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October 11, 2024 • 89 mins

It's a Friday free-for-all with haircutting, cornish pasties, auroras, and when holidays aren't really holidays.

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

Speaker 2 (00:15):
How are you greeting, Zen, Good evening, Marcus till twelve.
Just so you know, this time tomorrow twenty eight years ago,
which is a complicated way of saying, the twelfth of
October nineteen ninety six, that was our first MMP election.

(00:36):
So yeah, twenty six years ago tomorrow would be going
to the polls to vote for our first MMP election.
Some might not remember that I hadn't recalled that as
been then.

Speaker 3 (00:52):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
The result was inconclusive National one thirty four percent, Labour
twenty eight ye Zen Verse thirteen, the Alliance ten percent,
and Act six. So there we go. I think negotiations
took a while, anyone said with that, DMMP. So that's happened.

(01:18):
That's today, twenty eight years ago. I found that pretty interesting.
Welcome people, my name is Marcus Hurd on midnight tonight.
I hope it's good where you are. A lot will
happened tonight. I can guarantee that Jim Steeden will be
on after twelve o'clock tonight, and right now I'm there
till then. So get in touch if you want to
talk eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine nine yep.

(01:39):
And last night we spoke to Julian. Julian had well,
Julian had lost a trailer and his car had broken down.
He had a high trailer that was left in twice all.
He offered someone one hundred dollars to get the trailer
from twice all to Christ, Judge or Caste. Ooh, you've
got a conclusion for us, Julian.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
Okay, Marcus, I had look after the great talkback last
night that you run and all your lovely listeners. I
had three people phone out three.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
Well are you should have seen? Guess how many? I
love a guessing game. Three. I other thought it would
have been one or five.

Speaker 4 (02:18):
I guess how many were women and how many there
were men?

Speaker 2 (02:21):
I'd say two women, one men men.

Speaker 4 (02:24):
No, they were all guys.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
I was going to say something. I was going to
say some great gutization where women are more caring or
well that's interesting. Okay, well, yep.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
Ye, So speaking Christ the guy, he coincidentally had an
old jeep, so he didn't take one hundred dollars.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
I gave him the jeep.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Oh this is a great story. Okay, So for those
that don't, I'm going to back up the track of it.
On Wednesday, we're talking about luck and Julian run because
he had a series of good luck and bed luck
stories because he went to Clyde to pick up a
yacht on a trailer. Where's the yacht? We're dropping the
yacht off?

Speaker 4 (03:06):
No, that I was picking the yacht up in Clyde.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Where's the yacht.

Speaker 6 (03:11):
Was?

Speaker 4 (03:11):
The yacht is still in Clode.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
I didn't get to Clyde, Okay to organize that anyway.
So he got to the Lindis and the car broke
down and AA took him only so far back to
Twysel and you couldn't get the land.

Speaker 4 (03:28):
The what was his vehicle at Cherokee jep?

Speaker 2 (03:33):
You couldn't get your jeep fixed because it's work shot. Yeah,
and you had a dog and a trailer and yet
to hide the dog in a cooler bag to get
on the bus and that worked be out all right,
but you couldn't get the trailer home. Yeah, And we
put it one hundred dollars offer to someone returned the
trailer for trailer from twice all to cust And and

(03:55):
it didn't negotiate with you. As that he was, after
where is this guy live?

Speaker 4 (04:01):
He leaves him in twice all. He didn't want me
to mention his name, said I was going to purn
you up. He was just a good Samaritan. And as
I said, it just so happened that he got an
old jeep. That the motor's good, but the body's shot.
So I said, right, well, there's no point in me

(04:21):
paying Kapa grand to get the jeep back to christ Church.
You have the jeep, You do whatever you want to
do with it, and if you want to give me
some money at the end of it, that's cool.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
It's one of the great radio stories of all time.
What did the other two people have to say? They
just were the hundi did they?

Speaker 4 (04:36):
They were very helpful. But the only trouble is one
couldn't do it until Sunday. The other guy couldn't do
it until Monday. Whereas this guy was, he said he
was half an hour away from leaving twice all. He
went straight there, picked it up. He was back in
christ Church by help us too.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
So having to go that way anyway?

Speaker 4 (04:53):
Are you And I've got to do a big shout
out for Kinnard's in Ringuoron. Because I'd had it for
basically three days over the time that I'd paid for
they have only charged me for one extra day.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Oh wow, I've never hired a trailer. How much does
a trailer cost? A high would be one hundred dollars
a day.

Speaker 4 (05:11):
Yeah, it was one hundred dollars. It was a slightly
different trailer because I needed to with the with the yacht.
It's just a little old yacht, but I'm going to
turn it into my outdoor picnic table. Yes, so I
needed some way to get it up onto the trailer.
So you know, the guy that's buying off, I've had
some wheels, so he put it on a little trailer

(05:32):
for me. I was going to go down with the
winch on the trailer, widget on board, bring it all back.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
But it seems sacradarge to me to be turning a
yacht into a picnic table. But you do you.

Speaker 4 (05:43):
I'm sure it's an old yacht and you can mentioned
that it's not a great deal of sailing to be
done in Clyde Well.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
I was thinking about I was thinking about that. Look,
it's all a very good story, so I'm loving all
of it and Kinnard's. I think Kidder, I think I've
heard the ads for Kinnard's.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
Yeah, cards, cans, cannrds. Yeah, they've got quite a few branches.
If I could just add one more thing before you
get they on the show now, I'd like to offer you, Marcus,
because you guys are so great, if you ever want
to do a roady trip with the show, come to Cast.
Your whole family can stay in the church. I've got
plenty of room. Yes, you can see the Cast Museum

(06:19):
and you can be right by the Alps. Have a
great time. Anyway, the offers there, I leave it up
for you and your producer design if you want to
do something like that.

Speaker 7 (06:26):
Mate.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
Look, it's all been good one one one for me
during That's a tremendous story. So there we go. Not
only are we a radio show, but we provide a
trailer relocation service. And look, everything we've attempted to do
on the show we've normally managed to actually pull off.
So I don't know what we're going to manage to
achieve today. We don't relocate children. I'm not saying that
to sound weird. It's just cause the end of the

(06:48):
school holiday. Sorry, that did sound weird, didn't it. But yes,
if everyone's got anything that they want relocated or transported,
perhaps we could put people were like the internet, but noisier.
He's got familiar sounding voice, Julian, Have I heard a
voice like that? Sometimes these things come to you in

(07:12):
waves afterwards. Fancy making a picnic table out of a yacht.
I can't even imagine what that would look like, trying
to visualize the elk which part of a yacht screams
picnic table? None of it? Oh, eight hundred and eighty
tenny and nine. If you've got breaking news, will you
let me know what technic? Here's a question for you

(07:32):
from me to you. As you get older, and I'm
not old. As you get older, here's what's happened to
me as I've got older. Oh, this is going to
sound weird. It's going to plunge through with it. As
I've got older, I cut my own hair. And it's

(07:56):
partially because I just kind of shave it around the
back and a bit over the top. So it's easier
to cut because I've got the shaver, and I can't
really be bothered with the faffing around it going to
get me a hair cut. I can't really be bothered
with the chit chat. And maybe that's because I talked
for a living. For me, it's like a busman's holiday.
But going on, oh yeah, oh yeah, sure sure. How

(08:19):
about that hurricane? I have a hurricane, Milton? What's that about?
So there's a question for you, because you have less
areas you get old, it's less thick. Do people fight
as they get older? They cut their own hair always
looks terrible from behind. It's the biggest muddle. But you
just sort that out later on the kids saw them missus,

(08:40):
Oh you got a bit there? Oh can you shave
it off from me? And the way they go anyway,
sixteen past day, Debbie, it's Marcus. Welcome, good evening, Good
an evening, Marcus. How are you good, Debbie?

