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July 28, 2025 • 116 mins

Marcus talks flexible buckets, soul patches, and booing people at sports events.

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus slush Night's podcast from News Talks.

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

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Gridding's welcome head twelve high. I hope you're going to
hope you've had better by midnight. Here's a question for you.
And I don't really start with a question, but I've
thought about this all weekend. In fact, I thought of
it for longer than all weekend. I don't know how
to describe it. So you know how You've got a bucket, right,
you know a bucket. Picture a bucket, and it can
be like a mighty ten bucket which has got sides

(00:34):
at as straight each end, each side, and it's got
a wire handle. Or there's your other bucket, which is
slightly bigger at the top than the bottoms of the
sides come down inland inwards. And then you've got a bucket.
Then you've got to live that. Then you've got a
handle that's black plastic, separate molded, and it's in the bucket.
And so it's two types of bucket, the mighty ten

(00:56):
one with a wire handle, and then your standard bucket
that you've always been used to that's got the green
or you've read or something with a black plastic handle
these days, and look, I'm late to this boat. That's
why I'm asking you the question. These days is a
different kind of a bucket. That is a molded, one
piece bucket, and it's got floppy sides and its handles

(01:19):
are part of it, and people use them for all
sorts of things, like people go to the beach on
the chuck with the kid's clothes and stuff in them.
And those buckets, and they're a remarkable thing. And I
imagine some of you are into them twenty years ago.
I've just discovered them. Oh, and I think they are

(01:40):
one of the life's great inventions. But do you know,
for the life of me, I can't think what they're called.
And no one knows. Like it's a different thing. A
lot of people use them on farms for stop feed
and stuff like that. They come around about twenty years ago,
and they're one molded piece of plastic, but the sides
are flexible. They're much wider than a normal bucket. It's

(02:01):
so hard to describe, isn't it. Even though I'm talking
and they need a name, I'm thinking all week he
did long and then what is the name of those buckets?
I actually bring them up in conversation, how what a
late discovery was to them, and how good they are.
I hope i've described them. I might actually draw a
picture and send it to Dan, because I think you
know what I'm talking about. I've got no paper here.
I've got to ride on the classic hit sky notes.

(02:24):
They are a different kind of a bucket, but there are.
They're quite hard to draw. They're quite hard to draw
because I'm trying to draw them, but they are danses.
I've gone, I'm just trying to cut through it on
a drawing. Let a guy draw, then you know what

(02:45):
I'm talking about? Are they really hard to draw? Because
you've got to draw the one. I'm getting better at drawing,
then this next one's going to be right now, said,
but could someone tell me what those are called and
what you'd ask for if you're asking going to a
shop asking for one of those buckets? Because got unbeat
a dead beat, I've got no idea what they're called.
There are other things we'll talk about today, but this

(03:06):
is not the whole show. But I'm just it's got
me wondering tonight, and I thought, well, I can't actually
go on with the stuff it's done me Headden that
these buckets they're almost like a bag. Bucket was my
description one off, Dan, if you'd understand I was talking
about not really. So I draw a picture and I

(03:27):
draw a picture. Do you know what their name is? No?
No name, but there's something that's come into our life,
like twenty years ago. I'm going to draw a picture
to Dan and Dan can put that on Facebook and
say what is this cord event. I've drawn that as
I've talked to you. That's how versatile I am. What
are these called? Is the title?

Speaker 4 (03:46):
Dan?

Speaker 3 (03:48):
We should auction that, dudele like Trump's auction tis oh
eight hundred and eighty. But what are they called? It's
a question for tonight. Quite a good drawing because I've
got no name and they need a name or I've
never heard of a name, because it's not just a bucket.
They're quite different than a bucket. Jim AND's Marcus, Welcome, good.

Speaker 5 (04:08):
Evening, Hey Marcus at Uber Jim, Hi Uber, Jim, how
are you tonight?

Speaker 3 (04:14):
We're getting ubers and invert cargol Are you really? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (04:19):
Oh well done.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
The taxi drivers look a bit glum because they've had
it easy for a long long time they have.

Speaker 5 (04:25):
Indeed, anyway, now your bucket. There's two things. Firstly, they're
called a Flexi tub flip.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
Really it's a perfect name.

Speaker 5 (04:37):
Flexi, a flexy tub. And secondly, you wouldn't believes you
just couldn't write a story about this. My wife and
took My wife and I took a trailer load of
green waste to the tip today and a cost of
thirty six dollars. So that's by the bye. But you

(05:00):
know what we found at the tip?

Speaker 3 (05:02):
The flexi tub, the green.

Speaker 5 (05:03):
Wrist a flexi tub.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
So some on the left, yes, the.

Speaker 5 (05:08):
Flexi tub behind, so we scored it.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
And I think they want to do you know how
much you'd pay for a flexi tub?

Speaker 2 (05:16):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (05:17):
No, idea. I know Hour Gardener uses them.

Speaker 6 (05:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (05:22):
Have you googled it?

Speaker 3 (05:24):
No, I bore one.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
Twenty bucks about seven dollars?

Speaker 5 (05:29):
Seriously, Yeah, and you think that cheap?

Speaker 3 (05:33):
I mean that's why you leave. They're that cheap and
that versatile. How did you know they're called a flixi bucket?

Speaker 5 (05:40):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (05:40):
Mate?

Speaker 5 (05:40):
I know everything. Uber drivers have to know everything we
give and the cargo Uber drivers.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
Will have to know that in case you've got to
say to a customer, would you like me to put
the flexi bucket in the boot?

Speaker 8 (05:52):
Well?

Speaker 5 (05:53):
Do you know I want to know something?

Speaker 9 (05:54):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (05:54):
I do.

Speaker 5 (05:55):
Actually it's actually in the boot.

Speaker 3 (05:58):
Now not imagine people might I imagine people might be
going to the Appearents for Christmas Day and intending to
drink and just have a flexi bucket full of the
Christmas presents, and that might come up in conversation with
an uber driver.

Speaker 5 (06:13):
Indeed, yeah, okay thru Indeed. Now do you know there's
a couple of different styles.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
I know there is, I know there's change in literage.

Speaker 5 (06:24):
Or there's the handbag shape which looks like a big handbag,
and then there's the more versatile home handyman gardener type one,
which is square.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
Do you think we'll get an hour out of it
or two hours out of it? For talkback?

Speaker 5 (06:38):
Mate? This is going to keep you going all night, what.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
With people saying the strangest thing they've done with a
flexi bucket. Oh my god, the flexi buckets changed my life.
Hold your horses, Jim Christ's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 9 (06:50):
Hello Marcus. Yeah, your last corps of pretty much scoop mate.
Flexi cubs. They're not they're not flexi buckets. They're flexi
cubs and you can get them in a range of
sizes and quite often if you get them, sometimes they're
four dollars five dollars depending if they're on special. But

(07:10):
a tend cell hates of them. And you can get
them in all different colors. And I have used them
for years for everything from feeding horses in.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
Sometimes didn't I say stock feeding. Perfect for stock feeding
because you can the stock, you can carry them with
one hand.

Speaker 9 (07:29):
Yeah, and the horses can't destroy them because even if
they pour them or kick them, they don't break. And
the other thing I do with them, so yeah, I
drew holes in them and I turn them into plant tubs.

Speaker 6 (07:43):
It's a great idea, perfect.

Speaker 9 (07:45):
And then you can shift them. You can shift them
where do you want them to go because they're easy
to carry, and yeah, they're awesome things.

Speaker 3 (07:54):
We've got to like buckets the flexing well, there's already
we've got controversy whether the flexi tab or the flexi bucket.
We've also got you dolling holes for them, and that
means we can go in different uses. We get people
ringing me up and say, oh my god, Marcus, where
have you been. They've been around forever. I knew they'd
been around forever. I just never thought of a useful one.

Speaker 8 (08:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (08:16):
No, they're awesome things. I wouldn't be without them.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
And what do you call them?

Speaker 9 (08:21):
Flexi tubs?

Speaker 3 (08:22):
What?

Speaker 5 (08:23):
What?

Speaker 3 (08:23):
Did what did Jim call them?

Speaker 9 (08:26):
He called it a flexi tub? But you seem to
want to call it a flexi bucket?

Speaker 3 (08:31):
Did German? You call it the same thing? Yep, I'm
just the one that's calling it a flexi bucket.

Speaker 9 (08:37):
You're calling it a flexi bucket. If you walked into
a hardware shop, might a Channel, Bunnings or somewhere, and
asked for a flexi bucket, I don't think they'd know what.

Speaker 5 (08:45):
You were talking about talking about.

Speaker 9 (08:49):
If you walk in and said, where's your flexi tubs?
I have a whole heap of them?

Speaker 3 (08:53):
Okay, I might try that today. Have you got any
flexi buckets?

Speaker 9 (08:56):
Ge?

Speaker 3 (08:56):
If it's Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 10 (08:59):
Yeah, good evening. Those are buckets you're talking about. You
can buy them from the warehouse. What's all the miles?
I uh, I think they're only about eight dollars.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
You should buy one.

Speaker 10 (09:12):
No, I didn't because I really didn't have a lot
of use for it. But I just bought an order bucket.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
I reckon, why would you? What did you buy an
ordinary bucket for Jeff's that? Oh?

Speaker 10 (09:22):
Sorry, I could go out and get some puppies and.

Speaker 3 (09:24):
To you want to you want to flexy bucket so
much better?

Speaker 10 (09:28):
Because I no, because it fricks around too much and people.
But they are very handy because I've use them for gardening.

Speaker 11 (09:38):
I've used I.

Speaker 10 (09:40):
Brought them to the beach. Uh, chucked a whole lot
of gear in there and carry them down. So they
are very.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
Useful and they won't splinter or crack like an ordinary bucket.
Have you put them in the boot and jam them
or the kids that you know? They always seem to
be a versatile versatile.

Speaker 10 (09:59):
Well, you can't destroy them. Yeah, they flexed around so much,
so you can buy them from the warehouse quite really.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
I think Jim called them a FLIXI bin didn't he.

Speaker 10 (10:11):
Oh yeah, I didn't know what the name. I didn't
see what exactly what the name was. But uh ah,
but they were there. There's uh there was a couple
of colors.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
There was h gray, clack and pink.

Speaker 10 (10:27):
Yeah, gray black and something else. But but they readily
available and they're very handy around the house.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
Did you get did what were you getting? Pippy or cockles?

Speaker 7 (10:41):
No?

Speaker 10 (10:42):
No, no, tours puppies.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
Do you get them?

Speaker 10 (10:46):
Yeah, of course I'll get them and I ate them.
My mic photles out of them.

Speaker 3 (10:51):
Would you go to the old fret?

Speaker 10 (10:54):
Yeah? Oh, I love them.

Speaker 3 (10:56):
I reckon you be better off with a flicksy bin.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
Nah.

Speaker 10 (11:01):
No, because it flicks around too much around.

Speaker 3 (11:06):
What you looking around? We wouldn't flicked.

Speaker 7 (11:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (11:12):
Yeah, you're sort of seeing me in a wave. You
only got to go out so far. But it's sort
of not the best thing to do.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
I oh you mean you mean if if you if
you thigh deep in water, it's in the water there
with you, it'll flick.

Speaker 10 (11:28):
Yeah, well you can end up following up with water
and you're trying to hang on of this thing.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
I think you might have a point there. The sides
are too flexible. Yeah, I'll leave it there. Someone's coming
through the name Rubbert Tub, which sounds like a nursery rhyme.
With the start of the nursery around eight twenty one,
Murray Marcus welcome.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
Yeah him, Marcus you're pretty.

Speaker 3 (11:50):
Practical, unbelievable life you.

Speaker 4 (11:54):
Break down, whoever, it takes a while, a lot longer
than say wearehouse plastic bucket which last five minutes. I've
got eight bits to take currently on my warehouse brittle
all oh god, it was not the word anyway, my my,
My main use for it is because it smelly purpo.
But what's really good about them is because they do

(12:16):
fold on themselves almost right, yes, so you can tinue
it into a spout. They pour really easily. You can
evacuate the water, oh you can.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
You can. They're quite directional, poor, haven't they, because you
can squeeze the bits yep exactly.

Speaker 4 (12:28):
So you never get that spread that's flash. And so
I use a Elpine club huts a lot, so I'm
not on the road ins and stuff like that. They
don't have bathrooms and showers. But what you can do
is like heat up water and then just use your
towel as a bit of a huge flannel and give
yourself a towel wash. And you don't get you still,
so you boil.

