your dishes, not for your okay, yeah,
I don't know whether they use persal for dishes or not.

Speaker 40 (01:36:56):
The liquid soaked around.

Speaker 2 (01:37:00):
I'm thinking about those wire cages.

Speaker 40 (01:37:04):
Yeah, well we had them, you know I'm talking about
I'm rember seeing one.

Speaker 2 (01:37:10):
It was called a soap shaker. Oh yeah, and you
get and you get a bar of sunlight soap and
you put it in this metal cage with a handle
and you'd sake that you'd shake that under your hot tap.

Speaker 29 (01:37:26):
There you.

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
Are, you pretending not to know what? Do you really
not know?

Speaker 5 (01:37:33):
No?

Speaker 41 (01:37:33):
I don't really know the My wife uses that Australian
soap which is very good for the decious.

Speaker 2 (01:37:44):
If you do, you not do the dishes ever, Yes,
we like, yeah, you've never used a soap shaker, no.

Speaker 40 (01:37:55):
Solight slight, the block of so light it does me
from my hands coming out in the garden and things
like that, because there were a lot of dooms in
the garden on the soil.

Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
Yeah, I agree with you. Okay, thank you. Let's go
thirteen to ten eleven. Hi, Admiret's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 42 (01:38:20):
Yeah, Hi, Marcus. I used to use Luxe flakes to
do my hand washing.

Speaker 2 (01:38:28):
And when we say hand washing, that's not washing your hands,
it's washing clothes, washing clothes.

Speaker 42 (01:38:32):
But you put the lux flakes. It was like lux
luck so but all flaked, and you brought it like
in a box, you know. And the other thing I
still use the sunlight. So now, a few years back
it was taken off the market and then there was
such a human cry over it that it was brought

(01:38:54):
back on business on the market.

Speaker 17 (01:38:57):
I know, I know.

Speaker 42 (01:38:59):
And Knight's Castill Dove. So my mother was ninety five
and a half when she died seven years ago, and
she used to always use a dove soap.

Speaker 2 (01:39:09):
Do you remember what the smell was like, not really.

Speaker 42 (01:39:13):
I suppose I did buy some cakes back then too
of the dove, but no I can't because now I
use I'm afraid to say.

Speaker 20 (01:39:22):
And wash.

Speaker 2 (01:39:23):
Why would you?

Speaker 42 (01:39:25):
I don't know.

Speaker 43 (01:39:26):
It's just.

Speaker 2 (01:39:28):
Do you refill it or buy a new one?

Speaker 16 (01:39:30):
No, we refill.

Speaker 2 (01:39:31):
What does the refill coming?

Speaker 18 (01:39:33):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
Just a just a screw another place that can take.
So you just reuse the plunger and.

Speaker 42 (01:39:41):
You just put the new Yeah, yeah, yes, yes, yes,
but I just getting back. I did like the lack
of fakes because you could use that and you know,
to wash your dishes. Even some people used to do that.
It was a really nice soft like a soap.

Speaker 2 (01:39:58):
M Do you find it's easier to use the plunge soap?

Speaker 17 (01:40:02):
It is easier.

Speaker 42 (01:40:04):
Yeah, I'm afraid so yeah. Modern that's the modern way now.

Speaker 14 (01:40:09):
Isn't it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:10):
I don't know what I'm fighting that.

Speaker 42 (01:40:11):
I don't know, but is it right?

Speaker 43 (01:40:13):
I actually have just caught up.

Speaker 42 (01:40:15):
Is the soap coming off the markets?

Speaker 43 (01:40:17):
Bars of soap?

Speaker 2 (01:40:18):
I reckon it's TikTok and to days are numbered.

Speaker 42 (01:40:21):
Ah, as long as they keep the sunlight soap going.

Speaker 2 (01:40:24):
Well, you should stop pile that to a bury in
the backyard.

Speaker 42 (01:40:27):
Yes, I think I might.

Speaker 2 (01:40:28):
Now I'll be a hue and cry about that. Admory,
thank you. Eight to eleven here till midnight, midnight, midnight.
That Came soap seems to be quite publish. You talk
about that when he's a lot of stuff online about
Came not a brand of hood of here. Anyone make
their own soap. I'm sure you will do. Will Oh
eight hundred and eighty eight. My aunt had a bar

(01:40:51):
of soap in every box of our our cards to
keep the silver fish away. I haven't seen the insect
damage to keep the system going. Don't believe the hood
of the cage soap liquid soap, liquid soap. There's no
scum on the bath and shower walls. Heny hint from
a tile retail when we're buying our new build. Certainly true,

(01:41:12):
but still prefer cakes of soapd liquid.