Speaker 8 (08:53):
Now I've been doing your show and listening to the trailer.

Speaker 9 (08:56):
Episode and back in the day, they used to be
a bag and like we they've had a like things
for sound and things like that, like all of the
country and your head things for however.

Speaker 8 (09:10):
White bait or.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Who did that? Debbie?

Speaker 9 (09:15):
Remember you guys stood up second the day.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
You mean, in the morning with garage sale on the
Saturday Morning with Barry Holland.

Speaker 10 (09:23):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, And there.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
Was always that, There was always that woman wonning newspapers
and O Tara remember her?

Speaker 9 (09:33):
No I can't remember here, but oh well this is.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
A this is a worthwhile story because she would should
be first on every single time I reckon.

Speaker 10 (09:41):
I'm like, you have lighte fait.

Speaker 9 (09:44):
I've been craving right bait, so many runs white face
out there, we're.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
About, We're about today you debbis Brim, Thanks for that,
Debbie once white bait, don't we all seventeen? You stay there, Rose,
I'm coming back to you. Oh O one hundred and
eighty nine detext. We don't know what sort of hot
The only reason we're going to know what sort of

(10:09):
yacht is a number of years time. We're going to
go on Google Maps and we're going to go look
at the church and cusp and there's going to be
a table out the front of the church that is
built for the yacht. Yes, I cut bend here. If
I make a mistake, my friends fix it and mock it.
Nathan forty seven years old cutting your own hair. I

(10:33):
suppose it's harder for women, or I shouldn't say that really,
is it?

Speaker 11 (10:37):
Not?

Speaker 2 (10:37):
If you've got a bob if bob with a fringe,
that's what I've got. How did you know? Good evening, Rose,
it's Marcus and welcome to you.

Speaker 10 (10:45):
Ah, and good evening to you too, Marcus.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
This Rose your real name of chur Chat, it's Rose,
your real name. Yeah, you sound younger than a Rose. Oh,
bless one, nice one, kind thing to say.

Speaker 12 (11:04):
What's that?

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Younger than a Rose?

Speaker 13 (11:08):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (11:08):
It isn't very current. I'll remember that for life. Okay,
that's not very long.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
The rest of your long life. You've got to go, yes, Rose.

Speaker 10 (11:17):
Right, I had dreads for twenty five years, just recently
cut them off.

Speaker 2 (11:23):
Wow, I bet that was freeing.

Speaker 10 (11:26):
Oh I love getting in the show and washing my head.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Yeah, or feeling your scalp through your short Why did
you have them for so long? Rose?

Speaker 10 (11:35):
Just because it was just I felt it was just
a part of me.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
Okay, and that was your thing. You'd laid it on
the line. You're going to be Rows with dreads and
you're going to stick with us.

Speaker 7 (11:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (11:46):
No, I've chopped them off now.

Speaker 2 (11:48):
No, but where's you? But when you had them, you think, well,
that's me. I'm going to stick with them for twenty
five years.

Speaker 10 (11:53):
Yep.

Speaker 14 (11:54):
Wow, I was.

Speaker 10 (11:55):
Going to have them for life. I was going to
die with them. But oh, I just they got too
heavy and my arms are old and blah blah blah.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
Did they keep getting longer or just thicker.

Speaker 10 (12:08):
Longer?

Speaker 15 (12:09):
Wow?

Speaker 10 (12:10):
Actually, to be honest, they got a little bit center
towards the end. I guess that was my I've.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
Got so many questions. If you've got questions for rosa
dreadsticks them through, I've got so many questions. How many
were there?

Speaker 16 (12:24):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (12:25):
Cracky?

Speaker 15 (12:26):
Well?

Speaker 10 (12:26):
I did them myself, and there's a little story. Can
I quickly tell you about it? I wonder I was
talking to a homeless man and I said, I've always
wanted to have dreads and he said, if I put
the first one in for you, will you go home
and do the rest? And I did?

Speaker 2 (12:46):
What are there? In twenty yeah five?

Speaker 6 (12:52):
Matt?

Speaker 2 (12:53):
Well, I forgot a way other questions. Was your scout
all wrinkley and ruined or it was co back to normal?

Speaker 10 (13:02):
It was always normal?

Speaker 2 (13:04):
But does the does the way do the dreads not
pull them and make it all the skin crinkled at
the top of your head?

Speaker 10 (13:11):
Non Christian.

Speaker 2 (13:14):
Well, because I know some of they had really long dreads,
and she had them all cut off in it, and
she looked terrible.

Speaker 10 (13:21):
Because of what the because.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Of the weight of them all. I thought, Oh.

Speaker 10 (13:28):
No, that didn't happen to me. I've still got beautiful scalp.

Speaker 2 (13:33):
Okay, so it's not all crinkled. No, sorry, I don't
call it a crinkled head. Rose. What did you do
with them? Did you give them to cancer people? Or
what did you do with them?

Speaker 12 (13:45):
No? I am.

Speaker 17 (13:48):
You?

Speaker 2 (13:49):
Did you burn them?

Speaker 12 (13:50):
No?

Speaker 18 (13:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (13:51):
Burning here?

Speaker 2 (13:52):
Oh I love the smell. I love the smell of
burning here. Yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:57):
Oh you think you sausage?

Speaker 18 (14:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (14:01):
No, I like it. Okay. I would have just shaved them.
Is that what you do? Just cut them off?

Speaker 19 (14:05):
No?

Speaker 10 (14:05):
I cut them off, and I've got about a mich
yeah here, or yes, I've got another thing to say, Marcus. Yeah,
this is what a great week for the chit chat.

Speaker 18 (14:18):
I listened to.

Speaker 10 (14:21):
The twenty four.

Speaker 20 (14:22):
Seven Okay, okay, but you might anyone that anyone that
doesn't sleep I worry about if you're saying twenty four seven,
that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
I do Nana not though, Yeah, okay, and how long
ago did you cut off your twenty five years worth
of here?

Speaker 10 (14:42):
That's about a month and a half ago.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
You must feel so light and free as your wavy
here around I do well everywhere. Do you wish you're
done up ten years ago?

Speaker 21 (14:56):
No?

Speaker 10 (14:59):
No, I'm quite happy now.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Well, very good? Right, thank you for all that, Thank
you for everything, Rose rest in question. Thank you, Marcus.
I just clicked as to what a busman's holiday is.
I'm not a lot younger than you, and love leguage
in the origin and meaning of voids and phrases. I've
heard that most of my life. Could someone ring me
up just because I'm interested? Could someone ring me up

(15:21):
and tell me examples of busman's holidays that they have had.
It would be like here, what's the example of a
busman's holiday. It's got quite a hard thing to describe,
isn't it. High Pam, it's Marcus.

Speaker 22 (15:39):
Welcome, Hello Marcus.

Speaker 23 (15:41):
In the nineteen seventies, we were living in Lautoka, and
you know we're there.

Speaker 19 (15:49):
Yes, yes, that's right.