Speaker 3 (12:50):
The water and something else. So then you're in the
flixy bucket.

Speaker 4 (12:53):
Yeah, you just wait over and goes to bed and
splash it around, you know, even in winter, used to
warm stay clean.

Speaker 3 (12:59):
So would you would you carry one to the hut? Well,
you'd be the sixty Lee said, would you? But would
there be one there?

Speaker 6 (13:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (13:09):
No, there won't be one there. No, because it gets stolen.
It's so practical if you're.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
If you're in the middle of nowhere, would you steal
a FLIXI tub? Would you think? Yeah? I just tried
to think of Yeah, okay, because you've got repaired lock
up there, could you?

Speaker 4 (13:22):
No, you can't repair. I don't think think we would
go there far. But I'm not into plastic. But it's
so multi.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
Purpose that no, hang on, Murray, Murray, but we're into
good plastic. There's a there's bad plastic, and there's good plastic.

Speaker 4 (13:39):
That's true. I'd like to know what sort of plastic.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
It's almost feels like n Yeah, it almost feels like
a rubber In fact, you probably could get rubber one.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
I'll keep going seeing what they're called, Murray, but thank
you for that, the flipsy tag or someone's calling them
the tub trug jupid. I'll see what the texts are
saying too about this. Also in tonight, people the most
interesting use for a flixy tub. I think we should
get branded ones. Would that be good? Who knows, Marcus.
I cut out a corner of the wall down about

(14:13):
two inches from the base and sit in it, using
the wall to the backrest. Oh, someone's turned it into
a seat. What a great idea, Marcus. Flexi buckets are
great for boating as they take a little space, don't scratch,
and old small live baits for fishing. Also, they are
a great anchor and chain carrier. Good evening marks. Have
a lovely Flexi bin to house or my sock puppets.

(14:37):
Flexi tub's greatest bath for toddlers, except when you try
to lift it full of water, handles break free easily. Marcus.
The warehouse has gubber bags, same as what you're talking about.
Jim says, flexi tub tub is incorrect because a bucket
is functioning. Versatile tub implies it just sits there. Marcus
went to the greenways today and left my flex tub there. Well,

(15:00):
if I got a story for you. We call them
utility bins. My grandchildren with bay than one, I have
shoes and one my hobby used as an ice tub
for beers, and a barbecue. I imagine the barbecues would
be full of the Flexi tubs, wouldn't they with ice?
Ah bloy, Grab yourself a drink there from the flexy tub.
Don't mind if I do. Tub trug is the name, Hey,

(15:25):
Marcus flexible buckets. I reckon they should be called a flucket.
It's not bad actually for portmanteaux. It's the old fluckets,
it says. The tub trugs are now called gorilla tubs,
mixing feed for horses, water plants, moving mulch, and all
purpose gardening. Marcus rubber buckets tricks using the carroll sorts

(15:46):
of stones and dirt, even made concrete in one. They're
less likely to break, compete to plastic buckets. Tub trugs.
I think Marcus flexi tub, Flexi tub, Flexi tub. I've
used those buckets to drop down into a pile of
a construction site to trim the sides. I know what

(16:08):
that's about. Flixi tubs, Flixi tubs squishy bin from Steve
Flexi tubs more of a basket, Flixi tub, Flixi tubs,
Flexi tubs with handles, Flixy bucket Gabba buckets, a collapsible
bucket gabba bucket. It's a flexible bucket or a Flixi bucket.
The fucker is a flexible tub. Aren't they called a
flexi tub? Marcuse, I think it's a molded rubber tub.

(16:31):
You're a molded rubber tub. Think they're called feed buckets.
It's a Flixi bucket, Gabba bucket, Flixi bucket, no piney,
no luclett. That's the also called a boom bucket. What
if you google boom bucket. Anyway, we are talking about
boom buckets or Flixi buckets tonight, just to start where

(16:53):
there'll be other topics. No doubt you might have done
something interesting with a flexi bucket or a boom but
I don't think it's a boom bucket. I think a
boom bucket is a toilet, a portal toilet. I think
it's not the euphemism for bloom bucket, boom buckets. Oh goodness,

(17:14):
me here till twelve, breaking news when it happens. We're
all about the flexi bucket tonight. I can imagine someone
leaving it at the old Garden Center with their greenwaist.
Hit'll twelve. My name is Marcus. Welcome, oh eight hundred
and eighty ten, eighty nine to nine two detext looking

(17:34):
forward to what you've got to bang on about tonight,
But started with a flexi bucket with good reason. Karen
gulfed in flames on Auckland's north shore. There's a video
of that s Dale Road near Birkdale. Brent, it's Marcus, welcome,

(17:59):
here you go. I just have a guard good thank you, Brent.

Speaker 12 (18:02):
Hey, I can't believe you haven't used these things yet.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
No, well, and didn't I say? But someone's going to say,
oh god, believe you haven't used one. But I'm late
to the party. I was late with the old scrub
daddies and I'm late with a flexi bucket.

Speaker 12 (18:18):
No, no, it's They are actually quite an invention. Definitely
a difference in quality from place to place, and they
were quite dear to start with. But what year were talking?

Speaker 3 (18:30):
What year were talking?

Speaker 12 (18:32):
Oh god, it would have been ten years ago at least,
because as one of your hext has said, they are
excellent for giving babies a wash, so instead of filling
up the whole bath or if you haven't got a lot, I've.

Speaker 3 (18:43):
Had babies in them. Babies in the last ten years
had no idea.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
Oh look, that brilliant.

Speaker 13 (18:49):
And we.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
And we're living in a campground.

Speaker 12 (18:54):
Well tell you what you know, if you had your
time again, that brilliant. But what I do is every
Christmas for my kids and grandkids, especially my own kids
who are a bit older, is I give them all
their presents and a flexi tone. So why wrap it?

Speaker 3 (19:10):
Exactly? And I said that to Uber Jim they needed. Brent,
thank you so much. You've done everything I needed you
to do. You've endorsed for conversations with Jim. You've backed
up those comments. And I knew someone to say, well,
I can't I can't believe you haven't heard of those
the flexi bucket. Nice Brent, thanks for yes, I can't
believe that I've never heard of one. But there we go.

(19:34):
And the interesting news is people have used them before.
I see people going to the beach, don't they with
their flexi bucket? Everything in there, the kid's toys a whole.
But mind you, that's been superseded. Now you see families
going to the beach. You've got these giant collapsible carts
with these wheels. Thank goodness, gracious, but you look like
something out of the grapes of wrath. Are OKI's heading
for the golden lands of California with all the stuff

(19:57):
they've got, but anywah to their own. I try not
to be too judgmental, but yeah, all that not the
flexi but now, but the whole shooting match with wheels.
It's all about the flexi bucket tonight. If you've got
to think of interest to say about that, expector were
go vy shortage demand for weight loss drugs is becoming

(20:22):
so unsustainable that demand may soon outstrip supply. That's we govy.
It's like a video game, doesn't it we govy. That
sounds like more platform twenty eight away from nine head
on midnight. It's all about the flexi bucket. Do you
The Warriors were poor, weren't they? Goodness me fidgets for

(20:47):
I wouldn't want to be at Erickson for that one.
Cheap as creepers looking like a Penrith Bulldog's final. I'd
be saying, Simon Marcus, welcome, Simon, really good, thank you. Welcome, Welcome, welcome, welcome, welcome, welcome, welcome.

Speaker 7 (21:08):
Yeah, I've seen them. Really, there's tricksy tubs.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
You've got to get what you've got to get what Simon,
change your life?

Speaker 14 (21:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (21:15):
Pretty good. Yeah, you use for one, I think sort
of for nuts and bolts, nuts.

Speaker 3 (21:25):
And bolts and your general kind of general stuff. And
they're not pricey. Simon. No, did you get on? Did
you got one tomorrow?

Speaker 4 (21:38):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (21:39):
Primit?

Speaker 2 (21:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (21:43):
Is it?

Speaker 3 (21:43):
What is it? What you're so? What is it that
you're going to say? Just that you reckon? You've seen
them around.

Speaker 7 (21:49):
To sit there they're because yeah, good for toys or
the guy just mentioned putting his child children's toys into
the Christmas or something.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
I think it's kids might be adults. Now, I think
you said my adult children, so that would be getting
I don't think they'd be getting stuff like barbecue tool
and things too. Cibon. We might just leave it there,
but nice to hear from you. Twenty seven to nine.
Here you go, make case closed. I've called them trugs
for years, red gorilla tub trug. They might be called trugs.

(22:23):
This guy seems no works for safety company. I wonder
if you're an Australian invention the flexi bucket, we'll probably
find the been the thing in Asia forever. You might
remember your first experience with a Flexi bucket, and that's good.
We can talk about that. You have a shoot down
an easy topic. I tell you, don't come along. It's easy.
Every day you might have done something. The only trouble

(22:47):
I think if you're carrying a lot of stuff in
them a long way right, it's almost like you need
something because they handle if you're carrying them one hand.
If you've brought the two sides of flexi bucket together
and put your hand in them and carrying something with
some weight, it's not that comfortable on your hand. I
almost think they can probably put out a Flexi bucket

(23:09):
with like separate like almost like a length of piping
a hose around each handle. Marcus, I use my Flexi
bucket inside for empties. So easy to take to the
recycle bin. Oh, she says. She says, I use my

(23:30):
Flexi bucket inside for empties when entering. I think she
means when entertaining. I think that's when it's entertaining, so
easy to take it to the recycle bu plus us
separate ones in the garden. Enna, I'll tell you a thing
about recycling with people that drink a lot of people
of really self conscious when they drink when they go
to recycling to put their stuff in the bin and

(23:52):
they tip all their bottles into it, they think all
the neighbors are listening and realize they've got the problem.
I've heard people talk about this, Marcus. My wife is
a teacher. She uses those flexi buckets in her cast
room for all sorts of things. She reckons they're great.
I brought three or four years ago. I put one
inside the other to stack them. Have never been able

(24:14):
to get them apart, and Gillie, I can't work out
how you would get them apart. We brought some aluminium
glass cups stackable aminum, the aliminium cups steel cups. I

(24:35):
think it was for Milo for the rugby team on
the cold days, but they must have dropped them on
the way down and bore their hard to separate. There
were four that were in case two. There were two
lots of two encased with each other, and boy, I
had to fill them with water and freeze them overnight,
then run them under boarding water to get the separation

(24:57):
to pull them apart. That worked with one, and the
others are impossible. It haunts me to this day. I
haven't got the carriage to throw them out because I'm
sure I will get them up. But boy, oh boy,
it's got the better of me. Marcus flexy tub idea
a couple of holes in the bottom half full with
all instant planter cover with clear plastic hothouse. Oh he's

(25:20):
a good one. Use a split pool noodle for a
handle when carrying in one hand. Well, I don't call
those a pool noodle. I call them a for noodle,
fun noodle. I've always thought they're a fun noodle or
a for noodle. I think they're a for noodle. Are
they a fun noodle? If I google for noodle, I'm

(25:44):
sure they're a for noodle, comes up with nothing. I'm
sure they're a for noodle. Oh boy. By the way, too,
our Japanese exchange students going well spends a lot of
time watching train videos. So I'm enjoying that lot of
stuff of the bullet train. That seems to be a thing.

(26:07):
Just always watching bullet train and wow, yeah it's good
a So I've enjoyed that. So that's of interest anyway,
get in touch all about the for noodle. No, it's
not about the for noodle, It's about the FLIXI bucket
and breaking news. YadA YadA, yady yadya. I've seen the

(26:29):
shots of truck. You've seen Old Trump cheating at the
golf course, gets his candy to cheat forum. Who'd be
Trump's caddy? They dropped the ball out of the rough cheefers, Peter,
This is Marcus Peter, welcome, Hi Peter.

Speaker 11 (26:49):
Could he be Marcus? Marcus? I have no problems in
throwing my wine bottles and recycling them down here.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
In christ Oh good on you.

Speaker 11 (27:00):
No, No, there's a bit of competition between six neighbors.
We think it's good, and especially over Christmas and Eastern
and the winter when it's cold. Everybody's beads strongly. Here
the Paul of bottles. Oh god, he's been on the pot.

Speaker 3 (27:17):
Old Peter, he's had a big night. Peter's had a
big night.

Speaker 11 (27:20):
Oh Christmas is pretty heavy.

Speaker 3 (27:23):
But no, I know I know people. I know people
that have switched to the cast because they can just
hand the they can just hide the plaster come bags
under the house.

