Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus lush Night's podcast from News Talks.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
I'd be.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Welcome, good evening, end of a short week, and that's
a good thing for me. I had no idea it
was May what's wrong with ape? It seemed to finish
quite quickly, so there we go. Must only have thirty
days Vanessa's birth and the tween ninth and them before
you know what it was May Away get in touch
on him as Marcus welcome HITDT tweve o'clock tonight. I had.
I hadn't heard about that before. What Tim Horan was
(00:35):
saying about the test that once passed me by, I
love that idea. If there was an antact day test
between the All Blacks and the Wallabies every ntact day,
that would be fantastic. Once at the MCG, once in Sydney,
once in christ Church, once and all can chuck it
around four year cycle. That would to me would be
(00:56):
that would be a sellout. Be four million bucks one
hundred bucks a ticket, forty thousand and four million, is
that right? I know players have ante about how often
they play special uniform with a poppy. I mean that
I don't think i'd go to to Kahawe Stadium for
a Crusaders match or you know, a souper weekend. I'd
certainly go there for an all Black test. It's a
(01:17):
brilliant idea. You might have some thoughts on that.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
I have.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
It's sort of kind of just too that on the
music kind of wasn't a story that I was aware of.
So do you want to mention that? That's That's what
I'm about? So, yeah, anyone got any problems with that?
I guess it's the players saying they're playing too much
or wanting more money. More dora me, But yeah, an
annual ANZAC date and of course, especially now that the
Australians are getting quite good, a lot of guys coming
across from league that are playing quite well, so makes
(01:40):
sense to me. So if you want to talk about that,
it's Friday. Bearing in mind, so it's loose like a
caboose tonight. It's the Friday free for all, So anything's
talkable about on a Friday night. There's a lot happening.
I'll keep you updated. There's all manner of stuff actually
I've got for you. So you get in touch eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine to nine two
de texts if youve got to be a part of it. Yes,
(02:06):
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine two nine
two text. Now let me just have a bit of
a think eight hundred eighty tendy and nine two nine
two to text if you want to come through. So, yeah,
there we go. Now let me see what I can
tell you tonight. The all black test every ends a day.
I'm a big believer in that. I think it's a
great idea and I can't work out why we haven't
(02:26):
done it.
Speaker 5 (02:28):
Well.
Speaker 3 (02:28):
I know that sometimes they try and take the sport
is war an allergy a bit far? But I think
probably since we went to battle together in the Anzac
Peninsula or the you know, Gallipoli, it's not a bad
it's not a bad it's not a bad idea. That's
my take on that one. Now, some of the other
some of the other stuff you might want to mention
(02:49):
tonight that you might want to talk about. And bearing one,
it's Friday, right, so anything's go on a Friday, the
Friday three frulls when anyone can ring up and talk
about whatever they like. Just so you know. One of
the other things that I am curious to talk about.
Is there has been a run on cash? Now, this
(03:11):
is quite interesting. There's been a massive spike in cash withdrawls.
So in New Zealand, key Wes have eight point five
nine million dollars in cash. So how many adults will
there be in this country? Will there be four million
or three point five million adults? I'm just trying to
(03:32):
think how many much money each person has kind of
just bouncing around in their pocket. It's a lot, isn't it.
So before COVID it was six billion dollars now it's
eight point five billion dollars now. I know you people
love talking about cash, so why are you holding more
of it? Now? If you've got any ideas about that,
(03:53):
that's the key for you. I'm trying to work out
eight point five billion divided by three point five million
three five I'm just trying to work out how much
that is per person? Cheap as creepers. It's like two
five hundred dollars per person that people have in cash. Yeah,
it's a lot of money. So why have we got
(04:15):
all this cash fighting around? And where is it? It's
not all down in the back of the couch. It's
a lot of deray me, that's it's not all for
the pokey. So yeah, why have you gone more to cash?
Eight point five nine million in wallets, persus safe shop
tills and under the mattresses it's gone up twelve percent,
So this is this is more spike than when the
(04:37):
COVID pandemic was happening. So before the COVID there was
six point twenty nine. Now there's eight point six. So
I everyone's talk about why they've gone for cash. I'd
be curious to know about that if you want to
talk about that eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and
also the ANZACT day test. I think it's a great idea.
I know that we're not the sports talked like because
a lot of people are watching sport. Marcus. I was
(04:58):
wondering if you could ask your list is what people
use to help them sleep? And if people have tried
CBD oil? I don't think that's the central business stickt
district somehow, Thanks anyone tried CBD? Is it called CBD cannabinoid?
Have you tried the CBD to get you to sleep? Yes?
So that's what you want to talk about tonight? Well
(05:20):
I do, Marcus. I have six thousand cash, three thousand silver,
ten thousand gold, squirreled array for a rainy day. I
think it's wise until someone robs it. Marcus and Zach
Rugby day. Let's make a day of it, Women's and
men's Yes, I'd like that. I'd like the women and
the men. And this is gonna sound radical. I'd like sometime.
(05:40):
I'd like some years the women to play first, and
sometimes they play second, because one of the women always
have to be the curtain raiser. Cash is king. I
always have a minimum of three hundred and my wile,
I never have cash. I never had an occasion. I
go to meetings acsion. Occasionally I go somewhere that requires cash.
It's not church, and I've got to rob our draw
(06:02):
to find some. They'd like to fold into a triangle anyway,
so we are talking about that too, Cash, Marcus, Anzac Rugby,
let's make it out. But women's and men's defense forced
Rugby as curtain raiser. That would be right. They'd be fantastic,
They'll be brilliant, have a whole day of it. You
know what I'd really like to do. If Tim Horan
really had the Kannakers, what he would do Is. He'd
(06:25):
go and talk to old Is made across the across
the rough part of the city of the rugby league guy,
and you'd have a rugby league match and a rugby
union match on Anzac Day. They'd be brilliant every year. Fantastic.
I think everyone can get behind that. One year in Sydney,
one year in Melbourne, one year in Auckland, one year
and will and christ Church, occasionally in Dunedin and maybe
(06:47):
once in Wellington and Perth and Brisbane. That's my plans. Oh,
Marcus Wade and dogs were a colon registration tags anymore.
That's a good question. I don't know why that is
and what cbe? Do you a will like for sleep?
Here's another thing too, what's with people with two surnames? No,
(07:07):
not like a hyphen name. I was looking at the
rugby today and the coach that's playing today, or the
team's playing today, the Hurricanes. The coach's name is Clark Laidlaw.
And often I've talked on this show about people with
two first names, like Elton John, but it's a whole
new territory people with two surnames. I can't think of
(07:27):
any other examples. I was thinking during the news. Would
Lockwood Smith be a guy with two sur names? But
I've never met a Lockwood apart from those homes for
the people that make thee the clique homes. So yeah,
what's with people with two surnames? And who's got some
examples of that? So, yes, there's a lot happening for
a Friday free for all. Yeah, I don't know, me,
(07:47):
I don't know if I could think of any off
my hand with two surnames like Smith or Wilson. It's
got me thinking anyway, So jumpin' Marcus. I think my
grandma has five million of that cash stuff in a handbag.
Cash is king withdraw cash fifteen hundred times re handy Marcus.
For sleeping sleep drops, brit didn't get them from the
(08:07):
chemist warehouse us in and made follow instructions to start with,
I take them have the best night's sleep. What would
be in sleep drops? What's the ingredients? I've never heard
of them? He wants to talk about sleep I think
I might hear them advertised occasionally. Do I sleep drops ingredients?
Is it some I think it might be some stuff
from some flower? Is it California and poppy passion fruits?
(08:30):
Chammer mile, but it might work. Whatever. Don't knock it
till you've tried it. Now, get in touch if you
want to talk on EA day, you want to start
the whole rod. I'm not going to take the first
break until I get my first call, because there's some
good topics out there. Yeah, Clark Kent would be two surnames,
wouldn't it? And Tucker Calson Now we've got Now we've
got something. Tucker Carlson certainly two surnames, and Clark Kent.
(08:53):
I can't think of anything more any other. I can't
think of any women with two surnames. But now I'm
just trying to go through all the women I don't know.
Get in touch by name is Marcus welcome O eight
hundred and eighty to eighty and nine two nine two
detext Gosh, people are asking all sorts of random questions. Mate,
best bait for mousetraps? I imagine you'd go peanut butter
(09:14):
with that. I've always used peanut butter. Someone says Charles Dickens,
But that's not too surnames. It's a first name. I've
never heard anyone called Charles. Someone Charles. Have you who
can think of three of them. Breaking news when that
happens to by the way six past, sixteen past, eight oh,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine two nine
(09:36):
two to text rugby now score up and the rugby.
I'll bring that to you when I've got it. Can
you bring me the rugby scored? Where is it? By
the way? Is it at that new stadium? Cake tiny
(09:56):
Hurricanes thirty one? Crusaders seventeen twenty five? Let's go. That's
in Wellington? Is it? Crusader has just scored at thirty
one twenty two? Come Katie c. Good evening markets, Marcus,
welcome all how are you do you hear me? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (10:16):
Ringing about steady deal or ye, no works. It's good
for you if you want to have stay.
Speaker 3 (10:23):
If you want to have the Governess mark, if you
want to.
Speaker 6 (10:25):
Have any hundreds.
Speaker 3 (10:28):
Say all you said again because you were cutting out
and then I cut into what you said.
Speaker 6 (10:33):
Okay, yeah, and it's good. It works well. But because
you're two hundred and thirty dollars for a little bottle
from the government that's cheaper acquired than the punt, how long.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
Would the two hundred and thirty dollars bottle.
Speaker 7 (10:49):
Last Wow, it.
Speaker 6 (10:51):
Depends how much you need, Like, a big person probably
needs eight.
Speaker 8 (10:56):
Drops, not.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
You've come back and now the last thing I heard
was a big person needs eight drops. You work with
what you've got on a Friday. You bet Mark eight drops?
Do you think he's going to come back into Oh yeah, Mark, yeah, yeah.
The last thing I heard was eight drops. A big
guy needs eight drops.
Speaker 6 (11:20):
Yep, and it works well.
Speaker 3 (11:22):
And how many how lots how many lots of eight
drops would you get from your tominated dollar bottle?
Speaker 6 (11:27):
Eight nights?
Speaker 3 (11:30):
Eight nights?
Speaker 9 (11:31):
Yeap?
Speaker 3 (11:33):
Oh, so it's gonna cost you like, oh yeah, it's
gonna cost you like thirty bucks a night.
Speaker 6 (11:44):
That is better than hearing sleeping temperates and stuff, because
you'll wake up a lot better in the morning. You
feel nice better.
Speaker 3 (11:52):
Okay, anyone wants to talk about CEB deal and for
sleep too. That's sorry about Mark. I tribe my best,
but I really appreciate you staying with there and helping
me through that too. That was hard to hear. I
don't love that, but I'll tell you what sel Fo.
When I first are doing talk about when cell phone's
got one, more often than not they would drop out,
I think our self for net SELFI network these days
(12:13):
is one of the wonders of the modern world. I
think I've said it. Headle twelve, my name is Marcus
good evening, Taylor Swift. Well that's a woman with two surnames.
That's quite right, Taylor Swift, Winston Peters, Clark Gayford. Oh,
there's good. These are good coming through, very good. Oh
(12:33):
Clark Gayford is two surnames, isn't he? Wow? Marcus CBD
fantastic for sleep and five row myalgaa flare ups. I
use it regularly, no side effects, just use a little bit.
It's expensive but works. There are lots of females with
McKenzie for a first name. It's like anything goes now,
isn't it. What can someone think of someone with a
(12:54):
woman with a surname for a first name and a
first name for a surname. That's the rother that's ready
going to flip people out anyway. Now, this is what
I am in trouble with. Here's a text me. I'll
read this text and its entirety with punctuation typical speech mark.
Cut them off speech mark when they've actually got a
(13:16):
valid point. If there was one call where I persevered
against all adversity, it would be that one. I've got
no problem with the people having CBD sleep oil drops.
I got no problem with people talking about it. So okay,
Peter paranoia, I haven't, I haven't speech marks cut them off.
(13:37):
I think the point was valid. Marcus. The bottle will
last me two months. That's for two eighty bucks. This
is sleep drops, this is your CBD anyway, let me
take a brain, get myself composed. I hope it's going
where you are people, if you're driving around there, know
the state of the nation. Be in touch if you
want to be a part of the show. A lot
of questions coming through tonight and looking forward to your responses.
(14:02):
Get in touch. I'm a firm believer in the Zantac
Day test. Tim Horror and the boss of Izy Rugby
once every end Zac Day. Just put a pause in
Super Rugby. I don't know if anyone's going to miss it.
They were looking forward to a testa that picked on forms.
They'd be fantastic. So there's that and CBD oil for sleep.
Notice the Friday free for all. There is other Friday
(14:24):
free for all. If there is other stuff, you want
have got, there'll be neat Marcus millingtonin is wonderful Melawtnin.
Within twenty five minutes of taken it, I was yawning
my head off. I only took it for a short
time whilst I needed it. But you can get that
quite easily from their chemist. They don't need a prescription.
I think that was something that act was excited about
(14:45):
getting through for the frequent flyers. Marcus, if you use
the CBD care for you'll get two months out of
your bottle, not eight drops, more like two or three.
Good for social anxiety. Why would you go out with
social anxiety twenty eight past eight o'clock if you want
to partake oh eight hundred and eighty did the same
guy back again? Oh flop, mark, We don't mark rings
(15:08):
from a terrible part of reception. Then rings back and
said I'm going a better place of reception. Now we're thinking, well,
why don't you get that reception when you first ran?
Then rings a third time to see if the Woman's
Warriors team are in the NRL Women's NRL Dan's like
ask Jeeves, Oh, well be in touch if you want
to be on air. O eight hundred eighty ten eighty
(15:30):
and they are in them, they are and I don't
know where it starts, but get in touch if you're
on a part take oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty
and nine to nine two de text one of is
Marcus welcome anything else we are up for it. Do
get in touch. Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty and
nine two nine two to text. Would love to hear
from you if you got breaking news for anything else
(15:51):
you want? All that cash floating around the average adult
has two and a half thousand dollars of cash. Where
will they put it? Ever since the notes went plastic,
I had nothing more to do with them because for me,
they would work their way out of their post on
the bike, and that you'd look the blow away in
the wind, forever losing money and not in the pokies. Richard,
(16:13):
it's Marcus. Good evening.
Speaker 7 (16:15):
Hi, Marcus.
Speaker 8 (16:16):
I think you've miscalculated your cash.
Speaker 2 (16:18):
So have I?
Speaker 8 (16:20):
Well, eight million divided by about three million, two and
a half.
Speaker 3 (16:24):
Dollars eight and a half billion.
Speaker 8 (16:26):
I wasn't billion with a beat, okay, I didn't hear that.
I thought it was million. So in that case, you're
dead right.
Speaker 3 (16:34):
How much of you about how much have you got?
Speaker 8 (16:38):
I'm lucky they're having the tens normally.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
And the fact that you and I have got none
means a lot of people must have double amounts, like
five grand.
Speaker 8 (16:47):
Yeah, I really wonder how they can calculate that fire
eight billion.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
Well, I think the Reserve Bank knows how much money
they're printing. I think they've got I think they know
how much is in circulation because the Reserve Bank issues
or the banknotes.
Speaker 8 (17:03):
Yep. Well, I suppose a few wealthy people keep ten
twenty thousand, but we have salt up. I still t well,
maybe in a bank vault, but I still can't understand
the average person having much cash. It'd be interesting to
have someone from the Reserve Bank comment.