Speaker 23 (15:51):
And my husband took our two little boys to the
hairdresser and they all came home with knits. And he
never in all his long life. He died six years
ago when he was in his late seventies. He never
ever went near a hairdresser again. He brought himself a

(16:13):
decent pair of scissors. He used to take my mirror
off my dressing table, set into the bathroom and cut
his own hair. I don't know how he did it.
It always looked neat and tidy. It was like a
short back and sides kind of guy. That's sort of

(16:33):
man he was. You could never have told that he
was cutting words his own hair.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
I'm loving this story, And I'll tell me something, Pam.
Because the children didn't get the nuts at the hairdresser.

Speaker 7 (16:45):
Or they did, Yeah, they did, they did.

Speaker 23 (16:49):
And the house girl was we put stuff in the
kids hair and in my husband's here too, and the
kids sat on the veranda with a house girl and
she would pack all the dead knits out of their
hair like a mother mun key.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
Goodness, to do it, Yes, to do it. So your
husband went to get his haircut, and as the kids
went to get the haircut, and they came back with it,
don't you think they might have had knits before they
went to get the haircut?

Speaker 22 (17:21):
No?

Speaker 23 (17:22):
No, because no, how would.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
You get to the headresser or a barber.

Speaker 23 (17:28):
Well, it was just that kind of hair dresser, I suppose.
I don't think it was a very hygienic hairdresser.

Speaker 2 (17:35):
Okay, please discuss people. I've never heard anyone getting it's
at the headresser. But it was a good story. I
like your husband cutting his own hair. But wow, wow,
good save Marcus on the twenty fur hour thing. I thought, so,

(17:56):
Marcus is a fireman. We were called out towards sitting
the late hours up the Topal road, going up the
Titties to the Okoda Hill, where we came upon a
boat sitting on their own halfway up. Never found it,
how far the vehicle drilling got before they knew, took
a photo of it. Our turnout was Minor Fim and
Noel Napier. All of this is good, get in touch, funny.

(18:19):
I've always heard that ad for kiddards and they never
even thought they were trailers. So there we go. I've
learned a lot tonight. And is that good to that guy?
Of course he went to kindards cheap as it was
an interesting call. What wow? Like it from a different age.

(18:40):
Here's an interesting text? Marcus, me, old mate, what's your
what's your weekly schedule? I hear you from time to
time and enjoy the bend. It's just eight to twelve.
It's pretty standard. Marcus. I'm a twenty eight year woman.
Had been cutting my hair most of my adult life.
I was thirteen when I got the worst hair cut

(19:01):
of my life. Left the heaters are crying, and decided
I would not go back. People can't tell they do
it my get in touch Marcus till twelve, Marcus, can
you please yess though? When the Aurora Australis happens tonight,
and I'm wanting people with exams of busmen's holidays, they
might be you know, have you ever been on a
busman's holiday? That's really what I'm asking you about. How

(19:24):
to see the Aurora tonight. There's an article and you
see an a herald. You need to be south of
a town or city with a clear horizon to the south,
like a coastline or a top of the hill. So
it looks like it will be good tonight, But I
don't know. I'll you know, if there's any photos of it.
I think it's quite a high likelihood there will be

(19:44):
the Aurora tonight. So that's what I just go to
the website page Aurora Australis on Facebook twenty five to
nine altogether. Now do you cut your own hair? And
how does that work out for you? And there was
other bustman's holiday. What are examples? Have you've been on
a busman's holiday? I'm trying to think of examples to

(20:08):
make it clearer, but I can't think of any off
the top of that top of your head. It's like
I suppose, like if you're a nurse. I know that's
not really the same thing as it. Well, maybe if
you like working, if you're a chef and you go
If you're a chef and you go and hire a

(20:30):
batch or something and then you go to the beach
and then all your relatives dropping and you end up
cooking for them more, then that's a bustman holiday because
you're doing what you do is your job. I think
that's pretty much how it works. Sure, Stephen, it's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 5 (20:47):
Oh, good evening, Marcus. I'd just like to tell him
my impression of a bust one's holiday.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
Yes, good, please, thank you.

Speaker 5 (20:56):
As a professional driver, he could be a long haul
distance driver carrying freight from the one end of the
North Island to the other or perhaps a bus driver
that will be driving, say from Auckland to Germany and

(21:17):
uh and has a cup of coffee or whatever, hops
from the bus cut that's coming back to Auckland again
and that's it. But on the weekends for entertainment, he'll
drive his private car long distances.

Speaker 2 (21:38):
So yeah, and I think I think the concept is
the theory of a busman holiday is you end up
on a holiday doing what you do all week that
you do, end up doing your job.

Speaker 5 (21:47):
That's that's one way to describe it.

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Yeah, yeah, okay, I'm looking for more examples that say
thank you, that's okay. Well, if you're a fireman on
a Christmas outing and your bus catches fire, that's a
busman holiday. Well what about if I won't say that,
but fancy someone saying, Marcus me, old mate, what you
weekly said?

Speaker 9 (22:09):
You all?

Speaker 2 (22:10):
So, I only been doing this slot for a bit,
for about a decade, We'll not quite that long. I'll
give you a busman's holiday. Cutting your own hair? Who
does it? Is it something as you get older you
tend to end up doing cutting your own hair. I
suppose there's great things on timu to cut your own hair.

(22:31):
Is there like a Flowbie. I don't want to go
into nostalgia because she's a cruel mistress. But for most
of us, we stopped cutting our own hair after our
parents had those those things that were like a comb

(22:54):
with a razor blade and a child of the seventies,
and they were dreadful. There was one that was like
a comb, and there was one that was like a
double sot. I can still feel the pain. Do you
remember those? And they just riped their hair out. What

(23:17):
are they called? What were they called? It wasn't a
flowby the floby was one you put onto the vacuum cleaner.
But some of this will ring true with some people.
It's terrible. It was a terrible, terrible thing. I don't
know what was called, but geez were they They were

(23:38):
a disaster, absolute disaster. The Comet four and one safety haircutter.
I'll bang that on Facebook and you can have a
bit of a look at that, because man oh man,
and I think for most of us that put us

(24:00):
off home haircuts for twenty years, because that would be
the most painful thing that was ever under any one.

Speaker 10 (24:06):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
I mean, obviously I'll exaggerate but I don't want to
belittle people's pain. But you know what I'm saying, get
in touch. Marcus till twelve. Bang this on your Facebook frippery.
Would you undan say something like, oh, painful just looking

(24:28):
at it? Ooh, who needs time travel when you can
go back to the pain in the seventies. We're just
looking at this. Yeah, it was terrible. It was like
a It was like a rounded square piece of plastic
with combs at each end and razor blades. The comet Putton.
It was a torture device. Dan, it was a torture device. Ooh, Steve,

(24:54):
it's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 19 (24:56):
Yeah, they're called hair magicians.

Speaker 2 (24:58):
You're a here magician.

Speaker 19 (24:59):
I've got a seat. I've got two sets here and
I use them occasionally just for a bit of trimming.
You got a good brain, new razor blade in them.
They work perfectly.

Speaker 2 (25:09):
Oh come on, yep.

Speaker 19 (25:12):
My granddadther used to use them for years and he
ain't never any trouble. But I've still got them here,
and they say you put a new a new razor
blade and they were just as good. Of course, hair magicians, because.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
There's one that there's one that's had the razor blade
on both sides. But the here, magician was more like
a comb, wasn't it.

Speaker 19 (25:33):
Yeah, it's a comb. Yeah, it's got to It just
has the just like an orninary comb. He just you
just put a rais, the handle comes to pieces, and
you just put a nice new sharp razor blade on.
They do it sounds like they just got a job
as that. When he got them more, they'd be at

(25:54):
least forty years old.