Speaker 15 (27:32):
I wouldn't go that far.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
I also know I also know people that switch the
casks because what they can do is they can just
keep one of the French and no one knows how
much they're drinking. Could you just swap it out the
whole time? And they think it's the same cask.

Speaker 12 (27:46):
I suppose in four years, true years.

Speaker 11 (27:48):
No bottle myself because it's just well, I just like
the bottles, but no, I have no qualms. And we
were quite often have a laugh at it when we
and tomorrow's yeah, big day down here.

Speaker 3 (28:01):
Have you've done your dump? If you've done dump? Have
you done your dump yet?

Speaker 15 (28:07):
What do you do it?

Speaker 3 (28:08):
You do it daily? Do you take all the weeks week?

Speaker 11 (28:13):
I dually here four four a week?

Speaker 6 (28:18):
Is it's good?

Speaker 2 (28:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (28:19):
And it gets empty every fortnight has a bottles. But
the neighbor he drinks beer in bottles, but he likes
the noise, so it's worth just getting the bottles just
to hear the noise.

Speaker 3 (28:34):
Paid up, adding Tony and welcome here on midnight. It's
all about the flixie tub, well, the flixie bucket. Marcus,
one of the others, have felt lots of earthquakes, lightly
said he I'm in too. They've noticed at least six

(28:54):
or more the last couple of days. Marcus, I've just
tuned in. Sorry something see this. I drill holes on
the bottom and grow my tomatoes and potatoes in them
and join the program, Yvonne, Marcus, there are no good
for a planner because they go brittle and fall apart.
Call me mister negative, but it's the truth. Signed mister negative.

(29:19):
When roadside cycling came, I came and I see neighbors
been full to the brim and thought they had a
birthday party next week. The same Marcus, dish dishwash water
will get your cups apart. I'll try that tomorrow, Tracy,
thank you, dB. It's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 6 (29:38):
I didn't catch his name, But the idea of having
a competition for is Peter, Peter Peter. Yes, it's not unusual,
but I've just moved into a small flat a country
and I don't have a rubberston, I don't have a
wady bin. So i'll i'm post by neighbor and I'm

(30:00):
allowed to use her. Wow? Why Roberson?

Speaker 5 (30:06):
Now?

Speaker 6 (30:06):
Now, she's reasonably elderly and I had to warn her
when they dug her. Really, but it's going to sound
like she's party central. She didn't giggle it better. I
think it was more of a nervous giggle than a
full size breaking on.

Speaker 3 (30:27):
But yeah, that must have been a relief to find
an enabler like that DV to take away your empties.
That's quite an exciting thing for you to have found.
I don't know why you didn't get a ben yourself.

Speaker 6 (30:40):
It's complicated. And yeah, I went up to a you know,
like I don't have just moved in and I said,
I'm a new neighbor. I'd like to know. I will
put your bonds out for you if I can put
my brothers in your bins because I don't make batch

(31:00):
Rubbis's only me. And that was cool, and then I said,
back when they dump it, it's going to sound like
you know you're you're hosting the chogham the treat Malago.

Speaker 3 (31:18):
Have they had the first collect dB winners beIN day.

Speaker 6 (31:21):
I've been here about seven weeks now.

Speaker 3 (31:23):
And so that she's heard that she's heard the shattering,
the shattering of glass bottles.

Speaker 6 (31:31):
And she has she hasn't the snything and at about it,
I have, you know, I've done a few things I've
taken There was fifteen bottles in the box that I
took back to my own house and back in my cats.
It's dumping by a real recycle bin because I was
a little bit embarrassed about scaring it.

Speaker 3 (31:54):
Well, you could, you could switch to the cask or
to those pub pits.

Speaker 6 (31:58):
I tried the cast when I was younger, and they're
a bit more dangerous.

Speaker 7 (32:03):
I can.

Speaker 6 (32:05):
I can set. Look, that's by buying one bottle at
a time, and they're not buying anymore with a cast,
so you can drink three bottles in one session morning.

Speaker 3 (32:17):
What Australia called casks.

Speaker 6 (32:21):
I always shadow.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
No, I think they call them a goon bag.

Speaker 6 (32:27):
Okay, you know have you heard.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
Of Have you heard of that?

Speaker 2 (32:31):
No?

Speaker 7 (32:31):
I haven't.

Speaker 6 (32:32):
But like I said, did.

Speaker 3 (32:33):
You hear shadow? Did you hear shadow? The woggle wogger?

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (32:40):
It was a great thing to go. It was a
great thing to go camping with the right peck because
then you could turn the you could turn the bladder
into a pillow.

Speaker 6 (32:49):
Absolutely. And the other trick I used to do was
put a one meter of water into a three bladder,
freeze it and use it on my my being boat
as calling it inside my ice box.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
Okay, although it's hard to get water back into the cask,
isn't it? Because you got to have that funny who
deck h at the bottom.

Speaker 8 (33:10):
And I just.

Speaker 6 (33:14):
Slide down underneath the force and then the wandering. But
you know I'm not trying to fill it hard.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
I'm trying to Yes, you demmerse it in water and
do something like that.

Speaker 6 (33:24):
No, No, I'd follow from the tap because Glancy is
your friend. I'm only filling one litera into it, not
three less. I'm not pressing it hard because the way
the water would freeze flat and and and he put

(33:44):
it into it an ice box and not take up
too much room.

Speaker 3 (33:50):
You've got a flixy bucket story.

Speaker 6 (33:54):
No, I only learn about them tonight from you. I've
seen them. I have in.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
Four weeks time. You ring and say, oh my god, Marcus,
I'll tell you what it's changed my life. You put
your empties in it.

Speaker 6 (34:06):
Yeah, but put the Flexi bucket into the Rubstons.

Speaker 3 (34:10):
You report back, thank you? Nine away from nine Marcus.
Isn't the Flexi bucket just a modern version of the
flex kitty. It's from Steve. Thank you. It's all about
the Flexi bucket so far to know. If you want
to add to those discussions, you might have done something
extraordinary with one. We A lot appears sem to be
washing their children in them in them, in them. Here's

(34:30):
something that's interesting to me and hopeful it's of interest
to you. A lot of rain warnings. Eleven rain warnings. Gosh,
it's like groundhole day day day. A short and sharp
atmospheric river is going to hit the North Island nineteen.
We're the warnings. The worst will hit tomorrow. The warnings

(34:55):
are for the west coast of the South Island, the
Tasman District, Taranaki and everywhere from Topwa north. I should
be more specific with that North and gusting over night.

(35:19):
Expect to consider around eleven am Tomorrow morning, from ten
pm to night until liarly Tuesday morning out about in
the south of the mountains and I come from Tallahaka
to Central Plateau under a strong wind watch Whens we
blowing all day Tuesday for Auckland, clearing Great Barrier, Corrow, Coramnal,
Eastern Waikato and Bay of Plenty both Tuesday night. Tadartha,

(35:40):
t Gisbon and Mahia under a strong windwatch until nine
pm north Land and till eight pm a heavy rain
watch moderate chant upgraded to a warning and four am
Tomorrow to four and Wednesday. Wapa will also feel the
rain moderate chants have been upgraded to a warning. Just

(36:04):
doesn't stop. Get your flexi bucket. I think I'm best
calling them a flexi bucket. I think that's what actually
makes the best sound or rings the most true the
old flexi bucket, Marcus. I use the smaller ones to
hold cans of paint when I'm painting indoors. That is

(36:27):
a brilliant suggestion. I wouldn't have thought about that. You
need your own Instagram account. It's a very good suggestion.
Indoors with paint off its spills, there's no hssle. You
have to keep the lid on the whole. It's a
very good idea. Gosh, that's a good idea, just so
flexible and it's nature but flexible and what you can

(36:47):
use them for. How are you going? People? Welcome Headle
twelve midnight with your flexi buckets. Yes, I use mine
to carry hay and grass mainly. But this is just
the beginning. I feel all about the flixi bucket so far.

(37:14):
We'll branch you out, no doubt in the next hour,
but do get in touch if you want to be
a part of the show. Gosh, how was that woman
that line? Is she played the tournament with a broken leg.
It's kind of been that badly broken. Yes, anyway, if

(37:35):
there's other stuff you want to mention, Also, why are
scrambled eggs at restaurants always better up full of butter?
Apparently butter and cream, which is surprising, not that surprising.
Get in touch you want to be a part of
the show hit till twelve. Maybe someone could explain their

(38:01):
first meeting with a Flixie bucket, their first encounter with it.
I'm trying to get it dated. I think someone said
ten years ago. It's probably twenty years ago, isn't it,
because ten years what sounds like ten years probably always
what feels like ten years is probably normally twenty years,
isn't it? Almost right with this one? Come on, be

(38:26):
a part after the news if you want to go
about the Flixi bucket, be a part of it here
till twelve. Eight hundred eighty ten eighty and nine to
nine two to text, be nice to hear from you.
Anything else you want to talk about, feel free to

(38:47):
call me during the news. So eight hundred eighty ten
eighty and nine two nine two to text romance along
at midnight? Yep, gee, you see that footage of Oasis
that wimby eight people, because of course it's a big

(39:08):
stadium anyway, you fill the field man, that was a crowd.
There's eight hundred thousand people. Nine of thousand people going
to be at Wimbledon in the next and when we
in the next nine days, unbelievable, all dancing, all in
their bucket, hats head on midnight. You want to be
a part of it.

Speaker 13 (39:28):
Nine.

Speaker 3 (39:29):
I had a lot of texts. I'll get to them.
Here they go as they come, and Marcus moved to
Flexi buckets when the cane laundry basket gave up. The
ghosts never go back. Berry great for mixing horse food
and feeding the horses. In fifteen years ago, I purchased
three Flexi buckets pink Flexi buckets asolf issues of dirty

(39:50):
clothes on the kid's bathroom bedroom floor. These same three
buckets still exist and are in use daily. They've carried
boots and babies, have washed boots and babies, have been
driveway individual pulled up to the heat of summer, have
been played mixing bowls, traveled north and South camping. One
of the best purses is ever Kylie Nip from white

(40:14):
to the here. It's been blue skies for seven days.
I knew it was too good to be true. Flexi
tubs are graced as ice buckets for bears. Load the
beers and ice fantastic at parties, Marcus, I take two
Flexi buckets to the beach. One is empty, the other
foot with cups, utensils, watercolor paints, brushes, tongs, odds and

(40:37):
ends from the up shop. When we get there, I
fill the second bucket with water. Kids play happily washing, painting,
digging at Tetra brilliant parent hack. I each have your
own YouTube channel, Marcus. I brought some water drops. One
of your calls mentioned last week two ten drops between
the mills takes some swimming pool flavor out of christ Chitch,
tap water and ice.

Speaker 15 (41:00):
Yes.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
Well, I've tried the water drops and then the kids
dried them, and the kids like them. Then the kids
won on their own flo so I got them their
own flavor, and now we all just put the drops
straight on our tongue without the water. Much easier, So
that's what we're doing. Just yeah, a drop of time
in your tongue. It's quite a party. It's good. I'm
not quite sure if that's advised or not. But we've

(41:22):
given up on the water just taking the drops. So
flexi tubs is the so far topic of there's something
else you want to broach brilliant or how to change
the taste of bad water? What are they called water drops?
Talk about that also tonight. I didn't realize Hulk Hogan

(41:46):
was six foot eight. He's a big unit. I did
see him slam Andre the Giant on that video. Just
saying that that's not a topic. Just put that out there.
Come on flexi buckets and other stuff. Tonight, Oh get
in touch here till twelve. If this break can use,
I'll bring that to you. I think everyone's very happy

(42:11):
about payWave going. I don't think anyone's going to say, well,
we don't want it to go, are they. I think
people are very happy with payWave going. So there's that
also tonight. If there's something different you want to mention good,

(42:31):
you're spoken too much talk about payWave because everyone thinks
it's great it's going. So yes, a lot of people
saying penalty goals aren't good ways to decide football. After
the Euro Women's Euro finished, I think they're quite fun

(42:52):
to watch, so They've always been quite exciting. They seemed
to work well in the women's game for some reason,
always a lot of drama. So that might be something
you can mention as a bytopical. So today night, but
you do come through if you want to talk about
that or anything else tonight. As I say, oh eight
hundred and eighty teny may Way are talking about the

(43:12):
FLIXI bucket and interesting uses for the FLIXI bucket. I
don't know what the uses are unt I hear from you,
but I'm sure plenty will be interesting FLIXI buckets. I
don't know if they would degrade when they're in the sun.
If your potatoes are in them, you might better tell
me about that. Also, you might have FLIXI bucket degradation.