Speaker 16 (01:41:21):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:41:23):
Hello Max Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 9 (01:41:25):
Oh okoday, Marcus. Hey, I just got two points. I
do remember the cage thing that you put the sunlights open.
My grandmother had one. Now we're going back, probably at
nineteen sixty and oh they were great. They were great,
weren't they? And you had you had the there was
like a ring and once you close the cage, when

(01:41:48):
you got the barus open, you slid the ring down
and that that locked the cage. It was a lot
I remember right now. I remember as kids from my grandmother.
She swore by sunlight so but when she wasn't looking,
us kids would get the sunlight soap and we'd really
whip it up there and make bubbles and have a
great time. They were great, those cages.

Speaker 21 (01:42:06):
I think you can have for years.

Speaker 2 (01:42:08):
You can still get them.

Speaker 9 (01:42:11):
You can still get them.

Speaker 2 (01:42:12):
Oh yeah, they're coming back. But there's a certain market
that likes the old school kind of a way.

Speaker 9 (01:42:17):
Yeah. Yeah, Well, tomorrow's super day for all us. People
who will.

Speaker 2 (01:42:22):
Tell you how much one? I'll tell you how much
one costs. A Yeah, do you want how much a
soap shaker costs?

Speaker 9 (01:42:28):
I'd love to know. I'd love to get one check
GPT in operation.

Speaker 2 (01:42:33):
No it's not check GPT. It's just they seem to
be between about about twenty eight to thirty dollars.

Speaker 9 (01:42:40):
Oh, that's not too bad for a good soap shaker.

Speaker 2 (01:42:42):
We won't quite at it's quite quite a rugged one,
wouldn't you.

Speaker 9 (01:42:46):
Oh, you'd given a hiding.

Speaker 2 (01:42:47):
Yeah, I don't know who. I don't know. I don't
know where they're made.

Speaker 24 (01:42:52):
No, No, they were.

Speaker 9 (01:42:54):
They were a clever thing who ever thought of it,
very clever. And those I noticed when I was out,
well when I was a kid, if they were if
they were not sort of dried out, they would actually rust.

Speaker 2 (01:43:08):
Yes, you're right, they would. They just called ay, they
just called a wire soap shaker. Yeah, great, made from iron.
There's a good looking what at all concepts or I
don't know what they are. I don't know if that's
just an online shop or quite what that is. But
they have all that boogie stuff. It's in Greytown, of course,
it is boogie old Greytown. That's where they will be

(01:43:30):
their old city bikes.

Speaker 9 (01:43:31):
Yeah, that's where you get all the good things. Mark
a second point. You know this kind of like, oh,
you can't use soap? I mean, is this a health department?
What I mean? Who are these and nutters? I mean
we're going to say, if you don't want to use soap,
you have the option of using the you know, the
plunger thing. And I think, well we've got the option,

(01:43:55):
you know.

Speaker 2 (01:43:55):
Yes, but supermarket supermarket space is scarce if people aren't
buying it, the supermarkets won't sell it.

Speaker 9 (01:44:02):
But tomorrow's super day. Look after all of this, I
see what's going to be a rust on it. Tomorrow.
It's going to get up at seven o'clock in the morning.

Speaker 2 (01:44:09):
You get down there, what times are supercomming smacks?

Speaker 9 (01:44:13):
Well, tomorrow it'll be paid like I think it's paid
about midnight, one o'clock in the morning. So you know,
all all the old gray hairs like yourself, you know
we'll all be will be rare that you know, there'll
be a queue down and so far.

Speaker 2 (01:44:28):
Yes, this should be lovely to talk, thank you so
so so we want so for those who just joined.
The show bars of soap will be a thing of
the past. No one's buying them. The young people like
liquid soap. They think it's more hygienic. No planet be
young people, they're plastic. Goodness, hit'll twelve. We've got to

(01:44:52):
be part of it. Oh, eight hundred and eighty ten
eighty Rosebury. It's Marcus.

Speaker 23 (01:44:56):
Good evening, Good evening, Marcus.

Speaker 44 (01:45:00):
I just wanted to say, nobody's mentioned Pears soap.

Speaker 2 (01:45:05):
It's one of the great, doesn't it.

Speaker 44 (01:45:07):
The best? You can't really buy it in the supermarket.
I get it.

Speaker 16 (01:45:13):
It's cracky.

Speaker 20 (01:45:14):
Jack.

Speaker 44 (01:45:15):
I'm a fan of soape, and I'm a fan of
body water and all these other things, but hair soap
is so gentle. Sometimes you know there's been so but
you can't really buy many soaps in the supermarket. Now
you go down the aisle and they've got this. And

(01:45:35):
you know there's also protext, which is something that perhaps
I might have missed earlier this evening sensitive or yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:45:43):
I'm going to run roseby for news. But thank you.
I take your points. You are right about that. Someone
says they don't like liquid soap because it feels slimy,
and I'm inclined to agree. There has been slimy and slipper,
isn't there Linda? This is Marcus Welcome. Hi, Hey Linda.