Speaker 3 (17:20):
I think, well, someone has commented from the Reserve Bank
what they say. In the past year, the value of
one hundred dollar notes in the hands of the public
has increased one hundred and seventy seven million. Will fifty
buck notes increased by five hundred and forty seven million,
so half a billion increase in the fifties, the fidties
and twenty notes by turn on twenty two million. There's
(17:44):
a lot of money out there. So every year from
nineteen ninety eight the amount of money is increased, but
last year and increased by a billion. Yep, go figure
getting touched on to by their head of twelve minas Marcus,
good evening, yep, Pio, if you want to be a
part of it. Eight hundred and eighty ten eighty. I'm
very keen to talk about the Enzac Day Test two
(18:07):
that Tim Horan wants the All Blacks and the Wallabies
to play a Test match every ends that day. I'm
right behind that they'd be fantastic, Marcus. If I can't sleep,
all the reather was what all the weather is wild
and windy? I listened to Stephen Fry reading a story
about leavender on YouTube. I have never made it to
the end of the story, even if I start halfway through. Wow,
(18:29):
I don't know if it's deliberately for sleep. Got patent
when you say I miscalculated the amount? Oh, it is
a specifically for sleep. Stephen Fry talking about lavender doesn't
sound that interesting. Well, I guess that's the point your
Pia headl twelve minamers, Marcus, welcome oh eight hundred and eighty.
Teddy twenty five to nine score Hurricanes, thirty eight Crusaders
(18:50):
twenty four. That's right, Dan, Eight minutes to go thirty eight,
twenty four, eight to go, And I'm looking forward to
your contributions tonight. If you want to talk on air
about whatever you want, just don't mention the horses. I
think we have a night off the horses at Canterbury
(19:12):
because people got upset about that. So we are talking
about why every one's got so much cash? So you
got five grand?
Speaker 10 (19:19):
Where is it?
Speaker 3 (19:20):
If you've got like a jar with it all in it?
If you're buying stuff on marketplace? Is that what it's
all about? You know, I'm not a cash person and
I think I'm ahead of the curve with my payWave.
Oh well, you might want to talk about this twenty
four to nine, twenty two away from nine? How are
you going people? What's happening.
Speaker 11 (19:37):
Now?
Speaker 3 (19:39):
Listening to you talking about malatonin. I don't have trouble
fording asleep, but I have bad quality sleepers. I'm a
sleep talker, I sleep walk and I have night terrors.
Wonder if any of this have the same situation of
tried militonin for that and did it work? I will
go to the pharmacy and talk about them tomorrow. But
was just curious, And then, what are the night terrors?
(20:01):
I mean, it sounds dramatic, doesn't it? The night of
all the night terrors? But I don't know what they are?
Is that if you've had I mean, I don't know
how they are different from a nightmare. It doesn't sound
pleasant though, does it. Fil could explain the night terrors
to me that this might be the night for the
night terrors. Building on the Red Zone seems to be
council driven. Former Red Zone landowners were told land would
(20:24):
be too costly to remediate and rebuild on and given
no choice but to leave. Some couldn't afford to buy again.
Counselors put info out to media, but nothing on their website.
But there is a regeneration committee meeting next week. Agenda
shows plans with three story townhouses and majored in a
view about co governance on the land. Well, if the
(20:45):
land wasn't suitable and too expensive to remediate, why are
they going to do that? It seemed to be a
bit of affront to the people of christ Chiefs that
were forced out of there. I think was the right
thing to do and whole suburbs were stripped away Marcus.
On Anzac Day there was an Australian New Zealand ex
Wallaby's All Black game and New Plymouth. Hardly anyone there
(21:06):
annoyed by rugby in because it was not organized by
them but by a pass players association. Well yeah, you know,
inded rugbies on travel in trouble. They need more revenue streams,
so I wouldn't be surprised they don't do something along
those lines, because I don't think super Rugby is gonna
last much longer, I mean three or four years, and
then they'll rejig it and then no one will be
into it. That's my take on that one. Might be wrong, hope,
(21:27):
I am. I just see it as a as a
spectacle that's probably waning just because of the chat. It's
always changing every year, there's different teams. It's only really
interesting when there's the New Zealand teams together about the
quarters and the semis. I reckon good to see that
they are doing more stories about Chinese garlic, So there
(21:49):
you go. People still down on that one anyway, I
need your calls to like people nineteen to nine if
you want to partake, I am up against sport tonight.
I'm aware of that, but yeah, we can soldier on.
You might want to even rediscuss some of the topics
earlier on in the week, like Yorkshire petties or Yorkshire pudding.
Rather so he has come through any of the stuff's
(22:10):
good or anything else that you've got. Someone wants to
know about CBD oil for sleep. Where do we get
our seat? Is it imported from overseas? I know all
sorts of people started manufacturing marijuana products, but I think
but it seem as though most of them went bankrupt.
So CBD is Yeah, I'm not fully ofay with where
(22:31):
that comes from. Does not cause a high, it's non psychoactive,
and it is legal, but only with a prescription from
a registered doctor. Where someone said cheapen it by from
the pub eighteen to nine, Hang on back aunt your
people who ninety text John Ants Marcus good evening.
Speaker 8 (22:55):
Good evening.
Speaker 11 (22:57):
Yeah, I'm a person who's taking CBD and THC combination.
Speaker 3 (23:04):
Wow.
Speaker 11 (23:04):
And and yet it started off taking just the CBD
on its own, which was pretty expensive. But there is
a regional health subsidy for people who've got quite serious
conditions who've tried lots of other medicines and then to
use the THC product. It's a sort of was a
(23:27):
conundrum of having to have ministerial approval and have unapproved
use of the product. And anyway, a couple of years later,
I use it from time to time. I've got the
gummies as I've stopped using the flower. The flowers what
(23:48):
people would call buds. I guess the company that made
that was a New Zealand company. They've gone bus There's
another one called Kenneth South. I'm not too sure if
they're still going.
Speaker 4 (23:59):
But.
Speaker 11 (24:01):
Someone can correct me if I'm wrong. Maternity of the
old freezing works, so I'm sure that's the cannabis plantation
now in South lond But anyway, the post there's a
few different ways to get this the goodness out of
this out of the biomss and one way solvent, in
other ways like oxygen and anyways, process of extraction, and
(24:24):
then they isolate the good parts and then they put
them into a product that's that's use it friendly. What
it's done for me is it's helped me sleep through
the night because I've got quite very brittle asthma and
I stopped breathing at night sometimes and I don't even
sleep at year, and it's quite painful too, So helping
(24:49):
me manage my health, it's given me significant improvement. But
after a while, like most things, it just sort of
wears out. I guess your patient is going to wear
out because my dog's talking.
Speaker 3 (25:02):
I appreciate consider it is a THC legal, Yeah it is.
Speaker 11 (25:07):
Yeah, So I did this from a you can get
it from a clinic, right, who are just like send
for some people to be racketeers, but they're not. They
have GPS working there so to be general practitioner and
work at a cannabis consultancy.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
They have specialists, but I have mine in.
Speaker 11 (25:28):
Support with my GP and hospital specialists. But yeah, there's
you know, there are there are considerations so I can
attend the odds inn A meeting just to make sure
that my my medicine isn't becoming a social habit.
Speaker 12 (25:45):
Is is.
Speaker 3 (25:48):
Is a th HC an oil.
Speaker 11 (25:52):
H It's is like inside the inside the gummy.
Speaker 3 (25:57):
Oh okay, understand, okay, and the and the CBDs and
an oil.
Speaker 11 (26:02):
The CBDs inside the gummy as well. So it's it's
basically just just like eating envitament and gummy. So does
it effect a psychoactive effect from having it combined, But
you can buy them separately. But you know you're looking
at two hundred and fifty dollars a month. But you
can get a subsidy if people need it, and there's
through a disability allowance. But effectively, after taking it, I'm
(26:25):
not able to drive for several hours, so.
Speaker 3 (26:29):
Respect but you wouldn't want to drive because you've got
to sleep.
Speaker 11 (26:32):
Right, that's right, that's right. So it's not not something
you take. Look just because you're sore during the day.
During the day, you've got more ability to get through
it than waking up in the night with pain. And yeah,
during the day, it's like you don't want to be
taking that stuff.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
But definitely, Johnny, how recent is the technology? Is this
a recent thing?
Speaker 11 (26:54):
Oh for sure, So you know in the last twenty years,
mostly Canada. I think you could in places loot Holland,
but what was underground has now been driven above ground.
And that's of course good good because now you get
laboratory grade medicine instead of like maybe getting budst of
(27:14):
got cockroaches impregnated them. They have been grown outside in
the bosh from the local gang and you know, so
in some respects that's cheapened by it as well. If
I was just using flowers for example, which I was
at one point and I steered away from that, but yeah,
that was like ten dollars a gram, whereas it's twice
(27:37):
there on the street. And on the street you don't
know what you're getting. But I would say that the
cannabis that you get legally is a lot less potent
than what is around. And so it's for people who
are used to just self medicating and taking cannabis off
the street or wherever it's from, they'll get a hell
(27:57):
of a shock when they try something from from the doctors,
because it's very mild in comparison.
Speaker 2 (28:03):
So you have to like, yeah, really work on okay,
well that stuff, you know.
Speaker 3 (28:08):
I wrap up that I appreciate your honestly. Thank you're
living away from nine who won the Rugby then that
the Hurricanes Hurricans won by seven thirty eight thirty one.
That's a situation there, hold your horses, Jeanette with you soon.
I would like to know more about the night terrors, Jeanet.
It's Marcus, good evening.
Speaker 13 (28:26):
Marcus, my GP prescribed this for me about a year ago.
Speaker 14 (28:32):
It's all to Leaf.
Speaker 13 (28:34):
He is not a GP anymore. He studies only on
this sleeping help, which is I must admit it's been
good for me. I'm eighty six suffering from insomnia, so
it's been really good for me.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
Janie, could you tell me again what he's recommended for you.
Speaker 13 (28:54):
Well, I've got one for daytime.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
But what's but what's it called old to Leave?
Speaker 13 (29:01):
It's it's the hi T is it h I C?
And then I've got one that knocks you out a
bit and you feel a bit drunk the next day,
so you don't drive, and you don't I don't go out.
But the one you take at night that is safe
to drive on. But of course if you get up
(29:21):
in the morning, you're feeling all right and you can drive.
But if you take the other one, you can't.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
Jeanette, I heard you say something like alter Leaf.
Speaker 13 (29:33):
Yes, that's the name of the brand, would be.
Speaker 3 (29:36):
A L T A alter Leaf, that's right.
Speaker 13 (29:41):
And it's it's widely advertised up here in the north.
And he's a local GP of ours.
Speaker 3 (29:48):
But you said he's given he said he's given alter Leaf. Yes,
a L T, A L E A F.
Speaker 13 (29:56):
Oh, ef, that's right. Yes, And and you speak to
a doctor, not particularly this my GP, but he recommended
this and it goes through all your records and and
if you suicide or a bit stupid, you're not going
to get it.
Speaker 10 (30:15):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (30:17):
So is a Is it a marijuana product?
Speaker 13 (30:20):
It is, and it's produced in this country. And I
also make my own chocolate. Unfortunately I'm out for dra too.
Speaker 5 (30:29):
With that.
Speaker 15 (30:31):
It is very nice.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
So you make your chocolate with the with marijuana.
Speaker 13 (30:38):
Yes, with the buds it takes a it's a bit
of a process. You got book strain it and I
put it in ice cube that little ice cube things
and cover it with chocolate.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
And where do you get your buds from.
Speaker 13 (30:57):
A friend? Well he got it, see he got up here.
Speaker 3 (31:03):
Yeah no, that's great. Okay. So yeah, that was a
lot to unpick. And the caol and this is all
because you can't sleep.
Speaker 15 (31:11):
Yes.
Speaker 13 (31:11):
I was a driving instructor for forty years and when
I stopped work, well that was it. I think I
lived on a permanent high. And then when I stopped,
I didn't have it anymore. And that was just awake
all night.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
What was the permanent high from the high of teaching
people to drive.
Speaker 13 (31:30):
Well, yes, in a permanent test stage of fear, aren't you?
Speaker 12 (31:34):
Ah?
Speaker 3 (31:34):
Did you ever? Did you have a foot break?
Speaker 13 (31:37):
I certainly did. I certainly did. And I had a
bluebird thunder, a bluebird that I bought brand new in England.
I bought it out here with me. I tried to
do it here, but now I found them passing the
test too easy and not too many bad drivers on
the road. Well, so I gave it up and I
(32:01):
was then sixty two.
Speaker 3 (32:03):
And how long did the chocolates last? Like twelve hours?
Speaker 13 (32:06):
But yes, about that? Yeah, but you certainly wouldn't drive
on those What do you do? We'll stay at home
and relax and do your housework and puddle about, but
don't drive or ride a bike or touch the machinery
because they are a bit away with the theory.
Speaker 3 (32:26):
Do you watch the soaps and stuff?
Speaker 13 (32:30):
I don't watch a lot of TV. It's a bit boring,
isn't it. Well, I think I'd rather listen to my radio.
Speaker 3 (32:38):
So the doctor that did that, he's given up doctor
now and he's just doing the alternately, is he?
Speaker 13 (32:43):
Yes? Brilliant and he was a good GP as well.
Speaker 3 (32:48):
If you had a chocolate today.
Speaker 13 (32:50):
No, I haven't had anything today yet.
Speaker 3 (32:54):
Would you take the most? Would you take the most nights?
Speaker 16 (32:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (32:58):
Pretty much. Sometimes I've tried not to and I've still
awaited two o'clock and I think, oh damn, so I
take it. But then I don't wake up till late,
which is you'll worry if I would need to get
up early. You don't take it late, no, because.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
Then you get started wake up later and later, and
then you can't get to sleep.
Speaker 13 (33:19):
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Speaker 3 (33:20):
Okay, love you to talk. Joy that immensely, Jeanette. Thank
you what you And with old Stephen with his oven
and the exhaust jeepers. No rules anymore, is there? You
just do what you want. What a great world. There's
things are changing around here. I found a foot wrist.
I'm using a chair as a foot wrist. Extremely comfortable.
Speaker 14 (33:40):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
Anyway, good days. I got the chimney, got the chimney,
swipped the chimney when the fire was on. That was interesting,
wasn't it couldn't I couldn't be. I though, Jeekus creeper
is not flying well, got out there, got on the ladder,
got on the roof with the step ladder, dunk, good,
dunk good dunk, feel free, satisfying feeding which you swiped
the chimney anyway, it didn't fall off the roof. That
(34:01):
was a bonus. The sheep are shorn there in the
bottom panic ext It's all happening anyway. We look. I
want to sort of narrow focus that. Well, I say,
what a narrow the focus of the show. I'm enjoying
talking about night terrors and I'm talking about using CBD
to sleep. But also ever, when you see it has
(34:22):
two and a half thousand dollars cash on average in
money folding money at home, Why would you have that?
What would people have that much cash? I'm not saying
they shouldn't. I'm just surprised why they do. I just
find electronic money so easy, and I know that people
always say it was so handy in christ Church during
(34:46):
the quake. But my theory of disasters is every time
there's a disaster, it's something new that's a I don't
think there'd be a disaster and the problem be people
having enough cash. Something would be something different. It'd be
chet GPT was down.
Speaker 4 (35:02):
You know.
Speaker 3 (35:03):
The thing about disaster is it's always something unexpected. I
think anyway, that's just my take on that. So I
wouldn't get a hold of cash out in cases another quake.
I think there's another cake quake. Something different would happen anyway,
That is just me. All the lines are free. I
embrace you tonight to talk. That's the money and the
night terrors and the CBD oil. And for a fourth topic,
(35:24):
even though I'm trying to narrow it, but now I'm desperate,
I'm saying the Anzact Day test between the Wallabies and
the All Blacks every Enzact day and make it for pride.
It should be the pinnacle of an All Black's career
because I know the players. You units they were playing
too much. Well tough, toughen up butter Cup, we need you.
It's going to be great for rugby. Spit the uniform
(35:46):
with a poppy eddie ass will make a fortune, Canterbury
will make a fortune on the Australian's jersey. Be a
great thing. This is what we are talking about tonight.
The night someone said the night terrors.
Speaker 17 (36:02):
Due do.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
I get night terrors? I wake up hearing a voice
calling my name in my ear and shaking me. There's
no one there. I live on my own Mike, Wake up, Mike,
Wake up, Mike, Mike, Mike. I could almost imagine that.