(43:36):
Oh yeah, but do get in touch. You want to
be a part of the show, Marcus till twelve, looking
forward to what you've got to say, and you might
have your own things you want to get on about tonight. Good.
That's also good, good, good, good good. Let's be hearing
from you tonight. Um. So, yes, there's other stuff you

(43:59):
want to mention from the weekend or from whatever. I'm
up for that, so I just jump in there be
hearing from you as I say, oh, eight hundred and
eighty ten eighty, as I say, romance along at midnight tonight,
and we are mainly talking about the Flexi bucket. You
have something to say about that, I'm sure you will, Marcus,

(44:22):
I plant my marijuana and Flixi time handles are great
for hurried hiding times. Good on your trash to metro
motorway drivers who ignore on ramp traffic lines will one
fifty fines and tweety a mirrts stop you running red
lights on on ramps. I a relative of mine was

(44:43):
recently paying twice or two because it was say he's
at the same rong ramp. That's a loss of three
hundred US three of minutes in one week out seven
weeks on My relatives told their spouse and is trying
to pay it off. So not to tell their spouses
each to their own. I don't really know about motoril
on ramps because we don't have them down south. I

(45:03):
thought that was voluntary. I thought there was just a
flashing light. Be hard for the cops to chase you
on them where there was a ticket in the post.
Probably I don't know too much about that, but yeah,
if you want to start the whole degenery about something
else tonight people fourteen past nine. Interesting use for flexi

(45:24):
buckets or flexi tubs. I think I'm most happy calling
them flexi buckets, but do come through, Marcus. Those flexi
buckets would be okay filled with soil for a retaining wall.
Although would the water when it rains wash it out?

(45:50):
Will they need to be covered from moisture? I don't
know about that. I was impressed watching Alone in the
Weekend that finally one of the guys is actually building
a stone hut. I thought they made a lot of sense.
Two stone walls. Would like seen in between, thought there
was excellent idea. Mind you, they're a gutless bunch on
Alone this year they're tapping out like this, Oh I'm

(46:10):
lonely or miss wife? Well, if you're going to miss
your wife, why did you do it? This is the
show where you've got to survive in the desert for
as long as you can. Used to be the Arctic,
but now it's in the South African desert. You can
take ten items salt, rice, bow and arrow, billy, firestartera

(46:31):
tarp forget what my ten hor I work on it
from time to time, but they what happens to them
is it's the mental game. Come about day seven or eight,
they just start thinking, Oh they get on Mordland, it's ridiculous. Oh,
well to go home. They say things like go I've
proved to myself that I can do it, and tapping

(46:52):
out in day nine, you've proved nothing. Anyway, I'm yelling
at the TV and then I'm like something off goggle Box,
you proved nothing. I have floor four Flexi tubs for gardening,
very useful. One problem is a stack that was very

(47:15):
hard to pry apart due to suction. My solutions are
rolled up newspaper under each Gosh, we're getting some good
information through. It's a great idea. Marcus Celli, Lan's mar
Baker's putatadoo off the hok you they would be. That's
what you want, is Celi Luans our thing? Or I
thought it was schnitty Shitzel. Now we're Flexi tubs. I'm

(47:42):
going to upgrade mine. I don't like the warehouse ones.
I'd like a more higher quality one. I think I
want a forever tub, one that's going to be with
me to my dying days. I'm sure gonna we get
the high specked ones. Probably some sort of Shieshi gardening
shop sixteen past nine nine sixteen not good for Augland

(48:10):
grammar with the parents getting in a brawl. Cheap as creepers. Wow,
And the two principles didn't have much to say about it,
apart from we can't comment, Well, I'm sure you could comment.
You can't say you don't approve of anything of that
under any circumstances. That was gutless. We understand the police

(48:31):
are investigating instant. It's inappropriate for staff to comment while
such an investigation takes place. That's exactly when you should
make a comment when something like that's happened. Don't say
who's guilty or not. You can say your attitude towards it.
That's my take. Flip A surprised to read that anyway.

(48:52):
A text team Marcus, I've got a cafe. It costs
between seven hundred to eight hundred dollars a month to
have payWave user pays. I'll have to cover costs by
putting prices up. This what's going to happen? Store flixit
tubs and I Coul's upside down. If you don't have
long items left in them because skinks can get can't
get up their slippery slides and peerish poor little creatures,

(49:14):
So worry about the stinks. Skinks. Hello Murdoch.

Speaker 16 (49:18):
You know, I guess good evening there was not so
much fricky bands, but I've heard about the frickty beads.
Those big ones you buy from the Vegata and so.

Speaker 14 (49:29):
Forth, you know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 16 (49:31):
No, they're like a skipn but come to the bed.
So you go to like vegas Hen or Bunny or
whatever out of those and it's like a you're buying
them a certain size.

Speaker 2 (49:42):
It's like a.

Speaker 16 (49:43):
Big canvas bad that you take your house. You can
either ring them and they pick it up, or you
can pull it for the your own stuff and then
take it to the tap.

Speaker 3 (49:52):
How would you get on the trailer?

Speaker 16 (49:54):
Well, yeah, from past experience through difficulty, but if they
picked them up what I found top turbers, and if
you if you overfill them which I had before, and
you ring them up, pick them up and they're over
st and weight, they sort of just tip the bag
out and leave you to it. But they are incredibly useful,
like a FLICKI bun t on steroids like it's like

(50:15):
a whole cogan click.

Speaker 3 (50:17):
Yeah, I think down South we call those a fedge
from the which they used to put wool, and you
can buy those as well for gardening and stuff.

Speaker 16 (50:26):
It's like that, but it's not quite as it's like
that sort of material, but it's more funner. Yeah, okay,
size of a small skip fan. But it's got these
big handles on it and you can fill it full
of whatever you like and either you can take it
to tip yourself. I'm not too sure what they offer
it down South, but at a you go to biggest bed,
take the bag about ninety parts for a three cubic

(50:48):
meters bag, and you wring them up. They come over
the high and they put it on the truck and
they take it to the tip.

Speaker 3 (50:53):
Is that is that included on the what you pay
for it?

Speaker 13 (50:56):
No?

Speaker 16 (50:56):
No, they pick up extra okay, but they are quite
handy to have around.

Speaker 3 (51:00):
It's a great thing. Is there a frame that holds
them up?

Speaker 13 (51:04):
No?

Speaker 16 (51:05):
But from past sparing you can put a couple of
warr parts in the ground idea. You can actually take
a lot of and they're quite good. If you are
on a trailer, you can sort of tap them off
and then reuse them. You have a lot easier than
your trailer already retired.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
A lance would the two warrior tars do? What do
you need something between the top of them?

Speaker 16 (51:28):
No, four wars because there's like four.

Speaker 3 (51:31):
Yeah, is there a groove they go into the wartars.

Speaker 16 (51:35):
No, it's not just like a youagined like a But
they're talking about those heads have handles of.

Speaker 3 (51:43):
The think that not sure?

Speaker 5 (51:47):
Yeah, I think that.

Speaker 3 (51:48):
I think I think they do. I head, Yeah, I
think they do.

Speaker 16 (51:52):
Yeah, clearly heavy. They actually talking about you put a
lot of stuff with them.

Speaker 3 (51:56):
So I don't know what the word fedge cab is from.
It's a weird sounding word. It's like an Irish word.

Speaker 6 (52:01):
Yeah, it's strange.

Speaker 3 (52:06):
Yeah, what do you ask for?

Speaker 17 (52:10):
It's quite a fixy bin.

Speaker 3 (52:12):
Okay, I think you can. I think you can buy
a faedge holder, which is quite a good idea you
have on that.

Speaker 16 (52:21):
Well, we've got some of the old with the old
what you call the chedges going to the wall presses.

Speaker 3 (52:27):
Oh yeah, we're we've got those, oh in the shed.

Speaker 16 (52:31):
At home and around the place. So I've quite a
good little barleyer, you know, talk a bit.

Speaker 3 (52:36):
You've got a bar at home?

Speaker 8 (52:38):
Yeah, I use the.

Speaker 16 (52:39):
Old the old wool press and it's where the fedges
sit inside and you put us at the top on that.
That's quite you know, unique, So.

Speaker 15 (52:48):
Barleing you've got your own bar.

Speaker 16 (52:51):
Oh yeah, it makes you feel like you're a man
from the country, you know what I mean? But yeah, I.

Speaker 3 (52:58):
Think it's I think it's me when you get kicked
out of everywhere. Else is that you're can drink at
home right there? Good on you, but don't you take
care nice of twenty three past nine markers still twelve
flixy tubes and fedges anything else you want to a
pine about?

Speaker 15 (53:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (53:13):
What is a fedge? Is a feedg the same as
what Mudoch was talking about. Quite like a fedge. I'm
about to embark on a fedge. One got an interesting
cask wine story. In Australia they call them goon bags
or a goon. Cask wine is called a goon. That's

(53:37):
something that's called on here. I think everyone used a
shadow cardboard that was that was probably as a clever
expressions you could hear about fifty years ago. Yeah, but

(53:59):
then it seems as though you tie it to a
name the balgar hambag or the balambi handbag, or the
broad banner head or the double handbag, or a boxer
or a box monster. This is the cask of wine
in someplace, so they call it the bag of death

(54:24):
with the lady in the boat because the picture on
the box nice expression, the lady in the boat. If
I've never heard that, I don't know what cask that
is with a lady in the boat. Anyway, here's at
midnight if you want. We went well with that first topic.
Now I think we needed a rejoiner or a relauncher.
Oh yeah, the lady in the boat's a caller bar.

(54:48):
She's like on a gondolier with the umbrella. Parasol twenty
five past nine. Here to the end Monuments, Marcus, welcome
breaking news when it happens. Anything else when it happened
hittl twelve. What do you got It's going to be
wet tomorrow. I feel like I'm saying that every day
of the week now, But yeah, let's be hearing from

(55:09):
your people. Oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nine
to text. If you've got any breaking usually doesn't know
what that is. So basically it's about the topics tonight
are about cask wine and FLIXI bins. Marcus on Friday

(55:35):
night at call of the show mentioned the Muhammad Ali
model has boastful and irritating behavior on an unpopular person.
Can you have just this all the call himself? Remind
me who this person was to. I think that was
on my show Tear it Up. Recall that we got
pretty good recall of calls. I don't think that was
on the show. But at this you want to challenge me,

(55:57):
I'm almost sure it wasn't. But do again touch FLIXI
bins and feedgers. Think fags have got handles, They're strong.
I think their helicopters pick them up stuff up on

(56:19):
them too, don't they Good evening, Aaron, this is Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 17 (56:26):
Yeah, I just got a story on the cast of
wine that we used to play as a young teenagers.
I suppose, thank you, it was, yes, we called it
a circle of goon. So there was a rotary washing
line everyone that everyone that came to the party had
to bring a cask of something. So there was vodkas,

(56:46):
there was wine, there was all sorts and you'd peg
it to the washing line and you'd get get cheers,
spend the washing line and whatever landed on top of
you had to drink.

Speaker 9 (57:00):
It was.

Speaker 17 (57:01):
I was very messy. It did its shot.

Speaker 3 (57:04):
But a nice summer day. They sounds something quite sophisticated
about that.

Speaker 17 (57:08):
Oh, it certainly wasn't by the end of it, that's
for sure.

Speaker 3 (57:12):
Did they do vodka and did they do pre mixing casks?
I guess they did, didn't they?

Speaker 17 (57:16):
Yeah, they did vodka and orange and all sorts of
weird and wacky things.

Speaker 3 (57:22):
When I was in Australia, there was a drink called
there was a drink in a cast called liquid Leamington.

Speaker 17 (57:28):
Oh I never heard of that.

Speaker 7 (57:28):
One.

Speaker 3 (57:29):
Doesn't sound good, does it?

Speaker 17 (57:31):
No, it sounds terrible, to be fair. I think hangover.

Speaker 3 (57:34):
I think it was coconut and chocolate and kind of
car lure.

Speaker 17 (57:44):
Oh geez, sounds horrible.

Speaker 3 (57:45):
Yeah, no, yeah it was. It was yeah, liquid Leamington. Yeah,
give me fleshbacks anyway, Aaron, thank you, good evening, Louise.
This is Marcus Welcome.

Speaker 18 (57:54):
Benchers are great, Beggers are amazing.

Speaker 3 (57:59):
Yeah, I think you might be right, But you've.