Speaker 17 (01:46:04):
I would not be without sunlight open my laundry even now.
I mean, I have a dishwasher, so I don't I
only use just the bike for a dishwasher, but and
I still wash up with liquid determined detergent. But I
just could not use it do my washing without sunlight.

(01:46:24):
Soaps the most amazing stuff for marks and stains on clothing.
I came in sort of at the at the end
of the conversation about soap is the talk of doing
away with sunlight soap.

Speaker 2 (01:46:38):
No, not, to my knowledge. Most of the talk that's.

Speaker 17 (01:46:42):
All down the supermarket buying a box tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:46:45):
Most of talklender is that people aren't buying bars of
soap anymore. They're going to be a thing of the
past because people are on that plunging soap. But I
think you'll be right with you.

Speaker 8 (01:46:56):
I know one of the.

Speaker 17 (01:46:57):
Things I have had some of those cakes of soap
given to me, and you put them on a dish
in the bathroom, and then you put them under the
tap and put the soap back, and you always had
that sort of mucky soap dish and plunge your soaps
a lot cleaner. But very relieved to hear about my
sunlight soap.

Speaker 20 (01:47:15):
Oh.

Speaker 17 (01:47:15):
Another thing I was going to say, the shaker. I
do remember those, and I'm not so sure that were
they made to take a block of soap. I mean,
you can easily use a whole block when you're doing
your dishes, but I think they might have been invented
so you could put the scraps in it. Oh, you
might be right, Yeah, that's what I remember. Anyway, as

(01:47:35):
a kid, I think.

Speaker 2 (01:47:36):
It wasn't as good as dish washing liquid, though it
never really foamed up, did it.

Speaker 17 (01:47:40):
Oh, it was pretty good. Yeah, you could really give
it a good shake of a lot of people like
my parents washed up in a plastic also, you could
give it a good shake and only hit the plastic bowl.
It didn't scratch the sink or make a noise. But
now I do remember them really practical.

Speaker 2 (01:47:57):
Yep, nicely to thank you batman, Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 24 (01:48:00):
Oh, good evening, Marcus.

Speaker 7 (01:48:02):
How are you good?

Speaker 2 (01:48:03):
Thank you?

Speaker 11 (01:48:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 24 (01:48:04):
Hey, I remember back in the days of the care
using the old man's brute soap on a rope. You
remember that brute?

Speaker 2 (01:48:11):
What was the point of soap and a rope? And
why does it stop?

Speaker 15 (01:48:13):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 24 (01:48:14):
It just sort of disappeared. It used to come in
the old gift packs of Christmas. I'd see you open
that and I said, I was beautiful. You get another
group gift peck for Christmas. It's a more soap on
the rope for us.

Speaker 2 (01:48:23):
People used to make fun of it, but it seemed
like a good idea to me.

Speaker 24 (01:48:26):
Oh, you always smelt nice after it I used to
love it.

Speaker 2 (01:48:29):
What was the point?

Speaker 24 (01:48:30):
Oh yeah, I don't know. It's all Whether it was
just a hang on the shower, No, I don't know,
and it's you know, but you know, I spent many
of days in the bath. I used to love my bath.
But I spent many and many nights and you're looking
for the soap. It just always disappeared. Always when you
go to and you try and catch It's like trying
to catch a frog, you know. I think I spent
five minutes one night trying to catch his bar soap

(01:48:52):
flying around the bath.

Speaker 2 (01:48:53):
You never could work out where it was, did you?
When ye, when the pope visited the UK, least have a.

Speaker 24 (01:49:00):
Pope on the rope the rope, Yeah, yes, okay, I
tell you one other thing. Just getting away from soap
to the old bubble baths. The old bubble baths I loved.
I used to love the bubble baths. And I took
my girlfriend at the time when I was only a
young teenager. Of course, if I came on, we'll go
for romantic holiday downs and you plumb us and you know,

(01:49:20):
get a motel and we'll have this nice bubble bar.
So we arrived there and it was a sort of
upstairs bubble bus. So I thought, well, I'll start the
bath off and I had to bottle of bubble baths
thea and I thought, well, I don't know how much
you know, because I used to put a couple of
kIPS in the old bathtubs. I said, oh, I'll just
have to bottle onto this this spaffle sort of thing.
And I said, we'll go down and seas and talk

(01:49:40):
about the rest of your holiday. We'll give us fifteen minutes.
Pop back up there and all I could see was
bubbles come out out this bathroom door. So I opened
up the door and from from the floor to the
roof was just bubbles. And I thought, how the hell
am I going to get rid of all these bubbles?

Speaker 2 (01:49:58):
They would just leave, They would have they would have consolidated,
wouldn't they.

Speaker 24 (01:50:04):
No, they didn't. They stayed solid. So I had to
open up the window and I started throwing a few bubbles.
People that we wonder what the hell was going on.
We finally got there knee and we minister down at
least half way before we jumped in the in the
star that's pretty hard to see the old greats on
the side of the bath all bubbles.