I think I've had such a situation where I've woken
up kind of not the enim of tether, but you're
(36:28):
make is just falling up on the night terrors. It's horrible.
There's always an emergency to escape the room, and I
run out of the room, or there will be an
imaginary mezzanine floor at the ceiling with everyone looking down
at me. Even once I saw a huge bumblebee in
my beard that was one foot long. And it's just
different all the time. Sometimes it'll be frustrating and yelling,
sometimes be in an argument. Sometimes there'll be humiliation from something,
(36:49):
but there's no trauma that calls that, and there's no
is it a nightmare? Though with the one foot long
bumb will be to me, there would be a nightmare.
What I don't know about dreams I've learned on this
show is the interesting about dreams and nightmares. You'll never
be reading. If you ever come to reading, you can
never manage to get through it because it's always confusing.
There's never a clock, and you're never reading. We don't
(37:11):
know a bit about dreams. So twelve past nine people,
that's the plan. That's what we are talking about. Why
do you have all the cash? What about the THHC.
That's what we are talking about. So if you want
to add to these things, I'd love to hear from you.
There's something different. I can handle that also tonight, because
as you can see on a Friday, we are broad
(37:33):
so eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine to
nine to detect if you do want to come through.
They have detected the polio virus and Western Australia's wastewater.
This is the first time it's been detected. Yeah, SUBI
Echo wastewater plant. It's good to know they're still testing.
But they've been polio free since two thousand. Of course
(37:56):
that could come back. Now, that's what we're on about
thirteen past nine. If there's something different you want to
mention too, good if you're out and about, if you're
an uber driver doing anything in testing, you're driving up
the country, they'd be nice to hear from you tonight.
Twelve six North Queensland over the Canterbury Bulldogs. So the
first of a double hitter last night, Women's State of Origin,
(38:18):
New South Wales winning that pretty good match one drop goal,
one drop god attempt. I haven't seen that in the
State of Origin women's match before seemed to go pretty well.
Fourteen past nine CBD for sleep and night terrors. Do
if the CBD would help with the night terrors? What
if I think I have in the gamies with CBD
and THHC fourteen past nine. That's the plan. Keep those
(38:42):
texts through to ninety two ninety two to text you
want to come through. Would love to hear from you.
Year night terrors, Marcus, night terrors. My ex husband's uncle
suffered from them upon his return from Crete. Jim get
over yourself was his family's cat phrase. Marcus, nightmares you
(39:04):
usually remember, but as there is usually no memory of Wow,
so you just wake up in a mad panic. That
makes sense. That's the plans. Stand Good evening, This is Marcus, Jack,
welcome to the air waves. That we just use my
right mouse as opposed to my left mouse. Good evening, Jack,
Good evening, Marcus.
Speaker 16 (39:25):
How the Gunyah?
Speaker 3 (39:26):
Good Jack? How are you going with you?
Speaker 7 (39:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 18 (39:28):
Yeah, I've been been very good.
Speaker 4 (39:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (39:30):
I found it interesting you're talking about the CBD. I've
actually sort of been on it for probably or a
year and a half now, And yeah, I had had
quite a lot of issues with my sleep, Like I was,
I was quite sleep walking pretty in a pretty extreme
way actually sort of getting up at the night nights
here as all these all these issues and yeah, just
(39:53):
some CB there night was really really the deticket. And
also you know, I roll up a little bit of
a joint myself sometimes and it really helped.
Speaker 3 (40:04):
What was your worky sleep caused by it? Just start developing?
Speaker 18 (40:09):
Yeah, yeah, as I as I got a bit older,
probably in my late twenties, I'm sort of in my
mid thirties now, I actually had a bit of a
head injury sure, Yeah, yeah, and I wonder if it
was brought on by that, and you know a little
bit of kind of troubles and stuff in my life
(40:29):
I think potentially induced it. I've seen a lot of
people about it. But yeah, the CBD is, it's really
been the ticket. And yeah, I hope hope more people
embrace this products because it's really has done wonders for me.
Speaker 4 (40:42):
Me.
Speaker 3 (40:42):
Marcus, what was your part to getting it? Did you
get it from a GP?
Speaker 6 (40:46):
Yes?
Speaker 18 (40:47):
Yes, so yeah, initially my GP didn't didn't prescribe it
to me, you know, for whatever reason, I wanted it
quite initially and I think, you know, they have processes
and stuff whatnot they need to do. But yeah, I
eventually got it, and yeah, an absolute life savior really
for me to absolutely changed the quality of my life
(41:08):
because you know, sleeps pretty important as.
Speaker 3 (41:10):
I'm sure so important.
Speaker 7 (41:12):
Yeah, yes, so, hey is it fantastic?
Speaker 3 (41:16):
Does the does the amount you need change statical? Do
you find just you need more of it?
Speaker 18 (41:22):
Pretty static? Just you know, if I if I'm starting
to have you know, reachless sleeps again, or I feel that,
you know, this conditions sort of creeping back, and then
then yell up up my dosage a little bit. But yeah, no,
pretty pretty sort of consistedly, you know, taking just one dosage.
(41:43):
I'm not actually too sure what that is, but you
know one one recommended dosage.
Speaker 16 (41:47):
Is just track.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
Does it cost you to fifty a month?
Speaker 18 (41:53):
Yes, so yeah, yeah that has been too fifty a month.
But yeah, I've I'm receiving some money. I've I've got
got some grandparents actually you who have been helping me
cover the cost because you know, a big cost to
fifty a month for me at the moment. So yeah,
I have been amazing.
Speaker 3 (42:13):
He's too grand parents A.
Speaker 18 (42:15):
Yeah, yeah, you know I think that just yeah, and
you know a little bit actually mean just you know,
taking a little bit like smoking it as well, which
is has really been great.
Speaker 3 (42:27):
Good on you, Jack, thanks so much for that eighteen
Hold your horse's pill. I'll be with you so waiting
past nine, Stu, this is Marcus. Thanks for hanging there
in good evening.
Speaker 7 (42:36):
Oh, good evening, Marcus. Yeah, I just wanted to have
a quick chat about the money, the cash thing, and
and you know, you sort of said that you find
the digital money transactions easy. I just I just sort
of wonder if easy is not a good thing, you know,
(42:59):
as an not having control over your your digital currencies
and and you know, like the big Brother thing being
able to tell you what to do and when to
do it and how to do it and all of
that sort of stuff, whereas cash you have control.
Speaker 3 (43:16):
You know, how do you think big Brother would affect
me with what I want to spend my cash on.
What do you are you talking about?
Speaker 7 (43:24):
Well, yeah, just looking internationally, you know, like the likes
of Shina and places like that, where if you say
something against the government or you know, misbehave in anyway.
They can control your finances over the top of you,
(43:47):
you know. And so that's that's why I have a
bit of a stash of cash. So in those in
those times, like in bad weather, you know, our cyclones,
I'm down in the bay, I can still go and
purchase if I need to, you know, when the when
all the f posts are down and the computers are down,
(44:13):
I can still go and buy a tin of petrol,
you know, with with some cash, or go to the
supermarket and buy some food if their systems are crashed,
you know. So it's just a buffer really between between
the digital currency world and and the cash wild.
Speaker 4 (44:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (44:32):
But what have you got five grand at home?
Speaker 7 (44:37):
Should I say so?
Speaker 14 (44:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (44:39):
Yeah, But I mean there's a cost of that as
well too, because you're not getting any interest or anything
on that money too, So it's costing you to have it,
isn't it potentially?
Speaker 7 (44:48):
Yeah, that's correct, that's correct, yep.
Speaker 11 (44:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (44:51):
But then on the other hand, I can butt it
with my cash too, you know, I can I can say, well,
it's you know, if I'm going to buy a secondhand
car or a bit of furniture or something, I can say, well,
you know, it's one hundred dollars or I'll give you
eighty dollars cash. You know, it does it has those
benefits as well. Yeah, yeah, yeah, so that's that's why
(45:17):
I've got a bit of cash. Anyway.
Speaker 3 (45:21):
How old is Stu?
Speaker 7 (45:23):
Oh bro, I'm I'm over sixty.
Speaker 3 (45:27):
Do you remember, like in the mid eighties when the
weekend was coming up, yet to go to the bank
before the weekend to get enough cash to tide you over. Yeah,
it wasn't there wasn't that a pain.
Speaker 7 (45:39):
Ah well, a lot of us in those days got
paid in a little brown envelope that was got cash. Hey,
you know, and and then you've then you've got that
whole thing where you know, like the poor people are
holding their hands out in the on the streets and
you can you can pop a little bit of cane.
Speaker 3 (45:59):
That's a good point of talk if you cash.
Speaker 7 (46:02):
Chips of the world going round, you know.
Speaker 19 (46:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (46:06):
Yeah, And I just like that ability to have control
of some of my money, you know.
Speaker 2 (46:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (46:13):
The other thing, Marcus, was this this CBD thing and
thhd C thing. Well, I spent most of my life
as a drug edict, and I'm now eight years without anything,
eight years totally clean, and I sleep the best I've
ever had, you know.
Speaker 2 (46:33):
Yeah, So it's a.
Speaker 7 (46:34):
That's a that's an interesting one for me. So I've
got a really clean diet, i live really healthily, and
I've never slept so well.
Speaker 3 (46:46):
Yeah, okay, you're not worry about not worry about someone
speaking it and getting your cash.
Speaker 7 (46:53):
Now, I'm sleeping well on top of it.
Speaker 10 (46:54):
Mate.
Speaker 3 (46:55):
Good luck to them, lovely Stu, nice stuff. Thank you,
oh Stu with the mattress sture, with the mattress goodness.
Nightmares usually occur during aram sleep. What's the frequency? Whilst
night terrors occur in deeper sleep. They can cause screaming, thrashing,
(47:18):
and sleepwalking. Nightmares can genually be remembered, while night terrors
leave no memory. Marcus night terras Ah, there's quite a
bit of a cult on those. Depends how deep you're
into that scene, but they are interesting. Some say the
universe are the same figures a scene of people. Some
(47:38):
say that shadow people the figures you see from the
corner of your eye at night, and that once you
see them and acknowledge them, they see you. If you're
just want to know more, go on YouTube. Cheers, Tim,
just rolling a joint for no Dreams. I've had a
few terrors with part don't dream. I've always been told,
if you remember the dream of the night before, you
think about it the next night, and you'll carry on
(47:58):
with the same dream. Garbage. Tracy, Tracy, Tracy, Marcus Good evening, Marcus. Good, Tracy,
you've been listening.
Speaker 12 (48:10):
I have I had.
Speaker 9 (48:12):
I'm not a dope in myself, can't be bothered. Did
it as a teenager and.
Speaker 3 (48:15):
We're talking about we're talking about CBD for secret. I
think that's I think it's not psychoactive. I think it's
I think it's just DUI a medical thing.
Speaker 9 (48:26):
But I didn't know here, I didn't read it all.
But what'sn't there a study came out that said that
it doesn't actually work.
Speaker 3 (48:33):
I did see something like that. There was someone saying
that and that got them kicked up. Some saying that
it's it's it's it's it's benefit, it's benefits were over cooked.
Speaker 9 (48:46):
Yeah, they hed too, but not why I don't need
those sort.
Speaker 3 (48:50):
Of But what they'd be saying is they'd be saying,
big farmer trying to cook the results or something.
Speaker 9 (48:55):
Mmm, hey, look it's a kids. People came and happy.
I just don't get on the roads and don't endanger
anybody out.
Speaker 3 (49:06):
But this is endangering other people, which is actually benefits
over blow on. I'll just google that. Yes, what do
you what you are about?
Speaker 13 (49:16):
Yes?
Speaker 9 (49:17):
So anyway, I live in a kind or a house right,
but it's a new bill.
Speaker 20 (49:21):
It's not one of their new bills.
Speaker 9 (49:23):
That's private and SPM sets used to do there. How
can safety checks right? Once a year they'd inspect the properties. Well,
my inspection the other day, I'm from a tendency manager
and she enlightened me as to the fact that the
guys that worked for SPM message has now been high.
Speaker 3 (49:43):
Hang on, some of the woods aren't coming across that. Well,
what's what's over these manager?
Speaker 9 (49:49):
No, not the SPM as sets. They were a company
in New Zealand that contracted to Kayangle Aura.
Speaker 3 (49:58):
SPM Yeah s sets sure.
Speaker 9 (50:03):
Yeah, with two ass Yeah, they were brought out.
Speaker 3 (50:06):
It's got what's got to is its essets?
Speaker 4 (50:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (50:10):
Essets has two?
Speaker 3 (50:11):
Got three, hasn't it?
Speaker 2 (50:13):
Oh yeah it does?
Speaker 9 (50:14):
Yeah yeah yeah, sorry, I'm just talking about yeah. Yeah,
So they lost a big contract, I mean sixty thousand
houses right. So when they lost the contract, I assume
we wouldn't have to have anything to do with them anymore.
But now the Taronger branch has gone and hired the
(50:36):
guy that lied about the condition of the houses here
in Taronga to the detriment of the tenants. Like the
last inspection he did where I used to live, every
room in that poor guy's house was covered in mold
and the inspector.
Speaker 3 (50:55):
Wrote, this is your house or someone else's house.
Speaker 9 (51:00):
No, this was the house that I used to live in.
Speaker 5 (51:03):
Right.
Speaker 9 (51:03):
I got moved out because it was a leaky home, right, And.
Speaker 3 (51:08):
So I did a lot of reasons here, Tracy, where's
this going to go for me? With talk back? Do
you want people to ring about this or what's going
to help you?
Speaker 4 (51:16):
Well?
Speaker 9 (51:17):
I just think that people have to be aware that
this is what really happened housing New Zealand. In New
Zealand built the first leaky homes, right, So if they
built them and we're housing people in them, why did
they make it so hard for people to train on
their own leaky homes because they already knew it was happening.
Speaker 3 (51:39):
Okay, I'm going to leave it there, Tracy, because I
just don't know where I'm going to go with that,
and that's going to be hard to get into. Graham.
Good evening, It's Marcus welcome.
Speaker 12 (51:56):
So it's not me.
Speaker 3 (52:01):
What you listening to?
Speaker 5 (52:04):
Graham to the emergency emergency frequency?
Speaker 3 (52:10):
Sorry, I just, of course it is. What's happening in
the emergency frequency?
Speaker 5 (52:15):
Oh just guys chatting away on him radio?
Speaker 3 (52:20):
What are I chain about?
Speaker 11 (52:22):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (52:23):
Just usual chaddo. There's no immediency on at the moment.
But I just rang up to say that. It's Oh god,
that's sorry about I couldn't get hold of you last night.
Speaker 3 (52:39):
I'll just.
Speaker 5 (52:41):
The radio off him radio off?
Speaker 2 (52:45):
Oh god. People who have WHI should?
Speaker 5 (52:55):
Yeah, that's better. But the music monks.
Speaker 3 (53:01):
We still have that.
Speaker 5 (53:03):
I'm surprised.
Speaker 3 (53:04):
No one, no one fact that so well enjoy No
one knows it's May.
Speaker 5 (53:10):
It's it's made made the first.
Speaker 3 (53:12):
Yeah, but I didn't know that until about an hour ago.
Speaker 2 (53:16):
Well, it's.
Speaker 5 (53:18):
My birthday and the hand of May, and way as
you celebrate by getting out there and doing a whole
pile of KIV music. There's some fantastic bands are currently
and of yesteryear of course, well, Martin Phillips and the Chills,
and I just encourage people to get out there and
(53:39):
enjoy kivy music because we celebrate that around the country
every day in May.
Speaker 3 (53:47):
Yeah, it almost seems like we don't need to using
in music month because there's so much of it. It's
like all year round.
Speaker 5 (53:53):
Well, I like to think of it all year round.
It's foot ends the mockers, of course, the Chills, who
are no longer exists anymore, and called some of the
great Mary songs are out there, you know, so he
get if you're a karaoke singer and get out there
(54:15):
and sing a little hard out and.