Speaker 18 (58:02):
Got to have a fan sholder, because otherwise you're having
a at all trying to get everything in it.

Speaker 3 (58:07):
They themselves. You need a faedge holder.

Speaker 18 (58:11):
Yeah, absolutely, And the best ones to get to those
galvanized pipe ones that have that, they've hadn't sharing sheds,
and they're the old, brilliant ones. You can buy new
ones for around about wait for it, three hundred and
eighty dollars.

Speaker 3 (58:27):
I was wondering how much they would be. I think
I'll get one.

Speaker 18 (58:29):
Steep marketplace, Facebook, marketplace and follow that you probably should
be able to pick up an old sharing shed one
maximum one hundred bucks and it will be the best
investment you make.

Speaker 10 (58:43):
Wow, you can put it.

Speaker 18 (58:44):
You can. And they have these. You asked them whether
they had handles. They don't have handles. They have extended flaps.

Speaker 3 (58:51):
That's it. That's it. Now we're talking the extent.

Speaker 18 (58:53):
That's what folds over. And then they sold over the FED.

Speaker 3 (58:57):
Always if you're running a FED sholder, you'd want more
than one faedge, wouldn't you.

Speaker 18 (59:01):
Yeah, you can buy. You can buy them second hand.
You keep marketplace, will trade meet help get onto them.
Say that and you won't go wrong with them. They're
as rare as hen's teeth. There have been a lot
of sharing sheds that offer on farms. Don't use them,
or somebody will have one in their Garden's got a

(59:23):
bit old, you know, but hearing a list and then
they're brilliant. You can use them for recycling, you know,
you can put recycling in them. You can pot or
your garden waist. You can put in your lawn clippings.
And then you just fold those up and be them
on the trailer.

Speaker 3 (59:42):
Nice to hear, Louise, thanks for much that fold them
up with them on the tel. There we go. Feedges,
I don't know where the word comes from. Fedge if
a dge that you can buy feedges at mighty ten,
I think down south. I'm pretty sure I've seen them
there fedge and your fedge shoulder. And we are talking

(01:00:07):
about flexi bins. I think it's great users for flexi
bins we haven't covered yep. That's fine. The night's young
and be a part of it. Rain tomorrow. What was
that for? Anyone go to that? What was that thing?
Anyone go to that concert on the weekend? What was

(01:00:30):
that like? I can't work out if it was one
concert or two concerts, you know what I'm talking about.
I think Thunderstruck was a part of it. Ooh thunder
so yeah, I mean yeah, I mean it seemed to
be crowded. It's going to go to the South Island.

(01:00:53):
I reckon. It's all the hype, isn't it. Oh anyway,
Marc is my most vivid memory and as a kid
growing up in Australia after big family parties, all the
kids taking the beg out of the goon box and

(01:01:14):
blowing them up through the black valve and use them
as pillows to go to sleep. We want to hear.
So you might want to talk about that as well.
But the lines are free if you want to talk.
Oh wait e one hundred and eighty twenty nine nine
to text Hittle twelve anything else I'm here for you

(01:01:34):
do get in touch. Now tell me where Wright is
as guys, could you tell me where I'll have to
take that person back? Ah now, let me think of

(01:01:59):
theres anything else you want to get going on tonight.
We still use feedges to press bales of wool. Nowhere
near one hundred dollars, but it was Oh that's the
ones you get at. That's the organs ones that might attend.
I think good on you. Oh payWave. By the way,
it's going to be added onto the prices, so that's

(01:02:20):
what's happening. I don't know how that's going to work
because most people would be paying payWave, so it's I
can't quite work out where the when the numbers stack
up with that, because it seems as though the cash

(01:02:42):
is the most expensive stuff to process. So yeah, I
don't fully understand how that's going to pan out. But
they've got to pay for the payWave kits, and I
think the retailers themselves pay a percentage on that, so
you can't pass it on or just go onto the prices.

(01:03:02):
I guess that's how it works about flexi bins. There
the things I didn't know there was a name? Someone
else got me thing they don't know the name for.
I just wonder how we'd go with that as a topic.
Probably poorly, but we'll see how we go. What are
the things you don't know the name for? Well, the
things that there are no name for. I guess everything's
got a name, has it? Anyway, there might be some

(01:03:23):
burning question for you, or you might want to talk
about your flexi bin or you feedge. We're changing people's
lives tonight with your veedges. And your flexi bins, wire,
your flexi tubs are summonsist on calling it. Let's be
a part of it. Let's be hearing from your Marcus
till twelve. As I say, oh, eight hundred and eighty,
there's something different. You want to talk about payWave. You

(01:03:45):
might be someone that doesn't want to get rid of payWave.
You might want to explain the finances of how it
works in your business. So yeah, it's gone. But I
don't know if that's a fair thing. Fear, if a
I are not, if E a fear or fear, that

(01:04:13):
might be something you m want to mention tonight. Oh now,
I can't stop singing thunderstrack, thunder twenty three to ten.
So do come through if there's something that you want
to talk about tonight with you till twelve. Now, what

(01:04:34):
else can we talk about today? Hi, Brad, this is Marcus. Welcome,
Hey Marcus.

Speaker 15 (01:04:40):
How's it going good?

Speaker 3 (01:04:40):
Brad? Thank you?

Speaker 15 (01:04:42):
Good, good to hear Marcus. Just I was at the
Nipple yesterday. Great game in up there at Trust Arena.
Now I was here at the end as well. When
Christoph Luxon got booed. I was a bit disappointed in
that myself, but.

Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
Tell me, tell me the situation.

Speaker 15 (01:05:02):
So well, this is my take on it. Been there,
the Mystics supporters obviously big home crowd that were there.

Speaker 3 (01:05:12):
Remind me, remind me where the Mystics are.

Speaker 15 (01:05:15):
Mystics are Awkland?

Speaker 3 (01:05:16):
Yeah, okay, yep. The match was an Auckland.

Speaker 15 (01:05:21):
Match was in Auckland, yep, yep. And Christopher Luxxin was
there to give out the trophy at the end and
over the to the presentation, so they announced them and
then like the Mystics were the heavy favorite going into
the game, and the Technics absolutely thrashed them. And I
think the crowd was more it was more disappointed in

(01:05:43):
the whole event rather than they were.

Speaker 3 (01:05:46):
They weren't burying luck and they're brewing the Tactics for
winning it.

Speaker 15 (01:05:50):
I think they were they were booing lucks and I'm
not going to say that they weren't booing lucks in
but they were more show that was the only way
they could show their disappointment in the game.

Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
You know.

Speaker 15 (01:05:59):
It was just like they're all just they're all disappointed.
There's a whole crowd three and a half thousand people,
well yet probably three thousand, probably five hundred technical supporters,
and no technical supporters would have boot them. I'll tell
you that. You know, they were they were in a
good mood, so they weren't going to boot body. But
the mystics people were all of it disappointed. They turned
up expected to win and they didn't, so you know,

(01:06:22):
take your frustration.

Speaker 3 (01:06:24):
Yeah, okay, I don't necessarily know why. I don't necessarily
know that that is Luxeon's Forte is sort of been
there and appearing for that sort of ceremonial stuff. I mean,
he clearly seems to love it, but he's not sort
of a gregarious natural person, so you know, I you know,
and he said it happens to all the people. But

(01:06:44):
yeah I heard him saying, oh, well, it happens for everyone.
But you'd be devastated, wouldn't you.

Speaker 15 (01:06:49):
Oh yeah, they probably wouldn't.

Speaker 3 (01:06:51):
It's not nice for someone trying to do their trying
to do their best and everyone doing them.

Speaker 15 (01:06:56):
That's right, Yeah, but yeah, I think it was more
distant showing their disappointment and their home team not even
been in the match, because to be fair, they got thrashed.
So anyway, that was thanks.

Speaker 3 (01:07:06):
Did people hang around for the prize giving?

Speaker 15 (01:07:11):
They hang around to they clear it. They cleared that
pretty quick. They all, yeah, no, that's the credit. There's
only is the technical supporters stayed in the stadium.

Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
It's funny because they kept talking about the new look
domestic competition. There's been so many new look domestic competitions.
I can't keep up, and I've got to say it's
lost me.

Speaker 15 (01:07:31):
Ah yeah, well I've got girls that play. Mitchell I
took to watch. It was awesome.

Speaker 3 (01:07:36):
Oh okay, Oh that's a good thing. And the girls
enjoyed it.

Speaker 15 (01:07:39):
They loved it. Our technic supporters come up from you Puma.

Speaker 3 (01:07:42):
Oh okay, okay, so you oh yeah, so you've you've
driven up okay? And was the big city? Was it
supportive of you?

Speaker 15 (01:07:52):
We're in the city for probably two hours and then
we were out of there.

Speaker 3 (01:07:55):
So brilliant. That's the way to do it. Brand I
heard the bow. You go nice to talk nineteen to ten. Marcus,
my female flatmate back in the day, used to buy
a box of chatter cardboard, pull the cardbet off and
put the goon sack on a handbag for heading to
the pub. Once there, should buy a glass of wine
and then refill from the hidden goon sack all night, Marcus.
I just read about the ACDC coons and orkand full

(01:08:15):
Rud was the guest drummer. Remember the antics that guy
got up to. Brilliant, Marcus, Odd question for you, is
a car steering rack needing to be replaced a safety concern?
Just dealing with car warranties. I've got no idea a
car steering rack, Marcus. A good top. It would be

(01:08:39):
if we could choose one item to go back to
cheap prices as a country, what would it be but
a house prices, food, et cetera. Marcus, fadge is a
wallpack with less than one hundred kilograms of wool in it.
If it doesn't have any wool in it's just a woolpack.
But it has over one hundred kilograms of wool, it's

(01:09:00):
a bail. Oh that's good intel. Oh there already seems
to be confused about the netball. The mystics are from Northland.
The Auckland Stars came last. Marcus. It was weird. luxA
was at the netball, not like it was an international match.

(01:09:24):
You don't understand that. I understand why you go there, Marcus.
I love passion fruit, but today and Willington they were
forty nine a kili. I wish they were cheaper, Chris, Yeah,
I think what happened with the I think the passion
fruit gets a mite in New Zealand, so they're hard
to grow. So that's my intel on that it's a disease.

(01:09:51):
So they used to be plentiful because in Australia they're
very cheap. I only know that because I've got a
child that is a passion for it, obsessive. And we
went to and overseas. They had a lot of them
because that's where they could get them. But they're resusceptible

(01:10:12):
to diseases. I think it's one called grease spot. But yeah,
so they're not cheap like they once were. I don't
know what it's like growing your own. I don't know
if they're still susceptible to those diseases, but they seem
to be quite a flaky kind of fruit. They didn't
used to be flaky. Netbull names are hard to remember.
They need to redroduce, province names exactly exactly, absolutely exactly.

(01:10:37):
It don't must be called the magic or the mystics.
It's crazy. It sounds like Harry Potter stuff yeah, where
they're from. And I've got to say, don't judge me
on this, but crickets is bad. I've never understood central districts.
I've got no idea where they are. And that's what's

(01:10:57):
wrong with Super Rugby. They just should accorded them after
the runner that none of the Hurricanes are in having
two teams that begin with H. How confusing is that?
Every time I've got to remember who they are again,
I remember Hurricanes Wellington because it's windy Marcus. How many

(01:11:19):
wall bales of wool can you fit inside a train wagon?
The answer is also the name of a beach must
be ninety, is it? It's a good question. We're talking
flexibins and woolf edgers. It's like a container discussion tonight,
isn't it? And interesting uses for flexi bins and when

(01:11:47):
they first when they first became a thing. So I
feel sorry for the bucket the bucket manufactures. The buckets
mustn't get much of a look at now with flexi
bins so much more robust. Their strength comes through their flexibility,
which is like a metaphor for living gus, isn't it?