Speaker 2 (25:56):
You still got one there?

Speaker 24 (25:57):
Yeah, I got two of.

Speaker 19 (25:58):
Them, and they're still just as good as the tag on.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
How come you got two of them?

Speaker 19 (26:03):
Well, there's one that has a handle on it, like
an ordinary comb, and then there's one that's sort of
like a sort of a half round thing, a plastic,
very much plastically sort of half round thing with a
and it's got two it's got a number two and

(26:24):
a number three comb. You get one way, you get
a real short cut or a long cut?

Speaker 2 (26:32):
Okay, double sided? Steve? Do I call you Steve? Or
Steven Steve? Steve, I call Steve? Would you wit your here?

Speaker 19 (26:45):
No? No, I know you don't. You don't wait to
hear it. No, it wouldn't it wouldn't work.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
Then well I think sometimes to listen the pain we
wit our here before we got done with it.

Speaker 19 (26:58):
Okay, yeah, I suppose you could do. Yeah, your razor
blow wouldn't last as long.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
No, well yeah, well what star? What star are you pecking?

Speaker 19 (27:11):
I've got the numbers. I've got a number two here,
cut over. Okay, hey, they say they are local headresser.
Here he chooses FI twenty twenty five thirty dollars for
a number number two. I haven't had a number two
professionally for years.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
Okay, we'll find it very interesting, Steve, thank you for that. Mohammed,
It's Marcus. Welcome. Hi, markus Hei Mohammed.

Speaker 7 (27:42):
Hey, I'm a first caller, so I just started. You know,
I usually listen to the talk back because I'm an
uber drimer.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Thank you for your service, Muhammad with the ubers. But
anyway is.

Speaker 7 (27:55):
Yes, So with the haircuts, I think these days, what
I've noted in what I do myself is that it's
it's it's a very expensive. He is there to get
a haircut, and I'm thirty four years old, so I
usually I started getting my own haircut, and then one
day the wife saw me doing it and she said, well,

(28:15):
you know, we could just wat a couple of videos.
So I had a few bad haircuts, and then the
wise learned the trick and now she does my haircut
and she does the kids as well. So I mean
a standard haircut will cost you about twenty five to
thirty bucks these days, and if I go there along
with my four kids, it's going to cost over one
hundred dollars. So I bought the top end Trueman's haircuts

(28:36):
and all of that stuff, and it saves us a
lot of money. So these days it's I'd say it
wouldn't be about the age, but I think it's a
cost effective measure as well to do own your own haircuts.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Muhammad, Yes, did you say you had a check to
your wife and she watched a couple of videos.

Speaker 7 (28:59):
Yes, and we had a few bad haircuts. So in
the last five years I've been to a barber maybe
three or four times at the max.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
Wow, she's quite she quite happy to do it. She's
quite good at it.

Speaker 7 (29:15):
Yeah, she's learned it, of course. I mean we did
have a few, you know, bad ones that were not
really what we expected it to be. But then she
got better at the inn. So now she did the
perfect haircut.

Speaker 15 (29:29):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (29:30):
And it's the kids as well. So I've got four
kids and she does all of them. So once a
month she started all of them rather than me taking
them to the to the.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
Barm And what's the tool that you bought?

Speaker 7 (29:42):
So I went to the tour. I think it's called
Bliss or something. So it's a very I did paying.
I did go part of the basic ones, but the
twoty forty bucks were no limits or whatnot. We're not
really the great because I felt like they were pulling
the hair because when you go to the barber, they
just shave it, cut it. It's nice and smooth and
it doesn't pull anything. So I looked at the brand,

(30:03):
googled it up and I found a very good set
from from a hair company in Australia. It did cost
about I think it was about five to seven hundred dollars,
but man, it's the top end thing and it just
gets the hair like, you know, just goes habit.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Does she when she does you in the full?

Speaker 9 (30:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (30:23):
All the all the your children boys, yeah, all of
them boys? Yeah, Oh you're blessed. Does she just do
it with is it just shaving it quite short?

Speaker 18 (30:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (30:32):
Well, yeah, so it's it's got a sort of the
shaver and there's also a clipper, so we all she's
learned the fade cut. So it starts the basic one
and goes the way up and then the top and
the mirror top of the head or the hair she
just used sivil or even just hold it in the
hands or certainly that I want it to be so
it looks nice and cool, and we just use the

(30:53):
shaver to trimado rather than using a siver.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
Brilliant. You're saving the whole way, Marcus. I cut my
own hair. Got sick of paying huge made with head
dress and not anyway I asked for. Luckily, my hair
is curly, so forgiving. Just use my hobby scissors. I'd
love to have curly hair. Well, not really, but it'd
be fun to cut it, wouldn't it. Marcus. You can
buy the comb trimmer on Timu for two dollars forty eight.

(31:21):
Used to take me four hours to cut my hair
with thirty dollars. Warehouse clippers now have a one forty
rebington that takes ten minutes. Marcus. During covered lockdown, I
was desperate fory haircuts. I've got the kay Tel hair
magician out of storage my mother had since the seventies.
It's a raise a blade and to come. That's the
one a disaster. Can see why they stopped selling. Well, yes,

(31:44):
I kind of I kind of don't believe Stephen when
he says that it's not painful. Looks so Matt Paine's
got the poll for the shootout tomorrow at Bathurst is
out of interest to people Bathist. I suppose it's quite
good for time in the Nral finishes and Bathists on
its way. How are you going? People? My name is Marcus.

(32:05):
Welcome Heddle twelve oh eight hundred and eighty nine nine
to text Marcus, my partner cuts his ownly here and
has done for twenty years. Also, my nephew, who's twenty two,
told himself to cut his own hair during COVID and
got so good he now cuts all his mates here
as well. Marcus. On the subject of bustman's holiday, my

(32:26):
building mat took a bustman's holiday. He took three weeks
off his normal building job to go to and to
help his dad build a wollshit on his family farm.
Well that as a busman's holiday, Marcus, we're in the buller,
any side of the aurory, yet in the south. I'll
look it up. Guys arore Borealis. That's a great song,

(32:51):
that one you know that is It's old Neil Young,
isn't it. I'm on the website. Well, no one's posting
it yet. I don't think it's dark enough kind of
become a two topics show. Have you ever been on
a busman's holiday? And where are we with cutting your

(33:14):
own As you get older? Do you cut your own
hair more? Is it a thing? I can't quite while
I started cutting moment, I don't think I can be
bothered with the pilava of trying to book a place
to go and then going and having the chit chat.
I don't know if that's true. I'll have to run
that by myself. Actually think about that. They were just

(33:35):
becoming an isolator. Two for Tuesday, Dan, I've got two Simon's.
I'm going to Simon. It's Simon number one, Simon. It's Marcus.

Speaker 14 (33:49):
Good evening, Marcus, how are you good?

Speaker 2 (33:52):
Thank you? Simon?

Speaker 16 (33:53):
Oh good summon? Until vilmin I miss seen five and
I use on those What Steve was talking about. I
think it was it was sort of a flat blues
plus six thing and he had had the blades on
in the combs on two eends A and well, I

(34:14):
mean beginning getting most see i'd cut my fringe A
and ands you know it's to say it was my
fringe gone and such a good job.

Speaker 2 (34:26):
Did you do it yourself? Did you do it yourself?
For that age? You have it done for you?

Speaker 14 (34:31):
No?