Speaker 3 (54:18):
What's your what's your karaoke? Go to Graham?
Speaker 5 (54:22):
Oh I do I do anything from Sinatra and sex pistols.
Speaker 3 (54:27):
It's a good range. Oh yeah, huge range covers both.
Speaker 5 (54:33):
But yeah, oh yeah, Frank Frank's strength, Snacha's good value
and a lot of the young youngsters do if you
like Frank. So yep, get out there and enjoy yourself.
Speaker 3 (54:46):
That You sound quite panic tonight.
Speaker 5 (54:49):
Oh sorry about that. That that just caught me totally.
I'm not aware. I'm I'm sorry that those guys called up.
Speaker 7 (54:57):
On that frequency.
Speaker 3 (55:00):
What were they're talking about?
Speaker 5 (55:01):
They were just talking socially stuff, but like what about like, oh,
I just keep nical technical stuff about some intena rotators
or something something pretty dull and boring. Real good precy
is available to be used emergency.
Speaker 3 (55:17):
Have the internet chet rooms for that?
Speaker 5 (55:20):
Uh? They probably do, but they just had decided to
have a chin wag right in the middle of things.
And I'm sorry, you got what do you?
Speaker 21 (55:32):
What do you?
Speaker 3 (55:32):
What would you have the ham radio on for a
night like tonight?
Speaker 5 (55:36):
I do a twenty four hour monitoring on that frequency
on the only one person that does. But normally it
normally only gets used for emergencies. But what's a twenty
four hour real real emergencies like the floods and South
and Eden a couple of years ago.
Speaker 3 (55:55):
So is that your job to listen? Do you do
a twenty four hour shift to listen?
Speaker 5 (56:00):
Yep, yep, yep, that's part part of my job. By
I'm just positives network there and of course, of fate
goes off, you know, the the Southern Fault, the AF
nine as I call it.
Speaker 3 (56:16):
You know, I don't like I don't I don't like
people calling it a fate. I know that's coming to
council lingo when going about a fight. I don't. I
don't like a life changing earthquake to be called a fate.
It makes it sound almost American.
Speaker 5 (56:32):
While a lot of that so called a fate suffice
was searched here in these I thinkers. We've got world
class geoscientists who spend about five years working on that,
and I'm part of that as well.
Speaker 3 (56:43):
To the Alpone Alpine fault earthquake of an eight or
greater right.
Speaker 5 (56:49):
That's right, yep, And it will happen. Just rest assured.
It hasn't happened recently. But when it happens, it will end.
It has to need will miss most of it. It
will let you go up through the southern fault up
under the Southern alp and Mount Cook or a Iraqi
Mount Cook, and it will handle the hell out of
(57:13):
christ Church and Wellington.
Speaker 3 (57:15):
Can I just get back? So every so often it's
your job to listen and monitor.
Speaker 5 (57:23):
I'm one of the backup observers.
Speaker 12 (57:25):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (57:26):
So what what what frequency you're listening to? The emergency one?
Speaker 2 (57:30):
Oh, I'm going to tell you it's not.
Speaker 5 (57:35):
One forty six point nine, but that's a Ham radio frequency.
It's not the There are other emergency frequencies out there
run by other organizations.
Speaker 3 (57:48):
And when something happens, what is your job to do.
Speaker 5 (57:52):
We'll just be back up and report it and to
contact the appropriate people in the Ham Radio Fraternity who
deal with that at a more serious level.
Speaker 3 (58:05):
Okay, So other hobbyists, you'd say, hey, colms are down,
the cell phone network's gone, we're going to have to
get up a tower because it's up to us to
communicate with emergency services. Have I got that right?
Speaker 7 (58:15):
And yep?
Speaker 11 (58:16):
And we have.
Speaker 5 (58:19):
On our on our own bat we have what called
resilient systems that run off solar power. It's been built
in in the last four or five years down here
in Otago for so that if we go off the
gritters at work we have to, we can do that
for over ninety days if the sun's out from the
(58:39):
outside world, if we have to.
Speaker 3 (58:42):
You got you got batteries.
Speaker 5 (58:44):
I've got oh, I've got batteries.
Speaker 10 (58:46):
I've got all sorts of things here.
Speaker 3 (58:47):
Yeah, but you have you got much cash?
Speaker 5 (58:51):
Just enough, just enough to get by and no no
problem there. Oh the other thing I was going to
mention too.
Speaker 3 (58:59):
I'm not asking I'm not asking that rude I'm not
asking that rudely. It's because the average key, we's got
about three or four thousand dollars of cash day statched away.
I haven't. I haven't known normally.
Speaker 5 (59:09):
Okay, No, have have plenty of s fifth non perishable food.
Speaker 3 (59:15):
Yeah, of course you have all that sort of stuff.
So that the other thing you're going to say was, oh, oh, sorry,
there is a there.
Speaker 5 (59:24):
Was a comet floating around. Obviously it's not naked eye.
It's in the western sky. Given another week and I'll
call you back. It's not naked eye at the moments
about its magnitude, so it's really needs a large monoxaous
is set at the moment. It's comet pansters also known
(59:44):
as sea slash two two five R three.
Speaker 3 (59:49):
But it doesn't it doesn't matter if we miss it
now to be back soon, won't.
Speaker 5 (59:52):
It will be back back at about one hundred and
seventy thousand years. If we do miss it, we ever
seen the best year. It's just come into southern sky
and some people have gone off for a wee but
half cocked at the moment. The best is we yet
to come one.
Speaker 3 (01:00:07):
Hundred years, one hundred and seventy thousand years before we
see it again.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
That's right.
Speaker 5 (01:00:12):
Yeah, there's two common flight that Yeah, Rock.
Speaker 3 (01:00:14):
And Ice Graham, thank you for that. I'm glad you
could walk into that one twenty one to ten. How
the night Terrors? The night Terrors. It's a good name,
isn't it sounds Old Worldian? Catch you soon. I think
it's a long time to give the guy a twenty
four hours shift on the hammer. What if it is
at the end of a shift it kind of af
eight happens. I was lying eyes open in the dark
(01:00:38):
one night when I saw a shadowy phantom glided the
room and descend on to where my partners slept. As
soon as it made contact, she started shaking, as if
in a nightmare. Another girl I had living here in
all sorts of inter dimensionals hanging around, ended up kicking
her out, and all the phantoms and goblins went with her.
Welcome to our world. We are talking about why you'd
(01:00:59):
have five grand a cash. Yeah, I reckon it's a
bit loose for me just floating around. Oh here you go,
Oh there you go. Not unhappy with that, people, But
a billion dollars more cash had to be printed this
year because people have got more cash they've ever had before.
I don't fully know why. I don't know if it's
paranoia or fear mongering, fear mongering with the soul of
(01:01:23):
spots or the sun fleas or something. We're also talking
about whether you should have an ANZAC day test every
year between the All Blacks and the Wallabies. I think
that's a good idea. We're talking about night terrors and
CBD oil for sleep. That is a non psychoactive marijuana extract.
It will cost you a lot of money from the
doctor and the chemist. It's good for sleep yep, Marcus.
(01:01:47):
When we did our house up, we found five grand
in the of cash in the wall. We took it
to the cops, of course. So look, these are the
things we are talking about tonight. If you want to
join the fray, I'd like to hear from you, be
in touch. If you want to partake in tonight's revelry. Ah,
that's the plan, stand, yes, yes, So get in touch
(01:02:11):
if you want to talk about this or anything else.
Oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty No word on
the straight of horn moves. I say it every night
about this time, and nothing more from me tonight about
that that I can see if there's more information, but
I haven't got it, But be in touch if you
want to talk. Oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty and
(01:02:33):
nine nine to de text. Anything goes hit TI twelve
o'clock tonight. If there's something different you want to mention,
bring it on, looking forward to what you've got to say.
There's some sport on to eighteen twelve North Queensland over
can debry a lot of fuss about the Hurricanes Crusaders
match because there was a forward pass. Don't know if
(01:02:59):
you saw that and want to bring me up and
talk to me about it. I'm just watching an ad
for the Chemist Warehouse before it plays the video of
the ad for me to watch till if it's Ford
or not fair Hair Finiang and for is it's his
try in the fini norfol Yeah, they got that one.
Thirty eight to thirty one. Hurricanes have gone clear top
(01:03:22):
of the Super Rugby Pacific standing, but the Saders, i'd
if it's Ford or not, it's one of my skill sets. Ford.
Then we watch that again. Yeah, Ford, that's my take
on it. Ben touched. It's fourteen to ten. Here to
the end. Jim Steeden from twelve now it's twelve from ten.
(01:03:45):
People of New Zealand. Someone said, dom oh duck shooting.
Now there's not much talk about duck shooting. And I'm
in Southland, in Southland as duck shooting central. Although I
didn't notice that there's been a hang of a lot
of ducks. I've seen a panic near the ty turn
off and I've seen hundreds and huns of the ducks
(01:04:06):
in that paddock. And funny enough, I was in the
Top Paddies to day and there was ducks up there
and there's never ducks up there. Have I got a pond? No,
I haven't. I talked to the kids. I sit to
the kids, should we get a pond? And one of
the children said why would we? And the other child
said why wouldn't we? So, yeah, I's been a long
(01:04:27):
time since I've been duck shooting. Be twenty five year
actually that would be. But yeah, that's exciting. So there
we go. So if you are in the Mymi, I
don't know. There hasn't been much hype normally there's but
it's been quiet down here because you're most your south
and there's mostly southern people of farmers say, it's bigger
(01:04:49):
than for them than Christmas. Anyway, I'm looking forward to
your calls. We've got to talk before twelve o'clock, before
ten o'clock tonight, the night terrors. Tell me about your
night terrors, and I mean, I'll take it so I'm
not going to make fun of you. I'm genuinely quite
interested about you nighters. I mean it sounds funny. Tell
me about your night tiers, like I'm just wanting to know. Yeah,
(01:05:14):
I don't know why all the medical marijuana places go bang.
There was one of those talkback hosters and and that
guy Die what was his name? Andy Die was it?
He was into it. He's do the afternoons on ZB.
Then he went on into the professional recreational marijuana fairly
good broadcaster, I mean that was his thing. Did a
double at with Kiri. I think for a while there,
(01:05:38):
Ye Die was it? Pretty sure that was his name
something or know, But I don't know if his company
is still the one that's afloat. It's all too too
much going on in that area for me, Like it
was all everywhere and all this was happening, and that
was happening, and the other thing I'd be curious to
talk about is about whether they should build houses in
the red zone, because I thought that was because they
couldn't do that. Marcus. I get really worried when I
(01:06:00):
hear about the possiblity of a big quake. Sarah. Yeah,
well I'm hearing you, Sarah. However, the caveat for that
is they've always said with that big quake that it
is due to go. It's not if it's win and
it could be anywhere in the next five hundred I
don't know the details, but it could be tomorrow, it
could be in five hundred years time. So I don't
(01:06:21):
know how you worry about things that are as unpredictable
as that. That's what I would say. But I worry
about a lot of things. I don't worry about quakes. Hi, Peter,
it's Marcus.
Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
Good evening, Good evening, Marcus. I watched that Hurricane Crusaders
game tonight. It was an absolute cracker. And I heard
an earlier comment, and by yourself, that of a forward pass.
I think it was quite correctly judged by the TMA
(01:06:54):
that there wasn't an overly advantageous forwardness in the past.
But I did see don Gardner's try which was short
of the line have held up by due proceed KRETHI
And so I think the game and those little bits
(01:07:16):
and pieces that were controversial or may be controversial, the
game ein itself out pretty much. But boy there was
some good hits and shows you that.
Speaker 3 (01:07:27):
So with the try that was contentious, Pete, they went
upstairs and they reviewed the try, did they.
Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
Yes, they did, Yeah, they did. The ref wasn't too
far away either. The Duchy he he never put his
flag out or anything. So and the Crusaders players didn't
protest at the time either.
Speaker 3 (01:07:48):
So is it just the media looking for controversy.
Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
Well, I don't think they're looking for it. I thought
of subjective. They may have brought dom gardeners trying to
it too, But I just think if you try and
keep it even, I mean, it's not wrong aut the
fact that it was a big clash. Willingtonian's turned out
(01:08:15):
very good numbers, and I think that's super Rugby is
not named super for nothing. I think we're getting and
we're seeing a lot of players coming through the age
groups and getting to represent their provinces. It's good material
for the all blacks in the future. I think.
Speaker 3 (01:08:33):
Did they say how many at the ten tonight?
Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
No, they didn't say, but it looked pretty full. There
were a few. They always seem to shut off a
section at the at the at the ten, you see
there's two blocks that no one's sitting in for some
reason or other. But the rest of the ground here
was pretty full. I'd say she was a pretty good turnout.
Speaker 3 (01:08:59):
Oh, it's a good match. I mean, that's the thing
that when local Darby's work, they work well done't they?
Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
Oh they do they do? And and one of us
a full crowd at the game there was there would
have been thousands watching it. I'm sure at home in
the comfort her home. I mean, I enjoy that just
because I'm I'm waiting for a new knee and the stadiums.
Speaker 21 (01:09:25):
Did you are you?
Speaker 4 (01:09:25):
Are you?
Speaker 3 (01:09:26):
Are you welling Tonian?
Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
No, I loven't keep plumuth. I'm a tarnafid brilliant.
Speaker 3 (01:09:33):
Even better, nice to talk Pete, Thanks so much, Bet.
After the news people hitdle twelve looking forward to hearing
from you. How are you people? Seven past ten? I
hope you are good. My name is Marcus Hurtl twelve o'clock.
I know here's something too that I've just that it
might seem slightly radio and and but I'm excited and
delighted to tell you there's an article on the stuff
website there's just been filed at nine o'clock. It's about
(01:09:55):
mel Homer, who you'll know. She's a broadcaster. I've worked
with her over the years at ZM and things like that.
Now the radio station she is on at the moment,
I can't tell you what it does. Anyway, She's had
a long battle with cancer and she's cancer free, which
is extraordinary because boy, it looked like it wasn't good
(01:10:17):
and some of the reports I've heard, so yeah, not
dear yet broadcaster Malchomer says she's cancer free after grueling
bud blood cancer battle. Ladis biopsy showed no sign of
the disease. That's great news. So licial diagnosis was July
twenty twenty five and there we go eight ten months
(01:10:40):
no side of these that's extraordinary. So I'm excited about that.
We are talking cash, and we are talking ANZAC day
and we talk in the night terrors, but people are
withdrawing and holding extraordinary amounts of cash. I got no
idea I shouldn't say. I've got no idea why it's
not something I would do. Therefore, I can't work out
(01:11:03):
why others would do it. Hate cash, yeah, don't trust cash,
but I'm sure most people don't trust digital banking. So
horses for horses and courses for courses. But even Kay,
this is Marcus, welcome, right, where's it good to start?
Speaker 4 (01:11:23):
Hi?
Speaker 12 (01:11:23):
Kay?
Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
Hello, it's Marcus k welcome.
Speaker 4 (01:11:27):
Hello, Sorry, Marcus, it's kay. About forty years ago, I
worked in a bank in a small rural country town
and one day we had this elderly lady coming and
she had a pile of old money to that she
(01:11:53):
kept up the chimney, and they'd been afarre and she
was very shame faced about the whole thing, and of
course I couldn't handle that. She had to get ushered
into the manager's office to discuss the whole thing. But
(01:12:16):
it was quite amazing, Marcus, the amount of money that
she had. But what was so interesting, and I have
never forgotten the size of the money back in those
days she had. I think it was the same what
(01:12:37):
do you call it? You know? The money was denomination nomination,
that's right, but they were different sizes. I think there
were three different sizes of notes and they were quite old.
And the girl who I in the bank, who I
approached about this because it was past, you know, I
(01:12:58):
wasn't I wasn't able to handle this, And she said, oh,
a lot of that money will won't be paid out
on because it's too old. So we don't realize today
just how small our money is. And it's over the
years since well in the last forty years, the money's
(01:13:20):
got even smaller.
Speaker 3 (01:13:21):
I wonder, I wonder where has got smaller.