(01:12:09):
Here's some more this as an answer, This is a
text that needs to be answered. My car failed its
WAFT because VT and ZED would considering you about my
steering rack. I took my car to the garage, who
was skeptical about there being an issue, but checked out
as requested. They were somewhat surprised to find it a

(01:12:31):
new one and they replaced it with a reconditioned steering rack.
Everyone happy, new steering rack not cheap. And the question
Kate asks, it's a different text. Someone else is dealing
with a situation with a steering I don't even know

(01:12:51):
what it is. If someone's a mechanic type person, could
they come and give us a bit of a primer
on steering racks. Sounds like waft's having a the warrant
of fitness having a bit of a cut down, a
cut not a cut down on them. I don't even
know what you call it. They having a cut down,

(01:13:15):
a A they're focusing on those. It seems they're focusing
on steering wrecks. So it's apparently ninety bales of wool
into a whale railway wagon, Marcus. Yet it's ninety bales,

(01:13:40):
So what was the difference between but passion fruit and
banana passion fruit for the later to be declared a
notion weed when banana peat fruit was much better of
the two. They should combine the two. I don't know
if the banana passion fruit the actual pezzi freit are related?
Are they but delicious banana pressure? I was surprised. It's
a weed. It's a fantastic kind of a fruit. Is

(01:14:02):
it a fruit? It's a fruit? How are you going? People?
My name is Marcus. Welcome. We're talking flexi basket baskets,
edges and they're on too. Passion fruit and steering wrecks.
Do ne even know what a steering wreck is? Don't
know what what what the word wrack means? In that case,

(01:14:23):
I'll do ai A What is a steering wreck?

Speaker 9 (01:14:36):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:14:36):
I see you steer the wheel and that goes through something,
and that goes back and forward to the wheels. Looks
quite important to me. There's a pinion, it's called a

(01:14:59):
wreck and pinion system. That's that sort of stuff that
you Yeah, I don't even know what I reckon. So
the wreck is the toothed bar and the gear is
the opinion. They mesh together, so there's teeth from the
you turn the teeth and they go into a zig
zaggy bit. So that's the rack. So there we go.

(01:15:25):
I know that now there's a video even once you
know it's quite straightforward. So the steering wheel is attached
to a cog and the cog slots into the rack,

(01:15:45):
which is a straight bit of metal with spikes in it.
And when you turn the steering wheel, that goes back
and forwards and turns quite simple when you look at it, actually,
but I'm imagining that it's probably quite important to get

(01:16:05):
your worried first sharing wrack to work. I don't know
what would wear it out, what wears it out? I
guess everything wears out friction, But yes, having an experience
with a bad rack you might have. That's what we're
on about tonight. Eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nine,
nine to text marks till twelve. Good to see, Good

(01:16:26):
to see. Princess Charlotte was at the football. Seems to
have enjoyed that. They seem to wheel them out for sport.
That's something as well. So Trump's mysterious condition has reappeared
in Scotland. They've got plasters on his hand covered up

(01:16:52):
with his orange makeup so you can't see it, or
covering that if it's covering plasters or the bruises. They
did cheat at Gulf well worse than cheating, got the
caddies to cheap for him. I don't know if he
brings his caddies with him. But did you see that
Motiicaid and man oh Man. There must have been thirty

(01:17:14):
cars and that Motiicaid. Don't know what they all were.
I suppose one of them carries the Milania doubles. I'm joking.
I don't know what they will were, but there was
a lot of them. I have no idea what they
were on. Some of them were heavy armored, and there
was even an armored golf cart behind his own golf cart.
It was extraordinary watching it. Any who hit till twelve

(01:17:39):
if you want to be a part of it, max
till midnight? Do you want a pine or anything to
add eight hundred and eighty ten eighty Remember my texts
tonight on my I mean on a private phone, not you.
I keep turning my phone onto do not disturbs very
hard when you're expecting texts from anyone. Keep you on

(01:18:01):
my text though, that's nine two nine to a cap.
Or do not disturb for you guys. You're the lifeblood
if you went to that big concert. What was that like, Marcus.
We don't put wall bales and railway wagons anymore. They
go on trucks. You get around one forty one fifty
baiales into a curtainsider. Marcus Subari legacy mark five that's

(01:18:29):
two double nine twenty nine to twenty fifteen have steering
racks I I hydraulic wrack and pinion are known to
wear out prematurely. What if it's a Subari she's got.
I don't know about that. She didn't say, but Hittel
twelve one him is Marcus, welcome flixy tubs, wrack and pinion,

(01:18:51):
which I now understand about. That's just two of the topics.
Passion for it and feedgers and luxon at the netball
I'll beg at you guys. Sorry that was about Mockey. Hey,
I can tell you something I've got to tech right, Marcus.
I think it was great the Prime Minister at tend
of the netball final and presented the trophy on such

(01:19:12):
an auspicious occasion. Wish people would stop criticizing him all
the time, give credit where it's due chairs, Daryl Westport,
He's damned if he doesn't. Damned if he doesn't. Marcus,
butter is too expensive yet Marjorie can be used as alternative.
But what will coffee drinkers go to as a substitute

(01:19:34):
if and when coffee is out of reach? I think
coffee is an addiction everyone can do without coffee. Be
for referring. You never feel more energized without coffee, don't
if anyone's tried to give it up? Pretty well impossible.
Here to Midnight. You might want to talk about Luxon

(01:19:54):
getting booed. I don't know what you'd say, but.

Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
He's you.

Speaker 3 (01:20:04):
She really careful where you go, got to control the environment,
and I made you won't be going to many of
those events again because I masic won't be that enjoyable.
I want to have that sort of reception. You wouldn't
think anyway Here til Midnight if you want to be
a part of it. Eight hundred and eighty eight and

(01:20:26):
nine detext veges, flixy Buckets, Cask Wine and Laxon Lauri.
It's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 8 (01:20:36):
Yeah, Hian Marcus. Yeah, there was one of the cask
one that you didn't mention before stands on its own
with his own was what the older luto rosso?

Speaker 3 (01:20:48):
Oh yeah, well okay, yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:20:51):
It's still out there, he was.

Speaker 3 (01:20:53):
Was that a cask wine or was it in big flagings.

Speaker 8 (01:20:56):
No, it's it's been in the cast for the last
three years ago now, but I think there was was
an option for sometimes be got in bottle strips. Yeah,
that's still quite from It's one of those things you
sort of if I take a wonder around the supermarket,
just see price escalation and must go on, and I

(01:21:18):
look across and see what a cast of the miss costs.
It's round about thirty bucks. It's another one you know
that you can sort of solid item which you can
put a side preps. You know, just think of a
can of sadins, and that's sort of the sitting probably
around about two dollars for feet.

Speaker 3 (01:21:38):
I'd say sadines have always been about two dollars, haven't they.

Speaker 8 (01:21:41):
Yeah, I think it caused last year. Was that I
thought you caused a run on a sad.

Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
I hope so, yeah, I hope we did. I think
we did.

Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:21:51):
There was some talk it was on Google somewhere news
item that they thought people would be holding holding sardines
while they're but it doesn't seem to have happened.

Speaker 3 (01:22:02):
I'll never quite work out if you go in spring
water or an oil.

Speaker 8 (01:22:07):
I quite like the spring water. And they there was
a bundle of them there all four kings for ten dollars.
Yeah that's good. Yeah, individually, I think there around three
and stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (01:22:22):
Now, Lay, I haven't told you on this, but once
I brought tin grapefruit, I still to this day craved
that taste. It was delicious. You wouldn't think of tin
grapefruit would be nice, would you?

Speaker 8 (01:22:34):
No, it's it's not something, Nor was I.

Speaker 3 (01:22:38):
I was just seeing what I just I was on
a mission to try interesting things in tins.

Speaker 5 (01:22:43):
You know.

Speaker 3 (01:22:43):
Ten tried tin grapefruit and men. I mean I couldn't
eat them quick enough.

Speaker 8 (01:22:47):
Okay for court, Well, I do like grapefruit. I've been
taking a there's a lot of medications that won't allow
you to eat grapefruit.

Speaker 3 (01:22:55):
You'd be right, though, wouldn't you have? Slowly?

Speaker 8 (01:22:59):
That's probably right.

Speaker 3 (01:23:00):
I shouldn't give it. I shouldn't give advice like that,
should I?

Speaker 9 (01:23:02):
Lorry?

Speaker 3 (01:23:04):
What what year did the cask wine come out? That
must have been exciting when someone first experienced it.

Speaker 8 (01:23:09):
Yeah, you know, I couldn't have. I mean, it must
be forty years ago, easy, people.

Speaker 3 (01:23:16):
There'd be nineteen seventy something, wouldn't it. Yeah, probably, And
that's fifty years ago nineteen seventy remember.

Speaker 8 (01:23:23):
Yeah, Well it used to totally made of wine skin,
and I used to quite cast on and he cantered
under the old leather wine skin.

Speaker 3 (01:23:31):
Of course you'd be there in the seventies with your
leather wine. What is a leather like a Is it
like an American Indian thing?

Speaker 8 (01:23:37):
Well, it was sort of a little bit more fancy,
quite popular if he's going up skiing and stuff like that.
But it was sort of something well lined. But I
guess the originally well there was water bags and stuff
like that which would leather, which ye would have would
have I think they were an Indian did.

Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Have a plastic lining or is the leather itself remained?

Speaker 6 (01:24:03):
I did?

Speaker 8 (01:24:04):
I did have a plastic lining here.

Speaker 3 (01:24:05):
I'd love one. I know they always looks smart. I'm
going to run, Laurie, but nice to talk. Thirteen past ten,
Could you run the weather again? Please? Network failment we
got Auckland and north and and straight to a lengthy
period of commercials. I'll read them the weather again. They're
doing forensics. Who pushed the button? Get in touch to

(01:24:26):
We can talk about luxon as well. At the netball
I mean some people might want politicians fronting up to
sporting event. I don't know the case. Someone said they are.
They weren't bring him. They're buring the result. I wasn't there.
I couldn't possibly comment. Very sad day in New Zealand.

(01:24:47):
They be part of it. Fagers and flexibucket and the
booing of politicians not good. Oh wait tounded at twenty
and nine two nine to detext I'll get the weather
for you fully, I can promise you that. But do
you touch you want to be part of the show
hit till twelve with your FLIXI buckets? I don't think

(01:25:13):
flix Someone said Flixie bucket would be good for building
retaining walls, but I don't think that's the case. Twelve
places around the country have where the warnings coming to
it's going to be very wet tomorrow. Just so you
know there's anything else you want to talk about, by

(01:25:34):
the way, to feel free. If you're a retailer talking
about payWave charges, that would be of interest to me.
I presume you get charged that server for that service.
Did do you get charged that three percent? How much
do you get charged to provide payWave? Is that clear
or is that secret? I don't know if you're able

(01:25:55):
to reveal that, but I'd like to hear from you.
Might also want to talk about Full Metal Orchestra. I
don't know if there was one concert or two. The
reviews were slightly confusing to me. They seemed to whel
the orchestra out and they get I don't know quite
what it is. People seem to go along and jump
up and down and seem to love it well. I

(01:26:16):
thought it was surprising. Thing is somebody put out to
go to the netball. I mean, that's like someone presenting
at the NPC final, isn't it. I guess that's the equivalent.
Politicians don't want to get involved with that, but get
in touch. And also people are upset with the netball
and the fact the names that you can't tell for
the names what provinces they are, which I think that's

(01:26:41):
part of the reason why I certainly have found it
quite hard to get into the netball. They change the
way the tournament works from year to year. Every year
seems to be differ. They always talk about a revamped tournament,
but I never know where the teams are from because
they don't make sense. They want they just don't name
them after provinces to meet would make more sense, I know,
but I don't know why they do it. Marcus. In

(01:27:03):
the early nineties, when we finished a cask, my brother
and I took it a bag used to play football
or rugby and side full middle orchestra was a concert
then straight after was a dance orchestra concert? Was it
must have been spark Arena?

Speaker 5 (01:27:16):
Was it?

Speaker 3 (01:27:16):
But I saw for people posting online had been to
it look pretty full on. Yes, they get in touch
if you want to talk. Marcus Still twelve oh eight
hundred and eighty eighty and nine nine to text. We
just plugged my headphones and dude did he Yeah, Hi, Petty,

(01:27:38):
this is Marcus. Welcome, thanks for calling.

Speaker 13 (01:27:41):
Oh that's okay, Marcus. I was at the next four
on Sunday, Yes, when everybody was there, and I would
have to say it if I was perfectly honest, they
did booth that's and they never booed the opposition. We

(01:28:02):
just don't do that.

Speaker 8 (01:28:05):
In Auckland.

Speaker 13 (01:28:05):
It's not all one thing to do the opposition. They're
wonderful that that team from the Tactics came up and
they just blew theself the court, you know, and that
all hits to them that they played magnificent.

Speaker 8 (01:28:20):
You know.

Speaker 3 (01:28:22):
So it was so where did they finish in the
round robin? Was there a did Mystics finish top and
Tactics finished second? Or did they did they beat a
higher team to make the finals?

Speaker 13 (01:28:34):
Well, they actually finished second or third, and then we
finished first. So the second and third out the playoffs
and then they came back to playoffs and they were
prepared that they were magnificent, and you know, I just
hung my head because I'm such a Mystic support.