Speaker 2 (01:50:23):
It sounds like a great romantic weekend.

Speaker 24 (01:50:27):
Yeah, you know things, the things you do when you're
young age say.

Speaker 2 (01:50:34):
I'll tell you something. Bath bombs terrible, Yes, No, I've
never liked those. Never like them, you're yeah, never a
terrible thing. A bath bomb just phizzicism, just not good
for anyone.

Speaker 24 (01:50:48):
I enjoy the old towels, you know, you get them
in a little packet and you throw them in the
bath and they turn into a tune, into a big tail.

Speaker 2 (01:50:56):
Love one of those.

Speaker 4 (01:50:58):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, where are you?

Speaker 2 (01:51:00):
What's the clicking?

Speaker 24 (01:51:01):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:51:02):
You can hear me.

Speaker 24 (01:51:02):
I'm dropping the papers off in Carleton. I've just been
through Gratty and I was looking for that soap store
you're talking about, so I was going to bring in
in Canada, and now having a look for.

Speaker 2 (01:51:10):
The what's the headlow, what's the headline? Anything interesting?

Speaker 24 (01:51:16):
And now it's just up the House of Wellness on
the front page about the wellness.

Speaker 2 (01:51:21):
Yeah, I got it. Nice to hear from your batman,
j Kindred Spirit Margaret Marcus.

Speaker 14 (01:51:27):
Welcome, Hello Marcus.

Speaker 43 (01:51:29):
I've been listening with interest about the soap. I'm one
of these altation people that use sunlight soap. But I
still use the soap shaker. Mine are the small ones
and the modern ones that they sell at the moment
for such a price you have to cut the bar
in half. I usually use it and I use it

(01:51:49):
for washing dishes. I don't like use the petrochemical stuff
that you buy, that plunge stuff, because I did read
where it causes cancer and the kidneys and all that
sort of thing, being a byproduct, byproduct of petrochemicals.

Speaker 2 (01:52:08):
It's God.

Speaker 43 (01:52:08):
And another reason why I like my soap too is
because you don't have to buy that plastick. It's all
wrapped in paper and it's all, you know, able to
be recycled. And another thing I'd like to bring you
up to the speed on too, is that we have
people in Pyle or here who make soap and they

(01:52:29):
make it out of kelp and it's very user friendly,
very natural.

Speaker 19 (01:52:35):
Did you know that?

Speaker 5 (01:52:36):
No?

Speaker 23 (01:52:36):
I didn't, No, no.

Speaker 43 (01:52:39):
And they've got a good name that actually they're renown
worldwide now. They also make other things out of kelp
and they use it as you know, farmers can use
it in a farm for fertilizer and it's very natural.
A great idea yes, yes, so no, I really have

(01:52:59):
been listening with interest about the soap because I'm a
great fan of cake soap. I do have the plunge
of soap, but I don't use it a lot myself.
It's just for my guests where anybody comes to stay. Yeah,
so sunlight soap, I'll give that the big ticket as well.

Speaker 16 (01:53:16):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (01:53:18):
Did you ever go to dishwashing liquid?

Speaker 8 (01:53:20):
Not?

Speaker 43 (01:53:21):
I did for a while. I do have a little
I have a bottle of it in the in my
cupboard if I've got something extra fatty. They're clean, but
I don't use it very often. We can get a
very good thuds up with the shaker, and I sometimes
put some cake of soap in a in a coffee
cup and I use that and I run a hot

(01:53:42):
soapy water, hot hot water into that and boy it
SuDS up, all right, it does? It does well. Yeah,
So I'm a bit old fashioned like that. But I
even told some of my family about the theory that
a lot of these petro chemical soaps, especially if you
was used too much of them in dishwashing, that they

(01:54:05):
cause these other problems of cancer. And and actually they've
changed to using soap as well, just the sunlight soap. Yes,
so it can pink because people don't rinse their dishes
very well. They use too much of the other petrochemical stuff,
and because there's a certain amount of rears the juice

(01:54:27):
still on your dishes when you drive them. So no,
there's a good reason why I asked it to sunlight.
So well, I'll be looking for more soap.

Speaker 23 (01:54:37):
I'm a soapy kid.

Speaker 2 (01:54:39):
Good on your Margaret. Nice to talk color, Frank, you.

Speaker 35 (01:54:42):
Know, lushy Frank here Frank, Yeah, how are they're going?

Speaker 16 (01:54:46):
God yourself had I had to chime in?

Speaker 35 (01:54:49):
Made on the soap. I still love that laugh, Lushie.
Everyone's going all about the sunlight.

Speaker 16 (01:55:04):
What are you laughing for?

Speaker 2 (01:55:08):
It starts to hear from your Frank.