Speaker 4 (01:13:25):
I don't know. I suppose I don't know, but it's
so different now to what it used to be. It's
just amazing. And the other thing was, I don't know
what they would classify as money being in circulation because
I don't know if you've ever seen them packing the
(01:13:45):
money machines. There was a bookshop down the road for
me and they had a money machine in it, and
the money they put in those machines was just phenomenal.
And of course I know it's up for circulation, but
how much money is sitting in these money machines around
(01:14:07):
the country.
Speaker 3 (01:14:07):
Good point, What a daft place to store money up
the chimney?
Speaker 4 (01:14:11):
Yes, yes, I don't know if it was, say in
an old cold range that they never used and then
one day somebody decided they light the range. I don't
know that a lot of it was, you know, partly
destroyed and it's dunk of smoke, and you know it was.
(01:14:33):
But we all had a bit of a laugh about
it actually because there was there was a lot of money.
Speaker 10 (01:14:39):
Good.
Speaker 3 (01:14:39):
Yes, why are you sitting all at the bank?
Speaker 15 (01:14:42):
Looked?
Speaker 3 (01:14:42):
Okay, I appreciate you coming through that. That's good news.
There we go up the chimney twelve past ten. We're
talking money and and cash and night terrors and CBD
for sleep. That's the plan. If you want to work
these things or anything else at all. Good evening re crusaders. Try.
In my opinion, the referee should have gone TMO. I'm
(01:15:04):
pretty sure it would have resulted in no try. Marcus
Westpack Westpac Bank is sending letters to cardholders no more
ATM withdrawls officially. Now ATM withdrawls are unofficial. I need
someone to I have no idea what that means. If
someone or that texter could translate that to me, i'd
(01:15:25):
appreciate that and get in touch. But if you want
to talk on here tonight and the night terror is
in the one foot bumblebee. It's pretty terrifying, isn't it.
So yes, that's the plan. Get in touch ninety two
ninety two to text, Oh waito one o way if
you want to call. That's right, the old number back
in back for a bit of a go round. One
(01:15:47):
more week to Attenborough's one hundredth. That will be next Friday.
This day in ninety forty five, Adolf Hitler's death was
announced on German radio. I don't know if that meant
he died this day. I don't know much about the Bunker.
I steer clear of that chat, so I don't know
if it was today that he died or that was
just a day it was announced someone it to be
(01:16:08):
some of you wore people out of war knowledge. People
will know. I think he died yesterday and the Fura Bunker.
I don't know much about the end of the war
in the Battle of Berlin. I've seen a lot of
those videos of it when you put different scripts on it.
I don't know much about the Battle of Berlin. I've
(01:16:29):
got to say, to be brutally honest, Good evening, Angela,
this is Marcus. Welcome O.
Speaker 9 (01:16:35):
Hi Marcus.
Speaker 19 (01:16:36):
I'm just going to add to your discussion about the currency.
My mother had a whole lot of old, old, old
fig currency that couldn't be spent in the various shops
around because they'd changed your currency to more modern No.
Speaker 22 (01:16:52):
Anyway, I had heard that if you go into the
Westpec Currench inside the genner Our banking area it's Port
General at brunch and open doorphins.
Speaker 19 (01:17:09):
You go in there you can change the money. And
so Mum gave me all the old dollars that she
had hanging around, and I went in there and was
able to change it to new Figi's your dollars.
Speaker 15 (01:17:18):
And to send it.
Speaker 3 (01:17:20):
Wow, And it was like for years and years old.
Speaker 13 (01:17:23):
It was years and years and years old like it.
Speaker 19 (01:17:25):
And when you took it to other Fiji shots, they
couldn't accept it because it was now of a date.
And if you took it to the Whistec bank inside
the dinner Our Fort you could change it. And that
was only a year and a half ago.
Speaker 3 (01:17:37):
And how when you say had she lived there or
was it stuff she had on holiday?
Speaker 19 (01:17:42):
Mum and Dad had gone for holidays there many many
times over the years. Never ever took us kids, told
us we wouldn't like it, And then when we became
adult with ourselves and went there ourselves, we found we
didn't like it. But now that mum and dad are
really really old and not actually up to travel because
it was an accidence, they had like least over PG cash.
Speaker 22 (01:18:04):
That you could when you go.
Speaker 3 (01:18:09):
Did they go on a holiday when you were children
and didn't take you?
Speaker 23 (01:18:13):
They told us we wouldn't like it, wheld they put you?
Speaker 19 (01:18:16):
Would they send you aunties and grand nannas and stuff
like that.
Speaker 3 (01:18:20):
And I don't know how it feel. I wouldn't feel
good about that. Angela.
Speaker 19 (01:18:26):
Well, I've just come back from Rarah Tonga and I'll
tell you what. It's a lot better without I can
tell you. I can see now why they wouldn't have
taken us, because was a lot more fun without the
small children than it is taking places with you on holiday.
Those tide parents over there, same problems on a different
day in a different place looked like hard work to me.
(01:18:48):
I loved to sitting on the beach at the adults
only section.
Speaker 3 (01:18:52):
Didn't know there was adult didn't know there was adults
only section?
Speaker 7 (01:18:54):
That Raratana is there yes, there is sent God to
that too.
Speaker 3 (01:18:59):
Brilliant nice to hear angel, Thank you eighteen past ten.
Speaker 11 (01:19:02):
What do you got?
Speaker 3 (01:19:02):
People? Give us your best shot? Anything goes money? How
much you got at home? And where do you store it?
And why have you got it? Because the average person's
got three or four thousand dollars? Just unfolding. Maybe it
makes people feel wealthy, Dan, could you get me into
the Herald again? It's been shut out. You know that
you don't make it a little trick on it, on
on it, on it, on it, on it.
Speaker 5 (01:19:27):
What do you got?
Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
People? Sex nol Melbourne over the dolphins and we are talking.
If there's something else you want to mention tonight you
might be at the Mymi. You might be getting ready
to go duck shooting tomorrow. On the morrow. Duck shooting
has been quiet since they got rid of the lead shot.
I suppose it will be decoys off Timu, now, will it.
I don't know where you get your cheap decoys from.
(01:19:48):
I suppose that's always important kind of guff. But yeah,
if you want to be on here and that's the plan,
Oh that's what's going to tell you. I was going
to tell you some of the other stories that you
might get your motivated to bring up about This is
from Lorena. The one usual Vodafone outage today was a nightmare.
They are rough on consumers as the price of petrol rises,
(01:20:11):
there are companies that want us partly play pay as
can afford. I'm slow paying, but always even though it's slot,
I can't read that. Sorry. If anyone else has been
badly affected by that outage, let me know how that went.
Speaker 2 (01:20:28):
Do do do.
Speaker 3 (01:20:31):
Your research? Is just young people are more misunderstood than
ever by the older generations. Duck season commences this week
and there are a lot of ducks out there. I've
never seen so many ducks. It's a perfect season. Although
it's going to be a clear, nice day, which the
ducks don't like or the shooters don't like it because
the ducks. I don't know what they're doing. But yes,
(01:20:52):
if you want to mention that. Also to twenty past ten.
Oh now they call ten twenty two here till twelve, Charlotte,
Good evening.
Speaker 24 (01:21:01):
Good evening, Marcus.
Speaker 3 (01:21:02):
How are you for a good? Think is Charlotte?
Speaker 17 (01:21:04):
I was calling.
Speaker 24 (01:21:05):
I'm a time listener and a first time caller currently
on a long car ride from Auckland to Toplot, and
I was just curious about the money conversation more than anything.
And then I was doing some googling in the background.
And in fact, it costs more and more and more
to make money, so there is a reason behind why
(01:21:26):
it's perhaps we're getting smaller. But I also thought, you know,
when I was reflecting on kids and money, that poses
quite an interesting question around how you know that learned
the value of money, perhaps when it's something less physical
and it is all this kind of intangible things. Wondered
if you hadn.
Speaker 3 (01:21:42):
Thoughts on it, tell me more about that. What do
you mean?
Speaker 24 (01:21:45):
Well, you know, when I was young, I had an
A and Z lical book where you would, you know,
take your coins into school and then they would bank
it for you, or there was a money box. But
I think, you know, parents more and more are transferring
money into the account. So how do you, you know,
teach the concept of money to.
Speaker 3 (01:22:06):
Cold aren't dealing with cash?
Speaker 11 (01:22:07):
Are they?
Speaker 4 (01:22:08):
No?
Speaker 24 (01:22:08):
Not really not at all? Only their parents ESTAINIB.
Speaker 3 (01:22:12):
My kids wouldn't wouldn't touch cash. I don't think like
if they go to the shop, they'd take their cards.
Speaker 24 (01:22:19):
That's the one that is the one.
Speaker 3 (01:22:21):
So they would never they would never, they will never
have money, I don't.
Speaker 24 (01:22:24):
Think, yeah, or maybe not, Maybe it becomes a different Yeah,
it's some sort of contact with them into the future.
Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
So this would be that these will be the last
generations that will be nuts for cash because the other
people couldn't care less, could they? Because the generation now
is cashless.
Speaker 24 (01:22:37):
That's true, you're cashless or then you've got like, you know,
digital currencies.
Speaker 25 (01:22:41):
Who who knows where it's going?
Speaker 3 (01:22:43):
Would you would you have four or five thousand rolling
around at home?
Speaker 4 (01:22:48):
No?
Speaker 24 (01:22:48):
No, I was thinking I try and collect coins for
you know, weekly chore them. Would ever, ever, only find
one dollar fifty cents?
Speaker 17 (01:22:56):
Never more than that?
Speaker 3 (01:22:57):
If you're not got a jar of coins?
Speaker 24 (01:22:59):
No jar of coins?
Speaker 3 (01:23:01):
No, I couldn't bother with coins. I mean I have
no time for them. Whatso we have a call or
just I just think payWave is the best thing ever.
It's just like life change.
Speaker 24 (01:23:12):
And I think you know, even when saucy silhouette Bunnings
or anything. What you can do then is take your
phone in tact, you don't even need to find a
coin for your two dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:23:22):
Yeah, is that right? I don't know if. Yeah, there
are times I come across things I need cash and
then that and I can't think what the last instance was.
It was something recently.
Speaker 11 (01:23:30):
It's all be.
Speaker 3 (01:23:30):
Charity or something like that, isn't it when there's something
like that and you think you feel a bit grim
like at endsac day, try to buy a poppy or stuff.
Speaker 24 (01:23:37):
Yeah, that's one one.
Speaker 3 (01:23:39):
How far away from topor are you?
Speaker 15 (01:23:42):
Oh?
Speaker 24 (01:23:42):
Not fun now? Probably like twenty more minutes.
Speaker 4 (01:23:46):
So.
Speaker 3 (01:23:49):
Thank goodness, shout it, nice to talk, Thank you twenty
five past ten six and Al Milburne over the dolphins.
How are you going? People?
Speaker 11 (01:23:56):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (01:23:56):
Cash? Do kids even bother with it? You can't race dogs,
but you can kill ducks with total immunity. Brilliant hypocrisy.
So someone said, how could they ban greyhound dog racing
we can still kill ducks. Well, the farmers make the
case that the ducks will eat or the grass. I'm
never quite sure about the arguments about I mean, I
(01:24:18):
don't really buy into the arguments about duck shooting, but
people both sides are pretty adamant that it's bad and good.
But yeah, it's that time of the year. If you
want to chuck your bits in for that. Regarding CBD
oil for sleep, it's often used for neurodiversion individuals as
well as those with autism and what's this ADHD. I'm
(01:24:40):
a parent of a neurodiversion child and it's becoming very
common for it to be used in this way. I
am a neurodiversion out of myself and use cannabis occasionally,
which helps me sleep. It also helps in a similar
way to my ADHD medication and calms my Brian my brain.
Marcus Knightira is a few years ago when my grandson
was about four or five years to wake up a
(01:25:01):
few times a week screaming, and nothing would settle him.
He wasn't totally awake. I remember the doctor saying it
was night terrors, because you mean they'd be a tough thing.
You go to the doctor. Doctor says, I think your
son here, I think your grandson has don't dunt dunt
dun dun. Night terrors sounds so dramatic, doesn't it. Night
terrors woo night terrors. I shouldn't mock them, but I'd
(01:25:27):
like people to talk about it in an understanding way.
I don't have night terrans. I don't hear that feeling
when my when I I drop, my body drops. I
think you might be slightly awakened, slight your sleep and
your body just drops. That's not nice if you're a
word for that, when your body drops? Am I awake
(01:25:47):
or am I asleep? Kind of in between? Yeah, there'll
be some though, well study that. What's it called? There'd
be a Greek word for it. So yes, come on, people,
let's hear from you tonight. I guess it's my body drops,
isn't it? Pepnick jury for the quiz Dan, it's a
(01:26:11):
hypnic jerk. As you fall asleep, your muscles relax and
your heartbeatn body temperature drop. Sometimes your brain misinterpreters is
rapid relaxation is a sign you're actually falling. Your muscles
relax and your heart rate and body temperature drop. Your
brain misinterprets it's a glitch to glitch and the matrix. Wow,
(01:26:32):
it's a transition glitch between being awake and stage one sleep.
You think it'd be a band called the Hypnic Jerks,
wouldn't gym? I'm sure there would be. I'll google that too.
Looking forward to your calls, people, duck shooting and cash
welly have people got so much cash? But I am
call up shy tonight. So if you do want to
come through, I'm up against the sport and stuff, so
(01:26:55):
be in touch. Eight hundred and eighty ten eight nine text. Yes,
there is a Wisconsin based garage stoner band called the
Hypnic Jerks and why wouldn't they be what a tremendous
name for a band, hip nick Jerks be terrible, wouldn't they?
Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
What are they?
Speaker 3 (01:27:11):
Wisconsin based garage stone a punk band. Melbourne have scored again.
They're ten nierl over the Dolphins. This is Craig Bellamy's
first match coaching since he's came out about his neurological condition.
But he also despite having you, he also seems to
be an angry so and so. And we're on about
the night terrors twenty nine to eleven. Marriats Marcus, welcome
(01:27:35):
and good evening.
Speaker 17 (01:27:37):
Yeah hime Marcus. Yeah, my young sister had night terrors
when she was probably about five and it was just
absolutely it was horrible for the rest of us. Mum
and dad had visitors one night. We're going back to
like the sixties, I.
Speaker 3 (01:27:55):
Suppose and the nineteen sixties.
Speaker 15 (01:27:59):
Yeah, yeah, and we lived.
Speaker 17 (01:28:02):
We're on a farm, and we were sort of that's
five ken case, ten miles. It was actually to the doctors,
and it was it was like eleven o'clock at night,
and the visitors that we had suggested that they back
in those days, your doctor would come out and visit,
and they actually rang our doctor, and good old doctor
(01:28:23):
Bill said, right, I'm coming straight there, and my father
had to sit with her because they I've just been
reading a bit about it, actually, and the difference between
nighttaers and nightmares is they with the night terrors, which
is exactly what was happening with my sister. She would
be screaming and climbing in the wall, yelling, and but
(01:28:47):
they when they wait, they don't know anything about it.
Speaker 3 (01:28:50):
So was she physical? Was she in bed? Was she
actually at the wall trying to climb the wall?
Speaker 26 (01:28:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:28:55):
Yeah, well that sounds terrifying.
Speaker 17 (01:28:58):
It was, But as it turns out, they put it
down to the fact that her teacher they with her
and he expected a lot from her at school. But
the awful thing about it, though, Marcus, was the rest
of us had to be so careful with anything we
(01:29:20):
said to her. For a number of years, and I
think she may have started to play on it, to
be honest, but at the time, yeah, it was.
Speaker 12 (01:29:28):
It was not nice.
Speaker 17 (01:29:30):
It was, and they it's to do with you. It
happens in that the first part of your sleep, whereas
nightmares are more like the later part, you know, like
your morning sleep.
Speaker 3 (01:29:44):
Yeah, what doctor builder give her a shot of something?
Speaker 17 (01:29:48):
I can't remember. I can't remember. But he sat with
mum and he was He was a good old doctor.