Speaker 16 (34:31):
I didn't did hear the fringe A? And my mother
didn't use my I think because she probably thought they
might might be in my hut to say say she
just used the ornery.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
Barbers, But why wouldn't you use those things? I just
grabbed the hair and just yanked. It was terrible.

Speaker 16 (34:53):
I didn't I didn't notice it when you got just
maybe it's just why why I did it? Or something.

Speaker 2 (35:01):
Had the gift Simon, Thank you Simon number two. It's Marcus.
Good evening.

Speaker 15 (35:05):
Yeah, hi Marcus. Yeah, I cut my own hair too.

Speaker 2 (35:09):
You Yeah, I look smart?

Speaker 10 (35:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (35:13):
I So I have these little scissors, quite small ones,
and they're from France originally, but they're very sharp and
I find they're really handy to cut my hair.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
Are they cutting scissors?

Speaker 14 (35:30):
No?

Speaker 15 (35:31):
I actually bought them from a post office. Wow, And
they've been really good. And I just sort of use
a little handheld mirror and cut my hair like that.
And I haven't been to the barbers since twenty nineteen.

Speaker 2 (35:48):
Oh yeah, did you ever? Did you ever try and
cut your hair with the scissors from a Swiss army knife?
I've done that before.

Speaker 15 (35:54):
No, No, I wouldn't. I wouldn't. I guess it would
be wouldn't cut too well?

Speaker 16 (35:59):
Would it?

Speaker 2 (36:00):
Well, that's well scissors, it takes a long time. Ah right, yeah,
So why were you buying the scissors from the what's
the story there? Oh?

Speaker 15 (36:09):
So I was traveling. I was traveling in Germany and
I went into this post office and they had these
really nice little scissors that I could just sort of
fit into a purse or a pocket or something like that,
and so and they had a little cover on them
and nice and portable, and so I bought one of those.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
Yeah, And what cyber and what style do you go for?
It's the same every time, is it?

Speaker 25 (36:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (36:38):
Just sort of short back insides. I don't do like
a number one or number two or something, but just
fairly short. So I don't have to cut for about
three months.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
And it's all right to get around the back with
the small, tiny scissors from the post office.

Speaker 15 (36:53):
Yeah, yeah, it's actually it's very easy. Yeah. And I
just use a mirror to so I sort of have
a mirror in front of me that I lean against
the wall. It's a kind of full length mirror, and
then I sit down and have a little handheld mirror
that I then stick around the back of my head
and then I can see how it's cut at the back.

Speaker 2 (37:16):
Gosh, i'd my your honesty and your sense of self assuredness.

Speaker 15 (37:22):
Yeah, I sort of learned. I was always slightly disappointed
when I went to the barber. I wasn't always exactly
how I wanted it, and I'd have to then wait
another couple of months before I went next time. And
it was getting more and more expensive, and I thought,
and also COVID came and my hair was getting longer

(37:45):
and longer and longer. And then I saw this interview
with Nick Melbray, you know who started Zuru in Hong Kong.
They make toys. Oh yeah, and he was here in
New Zealand doing some marketing and he was being interviewed
and he said, and they asked him about something about

(38:08):
his hair or something. He said, oh, yeah, I cut
it myself. And I thought, oh, well, if he can
do it, and he's a wealthy entrepreneur and he does it,
so I can do it too.

Speaker 2 (38:18):
Goodness. Wow, the conversation went away. I didn't think it
was going to go cheap?

Speaker 15 (38:22):
Is okay?

Speaker 5 (38:24):
Wow?

Speaker 11 (38:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (38:27):
So yeah.

Speaker 2 (38:28):
I don't even know what I can say on the
beck of that.

Speaker 15 (38:31):
Okay, but they're really good scissors.

Speaker 2 (38:35):
Oh no, yeah, yeah? And what else can I ask you?
I think that's probably all, do you think? Oh? Yes, No.
I wondered this. I was wondering if you're going to
the barber's and getting your haircut right and you're always
disappointed yep. I wondered if that was your ability to
communicate with them, because you seem to be a good communicator.

Speaker 15 (38:58):
All right, Yeah, might have been. Yeah, sometimes it was good.
And at the time I would probably I would feel
over my head to see if it was all the
lengths that I wanted it, and it would seem all
right at the time, and then I would get home
and i'd show my wife and she'd say, oh, they

(39:18):
missed that bit.

Speaker 2 (39:19):
Oh wow, what And did you think I get your
wife to cut it.

Speaker 15 (39:26):
No, I decided to do it myself because then I
can do it exactly how I want. And then she
might just do a little bit to touch up at
the end. She would have a look and see if
there was any bits I missed. And I'm getting better
and better at it, and so I don't have to
get her to do it so much.

Speaker 2 (39:45):
Now, lovely your talks. I've enjoyed that Muchly fourteen past nine.
Cutting your own hair, Wow free in touch with himself? Simon,
isn't he is everything Mirc's I can't cut my own
here after a few drinks with the kitchen, says is often,
but always have to go. I cut my own here
after a few drinks with the kitchen, says often, but

(40:06):
always have to go get it fixed by the professionals.
Love your show, I think that's I think that's common.
I think we get sick of our hair. We jump
in from them and we cut it and it's never good.
Marcus good evening fifty nine. Now cutting my ownly hair
since eighteen use a wall clipper Wahl with a number
one comb attachment. Can't go wrong, all even all over.

(40:27):
Saved a lot of money over the years. One thing
that's spugged me for years is why the sausage rolls
are so small. Surely you want them to be three
times the length? Always felt short? Done by with them?
Do my own now black pudding sausage rolls. Nothing better?
Have a nice evening. Yes, I have a child, one

(40:48):
that's well occasionally like a pipe, the other one for
a sausage roll, and I have gone. There are a
lot of jumbo sausage rolls out there. Are you probably
getting any more meat to pastry ratio with a sausage
roll than you do get with the pie? I think
if I was involved in wanting to create something and
with branding, the pies have been done to death, I

(41:12):
would try and get in there with a gourmet sausage roll.
Of course the cornish pesty, which you know I love,
And I think there's a there's a missing area there.
I think if someone could get involved with that and
get a good name for it, like the I don't
know what a good name for sausage roll would be,
but I think there's a real there's a real spot
in the pie warmer for you. But a funny branding

(41:34):
go a bit viral? Areb be a license to print money.
There's no difference in a pie and a pie. I mean, look,
we had every d on the pie with the pie
woulds we've got We've got pies like this, no tomorrow.
But the sausage roll. You could name any brands of pies.
You could name Kai pies or singers or anyone. Name

(41:55):
one brand of sausage roll. Marcus, My auntie Ruby reckons
that we're back to front. We go hard on sunscreen,
hot summer's days for prediction and sunrays. You would go
sight seeing at night to see the aurora also sun raised,
no protection. Get in touch, Marcus till twelve metthew good evening.

Speaker 13 (42:14):
Hey, Marcus, I was just listening about the sausage roll.
But the pasti, you know, the cornish pasti they used
to have. The miners used to have sweet and savory
in the same pasti, and the crust was thick, so
their black hands could hold the top bit of the
crust and eat the savory, then the sweet, then just

(42:37):
chuck it away.

Speaker 2 (42:39):
So how did they do that?

Speaker 13 (42:41):
Well, so the top of the pasti right, They used
to make it so that the wife or the partner
would make it and the pasty was half of savory
and half was sweet. So when they're down in the
and then the crust, the top crust was thick. You
never ate the top bit. You might eat around to

(43:03):
your fingers because they were all coalie and dird.

Speaker 2 (43:06):
That's right, that's right.