Speaker 3 (01:28:56):
Was it a threshing?

Speaker 13 (01:29:00):
It was in every part of the court.

Speaker 2 (01:29:03):
Really, I have to stay.

Speaker 13 (01:29:05):
Yeah, that they were on fire. They two weeks ago
we bet them by twenty points. Yeah, and the semifinals
and honestly we we they they wanted this game, they
took it to it and we had no answer.

Speaker 3 (01:29:23):
Oh that makes for exciting That makes for exciting sports.
That's that's I mean, that's good. When it's a home
advantage another team comes up, I mean it's not easy
to travel and wins it. That's exciting.

Speaker 13 (01:29:36):
No, No, it was a great, great event and it
was a shame. People booth people any I hate that going.

Speaker 3 (01:29:44):
Yeah, it's it's awkward to be at and I just
wonder if it's probably a mistake for politics to be
in sport like that because people aren't kind of expecting
it anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:29:56):
I don't really know.

Speaker 13 (01:29:57):
We've then, but usually had a prime minister there no.

Speaker 4 (01:30:02):
Sport.

Speaker 12 (01:30:03):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (01:30:05):
I don't know why it was.

Speaker 3 (01:30:07):
Yeah, Oh, I guess it's I guess it's two election
election coming up next year and leaders promises want to
get out about to you know, to to to increase
their increase their popularity. But I guess I guess that
backfired a bit. By the sound of things.

Speaker 13 (01:30:22):
It was a shame. I felt ashamed and you.

Speaker 3 (01:30:26):
Can almost and I don't know if I imagine or not,
but when you saw the video, you coul almost see
them little WinCE a little bit because it wouldn't be nice.
But that might be me imagining it.

Speaker 4 (01:30:33):
I don't like it.

Speaker 13 (01:30:35):
You know, we're divote for them or not, it doesn't matter.
I just don't like that sort of thing. I don't
like booing any any sports. People show up. By people
show up, you don't boose them.

Speaker 3 (01:30:48):
I never liked the brewing of the kick. I never
liked the brewing of the kickers either when they're going
for penalties and stuff.

Speaker 13 (01:30:54):
Me either.

Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
No, I don't even like in basketball when they try
and put off when they go to the free the
free throw, the free throw line, they try and put
them off by by charge who won't get it stuff
that's name as well.

Speaker 13 (01:31:08):
Yeah, yeah, that that's just the thing. In basketball, it's
much more Americanized, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:31:15):
There's more of that sort of putting off the opposition.
I see in American football are always sort of waving
flags when they go to free kicks as sorry, Australian
football to try and put them off as well.

Speaker 13 (01:31:25):
Yeah, yeah, I think it's New Zealanders were a little
always quite charitable here. You get it probably more down
in Canterbury. Sorry, I haven't heard our rugby teams being booed.
Carlos Bence used to get foods down here.

Speaker 3 (01:31:49):
Which team your team or the christ the Canterbury team?
Which team had more New Zealand reps?

Speaker 13 (01:31:58):
Well I would have said a few girls would have
lost a couple of positions are probably Canterbury in up
with Canterbury having a few more. It's hard to say
he's going to go into Nolan's theme because there's a
lot of deals unavailable. Yeah, it's quite a few, so

(01:32:19):
you know, I wouldn't.

Speaker 19 (01:32:19):
Like to really pick up.

Speaker 13 (01:32:20):
Really it's pretty tough, you know, your new captain. But
Nolan's never been bothered by that. She always plays what
she's got. You know, what you get is available. You
just got to go there.

Speaker 3 (01:32:34):
Okay, nice to hear from your patty. Someone said of
mystics had won, they would not have booed. Well, what
at know if that's the case. Actually, according to her,
she was there but get in touched Marcus till twelve
twenty five past ten, Pete, welcome.

Speaker 14 (01:32:50):
You ain't Mark's regarding booing, Yeah, I don't agree what
they did a Chris. You know, it's not no need
for there at all. But far as booing goes when
it comes to sports, kicking a goal or whatever I can,
that's good because in the day that this man wins,
if you can't put up a little at a flat
that someone's doing where you're kicking a goal, you're you're
not strong enough in the mind.

Speaker 6 (01:33:10):
To handle that.

Speaker 3 (01:33:12):
Well, you could say the same about the Prime minister.
If you can't put up with a bit of booing,
you're not you're not fair enough stuff to lead the country.

Speaker 14 (01:33:17):
I suppose, Yeah, that's that's different for this he's really
he's not really something to the sport. He's a there
that he's just heres going out at you and I
enjoying himself.

Speaker 3 (01:33:27):
I think, I think I think it was there to present.
He was there to he was there as an appearance,
to get out out and about for publicity, I would think.
But at least I suppose we're in the country, were
allowed to boo.

Speaker 14 (01:33:41):
Yeah, I suppose the end of the day is part
of the game. And if you're a politician, I suppose
you can't handle a bit of the flat. I suppose
you shouldn't put your hat in the ring and then
the ring. I suppose you're just part of the being
a politician.

Speaker 3 (01:33:51):
I suppose are you going to have an interesting Is
there anyone running for the mayor of New Plymouth? Their peak.

Speaker 14 (01:33:59):
That we're hoping he's going to be a change, So
I rethon he's failed myself. Whether the president got the.

Speaker 3 (01:34:04):
Present time he's yeah, bike ways and toilets. Who's running
against them?

Speaker 14 (01:34:11):
As the couple? Mary Chong was probably one of them.

Speaker 3 (01:34:15):
Uh is it Marry's wife? So then again is it
Marry's wife Mary Chong?

Speaker 14 (01:34:25):
No, No, that's that's Mary Chong himself married.

Speaker 3 (01:34:28):
Yeah, yeah, yeah copy that yep, yep, yep with your
bat yep.

Speaker 9 (01:34:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (01:34:34):
So yeah, I don't know what's going to happen, but
even a bit of a change, we really needed to
go to get the fire's there and have a bit
of a bit of a clean up. Really though a
lot of things I've done, they just they don't They
just go against what the voters want, you know, or
you don't want.

Speaker 3 (01:34:50):
They got not listening to the voters during the opposite
opposite week.

Speaker 14 (01:34:55):
Yeah, basically yeah, time they have clean out, they pay
their wages, they get paid quite well. They don't listen
to us so far as I can see. If they
don't listen, there's always the right and the wrong. But
sometimes but they against and they still bull goes ahead
of them.

Speaker 3 (01:35:09):
You're putting your hand in the ring there for a pete.
You'd be good on counsel, you got you're a straight talker.
You make a lot of sense. You'd be great. I'd
vote for you.

Speaker 14 (01:35:18):
Yeah, well, I just can't say too much. I'm not
saying right now what I'm doing.

Speaker 3 (01:35:22):
But you're running, and you're running.

Speaker 14 (01:35:24):
Answer, Pete, time's getting pretty closer, and I got the fright.
I know I'm not saying anything right now, but I'm
just sort of just sort of thinking about it.

Speaker 3 (01:35:34):
Yeah, well, I think I think I think you're a
straight shooter. You call a spade a spade.

Speaker 14 (01:35:40):
You got to you got to listen to everybody. You
don't want them all, but at least listen to the
people that have voted you in. You know, you can't
go you can't. You can't be a yes man all
the time, but you but sometimes you also got to
say no when it's not right for you to. For
you be scanning running money because right now we all
know everybody's the basics. We're starting to pay for that

(01:36:02):
and all the nice things they got on the back burner.

Speaker 3 (01:36:05):
You'll be boer. There'd be a good there'd be a
good campaign slogan for you, wouldn't it. Yeah, Yeah, thank good. Confession, Pete,
there's a bit of a scoop from you, brilliant Pete's running.
It's got I've got, I've got to I've got to
put the problems with my microphone card. No, my headphone
card keeps coming out there we go. I've untangled it.

(01:36:27):
Now I can't hear anything. What's happened? Jeeps? Creepers testing
testing one, two, three for five, six seven. I've got
that fixed. So I couldn't hear anything. But Pete's gone,
isn't he?

Speaker 5 (01:36:42):
You?

Speaker 3 (01:36:42):
Zee in his borish crowds don't matter where it is.
The Australians just as bad. I don't think that. I
don't think that Bill alban EASi though would they? Oh,
I don't think Australians would be their politician. I don't
think so. Anyway, get in touch hit or midnight if
you want to be a part of it. I was
asking about bowling on anrofessional ground. I thought I had
that answered by now people. Oh, Marcus, I was in

(01:37:13):
the same bowling comp. So each club sends their champion
falls into the comp. So you get a New Zealand
champ two bowls each? Are your bowls sequential or you
than the other guy than the other guy? And cheap
pints of course from nine am to five bucks an
EPs some carpet greens year round. Play try it, Marcus.

(01:37:35):
Lawn bowls go from late August to late April. I
personally prefer grass over artificial greens. You this one, want
to know what's different. I presume the artificial is more uniform.

Speaker 2 (01:37:47):
Is that right?

Speaker 3 (01:37:48):
That grass? We have its own kinks. Marcus the pen
probably got booed because he's a vocal Canterbury fan. He
should grow a beard to soften his lock. Didn't I
have one of my predictions, Dan, did they get a
go or a soul pitch? Marcus the PM probably got

(01:38:14):
booed because of a vocal Canterbury fan. He should grow
a beer to soften his look. He's a bit too
humpty dumpty at the MO, but he's doing the best. Marcus.
I feel sorry for Luxon with people booing him. It's
going to take years to get us out of debt.
I think Luxon's trying his best. I wouldn't be doing
his job. We are lucky to have someone who's trying
so hard. That's right. And he's changed the passports. It'll

(01:38:37):
be cheap to remove it and put it below in
new Zealand Great show lux and booed at the netball
definitely aimed at Luxton and frustration with the current economic government.
Particularly it's an ability to control the cost of living
a buttergate, the arrogant response by the Governor Nicholewis and

(01:38:58):
Fonterra Ceo Steve Austin unemployment figures really hitting hard now.
Also generally just pin up frustration all round at this
government talks but no concrete action. That's rob of Dunedin,
Marcus Energy, Genesis Energy is increased. Oh that's a text

(01:39:19):
for Kerry, that's a late text. So we're talking about
lux and also too. I predicted Prince Harry would get
a soul patch put me down for this for luxA
next year to get a bed over summer, grab a
bed over summer and caught wearing crocs Winston to start

(01:39:43):
vaping the my political predictions. I don't think I've got
any others, pardon have We really would not say that
because it's five hundred grams now, isn't it. J I

(01:40:04):
also predicted button had dropped down before hundred grand block
because they'll do that. Shrink shrink flation, dirty old shrink flation,
so dirty old shrink flation, that'll happen. I kind of
thought had only gone down to four hundred. I think

(01:40:25):
some of them are, what butter do we buy the
other day? For our exchange student to we buy butter?

Speaker 2 (01:40:31):
For him?

Speaker 3 (01:40:32):
What did we buy butter? I can't think worry buying butter.
It must have been in a particularly extravagant mood. What
do we buy butter? There was some particular reason we
had it for. I had to go way up to

(01:40:52):
go jet boating up in Queenstown and he Vanessa said,
what sandwiches you want? Doesn't speak most singers. Egan cabbage.
I'm sure he meant lettuce. We made a Megan cabbage sandwich.
It said there, all right, But I don't think Egan
cabbage would be a sandwich, would it? You had an
Eggan care whage sandwich anyway? Seem to enjoy that. Yeah,

(01:41:18):
it's got a very nice track sit. I think it's
probably a school uniform. I haven't quite without you hasn't
goten English to ask, but I think that's what they
were to come across in their school uniform. But yeah, gee, anyway,
Oh no, it's been a very mind broadening experience. Marcus
what's a soul patch. It's a good question, and I
look for an absolute definition of it because I can't
really think of how to explain it. A soul patch.

Speaker 5 (01:41:40):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (01:41:43):
So a soul patch also know as a mooche. It's
a small triangle of here below the lower lip. It's
about the size of a postage stamp. And I'm trying

(01:42:04):
to think of a famous person, famous person with the
false so you can think of it, but so I
can explain it to you more clearly. What famous person's
got a soul patch? So famous people with soul patches,

(01:42:34):
there's a long list. I don't know if any of
them actually got soul pitches. John Pravolter I think had
one in polp fiction. I think Frank zipp is probably
the most well known. I think Frank Zappa very much
had a soul patch. Yeah, he did hit a mustache

(01:42:58):
and a soul patch. It was just like a It's
like a hit the mustache but down below. I know
that seems like a it seems that that's an elegant
way to describe it. But yes, and I think Billie
ray Cyrus had one. So that's what they are. A

(01:43:21):
littlebody here under the on the chin. I think Adam
Lambert had one for a while. Most people we're one from.
I think Johnny Johnny Depp had a. I think Billy
Bob Thornton had one. Not in Pushington, but in one
of the movies. Howie Mandel's got Who's see he's on?