He was a lovely old guy, and yeah, he was
quite concerned for her. He kept in touch with mom
and dad for quite a while after it because because
he actually witnessed it as well, because the screaming and
(01:30:08):
the yelling and the punching at the.
Speaker 3 (01:30:10):
Wall and things like that didn't these days. These days,
you probably do a zoom call. Are you zoom your doctor?
Speaker 14 (01:30:17):
Mm hmmm?
Speaker 17 (01:30:18):
Probably?
Speaker 3 (01:30:19):
Are you supposed to wake them when they're like, what's
the girl's name?
Speaker 17 (01:30:24):
Jan?
Speaker 7 (01:30:24):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:30:25):
Jane?
Speaker 3 (01:30:25):
I wonder if it was going to be a Jen.
Could you wake Jen during the night terrors?
Speaker 17 (01:30:30):
I really can't remember. I suppose she did wake Eventually
she became a nurse. Actually, we actually have not spoken
to each other in years, you know, we've just ye
had a fall out years ago and it's it was
never unfortunately.
Speaker 3 (01:30:44):
But do you reckon that's repairable? Do you fall out?
Speaker 13 (01:30:49):
Oh?
Speaker 17 (01:30:49):
No, she's she worked, She went and worked for the
Flying Doctor Severson in Australia for many, many years and
she's just she's made her home over there.
Speaker 15 (01:31:01):
Yeah, it's so.
Speaker 17 (01:31:03):
Yeah, big family is aren't necessarily always good thing.
Speaker 3 (01:31:06):
Oh gosh, okay. Not with the night Mary, We've got
a lot there, thank you for that. It's all about
the night terrors and the hypnic jerks. We've got to
keep it exciting for old Charlotte on the Papal Run,
Eric Marcus, Eric.
Speaker 10 (01:31:26):
I just I just turned the radio and I just
heard you talking about these hypnic jerk jerk things, which
which he heard of before, but you described exactly what
I've been suffering from.
Speaker 3 (01:31:35):
Yeah, you've got epnic jerks.
Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
Eric, Well, I'm not a jerk, but.
Speaker 10 (01:31:42):
It certainly hipness.
Speaker 3 (01:31:43):
So yeah, you're about to go to sleep and then
you just dunk.
Speaker 10 (01:31:47):
Oh horrendous man like you're about to go to sleep.
I've just been to the doctor about it. Actually, it's
been happening over the last week or so. It's been terrifying.
You're just about to go to sleep and you're just
going into sleep and next minute feels like you're you're falling.
It feels like you're in space falling. It's you've got
no control o' written your wake up an absolute panic.
Speaker 3 (01:32:08):
The doctor, I'll tell you what Jacks.
Speaker 10 (01:32:12):
No, he wasn't sure what it was. He thought it
would have been caused by stress and stuff, but anxiety.
But I wasn't really feeling like that. But the funny
thing was today I thought, you know, I thought, I
wonder if I just go and get my ears checked
and cleaned out because I know that, you know, I've
had that before where you feel a bit giddy and
(01:32:32):
stuff and it can be your ears. And I went
to the the airplace just to get the ears my
ears sucked out and there was a bit of waxing
it in there. But she found that, Yeah, I had
fluid all behind my ear drums and it was pushing
against my ear drums. So she reckons that's actually what's
causing it. That causes it when you laid down, it
(01:32:52):
causes it and balance in your brain yep, so your
brain can't because of this fluids your brain when your
when your eyes when you're awake, your eyes can help
you balance, but when you those your eyes. Yeah, and
so it's giving me a whole lot of stuff to
try and see if it's going to fix it up
because I can't. I couldn't look like a stroke as
(01:33:13):
you're crazy, like I had no sleep for that.
Speaker 3 (01:33:17):
Your missus has stood by you, though, Eric, by the
certain things.
Speaker 10 (01:33:20):
Yeah, she's pretty good mate.
Speaker 3 (01:33:22):
Yeah, she sounds good.
Speaker 5 (01:33:24):
Laugh.
Speaker 14 (01:33:25):
I like her.
Speaker 2 (01:33:25):
I've I've been keeping her up all night, have you.
Speaker 3 (01:33:29):
Well, she's understanding.
Speaker 10 (01:33:31):
Yeah, But to anyone that's actually suffered from it out there,
I mean I've also suffered from from busy spells before
in the daytime, and that's frightening as well. And it
just feels like you you've got no control. I feel
like the whole room spinning.
Speaker 3 (01:33:46):
But you sound like Eric, do you sound like you're
falling a long way? I'm falling like three inches?
Speaker 8 (01:33:51):
Are you having it too?
Speaker 3 (01:33:52):
Are you everyone has them?
Speaker 4 (01:33:54):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (01:33:55):
I thought everyone had them?
Speaker 10 (01:33:57):
No, not really, not not at night. I mean there
are people that could suffer from them.
Speaker 3 (01:34:06):
Falling like about three inches and then I'm awake.
Speaker 10 (01:34:09):
Yeah, it's horrible. And how do you feel about it,
worries does it?
Speaker 3 (01:34:14):
No, No, I think that's the quirk of nature that
you're in the glitch. Your body thinks you're falling next,
you're going to sleep in your mind kicks in.
Speaker 10 (01:34:21):
Yeah, you know, I'm getting a bit worse than you.
I'm kind of getting it now.
Speaker 3 (01:34:25):
You're falling, you're falling along where you're like you're down.
Speaker 10 (01:34:27):
A chair and yeah, yeah, and I'm actually waking up
in my heart. I feel like my heart's trying to
catch up, like it's it's like it's pumped so much
a drill into me. It almost feels like your Yeah,
your heart's going to blow off or something.
Speaker 3 (01:34:42):
You don't sound scared. That sounds strict. You don't sound stressed, Well,
not tonight, because I've actually got a a possible diagnosis
of what might be causing it.
Speaker 10 (01:34:51):
But I was pretty stressed because every not to go
to bed, I can't sleep.
Speaker 3 (01:34:55):
Have you got have you got stress in your life?
Speaker 10 (01:34:57):
Oh? Probably no more than anyone else, I suppose.
Speaker 3 (01:35:01):
Yeah, you don't want to get obsessed about worrying about sleep.
That worrying about sleepers the worst thing for people, I reckon.
Have you got one of those watches? To tell you
how about sleep you've had No, No, I haven't stay
well clear of those. You're a disaster.
Speaker 10 (01:35:16):
Yeah, no, it's just more.
Speaker 2 (01:35:17):
It's just more the the.
Speaker 10 (01:35:21):
Fear of not being able to get any sleep.
Speaker 3 (01:35:23):
And yeah, you just set the clock, get up and
just you little kid. Did doctor give you anything for
your hypnoic Jake?
Speaker 12 (01:35:31):
No?
Speaker 10 (01:35:32):
Or he hasn't really diagnosed it, so gagery give me
anything any So, like I said, you going to your
own diagnosis in the end, try and find out yourself
what's wrong with you because you're not really getting much help.
Speaker 3 (01:35:43):
So well, they just don't google themselves, aren't they.
Speaker 10 (01:35:46):
Well yeah, but I said, if anyone is having that problem,
get your ears, don't get your ears cleaned out, because,
like I said, this lady's picked up that they're almost
in the troops you.
Speaker 3 (01:35:57):
Know that what they call with you the lady next
here or the ear lady.
Speaker 8 (01:36:01):
No, the ear lady.
Speaker 10 (01:36:03):
Yeah, I don't know what they call the name of
these troops that run at the back of your names
to just down to in an ear drum and if
they block up she said, my ears were blocked on
the inside in the outside, so.
Speaker 3 (01:36:13):
How would she know that be because you can see
in this can you see through the ear drum when they.
Speaker 10 (01:36:19):
Sucked the wax out, they can see the fluid behind
the ear drum somehow.
Speaker 12 (01:36:23):
Yeah yeah, yep.
Speaker 2 (01:36:26):
Not for me.
Speaker 3 (01:36:26):
I've got I've got very narrow canals. Okay, yeah, it's interesting,
but but you know that about me, that's a bit
of extra for experts.
Speaker 10 (01:36:34):
At least you haven't got Iranian canals.
Speaker 3 (01:36:43):
At least haven't got what iranian you know? You know
that's a straight that that doesn't work as a joke
because it's the straight of whom he is, not the Iranian,
not the canal, and for moves.
Speaker 12 (01:36:55):
Is it no good?
Speaker 2 (01:36:57):
I'm no good at jokes, mate, I'm just.
Speaker 3 (01:37:00):
Trying to I'm just trying to get you out of
your stress. Look lovely you tal get what's your what's
your partner's name?
Speaker 10 (01:37:05):
Michelle wrote, or my Michelle.
Speaker 3 (01:37:08):
I've never heard such a delightful presence on a phone
line that someone's just there, supporting and giggling away. Sounds tremendous.
Love you, Michelle with the ep Nick jerk Oh eight
eighty ten eighty, nineteen to ten, eleven, let's call it
nineteen to eleven. Well, well, well, if it an't, if
(01:37:29):
it ain't, Jan on night Terrors Evening, Jan.
Speaker 5 (01:37:35):
Funny Man, one.
Speaker 3 (01:37:36):
Of the funniest Jan one of the funniest. O Coy Now,
let me guess, Let me guess if you'd be the
sort of person to suffer from night terrors. Let me
have a quick think about this. I reckon, Jane, that
you would know something about.
Speaker 15 (01:37:51):
This, nothing at all. Yes, I do. Actually, you know
when you're falling? And are you at sleep? And does
it wake you up?
Speaker 3 (01:38:05):
You're just you're in the state of falling asleep and
then you your body drops literally no, not literally, but
it feels as though it does, and your mind thinks
your body is dropping, and your mind snaps your body
awake because you think you're about to you think you're falling.
Speaker 15 (01:38:21):
You're still awake when it happens.
Speaker 3 (01:38:27):
It's hard to answer. You are in the process of
falling asleep and you snap awake. The process of falling stops. Oh,
now have you not experienced that?
Speaker 5 (01:38:39):
No?
Speaker 4 (01:38:40):
Really?
Speaker 19 (01:38:41):
No?
Speaker 15 (01:38:42):
Will I hit sleep tea? See knocks me out? It's
just wonderful?
Speaker 4 (01:38:47):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (01:38:47):
THHD sleep tea?
Speaker 15 (01:38:51):
Before I go to it?
Speaker 11 (01:38:53):
Is it?
Speaker 15 (01:38:53):
Chammer Miley mixture of different things. Passions now all mixture different.
Speaker 3 (01:39:00):
It's always that for going to sleep. What's that one
they always talk about. Oh ye, it's got something. It's
got some out of their name, like Valerian root. You've
had Valerian root, Yes.
Speaker 15 (01:39:13):
That as well. It's got a mixture of different vebs. Anyway,
So I sleep like a baby most of the time
unless I've got it rap poking at my ear in
the night.
Speaker 16 (01:39:26):
Well I'm sleeping.
Speaker 7 (01:39:28):
Have you had that?
Speaker 15 (01:39:30):
Yeah, just recently? And still what are we doing?
Speaker 3 (01:39:34):
What are we doing about that?
Speaker 15 (01:39:35):
Jan No, I can't find any resolution. My garden has
had to put the cat in there.
Speaker 3 (01:39:43):
And have you got a gardener? Yeah, that's three upstairs downstairs.
It's like down to abby, is it?
Speaker 15 (01:39:53):
Help? Swistle? The rubbish takes away all the guardboard and
a bag load of my gardening rubbish for me. Does
the lawn. It's wonderful the saint anyway, and.
Speaker 3 (01:40:08):
Say you need a cat. You've got a kid, haven't you.
Speaker 15 (01:40:10):
Yeah, I've got lots of them. But my ginger boy
he'll get he catches rats and I put him in
there and he just like thought, I'm supposed to kill
up and ever sleep. He wasn't on the job, so
I don't know what to do. I can't sleep in
that room anymore. I've moved into another room.
Speaker 3 (01:40:32):
How many bedrooms have you got?
Speaker 11 (01:40:34):
Jen?
Speaker 15 (01:40:34):
Seven?
Speaker 3 (01:40:35):
Seven? And I've never I've never asked you this, but
I've always and I don't know why, but I've always
presumed that it's you on your own?
Speaker 12 (01:40:43):
Is that right? Me and my cat?
Speaker 15 (01:40:46):
You gus?
Speaker 3 (01:40:49):
Oh, you've got plenty of choice for which rooms? Have
they all got beads in them?
Speaker 15 (01:40:53):
Yeah? Or geared up jan visitors, guests, Yeah, anyway, and
all that sort of things. Friends come, they yeah, self
contained upstairs, they can go up there.
Speaker 8 (01:41:12):
And.
Speaker 3 (01:41:14):
You're on Airbnb.
Speaker 15 (01:41:16):
No, they don't want strangers. When I was younger, borders,
you drive me crazy. They bring their boyfriends or their girlfriends,
and who knows how many people you've got in the
house when they bring all their friends with them. Yeah,
that's really scary.
Speaker 3 (01:41:37):
You have you had night tears?
Speaker 11 (01:41:39):
Jen?
Speaker 6 (01:41:40):
No?
Speaker 15 (01:41:41):
But I'm a Christian and we'll get onto that again.
Because I believe in binding up the evil spirits.
Speaker 3 (01:41:54):
I live for this stuff. You believe in what.
Speaker 15 (01:41:59):
Well the evil spirits or spirits of the dead they
can attach to you, and so then they bother you
when you're sleeping or during the day. Even they can
cause you to have addictions to various things like if
(01:42:20):
you're overweight, you can have an addiction to gluttony. Or
are people who are prostitute they have a spirited of Jezebel.
You need to bind up these spirits by putting a
spiral around yourself and finding it up. You speak it
out loud, you bind it up and you break it
(01:42:43):
off you And but you need to have your homes
cleaned out, you know, with the spirit realm you've got.
Speaker 3 (01:42:51):
These are these people in purgatory? Are these the people
wanting to go to heaven and the tex and they
attach themselves to people like Jezabel.
Speaker 15 (01:42:59):
Yeah, And any kind of addiction that you have, that's
a spirit an attack spirit.
Speaker 3 (01:43:07):
What about addiction to temu like online shopping, Yeah.
Speaker 12 (01:43:10):
Any of that sort of thing.
Speaker 15 (01:43:12):
Hoarding. Hoarding is a big one a spirit. And you
have to open the doors and the windows, and not
in the night, of course, but have your house cleaned
out and you tell the spirits to go in the
name of Jesus Christ.
Speaker 7 (01:43:30):
That's the power.
Speaker 15 (01:43:31):
That's where you get the power to find it up
and break it off. Anyone can do it. You don't
have to be a special, you know, gifted person in
that area and open the doors and windows and tell
all the spirits to get out now.
Speaker 3 (01:43:50):
Okay, And the problem with the Jen, You've got a
lot of wisdom there can I think I'm loving this,
but I think that might be because you're in a
bit of a roll.
Speaker 2 (01:44:00):
Ah.
Speaker 3 (01:44:01):
Yes, I've got to run. I've got commercials to go, Jen,
Thank you. Threats were just made of the Z gas
station morehouse ere. It seems someone got upset the cashier
wouldn't take pump off prepaid. Sign of the times their
threats made at the There we Go. Someone said to
me last year about having a bit of cash hidden
(01:44:22):
in case of an emergency, have it stashed in more
than one place in case of a robbery where they're
likely to feel a sense of accomplishment when they find
one stash. Remember when cash was king during the christ
chitch quake. Today's outage affected some banks reminded me of
an outage a few years back and then one Christmas.
But if there's another quake, it won't be cash that
it'd be something different. Lightning doesn't strike twice, Marcus, and
(01:44:44):
voluntary leg makes it difficult to sleep? What's involuntary leg?
What do you call it? When you start all to
wake mid sleep and find yourself frozen so you can't
move any part of your body, not even utter a whisper,
least of all, called to speak out for help. Doesn't
sound good, Marcus. I've got twenty five thousand in my
safe cash from cash jobs, painting, et ceter. Also, the
(01:45:06):
big topics tonight is the night terrors. It's got such
a dramatic sound to it, hasn't it? The night terrors?
Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
Here?
Speaker 3 (01:45:14):
Until twelves? You're sitting along at twelve o'clock? Scott ats Marcus,
Good evening.
Speaker 21 (01:45:19):
Marcus, Marcus Scott. I wanted to I thought you might
like to hear about my experiences of dealing with cash
from a retail perspective. Sure, so, I do we speak
generally about fireworks most years, yes, but also I do
(01:45:39):
various other things that take me around the country throughout
the year and the I don't know how if people
have covered this, but when we talked about cash being
used very rarely, I think this is something that can
differ greatly between various ethnic groups. I would say, if
(01:46:01):
that's the correct term to use, like, certain communities use
cash far more than others, and far more than most
white people do. And the exception I would say would
be christ Church, which as a whole I think uses
cash far more than any other region in New Zealand,
probably because of the yeah, the quake thing, and I
(01:46:25):
think just I'm trying to think of the word, you know,
but basically the effects of the quake and people worried
that the FOS system is going to go down and
they kind of haven't lost the habit of using cash
like most must have.
Speaker 3 (01:46:40):
Is a pain in the neck for retailers.
Speaker 21 (01:46:42):
Sorry, is what exactly a pain in the neck.
Speaker 3 (01:46:44):
Having to deal with cash because it's expensive to bank,
It's time consuming, isn't it.
Speaker 21 (01:46:51):
Well, well, it's not particularly I think people often say this,
but I mean, like if I took a thousand dollars
of cash in a week and I wanted to take
it to the bank these I mean. The issue is
that there answer as many banks as they used to be,
but most of them have the smart age. We can
go in at any time. You know, you can go
to a twenty four seven ATM and a more depositive
(01:47:12):
cash in two minutes in your and it's in your account.
It's it's not that big a deal.
Speaker 3 (01:47:17):
But you've got to find a park and you've got
to walk to the machine and stuff like that, don't
you It's not it's it's not without its problem.
Speaker 21 (01:47:24):
Yeah, I mean if poss is definitely more convenient because
you get that money and then y, that's in your
account and you can use it to pay a bill
or pay a mortgage or whatever. This is a bit
tongue in cheek, but you're not the biggest thing I
think of the husslers of taking cash is the cash
is king people that pay you cash and then feel
that they have to tell you, look, I'm paying you cash. Hey,
(01:47:46):
cash is king. Hey you don't have to pay tax now,
they're not stopping us. I'm never going to use f
pos because people feel like they have to give you this.
Not everyone, but certainty.
Speaker 3 (01:47:56):
So what do they do they think? I think it's
a badge of honor using cash.
Speaker 21 (01:47:59):
They need to tell you about that, absolutely, And they
say cash is king and it's and it's actually not
even what cashus king originally meant, but yeah, it's it's
I guess it's the same some of the same sort
of people that may have certain ideas about five G
or about vaccinations.
Speaker 3 (01:48:19):
Or you know, the sort of people I mean the
cookers and.
Speaker 11 (01:48:23):
Exactly.
Speaker 7 (01:48:24):
But and generally it's.
Speaker 21 (01:48:27):
Pakiha guys over the age of fifty and they pull
out cash and they say, do you take cash? You
saw need to take it before they ban it? Cashus king,
make CASHUS king.
Speaker 3 (01:48:36):
More it's got and more people using cash. Is that
what your experience that more people are paying.
Speaker 4 (01:48:40):
With it.
Speaker 3 (01:48:42):
Over what period of time the last couple of years.
Speaker 20 (01:48:46):
No, not at all.
Speaker 21 (01:48:47):
I mean maybe there's the odd bullets. But like when
I started doing retail, you know, like twenty five years ago,
it was probably it was probably your takings was probably
thirty percent if boss, you know, and this is obviously
averaged out, but it was probably something like pos seventy
percent cash and now it's probably ninety tenvera show and
(01:49:10):
stopping all the time.
Speaker 3 (01:49:12):
Nice to hear from you, Scott, Thanks so much about that.
Eleven eleven eleven past eleven we are talking cash is king.
We're also talking about sleep paralysis, hypnic jerks, and the
night terrors, anything sleep dream related that's important to me tonight.
Get in touch if you want to talk, Marcus. When
a person has waken during sleep and cannot move a speak,
it's called sleep paralysis, Marcus. Sleep paralysis is terrifying. That's
(01:49:32):
what the other text was referring to. Couldn't imagine anything
worse Google sleep paralysis a temporary inability to move or
speak while falling asleep but waking up, often accompanied by vivid,
frightening hallucinations and a feeling of chest pressure kylie of
chest preasure, full stop com Kylie chess terrors, night terrors,
hypnic jerks. And the fact that there's a lot more
(01:49:55):
money out and floating around in people's pockets. People of
using a billion dollars more cash to share than last year,
which about three dollars each more extra per adult. So
we're gonna a lot of money each So that's what
we're on about tonight, Good evening, Welcome to your people.
My name is Marcus. How are Where are What's happening?
Anything goes in the final hour. We are also talking
(01:50:18):
about the proposal to have an ANZACT day test between
Australia and New Zealand and Rugby every ends ACT day
I'm all into that. I think it's a great idea.
Thoughts if you've got those, that would be good. Trump
is calling for the PJA tour to welcome back the
live rebels. No surprises, that's gone bad. Who want to
watch teams play golf? Though there was a strange way
(01:50:41):
to do it. Couldn't say they have much? You sit
and say that compelling to me? Non curated talking is
the Friday free for all. Anything goes. You might just
have a quick, quick, quick quick comment about something. You
might be on a journey. You might be duckshooting tomorrow,
you might be at the mymi ah. Because I think
what happens when people go to the mind Wi. They're
(01:51:01):
stay up all night having chats, don't they? Then they
go up first thing in the morning. But worse for
where Marcus. I went to the Ricketon market a week
as I back. It's huge, but I couldn't buy any
things and have cash. Ah and the market. I've never
been to the Ricketton market. Actually, I don't think I've
been to the Ricketon market. Where is the Rickettson market.
(01:51:22):
I think I've been to a market in that bush
Dean's bushes or that's not the Ricketton market though, is it. Well,
the rickets market was a bigger deal. In fact, I
need to know about the Ricketton market was like the
sound of it, Jimmy Marcus, welcome, good evening, do.
Speaker 4 (01:51:38):
You hear me? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:51:38):
Got you sound like you're in the rain, But I've
got you, Jimmy.
Speaker 25 (01:51:42):
Yeah, I'm going to some currently driving, so you have
been bounds later at the moment, I'll just turned into
your station. And now you're talking about stuff like a
sleep like paralysis.
Speaker 4 (01:51:55):
And.
Speaker 25 (01:51:56):
Yes, yeah, so I tain a little picture for you.
I've had paralysis before, so that you may one the
most terrifying things ever. I was just saying to a
quill when I was a young teenager, as a stormy
night and everything went quiet and go with our house
(01:52:20):
in a long hallway. In my bed basically faced the hallway,
and I noticed the figure. I woke up and yeah,
I noticed the figure at the end of the hallway.
Speaker 11 (01:52:33):
And I just kept on.
Speaker 25 (01:52:36):
Basically I could I couldn't do anything. I was just yeah,
couldn't scream out, I couldn't do anything. I went into
Browns as I supposed to cou you could see.
Speaker 3 (01:52:47):
And you were asleep so you're you're asleep but amazin
thing side.
Speaker 25 (01:52:51):
Yeah, I actually woke up because I kind of felt
something and then it was a story, right, and then
everything went quiet and the street light out my outside
my window. We basically went out, but I noticed something
at the end of the hallway, like a figure, and
I it actually came closer to me, and I just
(01:53:14):
I couldn't do anything, so im I was in there paralysis.
So yeah, I just couldn't screen that couldn't I just
couldn't move.
Speaker 3 (01:53:25):
Does it just happened? The ones just happen the ones
to me?
Speaker 25 (01:53:29):
Yeah, he happened to me once, but there after that,
I'm lo talk familiar with the movie get Out. No, uh,
it's good. It's a good movie that's got of a
horror thriller. And it was in you you talked about two.
Speaker 3 (01:53:49):
Yeah, when you feel like your body's falling down.
Speaker 25 (01:53:53):
Yeah, I've had that a few times, Like I'm just falling,
just I just keep falling like a hit. So I
feel like you actually hit the you wake up and
you hit the bed real hard. Yeah, I've had it
a few times. I'll think I've never heard they two
before they see anything.
Speaker 3 (01:54:12):
Once you hear the term there's nothing else that could
be a.
Speaker 25 (01:54:16):
Yeah, exactly so, and I wait a few times and
you're just it's like you are wait for your fall.
You just keep falling, and you're like falling into a
dark place. Yeah, we are real, very really really scary, really.
Speaker 2 (01:54:30):
Freaks out, freak out.
Speaker 3 (01:54:31):
Lovely to talk to me. Thank you so much, Tricia
as Marcus, good evening.
Speaker 14 (01:54:36):
Oh him, chus. I'm actually trying to go to sleep,
but that's not happening.
Speaker 3 (01:54:40):
You sound I am. You sound like you're ready for sleep. Pressure.
Speaker 21 (01:54:44):
I am, but I.
Speaker 14 (01:54:47):
Do a bit of that free falling, not not often,
but I know exactly what you mean.
Speaker 3 (01:54:53):
I don't think it's I don't think it's to be feared.
Speaker 14 (01:54:56):
No, no, but exactly how you described what happens to me.
I don't fall a long way like that other man.
Speaker 3 (01:55:03):
No, I thought, I don't know what's going on with him.
That's weed. But I'm three inches.
Speaker 14 (01:55:08):
I've built yeah enough to just wake you. And you think, oh,
so that's my first thing. I've just got a couple
of other things. Cash now. My husband, he loves cash,
and so that's good. It's really good because I don't
have to go to the ATU machine. I love it.
Speaker 3 (01:55:29):
Where's he keep it? For sure?
Speaker 14 (01:55:32):
Oh, look he's done. I've been married to him for
forty six years and he's always had cash. And he
used to hide it everywhere and then then forget about it. Great,
but I will, but I will have found it.
Speaker 15 (01:55:45):
That's good.
Speaker 3 (01:55:46):
So that's what keep like jars and stuff.
Speaker 14 (01:55:50):
I used to have a shoe box when we first
got married. He gave up the shoe box. But where
does it? All over the place. But the funny thing is, Marcus,
many years ago, probably forty years ago, we had a waterbed.
Speaker 2 (01:56:04):
You know the waterbeds.
Speaker 3 (01:56:05):
Oh my goodness.
Speaker 14 (01:56:08):
And I don't know whether we were shifting or a man.
All I remember was a man was there and he
was doing something with the waterbed, whether it leaked or something.
And he found this big evenlop with ahole of the money,
like over one thousand dollars. I know, lucky you told me, because.
Speaker 8 (01:56:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:56:29):
And the last thing is I was in christ Church
not so long ago, hadn't been there for a long time,
and at the airport, I meet your Fovo Pearls marching team.
And because I'm Trisha from marching and so I was
(01:56:50):
just standing next to them, and they said they were
the Povo Pearls, and I said that about you, and
one of them said that their auntie used to work
at some supermarket and she knew who Marcus was.
Speaker 12 (01:57:03):
So there you go.
Speaker 3 (01:57:05):
Goodness.
Speaker 14 (01:57:06):
So I'm all over the shop tonight, and I've got
to get up at six o'clock in the morning because
we're going to march in too.
Speaker 3 (01:57:13):
But you don't still have a water bed, do you, Tricia?
Speaker 4 (01:57:16):
Not now?
Speaker 14 (01:57:16):
But I actually liked my water bed.
Speaker 3 (01:57:19):
Really, I reckon you get a hepnic jerk and a
water bed, you'd feel like you're falling down the whole time.
Speaker 14 (01:57:25):
That I'm a small person and my husband, he's quite
his tall, and it was like when he got it,
I used to feel like it's going up on the wave.
Speaker 3 (01:57:39):
Nice to talk pure twenty five past eleven high bread.
Even that's right there, Yeah, good bread. You sounding good spirits?
Speaker 2 (01:57:48):
No, not really.
Speaker 16 (01:57:52):
Yeah, I've had the forming experience before. I did look
at the positive side of it, and it's eve when
you wake up after falling, you really do feel good
that it was a dream.
Speaker 2 (01:58:03):
Yeah, you know what I mean, was.
Speaker 16 (01:58:06):
Actually having it. It's a bad thing, but maybe I was.
I have long falls and it's dream and then I
got sleep.
Speaker 2 (01:58:15):
Sleep.
Speaker 3 (01:58:16):
You know when your league stuck restless, restless and restless
restless syndrome league, Yeah, restless.
Speaker 2 (01:58:28):
Anyway, that was the first thing.
Speaker 16 (01:58:30):
The second thing I wanted to bring up, and I'll
be real quick, is that my daughter turned eighteen in
February and she lives with a mother, and I've been
paying childs support for eighteen years eighteen. I ring her
ID on the following day saying, you know, hey, I
(01:58:52):
stopped gutting out of my wages, and they said that
the concept of the mother and she's still enrolled in school,
which I know she isn't, so I've got to pay
from to December her whole eighteenth year. I thought chil's
support would stop when the toils stop starts, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:59:15):
Yeah, yeah, Bred not that I don't know much about that,
but yeah, thanks for airing that. Appreciate that. David Marcus welcome. Hello, Yeah,
hi David, good evening. It's Marcus.
Speaker 20 (01:59:27):
Oh, hi Margus. Yeah, I just wanted to bring up
because I knew it was a free for all thing tonight,
and bring up a couple of things.
Speaker 3 (01:59:36):
Great, that's the spirit of Thank you for embracing that.
Speaker 20 (01:59:39):
Yeah, no, I don't have cash, but I do have
my Broncos tickets. Yeah you know which, David, Now, Yeah, I.
Speaker 3 (01:59:49):
Live on so so for those that don't know, you
don't have a bank account, but you put instead of banking,
you put money every week on the Broncos making the
top eight.
Speaker 20 (02:00:00):
Yeah, sounds like a perfect plan. She used the work.
Speaker 3 (02:00:05):
Well, if it works for you.
Speaker 7 (02:00:07):
Yeah, but I've moved.
Speaker 20 (02:00:09):
From Wellington to the lovely carpet Coast. I live in
Paraparumu and it's a beautiful night out there. And but
I was very fascinated to hear about Jens, who's talking
about the spiritual things and all sorts of things. And
I just wanted to bring up something I was thinking about.
Have you heard of the Big Bang?
Speaker 3 (02:00:31):
Yes? Well there's a lot. I like the way you say.
It's like saying have you heard of oxygen? Have you
heard of Thursdays? I mean, hasn't everyone heard of the
Big Bang?
Speaker 7 (02:00:43):
Yeah?
Speaker 20 (02:00:44):
But what happens is it goes onto the big shrink
and then it repeats.
Speaker 3 (02:00:48):
Yeah, it's going back, it's expanding, contracting, expanding, And there
might be millions of universes that are doing that. Yeah,
it's terrifying, isn't it.
Speaker 20 (02:01:01):
Yeah, well it's not really terrifying. It's just quite freaky.
Speaker 3 (02:01:05):
But I'm terrifying by the expense of universe. I mean
that's that. I find that really unsettling. If there's more
stars and grains of sand and it's just our universe,
there might be as many universes as grains of sand.
That that freaks me. I have real troubles comprehending that anyway.
(02:01:25):
Maketts Marcus good.
Speaker 26 (02:01:26):
Evening Markers sows you're not to go.
Speaker 3 (02:01:30):
Yeah, good Market's not bad at all, but if a
slow start sometimes you get that. On a Friday, we
cracked it up with hipnic jerks and we got there
in the end. A couple of topics too or three.
Some of them didn't fire, some of them fired well,
but you never know. You pay your money and you
take your chance.