Speaker 19 (01:55:11):
Yeah, jeez.

Speaker 35 (01:55:11):
I've still got your number, but I don't ring it
anymore because I haven't worked with you for so long.
I thought, oh no, that's a bit that sort of
stalk r as really so.

Speaker 2 (01:55:22):
Usually happened with which part of the Where are you, Frank?

Speaker 35 (01:55:26):
I'm heading to Wellington. I'm going. I've got my motorbike
on my trailer, got a load of firewood for a
mate down there from up Kerry Carey and I'm going
to have a weekend on the motorbike. Oh well, every
day is a weekend for me.

Speaker 2 (01:55:40):
Last you know that where's the Where's home?

Speaker 35 (01:55:43):
Well, Auckland sort of, but I live Kerry Carey most
of the time. Now you got a boat, Oh yeah,
I got three, got too mini boats. I got one
for every occasion.

Speaker 16 (01:55:57):
Energy.

Speaker 2 (01:55:57):
So yeah, i'll next summer, I'll shake the vine and
work out where you are. People. People will know where
you are, I won't they I'll find you.

Speaker 35 (01:56:08):
Yeah, you have Well, you should still have my phone number.
I'll texture I reckon, I will have it.

Speaker 2 (01:56:14):
I'll chick it.

Speaker 8 (01:56:15):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:56:16):
What do you want to say about soap?

Speaker 35 (01:56:18):
Well, everyone's going on about the sunlight. I've got a
couple of points. Sunlight's really hard, So I don't know, like,
you couldn't use it on your body?

Speaker 2 (01:56:27):
People?

Speaker 17 (01:56:27):
Do?

Speaker 2 (01:56:28):
People do? I think?

Speaker 35 (01:56:30):
Oh geez, my nana used to grate it up and
put it on saws when we had saws. Should use
it as a poultice, really, I don't know. I don't
know how she work that one out. Should use onion
as a poultice, Should use twoots from the bush.

Speaker 2 (01:56:46):
Frank with the cheese grater.

Speaker 35 (01:56:49):
Yeah, yeah, like I still remember it. I always used
to have injuries to my feet and they'd always get infected,
and my nana would always do a poultice, either onion
burnt onion or sunlight soap grated or yeah, or even
bread poultice, but didn't. Yeah, but I still travel like

(01:57:12):
I travel with Palmel of gold is my favorite soap,
and I still travel with it because hotels don't.

Speaker 37 (01:57:21):
They don't.

Speaker 2 (01:57:21):
You'd hate that plunge. You'd hate that plunge.

Speaker 35 (01:57:24):
Your friend hate it, hate it slimy, Yeah, it.

Speaker 2 (01:57:29):
Just it just goes straight to go straight. What about
you travel a lot?

Speaker 15 (01:57:33):
Right?

Speaker 16 (01:57:34):
Yep?

Speaker 2 (01:57:35):
What it is a thing if you got a washing
machine in your room and your and your hot and
your motel or your hotel. Yeah, and it's two dollars
for a sashet of washing powder and you've got to
go downstairs to you which do you just use the

(01:57:55):
flow soap?

Speaker 20 (01:57:57):
You know what?

Speaker 35 (01:57:58):
In twenty years of traveling, I've never ever washed my
clothes on a job. Really too tight.

Speaker 4 (01:58:06):
I can't.

Speaker 35 (01:58:07):
I'd wait till I get home. I take woolen socks.
They last me two weeks.

Speaker 2 (01:58:11):
But it'll be it'll be free if you just use
the flow soap. Have you never had a washing machine
in your room?

Speaker 35 (01:58:18):
I have, and usually they have like little feschets.

Speaker 26 (01:58:22):
I reckon.

Speaker 2 (01:58:22):
I reckon the flow. So it would work all right,
wouldn't it.

Speaker 5 (01:58:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 35 (01:58:28):
I hate the feeling of it, so no, I never
use it.

Speaker 2 (01:58:30):
The showers terrible. Just you put it, pump, pump, pump up.
It's all gone through your fingers.

Speaker 4 (01:58:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 35 (01:58:36):
Yeah, And you have to put it on when you're
turning around and it washes off your hands.

Speaker 19 (01:58:41):
I hate it.

Speaker 35 (01:58:42):
I actually take overseas. I take palmele of gold. Don't
wait to be told.

Speaker 2 (01:58:47):
Don't wait to be told, use palmele of gold.

Speaker 4 (01:58:49):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:58:50):
Can you not get it out of.

Speaker 14 (01:58:53):
Well?

Speaker 35 (01:58:53):
I've never looked for it. I just always take it.
So yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:58:58):
Have you got one of those plastic soapboxes it goes in?

Speaker 5 (01:59:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 19 (01:59:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 35 (01:59:05):
Or or I wrap it up because I don't bring
it home. I only use it there, take a new, new,
new bar and use it overseas and then leave it there.