Speaker 13 (43:07):
Chuck it away.

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Yeah, so you have the you have the savory, but
first in the apple pie in the bit that's the
like the rhine.

Speaker 13 (43:14):
Get rid of that and then you just throw it away.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
Yes, Now if someone in New's in and started to
develop those like.

Speaker 13 (43:22):
That, would I think it could be a game changer.

Speaker 2 (43:25):
Total game changer TCG.

Speaker 13 (43:27):
Total game changer, because you get you get the pudding,
the meat and then the pudding in one dish. So
you could do it like you could do a sauce
and then may be a cream like you know the
squeezy sauces. You could do the squeeze sauce and in
the in another packet have the cream for this for

(43:49):
the sweet.

Speaker 2 (43:52):
Here cut and story.

Speaker 13 (43:55):
Used to do my own. Now I've grown the top out,
so I don't do it anymore. I go to a barber.
But I used to do the well and I used
to do the one and then the one and a
half and two and do the fade with the mirror
two mirrors. But yeah, gave up because I like the
long hair now because it's it's fashionable, and I put
the pomade in and it looks good.

Speaker 2 (44:16):
What's fashionable now?

Speaker 13 (44:18):
Well, the I've got the long hair on top and
the fade on the side.

Speaker 2 (44:24):
Well, unsymmetrical.

Speaker 13 (44:26):
Well it's sort of yeah, unsymmetrical.

Speaker 2 (44:28):
But that's terrible.

Speaker 13 (44:30):
No, it's good. It's it's what's in Marcus?

Speaker 2 (44:34):
What's it again?

Speaker 13 (44:36):
So you've got the Yeah, it's like the buzz it's
not the buzz cut. The buzz cuts out. The buzz
cuts out. I used to do my own hair.

Speaker 2 (44:46):
Do you look like? Do you look like? Let me
think who you might look like.

Speaker 13 (44:56):
Um, well, it's really long. Well it's not really long,
like it's about maybe three or four inches on the
top of my head. Because I've got here and I've
faded the site.

Speaker 2 (45:09):
Like Jim Carey and dumb and dumber.

Speaker 13 (45:13):
Yeah, a bit better than Jim Carrey.

Speaker 2 (45:15):
Okay, I'll try and visualize that. I appreciate that. Matthew.
Thank you. By the way, the aurora is going off now,
someone's text me I'm on the website. There's sh sights
of purpleness at Blackhead Beach. There's sights of color and
the sky at Papamoa. There's sites unedited at Castle Hill, Canterbury.

(45:38):
People are saying go now. People are saying go now.
I just text home. So the Aurora's on, guys. So
the aurora. There's a lot of action with the aurora.
If you want some, if you've got it. And by

(46:00):
the way, I've got the comet next week. If you've
seen the aurora, let us know how that is. Talk
about cutting your own hair and says Marcus went to
the mall for a walk and haircut seventy one dollars.
Then he fell over. He should wear a helmet. Good evening,
Stuart's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 26 (46:16):
Hello Marcus. You're just bringing back some really bad memories
about things flaming haircuts, aren't you. As soon as I
started mentioning, sorry raiser one, sorry raiser one, I.

Speaker 2 (46:28):
Care I can still remember that pain?

Speaker 26 (46:32):
I yeah, I didn't think I could until you mentioned it.
And also the other one where my grandfather, you know,
it was like a proper haircutting tool and then he
had squeeze it with his hand.

Speaker 2 (46:46):
Wow.

Speaker 26 (46:46):
And it would cut your hair, well, it would pull
it out more than cut it. And you know we
advanced from that. Years later we went we went the
whole hot. My brother used to cut my hair with
his hand piece, with the shearer's hand piece.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
That's a great thing to do. Ah, you mate, Can
I just say that I don't just remember the pain
of that comet haircutter. I can also remember the sound
because it was so close to your ear. There was
that sound of their hair sort of tearing, had a
really distinctive sound to it.

Speaker 26 (47:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm going to have night nears.

Speaker 14 (47:26):
Want to get under night.

Speaker 17 (47:27):
Where are you?

Speaker 2 (47:28):
Is that weird noise?

Speaker 26 (47:31):
I'm going to try just a truck tonight and every
now and again it's stop us. The the of the
e roads makes a really strange noise. Okay, and you
know it's really quite hard to listen to us.

Speaker 16 (47:46):
Again.

Speaker 2 (47:47):
I'll get some mechanics to diagnose that. Thank you for
the call. Get in touch, Marcus till twelve oh way
one hundred and eighty Toda eighty and nineteen nine detext Marcus.
The two flavored sweet and savory pies were called clangers.
Oh is that right as the corners PESTI clanger must be.
Where was iden when I got a cornish pie? Where

(48:10):
was I with the kids? Something I speak about down
like is my wife a.

Speaker 9 (48:17):
Now?

Speaker 2 (48:17):
Where was I with the kids? And there was a
lot of cornish? Was it a woemd? I think there
was cornish pesties at woman was a woe mad? Where
were we when I thought, gee, it's it's a real
cornish PESTI day I'm going to mention that'd be it's

(48:38):
more like vegetarian food there, Ah, No, I know where
it was. It was the Kumu Feir was a kumu
a MP show. That's exactly where it was where we
saw Zalizniek. Height of my holiday didn't ever corny pesty

(49:02):
though it's taller than I thought he'd be. I've put
because that's elastic. That's when the Warriors were there were
that's before they had the next season. That's throw at
the top of the hit parade. It's a great show,
the Cooma show. But yeah, a lot of cornershe you
had one for lunch, had the old man there and
Vanicsa's but we're all there. It was a great day there.

(49:24):
The cornish pesty. That's right, there was a company that
was specially We'll have to book that in for next year. Wade,
It's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 17 (49:31):
Ay right, I'm just the aurora. Anyone listening that's in
messin there? Okay, yeah, pretty bloody beautiful.

Speaker 2 (49:43):
Yeah, thanks for coming through. So I'm a slightly I'm
a slightly experienced aurora guy. But a lot of the
images you see are on cell phones and are adopted.
But you can see it with your naked eye now a.

Speaker 17 (50:02):
Kind of but you need you're faild, like on dark
mode to like as you see the colors, but you
can tell the difference in the sky.

Speaker 2 (50:09):
Okay.

Speaker 17 (50:10):
So at the moment there's like to the right of me,
it's like dark, you know, dark sky. Yeah, and then
but as you go south and it kind of lightens
up and that's where the aurora is. You can see
did you.

Speaker 2 (50:23):
Go out did you go out of town for it?
Or you're are you in the are you in the
countryside anyway?

Speaker 17 (50:29):
Oh, I'm just in the front yard looking.

Speaker 2 (50:31):
Oh okay, oh well, okay, well okay, I'm seeing shots
now people are seeing it and Tikopeter and the Wacato
so people sing it. There's shots of it in Middleway,
so people seem to be seeing it everywhere, but it's
hard from the images to know if that's with the
naked aisle with cameras.

Speaker 17 (50:48):
Yeah, yeah, it's probably just cameras here because the other night,
not last night, the night before there was you could
almost almost just say it was the naked eye. Like
you could tell the difference, the color difference in the
sky between where it goes black to where it is near. Yeah,
it goes white.

Speaker 2 (51:07):
So are you seeing lights like search light beams or
you seeing pinks and purples?

Speaker 17 (51:13):
There's been purple so far. You'll go yeah, well it
goes from like, it goes in different shades. So when
you're like, I'm just looking at me phone, nere so
it goes dark and then pine of goes blue, then
it goes into a purple, then it goes white.