(01:43:49):
Is he also on the America's got talent? Yeah, he's
got a. He hasn't got one at the moment. Over
time to time, he's had a soul patch. Yes, that
will back back fire spectacically, four hundred grand, but will

(01:44:09):
be a great way to get unelected. It's called the
last straw. I reckon they'll do that of the six
million dollar man. But we're talking about getting booing politicians
and getting booed at the netball.

Speaker 7 (01:44:23):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (01:44:24):
By the way, I'm excited that we have got some sport.
We've got a women's rugby World Cup this year. I
didn't realize that, so I was moaning last week because
there was no major sporting events like the Olympics or
anything this year. But we have got the women's rugby.
I've enjoyed that and I'll continue to enjoy that. So
I'm looking forward to that. I wish I'd watch more
of the euro Football that England won and that was exciting.

(01:44:47):
But you said it'll be good. But that must have
been four years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:44:49):
Was here?

Speaker 3 (01:44:49):
I was it later because of COVID. I remember watching
a lot of those matches. I mean watching the final.
We're in Queenstown for some reason, and quite exciting. It
was now right there for a book thing. Oh, Steve,
who in New Zealand's got a soule patch? Did Robbie

(01:45:10):
Rackety have one? I think the old Rackety might have
had one? Which New Zealand people have a sole patch?
I think Robbie Rackety had one. I hope, not religning
him because he's quite a good I think he. I
think he had a soul patch. Troubles. You can't go
any social media on Twitter now you can't say, did

(01:45:30):
Robbie Rackley you get a soul patch? Piped? Oh? You
it's just in this fault. Yeah, anyway, you might want
to mention that headle twelve. We're talking soule patches, but
Laxa look good with one. I think David Tour had one.

(01:45:53):
You might have grown one yourself. You see them occasionally.
There's quite often men with no hair will grow a
sole patch just to differentiate themselves. I think Diesel have one.
I think Vin Diesel might have a soul patch. I'll
just look up a Google picture of him and fast

(01:46:14):
than the curious so what it's called. Yeah, maybe he didn't.
I'm sure he did, though, I'd bet good money he
had when I can't say. Maybe the Rock had one anyway,
but yes, I think probably the only New Zealander that
had one would be David two that. I don't know
if Robbie ruck at the Head one or not. Anyway,
there's someone I'm visualizing. So there's that and flexy buckets

(01:46:37):
and Christopher Luxon at the Netbull getting booed. You were
outraged about that. How badly we treat our politicians. Didn't
Moses mackay from Solo Mio have one, and Charles Leclair
from if One. I think Moses, I think one of
Solo Meo might have had them. I can picture Moses

(01:47:02):
in one. I'll just google up an image of him.
He had quite a lot of different facial hair overs.
I don't think he had a soul patch is such.
I think he just had like a permanent like a
you may I don't know. I just sort of had
a well sculpted beard. I think you don't know that
they did ever soul patch. I don't know the sort

(01:47:24):
of face you need to have to carry one off.
But that's the discussion tonight and luck at the nepl
and Flexi buckets or Flexi tubs or flexi whatever they
were called baskets. So that's some of the discussions we
can talk. It's just the final hour for me. Actually,
the nicest night is flowing by. So if you want
to got something to say quickly, there might be something

(01:47:44):
different you want to mention. Be a part of it.
Welcome Hitdle twelve, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nine
ninety text Flexi buckets And for a Gleannovant there was
another question, bigg in question, Oh, lawn bowls. I want
to talk about what's it like playing if you're a
bowl or let me know what it's like playing on
the artificial surface. And I've got some questions, so you

(01:48:06):
could really explain to me how bowls works. Oh, Steve
Gurney had a sole patch. Don't hear much about the
old Gurney these days, do you, Yeah, he kind of
had a. Did he have a sole patch here? That
line that comes down from I think it is a
soul patch. Hard to know. One's almost a half to
a soul patch and a go tea. You need to

(01:48:30):
have the right shaped head. You don't know if that's
just a thin go tea. Hard to know. Anyway, someone
will be a part of it. I'm thinking about this
a well known useal broadcast in the seventies with a
soul patch, but I can't remember what was it Ridge,
I can't remember who had it. Anyway, do come through
if you want to talk. Marcus. I wasn't the netball,

(01:48:50):
but if I was, I would have bowed Luxeon as well.
Anyone who calls people bum lickers as a planker, what
sort of man says that? Love you show bif. I
don't think he called anyone that. I think Seymour called
people drop kicks, and I think he might have called
people bottom dwellers, but never that. So I've googled that
and I wish I hadn't, but I don't think he's

(01:49:11):
done that. Andrew, it's Marcus, good evening.

Speaker 17 (01:49:17):
Hi, how are you?

Speaker 19 (01:49:18):
And yeah, the Prime Minister was co speaking with the
folks person from the am Z banks then got boots.
So I don't think that's really a very good look.
So it's that might be a good reason for am
Z to pull the sponsorship on that league.

Speaker 2 (01:49:33):
That was not good.

Speaker 3 (01:49:34):
If it's working that stick with it, wouldn't they?

Speaker 19 (01:49:37):
Well, but it's not. It's not really very good if
you boo your sponsors co speaker, is it?

Speaker 5 (01:49:43):
Well?

Speaker 3 (01:49:44):
People have gone to a sporting event, right and a
politician turns up to give a speech. Unless you're one
of those politicians that's adored, it is a risky thing
to do, isn't it. Because it's on the weekend. People
don't necessarily want to be reminded of what the country
is the state the country is in.

Speaker 2 (01:50:01):
Do they.

Speaker 19 (01:50:04):
I just don't think it's very a very good form
for them too. And that me yeah from a from
a from a sporting perspective, that's the sponsors. That was
the finals, so I thought that a bit more to corn.

Speaker 3 (01:50:15):
But whatever the what are the sponsors chosen him to
be there? Would he be there as a Is it
the A and Z or the national bank a Z?
It was there was a national bank gone?

Speaker 19 (01:50:24):
Now has it a national banks owned by the AIM I.

Speaker 3 (01:50:31):
Should know that bank at the National Bank. I no
longer do. Okay, did you did you?

Speaker 15 (01:50:35):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:50:35):
Were you watching it live when it happened?

Speaker 2 (01:50:37):
Not at all?

Speaker 3 (01:50:38):
No, So, so you're not you're not a netball fan anyway.

Speaker 19 (01:50:44):
Not really, Matt so Yes. I just didn't think it
was very good form for them to boo, particularly because
he would have probably been invited by the ad.

Speaker 9 (01:50:53):
You know.

Speaker 19 (01:50:53):
So you've got to look at the the details. But
I don't think it would be very good for the
brand that they want to put forward.

Speaker 3 (01:51:02):
Okay, okay, take your points here, thank you, Marcus. Maybe
the predominantly female audio the NetPro among the workers whose
equal pay applications were dumped by the lux and government. Marcus,
the losing woman's team had a net ball ba w L. Marcus,
you won't be able to read this, appen. I remember
the soul Patch. You're talking about being called the and

(01:51:24):
I think you know what the word is. How can
I say it? I could spoonerism. It of spoonerism. It
make it sound less and decent unless they won't be
kids listening, Marcus, you won't be able to read this, opupen.
I remember the soul Patch you're talking about being called
the Tanny Fickler. That's probably the most elegant way I

(01:51:46):
can do that. Pex good evening, it's Marcus.

Speaker 9 (01:51:49):
Welcome, Oh Marcus, how are you good?

Speaker 3 (01:51:52):
Thanks?

Speaker 2 (01:51:53):
Yeah? Well, Sammy Davis Junior head the tickler, of course
he did, and yeah he's he's the most famous one
in Eric Clifton had one and in seventy eight, pretty
sure remembering him having the tickler.

Speaker 3 (01:52:09):
There, Dave. Yeah, you think you got you've got you
got on this page.

Speaker 2 (01:52:16):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And the reason why the Prime
Minister got the thumbs downsigne is the mess he's made
of things, blaming everybody else all the time, taking the
money off the women's wages, borrowing twelve billion dollars to

(01:52:36):
pay landlords, you know, and we're all subsidizing that because
they are dollar dropped. When labor was in the dollar
was sixty four cents to the America.

Speaker 3 (01:52:48):
What are we now sixty fifty nine?

Speaker 2 (01:52:52):
Is it that? It's long nine? Yeah, and it's been
around that for a long time. And that's because he
borrowed that money and we're all paying for it. Anything
that comes into this country, we're subsidized those people and
a vice. And I live out in the country and

(01:53:14):
I've got big farms around me, and some of them
vote National and they're not happy with what he's done.
So when I hear farmers are very please with this
and that, no they're not. That's not what they're telling me.

Speaker 3 (01:53:30):
So the farmers themselves are unhappy, are they?

Speaker 7 (01:53:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:53:33):
Here?

Speaker 3 (01:53:34):
Are you North Island or South Island pecks?

Speaker 2 (01:53:37):
I'm in parh here tour okay, wow. And I've got
big farms around me, not small ones, big ones, and
a none of them are happy with what's going on?

Speaker 3 (01:53:48):
Is a lower dollar work for the farmers up? I
guess it means they're I guess they can sell things
more things, doesn't it. It works for them for me.

Speaker 2 (01:53:56):
Roundabouts. But they're still going to buy stuff in.

Speaker 3 (01:53:58):
From tractors and things, don't they.

Speaker 2 (01:54:01):
Yeah, yeah, so they're all evens out of here in
the borrowed that twelve billion dollars for landlords.

Speaker 3 (01:54:10):
It was two billion for landlords, was it? Bon I
thought that was author was two point seven?

Speaker 2 (01:54:18):
Well, whatever he borrowed had dropped our dollar the worth
of that and Treasury Treasury said labor would have us
out of the the turmoil by mid next year. This
hunt the Dumpy's talking about three years.

Speaker 3 (01:54:38):
To Oh no, it does. I think they borrowed twelve
billion for tax cuts, but I think some of that
was for the landlords.

Speaker 2 (01:54:45):
But yeah, and you notice all those people that voted
for him because they he brought them with the tax cuts.
Trump done the same thing, so did the guy in Brazil.
All the right wingers brought there, brought the people's votes
with a tax cut.

Speaker 3 (01:55:02):
They get it back teams as are in America because
the people that voted from them seem to have benefited
for nothing. They seem to be the disaffected. They get
cut with Medicaid and all sorts of stuff, but they're
voted for them.

Speaker 2 (01:55:16):
Yeah, they done it here. They've done it exactly the
same as what Trumps aren't. They put everybody out of work.
They've done this. They put the brakes on, they don't
know when to take them off. That's the trouble with national.

Speaker 3 (01:55:29):
Nice to hear from your packs, Thanks very much. Sixteen
away from twelve. Get in touch. You want to be
a part of the show. Here till midnight. The hat
repair on the repair shop had a soul patch. The
Dapper Hat repairer. I think a lot of people have
a soule patch and a goatee together as well. That
works quite so well. Or I don't think a soul

(01:55:50):
patch works that well. But just think who in radio
had a soul patch?

Speaker 4 (01:55:56):
Ma?

Speaker 3 (01:55:56):
Did pul Warren have a soul patch?

Speaker 5 (01:55:58):
Hey?

Speaker 3 (01:55:59):
That's it to me from me. I will return tomorrow
people to greet you with more wondrous talk. Enjoy your Tuesday.
Watch out for the weather. Let's type. We don't on
a weather a show tomorrow night with people being in undated.
Let tape. It doesn't end up being as bad as
people of senators, but you never know, it could be

(01:56:22):
a bad one. By the way, Trump has said nothing
on truth social in the last fifteen hours. He must
be enjoying his golf. It is warm reception in Scotland
cheating at golf behind you. I will talk to you
again tomorrow night, people. Enjoy your Tuesday. Good night.

Speaker 1 (01:56:41):
For more from Marcus Slash Nights, listen live to News
Talk Sat BE from eight pm weekdays, or follow the
podcast on iHeartRadio.
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