Speaker 29 (01:59:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 35 (01:59:14):
I don't bring it home.

Speaker 19 (01:59:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:59:16):
So you got to write a book, Frank, You've got
to write a book.

Speaker 35 (01:59:23):
Oh well, I've been wanting to bring you for so
many subjects, but I had to go with the So.

Speaker 2 (01:59:32):
I just oh, you've got my number?

Speaker 35 (01:59:35):
A yeah, I've got your number.

Speaker 9 (01:59:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:59:39):
Well I can't find mine, but you don't need to.

Speaker 15 (01:59:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:59:41):
Well Dan can give it to you, but you've obviously
got anyway. So that's quite important to me. I have
a Frank.

Speaker 16 (01:59:46):
Yeah all right, love it.

Speaker 2 (01:59:50):
Hear from your Frank, Frank. I went to Antarctica. The
Frank Yep, very good. It's made my night. Frank. No
old stay his name for him anyway. Laugh. Eleven twenty four,
Hello Jenesis, Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 36 (02:00:12):
Talking about sunlight soap. We used to grate it into
their washing machines to wash the baby snapkins. Well, everybody
did it as it happened. This is in the nineteen sixties.
Apparently it prevented nappy rash. And of course we the

(02:00:38):
water was hot because nobody washed and cold in those days,
and you'd have to grate the soap using a cheese
greater and turn the machine on the hot water and
dissolve it and then you do your washing. And of

(02:01:01):
course they were into automatic washing machines then either, but
that was the way it was done. I must think
I did it every day for about six years.

Speaker 2 (02:01:15):
Is it the same cheese greater you used to grate
the cheese? Probably probably was, wasn't it. Yeah, last in
those days, not of those thin ones you get these days.
The greatest aren't the same, Thank you, Jennie. Actually talking
to Frank, I was remembering for a lot of us,
A lot of us might remember because you get a

(02:01:35):
soap box to put your soap in, those plastic things.
But for a lot of us of this age, we
remember that those we had those soap containers because when
you went to school, you'd sent your word yet to
practice at home on bits of cardboard and those soap containers.
Do you remember that you have to sort of that's
before products and everything. That's how we learned to read.

(02:01:57):
I think that does sound like very well like nostalgia,
doesn't it. I'm still caught on soap on a rope,
Welcome people, get in touch. I beat all these spar
of soap users still use tal compowder now, that is
truly terrible stuff. Yeah, I think the wow the only
reason that I that soap, that green soap. A remember

(02:02:18):
because we had been in Rara Tonga when the kids
were quite young, and we'd walked across I think the best.
I'd walked around the is and walked across the top.
We had the kids in a local crache and when
we went to pick them up to the day, they
all had the hair washed. The kids have been washed

(02:02:39):
to the hair washed. And it was that same soap
I spelled with that sort of same green and white
soap I've been trying to remember anyway, And that was
when the last place I'd seen it was there, And
I can't what brand it was. Anyway, I thought that
story is more interested had actually turned out to be
get your calls through if you I haven't even checked
the emails tonight. They're not many. Actually that's good. I

(02:03:01):
am excited talking about the element of the fiberglass car
body too. That was a big thing. Therefore, of course
cars were hard to get. Well, flesh imported cars were
hard to get. Now, let me just have a bit
of quick look at news around the world in the
Middle East, since we're here. I wonder how Frank does
take probably just reps of a newspaper to masking tape.

(02:03:24):
World faces World faces highest ever petrol pump prices as
Middle East crisis deepens, with market slumping, but Trump says
spiraling energy's bills are small price to pay for taming Iran. Now,
Iran's new supreme leader is wounded. I had told a

(02:03:47):
harmone's sun sustained mystery injuries, claimed State TV. Now this
is just breaking news, so I'm not quite sure what
the full story is there. I'd been wounded wounded in
the war, the Ramadan war, which is how the media
referred to the current conflict, does not say how he
was injured, that his wife and father were killed. The

(02:04:10):
report also claimed that Mujaba, who has not been sent
in public since the bed of the water, is fluent
in English and has completed psychology courses. There we go
and the Brits face highest epipetul prices as Iran crisis deepens.
That's the fear mangering for the Daily Mail, although probably
a grain of truth there. If you want to talk

(02:04:32):
on here, we are talking soap and that dreadful, plunging stuff.
Wouldn't be good to travel with either. Wouldn't that got
loose in your bag? How would you pack that? If
you're traveling you have soup, you'd have soap all through
your clothes. Wouldn't be good. It's a disaster waiting to happen.
That stuff we know good on school camp?

Speaker 24 (02:04:50):
Would it?

Speaker 5 (02:04:51):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (02:04:52):
I love being a cake of soap always seems pretty
reasonably priced too, doesn't get a three pack? Even in Kevin,
it's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 8 (02:05:00):
Yeah, I.