Speaker 2 (51:30):
Okay, yeah, oh, I appreciate you coming through. I'm looking
at the Facebook page now and it's going it's going
off for everyone's posting now from the last two minutes,
so there's nothing twenty seven minutes ago, but the last
three minutes I've got images from Pocacohy Motawaka Lake White
and Upper Littleton Breaker, bay Den of RK Fottapoo, Tasman Lake, Catpedal,

(52:02):
christ Church, Porthills, North Canterbury. So it's just coming on guys.
Thanks Wade, really appreciate that tokof. I've said that Mudaway,
so's she's on. She's a happening thing. That's the aurora
to get in touch, Marcus till twelve, the aurora cutting
your own hair in Busman's holidays. There is something different

(52:25):
you want to mention. Those topics are not exclusive. You
want to put something else into the mix. Good Cornish
pasties and I've if anyone out there is entrepreneurial, if
you started to make your own sausage roll with a
catchy name and so, it'll come back to me in

(52:45):
five years, I'll be multimillionaires. They say, oh no, I
just was one Friday night at home like that suggestion
of yours. Because the whole market is just done tapped.
No one's ever done a branded sausage role. I don't
know what you'd call it, but that's a challenge. You

(53:11):
have to come up with some pun. I don't know
what that pun is. It's not my company. Maybe like
Sally's sausage roll or I mean that's just alliteration. I
think you do need the word sausage in there because

(53:32):
everyone knows what a sausage roll is. That's just I mean,
this is just sounded like an episode of the Office.
Nineteen away from ten Marcus till twelve get in touch
Cornish paste at the UK shop in Milson, Palmston, North
Date when I bought a pork pie. I guess what
I'll get tomorrow. You are our food influencer. Cindy Marcus,

(53:53):
when I was a kid, mumbled offrom make Cornish pesties
for picnics. I now wonder if it was additional recipe
handed down as her mother's grandmother immigrated from Cornwall alone.
Back in late eighteen hundreds, Marcus. I had a pasty
for dinner tonight from Sheffield Pie Shop. Yummy. I used
to cut my late husband's here on a number two.

(54:16):
One time I had the protector off to weaving up
the back until actity shaved a big wide strip up
the back. I never told him and no one else did.
That's pretty much the complete text, Nikki. We need to
say lead that all you need to finish head off
by saying, you've just seen the Aurora and you're in astronomer,

(54:37):
so it's a bit of a bustman's holiday. That would
be the complete text. Someone wants to know, Marcus, what
do salons, barbershops, and haired dresses do with all the
hair they cut? I wonder if anybody ever asked to
take their cut heir with them, someone will let us

(54:58):
know what headresses do with their old hair. I'd be
curious to know. I did a bit of a deep
dive into hair because one of my boys had long
hair and decided to cut it all off. And I
think we saved it for you know, you can save
it for people that want wigs and stuff for cancers

(55:19):
and cancers and things. But I told them that most
of the world's here comes from India. A little bit
of research on that. And there's this massive, great tip
outside one of the cities and there's people. Yes I'm

(55:44):
not saying it's a tip because it's but it's a
place where they said all they rubbish and people live
there and a lot of people will go and retrieve
human hair from combs and stuff. It's like it's an industry.
It's extraordinary and extraordinary harrowing with their lives and how
much how little money they go on and they clean

(56:05):
it all up and that became sold around the world
for wigs, but most of us just scavenged. Well, I
couldn't believe it anyway. For more information than you acquired, Hi,
Thomas Marcus.

Speaker 7 (56:20):
Welcome, Yeah, okay, Marcus.

Speaker 14 (56:23):
I'm just let you know where he used to do
my hair.

Speaker 3 (56:27):
After I cut it.

Speaker 19 (56:28):
I used to cut possums back in the days, and
I used to check them with me.

Speaker 3 (56:32):
Possum fur.

Speaker 7 (56:35):
Looked exactly like it, and they would know he's mede hundred.

Speaker 2 (56:41):
Wow. But making thick your socks with that stuff.

Speaker 14 (56:45):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it could be.

Speaker 4 (56:48):
We we were in my here right now.

Speaker 18 (56:50):
Very good.

Speaker 2 (56:51):
Appreciate that.

Speaker 12 (56:51):
Tom.

Speaker 18 (56:51):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (56:53):
There you go, no different from possum fur. Wow. Marcus.
Have a photo of me going over a big jump
on my horse at the Kumu A and P show
and nine sixty with a train going by in the background.
Great memories now eighty. Thank you for wonderful program with Cheryl. Well, Cheryl,

(57:15):
you've got my attention. Is the train in the background
a steam train or a diesel train? Veronica at Marcus welcome,
Hi Veronica.

Speaker 24 (57:29):
Hello, I just wanted to let you know that my
husband now we're married for seventy two and a half years,
and I always cut his hair and South Africa then
he was a new clander and I used to go
home every five years to South Africa with him, and

(57:52):
I used to go down my hair set by my cousin,
and my husband used to go to the marber shop
next door and the barbersholp. When he saw my husband,
he said, good as gracious, do you wait for five
years before you have your next day? It was always

(58:14):
a joke.

Speaker 2 (58:15):
Wow, which country did you meet him?

Speaker 24 (58:19):
He came to say, I'm going to be miss mad
at the wedding in our surprisemaid.

Speaker 2 (58:24):
Oh, what a delightful story. And did you were you
good at cutting as here?

Speaker 24 (58:31):
Yes, yes I was. I've set my own day too.
I've got a hand in a dressing.

Speaker 2 (58:39):
Wow, I'd like to see what it looked like. Thank
you so very much for coming through, Veronica. Oh eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty Marcus Cody here, just listen
to the last caller. Do we consider the kids wanting
to be with the father and obviously not the mother
if I was a kidnet situation wanted to leave, I would.
Tom doesn't have the kids light up tied up on
a lead. Wow, Marcus Victor from Huntley, but off topic,

(59:03):
but I'm being more and more crossed about the Navy
managing sink a ship for no apparent obvious reason. It's
just not acceptable. Great show tonight, Marcus. Now that I'm
getting older, the thing I do more is shave my
ear here lull Joe Connor. Marra has sailed again tonight.

(59:23):
Thanks for the information. It's back starting to pick the
now twelve aen and depict them. Chase, its Marcus. Good
evening and welcome.

Speaker 17 (59:32):
Hey mate, how's going good?

Speaker 2 (59:34):
Thanks Chase.

Speaker 27 (59:37):
I just want to touch on the text from Cody.
You don't really give it much, but I sort of
agree with his comment. What makes you think that the
kids don't necessarily want to be with the mother and
the sort of happy being with the father.

Speaker 2 (59:55):
Oh, the kids have to go to school and stuff
like that. He's what he's done.

Speaker 11 (01:00:00):
But you saw the.

Speaker 27 (01:00:00):
Video, Mate, they weren't They weren't. How Foster during his
thing it sort of looked like they were romans.

Speaker 18 (01:00:06):
Really?

Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
Oh yeah, I mean.

Speaker 27 (01:00:12):
Take it with a grain of salt. But I mean,
the video is the video, and you've got to look
at all angles or do you not do you just
have to take what the mother is freely saying, because
if you it's it's it's touch and goes. There's a
lot of people just on the mother's side. But if you,
if you look at the whole.

Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
I think you're on the side of the of the
law and following what the police.