Speaker 26 (02:01:46):
Yeah, cash is can I've always believed in cash.
Speaker 3 (02:01:53):
Do you say mac when you buy something? Do you say, oh,
kesh is king?
Speaker 4 (02:01:58):
No?
Speaker 26 (02:01:59):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (02:02:00):
It sounds really irritating, It sounds fantastics.
Speaker 26 (02:02:06):
I started working when I was eight years old.
Speaker 3 (02:02:08):
Of course, down the on the pharree down the mines.
Speaker 26 (02:02:13):
No farming, Oh yeah, Derry. And I started getting paid
at nine years old. And I bought my first car
when I was eleven years old. But it cost me
one hundred and fifty pounds. I brought it off my uncle.
He was at the next taxi A box or box. Yes,
(02:02:37):
And from then on and then I bought a motorbike,
a five hundred Mattress single banger, for one hundred and
twenty pound. Those bikes now are worth an original condition
wheth fifty thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (02:02:52):
Have you still got it?
Speaker 4 (02:02:54):
No?
Speaker 26 (02:02:54):
I haven't, No, no, no.
Speaker 7 (02:02:56):
I was young and dumb, you know what I mean.
Speaker 26 (02:02:58):
And just when I got sick of riding it, I
just gave it away. I gave it to my Army general.
Speaker 5 (02:03:06):
Mate.
Speaker 26 (02:03:07):
Yeah, i'd be retired now, Army General new John, Army General.
Speaker 11 (02:03:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (02:03:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 26 (02:03:16):
And another thing too.
Speaker 3 (02:03:19):
He's just doing like free association tonight or is there
other stuff?
Speaker 2 (02:03:23):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (02:03:24):
What's the theme of your call?
Speaker 26 (02:03:27):
A Shane Jones like mister Shane Jones.
Speaker 3 (02:03:32):
A hole in the head yep, I.
Speaker 26 (02:03:36):
Believe I know this man. I believe I went to
primary school with him at one stage. Yes, And I
believe his I seem to think that he looks exactly
like I knew him when I went to primary school
with him, and I knew the whole family. They are
(02:03:57):
the farmers down the road.
Speaker 3 (02:03:59):
Wheubots is this?
Speaker 26 (02:04:01):
And Tartan.
Speaker 3 (02:04:04):
Minds he's from the far North.
Speaker 26 (02:04:07):
I think, oh, okay, I'm well more than what you're wrong.
But every time I see him on TV, I look
at him out say, jeez, it looks like Shane Jones.
I knew could be a different change on it.
Speaker 3 (02:04:25):
Well you'd recognize him, wouldn't you. I think he's from.
Speaker 26 (02:04:28):
Owen d I definitely do. He was a friend of mine, okay,
and and you know he was. He was nineteen years old,
you know, and I was the same, not about nine.
Speaker 3 (02:04:43):
Okay, Well where's this school? Where's sorry? I don't want
to sound I don't want to sound brutal or anything,
but are there any other twist or turned in the school?
Speaker 20 (02:04:59):
To be honest?
Speaker 3 (02:05:00):
No, it's cashus. Can you start a work when you're eight?
You started getting paid when you were nine. You brought
your uncle's taxi which was a Vauxhall Velex. You bought
a Matchless that you bought a Matchless single banger that's
worth fifty thousand dollars and you sold that to the
army in general, the New Zealand Army. But you have
a dot that like you were young and dumb and
(02:05:21):
you sold that. Yeah, and then now and then Shane
Jones miss a bit or that's pretty good recall.
Speaker 26 (02:05:31):
Yes, yes, well I seem the guy I know him,
you know, because mate, you know how many Shane Jones
is in New Zeale.
Speaker 3 (02:05:41):
Probably two thousand. It's a I can't think probably it's
probably one of the ten most common how many you
know how common they were? Jones is?
Speaker 26 (02:05:51):
But keeping up with thee for their mother and fathers,
keeping up with their mother.
Speaker 3 (02:05:57):
Keeping up with the Joneses. I mean, why do they
say that because it's a common surname.
Speaker 26 (02:06:02):
Oh oh, just wondering that that Shane Jones ecks become
a politician, which this guy here might maybe you know
the guy that's doing the job.
Speaker 3 (02:06:12):
Now, you know, what are your plans for the weekend?
Speaker 7 (02:06:15):
Mack working on a.
Speaker 26 (02:06:17):
Bus, my twin brother's bus before he fought the bus.
Speaker 3 (02:06:22):
Does your twin think cash is king?
Speaker 26 (02:06:25):
Yes he does.
Speaker 3 (02:06:26):
Does he start working he was? Did he start work
when he was eight.
Speaker 26 (02:06:30):
No, No, he never started working till he was sixteen.
Speaker 3 (02:06:35):
See how come?
Speaker 26 (02:06:38):
Because mate, he had life reasonably easy?
Speaker 11 (02:06:42):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 26 (02:06:43):
Because my father never said never. I was like years
old and my twin was eight years old and he
was just and I just said, because my father when
he first started farming, he couldn't afford to.
Speaker 2 (02:06:59):
Hire labor.
Speaker 3 (02:07:01):
But what did one was he spoil the other twin.
Speaker 26 (02:07:06):
I had? Well, I was twelve of us.
Speaker 3 (02:07:11):
Okay, I had enough, Mac, But thank you lovely to
talk Jeepers Lizard's Marcus. Good evening.
Speaker 23 (02:07:17):
Yeah, hi Marcus, you.
Speaker 3 (02:07:19):
Sound bright and breezy. Welcome Liz.
Speaker 23 (02:07:21):
Oh thanks. Yeah, I'm just talking about sleep paralysis things.
I get sleep paralysis when I'm dropping off to sleep.
I think it's like my whole body is just dead,
but I'm awake in my head and it's really quite scary.
My partner has to physically shake me awake because I'm
(02:07:43):
unable to just wake myself up.
Speaker 3 (02:07:45):
So how how does how does he know you're in
sleep paralysis at these stages.
Speaker 23 (02:07:50):
I'm like trying to call out to him and I
start like moaning and like like I'm having a bad dream.
So yeah, he knows and he shakes me. The first
time I had it, I had to check out with
such strength that I bounced off the bed, bounced up
off the bed.
Speaker 3 (02:08:08):
Are you having Are you having nightmares at the same time?
Speaker 23 (02:08:12):
Sometimes I do? And yeah, it's the same sensation. Yeah,
it's really weird.
Speaker 3 (02:08:20):
Yeah, so yeahs terrify. Yeah, yeah, it's.
Speaker 23 (02:08:27):
You're saying to me that now it's getting harder and
harder to wake me up.
Speaker 3 (02:08:32):
Well, that's worrying. That's a worry.
Speaker 23 (02:08:34):
Yeah it is because in my in my head, I'm
thinking I don't want to drift off back to sleep
because I might not make up.
Speaker 3 (02:08:42):
You're already. You don't really scared of sleep, do you.
That's a terrifying thing.
Speaker 23 (02:08:45):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yes, it's really weird, horrible sensation.
Speaker 3 (02:08:52):
It's nice to talk. Thank you for that. Twenty two
away from twelve. Oh guys, I've got to thank you all.
That was a tremendous flurry of calls too, and I
enjoyed that immensely. For the old Friday Free for All,
the f if A Friday Free, four FFFA, Friday Free,
Triple IFA, We're back on sleep paralysis, Marcus reinteresting evening
(02:09:13):
for emergencies. I have five hundred dollars in the hem
of one of my drapes. Marcus. My job, first job,
as a sixteen year old was an insurance and an
insurance office. Daily I walked to the bank with one
thousands of pounds of cash. I was in a company.
There was no thought of robbery. I can't remember the
last time I saw a used cash. I'm eighty nine.
Another thought, Marcus's satellites they send to orbit forever, no refueling,
(02:09:37):
no maintenance repairs, no rusting, no mechanics and engineers required.
Strange a. Maybe they never sent into orbit. Maybe they're
on dedicated on earth sites, mountaintops of the government fields.
Quite a scam, it would be, wouldn't it, Marcus. I've
had multiple sleep paralyssies, episodes of very real and frightening,
always a feeling of another presence in the rooms, sometimes
associated with pressure on my body. Thank goodness, hasn't efened
(02:10:00):
for approximately twenty years. Also, one of my children had
severe night tiers when she was around three. She's now
six y and doesn't remember this. Oh that's a good thing, Clarence, Hello.
Speaker 12 (02:10:10):
Hello, makers, He's producing for you to know. I just
want to say, high turn Dan, and now the cashless society?
Speaker 3 (02:10:20):
Have you said high tim?
Speaker 12 (02:10:21):
Yes? He said what do I want to talk about?
And I didn't recognize the voice, so I was acknowledged
to produce so in the background, Yeah, okay, cool, Yeah,
and you cashless society. I always have cash with me
and hidden at home in various places. I don't have
a chip in my ATM card, so no one can
(02:10:44):
read it, and I've still got the original one, and
with people hiding their money, and I'm thinking a bit
pointless telling you we're certain because it wouldn't be hidden.
Then now the chip that bring up and made a
comment about the satellites which was really out of the
(02:11:06):
as planet as it were, and has to look up
every ninety minutes, and you'll see the same one go
over if it's on that angle, because it's how long
I take to or of it, and there's nothing on
them that will rust and there's no oppoxiiten up there
to cause rust. If he was so, his argument lacks
(02:11:28):
some understanding about the satellites which are definitely there, And
why don't you have.
Speaker 3 (02:11:38):
A chip on your phone and your card? Parents?
Speaker 12 (02:11:41):
When I found people stand behind you in the queue
and not just they can read your card and then
watch what do you put in the future put your
pen in And there's a lot of shops don't have
pay ways and I don't trust it. I absolutely don't
trust it. It's not I'm not a lade. It's just
(02:12:02):
there are too many scams and things. And even when
you use your eating card at the bank, it says
carver your hand, but with.
Speaker 3 (02:12:11):
A Clarence with a card with a chippen right, Yeah,
you wouldn't need to be entering your pin code so
no one could see because it's just it's done without contact,
there's no pin so that might be an advantage, not
at all.
Speaker 12 (02:12:25):
If someone finds your card, they can use it until
you find it it's missing.
Speaker 3 (02:12:29):
Yeah, but you're not going to find You're not going
to look over your shoulder.
Speaker 12 (02:12:32):
Are they. It's it's a strange world. You lose your bag,
the card's gone.
Speaker 3 (02:12:38):
Why would you have a beg what's in your bag?
Speaker 12 (02:12:41):
Shopping bags on an invalid.
Speaker 3 (02:12:43):
Oh yeah, I see what you're saying.
Speaker 12 (02:12:45):
Yeah, and anyone watching what you do, there's always someone
there looking for the quick book. And I'm just very
suspicious about all that stuff. So I have cash. I
like ca.
Speaker 3 (02:13:00):
I think have you got a lot of Have you
got a lot of cash at home?
Speaker 15 (02:13:04):
No?
Speaker 12 (02:13:04):
Not much.
Speaker 3 (02:13:05):
I got it in another place, like outside the house,
something like that.
Speaker 12 (02:13:11):
The banks with old old currency, they were legal tender then,
and I think the government should honor them regardless of
their age, because you earned them. It was legal tender then.
Just because the day changed the currency, it shouldn't mean
that your stuff is not only obsolete but now not redeemable.
(02:13:35):
I think that's robbery.
Speaker 3 (02:13:36):
What islander you on Clarence and North Island of the
South Island.
Speaker 12 (02:13:40):
I'm in Roskill, South in Auckland.
Speaker 3 (02:13:43):
Love your talk. Thanks, thanks so much. Ten to twelve
good Eving Pooler. It's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 27 (02:13:49):
Hi Marcus, good show. Look Marcus, I'm a fan of
cash too.
Speaker 7 (02:13:54):
Just drop in there.
Speaker 3 (02:13:55):
People love it is king? Do you say cash is
king when you're using.
Speaker 4 (02:14:01):
That?
Speaker 27 (02:14:01):
But be fair, always going to have some cash kids,
Give me stick out of that. But you know, I
have been through an actual design so where there's no
power for a week, it does help if you need.
Speaker 3 (02:14:14):
Were you in christ Jurich or.
Speaker 27 (02:14:16):
No somewhere else? But it was it was a big
events and there was just literally no power, no water.
So yeah, Cass very helpful. I just wanted to talk
about sleep and I don't and it's a curse and
it's a terrible thing, not being out of sleep.
Speaker 3 (02:14:32):
Oh absolutely I can. Yeah, I can identify with that.
Speaker 2 (02:14:35):
Yep.
Speaker 27 (02:14:35):
And I've been like that thought either like it's not
something that acquired or happened, it's just since and it
really is a curse. But you sort of adjust your
life to it. And the thing is, you know, it's
good for driving.
Speaker 3 (02:14:49):
How many you have a long day do you get
to sleep at all?
Speaker 4 (02:14:53):
Not?
Speaker 27 (02:14:55):
No, not without sleep, bath, no goodness. So if I travel,
sometimes I travel to the other side of the world
of visit family and stuff, and I come back with
you there it's just to nightly, you know, ten days
it's hard enough to sleep, but that.
Speaker 16 (02:15:09):
Just stops it up.
Speaker 27 (02:15:11):
So I've learned to stop somewhere in the middle, have
a bit of a break, and it helps occur there.
But I think, you know, if you can sleep, no
matter what happens, when your sleep, it's a real blessing.
Speaker 3 (02:15:22):
Really is, and you've always had it, always, always, always.
Speaker 27 (02:15:27):
It's a I think because I've been to the sleep
specialist because I have a look, you know, trying to
figure out and he said it probably something to do
with the electrical activity that isn't working necessarily the same
as others. And because I have a sleep cycle of
forty two minutes, that's what's done, so I can sleep
(02:15:48):
for forty two minutes that I miss the cycle for
the remcycle.
Speaker 15 (02:15:51):
So technically you.
Speaker 27 (02:15:52):
Don't feel like you sleept it all soo and yeah
no since day dot and the only way you can
sleep is to take whatever you have to take to sleep. Goodness, Yeah,
so enjoy it for all of those sleeping. Good night
sleep while nice dreends.
Speaker 3 (02:16:08):
Love your message, Paul Of thank you. Hello, Susie, it's Marcus.
Good evening, Marcus. There are you very good Susie. Thank
you Marcus.
Speaker 17 (02:16:14):
I've got something you're talking about, a bit of cash tonight.
I've just come home from Australia from a holiday. I
wait to Sea World, went to all the souvenir shops
and the other shops. Not one of them take cash.
I had to use my card.
Speaker 3 (02:16:30):
You know, that's the reality.
Speaker 17 (02:16:31):
Yeah, I know, but I had all this Ossie cash
on me. But what my sister did is she paid
for it? And then I just paid in her bag.
But yeah, I know, I know it's happening, Marcus, because
sort of quite shocked.
Speaker 3 (02:16:45):
Really, all those sports stadiums that don't take any cash,
and I guess that's because you don't trust you know,
you know, if you're running a sports stadium, your hot
dog workers can't take money or people can't rob you.
It just makes it, you know. I imagine if you're
involved in business, it would be a lot easier for
you not to have to deal with it.
Speaker 17 (02:17:05):
Mm here, Oh well, I'll just want to ring up
with that, Marcus.
Speaker 3 (02:17:10):
That's it. Which which island are you on, Susie?
Speaker 17 (02:17:13):
So come home to cold? Were the Marcus?
Speaker 3 (02:17:17):
Are you? Are you in Southland?
Speaker 12 (02:17:19):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (02:17:20):
She's cold. Isn't it a beautiful day today? Though? Goodness me? People,
how are you going? Marcus? Mates? A mate died suddenly
at the funeral after match. People see he was always
had around thirty k hidden his place. No one knew
where it was. My partner had night frights. We got
(02:17:41):
a weighted blanket, which is good. He can still call out,
but when he kicks or hits out, it happens under
the heavy blanket, I am safe. That's not me right,
And I am safe. That's some texting. I am safe.
Speaker 1 (02:17:53):
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