Speaker 37 (02:05:02):
From you had a lady talking luck flakes. Well, I
played my senior rugby and that down in the sixties
and seventies, and I remember going home and having tied
for muscles and that sort of thing out of a game,
and my mother's pouring a bar for us and sprinkling

(02:05:24):
luck flakes in the bar and oh so relaxing, right,
really unbelievable, Yet luckslakes in the bar.

Speaker 2 (02:05:33):
I'll tell you didn't come away feeling. Oh yeah, I
give that a go. What we w were you playing, Kevin?

Speaker 37 (02:05:40):
I was playing rugby down in christ Seas.

Speaker 2 (02:05:42):
Who are you playing for?

Speaker 8 (02:05:44):
Well?

Speaker 37 (02:05:45):
I played for Suburbs in Belfast.

Speaker 2 (02:05:48):
I did play for Belfast. But on You're nice to
hear Kevin Brett, Marcus welcome.

Speaker 16 (02:05:54):
Marcus had those work vison with Clic. My go to
was censo oh yeah, yeah, don't share. Yeah, it's been harsh,
but it did the job. Did you try so figure, Yeah,
but my elbows, everything got covered in grease, your forehead,

(02:06:14):
your knees, if you weren't hearing wearing overalls.

Speaker 2 (02:06:19):
How's your skin? How's your skin now? With the sands
you wore yourself away?

Speaker 16 (02:06:24):
I'm sixty now and believe it or not, lovely olive skin. O.
My brothers are black. Looks like a piece of sand paper.

Speaker 2 (02:06:36):
Have you got have you got a? Have you even't
got that plunge soap now?

Speaker 8 (02:06:41):
Though? Have you no?

Speaker 17 (02:06:43):
No?

Speaker 16 (02:06:43):
I know I use luck, good solid bartoe.

Speaker 2 (02:06:47):
Your brand your brand, but you don't hear it if
you advertise as much on do you hear so advertised
as much? Anyway? Nice to talk to you too, Brett.
Thank you keeping touch people. I used to make my
own soap from glycerine. It dissolved fast, though, who makes
their own soap? I've got some lovely hope. It's sobert
home at the moment some listened to sper forget where
it was from. With the excited rush of Christmas. I

(02:07:09):
probably didn't keep the envelope, but oh, beautiful smelling. It's
one of the great soapsy.

Speaker 15 (02:07:16):
Mo, Hello Marchis, guess what you were talking about Triumph
Heralds about an hour ago.

Speaker 8 (02:07:23):
I owned one.

Speaker 15 (02:07:24):
I was about twenty years old. It was a convertible, oh,
soft top. I rolled it back one day and it
was such an effort when I rolled it back as
normal at leaked.

Speaker 2 (02:07:39):
Yeah, I think probably that was the part.

Speaker 15 (02:07:41):
Yeah, and guess what. I went to Ruana Park and
a convertible, Yeah, a soft top like like I was
quite a trendy teenager. And the runa park guy said, no,
you can't come in here with that convertible because the
lions would jump. This was back of the day when

(02:08:02):
the lions were roaming free. They said no, you can't
come in because I'll have a ski bar thing on
my car as well, and the line would jump up
and jump through two through the roof and get me.

Speaker 2 (02:08:16):
It was dafter thinking you went there in a convertible.

Speaker 15 (02:08:20):
Well, we're going twenty and a round. A pack in
those days was open. You know, there was no limitations
as far as they do now. You can't go to
run a pack and drive around and feed the lions.
You're going to cage track.

Speaker 2 (02:08:36):
So do they give you something else to go around them?

Speaker 17 (02:08:39):
No?

Speaker 15 (02:08:39):
I left my car outside and I just walked around
in a cage truck.

Speaker 2 (02:08:46):
Yeah, that makes some more sense. Okay, thank you for that.
Twenty four away from twelve. Hello, Susie, it's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 28 (02:08:53):
I'm Marcus there.

Speaker 16 (02:08:53):
Are you good?

Speaker 2 (02:08:54):
Susie? Yourself?

Speaker 20 (02:08:55):
Go?

Speaker 28 (02:08:56):
Yeah, I just wanted to bring up a little something
and then I'll go on to Sopes. Do you remember
a couple of weeks ago you said about some Remember
we talked about some restaurants charging here covering of the cake.

Speaker 5 (02:09:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 28 (02:09:10):
Yeah, Well I just wanted to leave, you know, I
had my sixtieth at the tar and feather down number
Carggle and we cut her own cake. There was no
charge or anything. They just bought it out and no
charge or anything.

Speaker 2 (02:09:23):
Brilliant. Did you make the cake?

Speaker 28 (02:09:26):
Oh no, my friend got it made for me. Marcus.

Speaker 43 (02:09:29):
I had forty people there.

Speaker 2 (02:09:31):
Where'd you get cake made? Susie?

Speaker 28 (02:09:33):
I think my friend got it made it? Brain Marcus,
that's where she works.

Speaker 16 (02:09:37):
It was beautiful.

Speaker 2 (02:09:38):
What's that, brain, Maer?

Speaker 3 (02:09:39):
Is it a Yeah?

Speaker 28 (02:09:41):
It's a bakery place in Burbert Street. Marcus. Oh yeah,
I think that's beautiful baking, beautiful bacon.

Speaker 2 (02:09:48):
It's in someone's house, is it?

Speaker 19 (02:09:50):
It is?

Speaker 2 (02:09:51):
I've never already been there.

Speaker 28 (02:09:53):
Yeah, but anyway, going on for soaps. I used to
collect the Marcus and I've still got them.

Speaker 9 (02:09:59):
How many you got two hundred?

Speaker 2 (02:10:02):
Well they got beller do they keep?

Speaker 4 (02:10:07):
Well?

Speaker 28 (02:10:09):
Yes, I'm going to have to decide what i want
to do with the Marcus, such as flowers. There's a
deck of cards, there's ballet dancers, there's I've got all
sorts of fairies, angels. I don't know what I'm going
to do with them, to be quite honest, I've had
them for years.

Speaker 2 (02:10:26):
Yeah, well collecting is it? Collecting is problematic because it
takes up space.

Speaker 14 (02:10:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 28 (02:10:32):
I might give them some little grape neat or something.

Speaker 2 (02:10:35):
Kids are like, oh, that's because you've got forty two birthday,
isn't it.

Speaker 28 (02:10:38):
That's not a bad yeah, riley o Marcus things.

Speaker 2 (02:10:42):
I'm interested in that brainer place. Thank you, Susie. Yeah,
I'll tell you what about those. I know it's not
probably not time for a topic pivot, but those. I'm
struggling with Popeyes, and I'm loving reading everything about that
McDonald's CEO that had that minuscule bite. I don't think
he's eating any of it at all. He looks like
some sort of cellard eating fitness obsessive. You're said eating

(02:11:06):
fitness obsessed. If you're not going to eat McDonald's four
times a week like he says he is, I reckon
he's going to go because every day there's more and
more videos of him not eating food. I don't know
what you want to say about that. Maybe he's not
going to go, but I'm here for it. And if
you seo, you can't try and be some sort of
social media influencer doing micro bites if you haven't followed
the story. He tried to talk about the macarch burger

(02:11:29):
and how yummy it was, and he took the world's
most minuscule bite and that was it, and he's tided
alread eating a burger. Well, i'll tell you what. They
need to fire their social media person because they've done
appallingly to allow that video to go out and now
they've found all sorts of videos of them just having
bites and then not even swallowing it. I'm surprised. I'm

(02:11:49):
so engaged with it. I'm pretty fascinated. Hello, Gary Marcus.

Speaker 10 (02:11:55):
Marcus, I'll just get just talking to something about McDonald's.
It terms on my wagon.

Speaker 18 (02:12:00):
Ye, what was it?

Speaker 10 (02:12:02):
The CEO won't take your own mine off his burgers?

Speaker 31 (02:12:04):
Do you know why he didn't know?

Speaker 2 (02:12:07):
That's not quite the story.

Speaker 10 (02:12:08):
But but anyway, what I was just going to throw
out there, I think McDonald's wos sixty nine million paddies
per day or something. Globally there's not enough farms or
or cattle line up to go this water. So you
know what, there's humans in there, mate, they're feeding your
human What were.

Speaker 2 (02:12:29):
You jumping in the truck to go?

Speaker 10 (02:12:31):
I was just going home from where from work?

Speaker 5 (02:12:34):
Wow?

Speaker 10 (02:12:35):
Yeah, I just got home and turned the radio one
and just thought that. Yeah, saying about that the other day.
And so you do the method?

Speaker 13 (02:12:42):
Does it?

Speaker 10 (02:12:42):
It's literally and then you're reading the fine print s
We see people.

Speaker 11 (02:12:49):
Anyway?

Speaker 10 (02:12:51):
They do.

Speaker 2 (02:12:59):
H Gary good sit, I actually good. See up.

Speaker 1 (02:13:02):
For more from Marcus lash Nights, listen live to news
talks there'd be from eight pm weekdays, or follow the
podcast on iHeartRadio
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Fudd Around And Find Out

Fudd Around And Find Out

UConn basketball star Azzi Fudd brings her championship swag to iHeart Women’s Sports with Fudd Around and Find Out, a weekly podcast that takes fans along for the ride as Azzi spends her final year of college trying to reclaim the National Championship and prepare to be a first round WNBA draft pick. Ever wonder what it’s like to be a world-class athlete in the public spotlight while still managing schoolwork, friendships and family time? It’s time to Fudd Around and Find Out!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • AdChoicesAd Choices