Speaker 27 (01:00:37):
And you can't just.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Take your kids into the bush for three you know
you can't do that. That's no one agrees that's a
good thing to do.

Speaker 27 (01:00:48):
No, no, no, I don't think it's.

Speaker 2 (01:00:50):
And the guys the guy's been involved in crimes allegedly
with guns and firearms and hold ups and stuff like that.
He's got a rifle. You're aware of all that sort
of stuff, aren't you.

Speaker 27 (01:01:02):
Yeah, yeah, one hundred percent. I've been sort of following
it with us. You know, you have you got kids,
Uh no, mate, a little bit, a little bit young.

Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
But getting there, okay, because I reckon probably if you
had kids and your partner had a firearm and was
committing crimes and stealing vehicles and taking your kids into
the bush, for three years. You probably wouldn't think, oh, well,
it's up to them. They probably think it's probably you know,
it's their choice. They look quite happy.

Speaker 27 (01:01:32):
Look, look, look one hundred percent agrees with here, and
I see where you're coming from.

Speaker 2 (01:01:38):
Okay, thanks Chase Bobbitt's Marcus, welcome, good evening, Ning, Marcus.

Speaker 3 (01:01:46):
That call you just said previous he kept on saying
one hundred percent and jeez, come on, might have a
think about it. If he was that kid that was dragged,
well even that video footage or he's wrong. The father
was walking fast almost two three meters in front of
his kids. He's running, he is, and you had to

(01:02:08):
do that for three years. Come on, mate, tears. You
know you need both parents. And what he's gone about
it is so selfish, self sended of noxious. I mean,
those poor kids dragging three meters behind him, and I
think he's following them with a lot of false accusations.

(01:02:31):
For those kids to keep following him and for him
to walk that far in front of the kids is
telling me he done, and with a rifle as well.
I think the police have to do take this seriously
in the way that they are approaching it in a
way where they'll be going quite stealthy about it. I'd

(01:02:52):
imagine they've probably got guys sitting and there they're just
sitting quietly waiting.

Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
Yeah, yeah, look I am. Yeah, it's funny. You and
I can see those shots and looks terrifying, but for
someone else can see it looks. I think there's a
lot of people on social media, on Facebook pages with
their own reckons and misinformation, and I think it's I
think it's become one of those stories that's become quite politicized,

(01:03:18):
with everyone having all sorts of takes about separations and steak.

Speaker 3 (01:03:25):
You'll say it gets down to the law.

Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
Yeah, that's that would be my take. And and yeah,
and I can't particularly another guy that said he knows
where they are, and I said, well go for the wars.
I don't know where they are. So there's a lot
of kind of bluster and misinformation about it as well.

Speaker 3 (01:03:43):
Yes, and I think a lot of it. You know,
to have that, you've got to text the other night
with a person's saying, come on, Marcus, the kids are
all right. Let person that round me up too. That
comes through you know, those kids have been filled with
rubbish for and I when the kids do find out

(01:04:03):
the truth, wouldbout what's been happening. Three isn't their life
taken away from the mother and other loved ones, not
just a mother, you know, there's a there's a I
think there's another sibling, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:16):
I don't know. Yeah, I mean, I think there's a
lot of information you're not privy to, and nor should
we be, because it's a family court thing and you
can't you know, And of course you can't publicize that
stuff because the kids the kids and mine is so
you can't know about that stuff. But I mean, it's funny, Bob,
because we've got the situation with the ship that's gone
down off Samoa, and we've got the situation here and

(01:04:37):
the texts I get from people I've seen such and
such on the internet. So people are not following the news.
They're getting all sorts of kind of speculative stuff which
they just believe. And it's kind of dangerous because it
fixed people's views.

Speaker 3 (01:04:52):
It's probably even affect in the way that the police
want to approach it as well.

Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
Yeah, yeah, I mentioned you're probably right.

Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
Yeah, So they don't want to go in and go
home knowing that he's armed, and he's very volatile the way,
especially not communicating with anyone if he is communicating with
a family members letting this happen. And I hope they
will get the full length of the law as well.

Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
He's such a rare and difficult terrain, un known to
rain to try and to try and apprehend someone with
a firearm, and so the children aren't so the children
don't have to see what's going on. Also, it's an
unbelievably difficult you know. I was a bit the same.
I thought, geez, surely the police did to get there

(01:05:42):
and sort out, until I thought about or someone told
me what a difficult scenario it is, And it really is.
It's very complex.

Speaker 3 (01:05:50):
Yeah, and I think they're biggest, Like say I, they've
got a team sitting in there waiting and just slowly
maneuvering their way in without trying to make him be
vulnerable and the kids. But I hope it gets sorted
out soon.

Speaker 2 (01:06:06):
Nice to hear. Nice to hear from you, Bob. Thank you.
Oh well, my googling's taken over. I've googled up all
the images of it. The Bedford shick clanger. That's the
kind of the corner capacity which has got your main
meal in your dessert, and the same thing looks fantastic.
So I'm certainly going to make those reckon. I could
even have a stall at the Kumu show with a

(01:06:26):
Bedford chicklanger. Someone says, Vira text to but off your
current topic. But I'm appalled and saddened that the human
being could shoot the mother and pup sea lions and
the catlands. The New Zealand Sea Lion Trust is asking
for the nations or produce a reward for information leading
to a successful prosecution. That was ghastly. Sort yourselves out, people, now,

(01:06:46):
he's an exciting story that I will share with you.
British explorer Sandy Irvine's remains are found on Everest, one
hundred years after he and George Mallory were last seen
on the summit. But do they prove of the doomed
peer were first to summit the peak, so they found

(01:07:09):
the bodies of Mallory. Well, they've found the body of
Mallory's climbing partner Everest climber Sandy Irvine, his foot encased
in boot and sock bearing his initials are discovered inside
the boot. One hundred years after he vanished near the
peak of the world's highest mountain. He disappeared, aged twenty two,

(01:07:33):
with his climbing partner Mallory in June nineteen twenty four.
It was found on Everest Central Wrong Book Glacier, below
the mountain's north face and at lower altitude than where
Mallory's remains were discovered in nineteen ninety nine. Incredibly, his

(01:07:56):
remains were identified by the name stitched into a sock
ac Irvine. His middle name was common Wow. I don't
think they'll be troof that they've got to the top,
though some experts believe that Irvine and Mallory might have
actually achieved their goal before perishing, because they were last

(01:08:17):
seen eight hundred foot from the summit. A small team
sent by a national geographic might be the same guy,
I think Jimmy Chin that did the movie on l Cap.
They made the discovery recently and the remains are now

(01:08:39):
in the position of the China to Bit Mountaineering Association.
Pretty significant find. So there we go. That's the latest
there on that one. That's an exciting story and a
conclusion to that children in the bush with their father
desperately need socialization with their own peers. Isolation with just

(01:09:03):
family is no different to isolation in prison. Human hair
can be fed to worms and a wormb farm. That's
good information. Thank you for that, Pauline. It's Marcus. Good evening,
and welcome. Hi Pauline.

Speaker 11 (01:09:18):
Hello Marcus. When they found George Mallory's body, the photograph
of his wife was missing. The photograph was to be
put at the top of Mount Everest. Wow, wow, right there,
and that isn't a book.

Speaker 14 (01:09:36):
And okay, I believe.

Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
He got to the top there. I'm going to do
a bit of research on that during the news because
I hadn't heard that, Pauline. So thanks very much that information.
We'll talk more about that after the news. Yeah, do
they have, Pauline, Did they have cameras with them? No, no,
point is just gone. Would they have cameras in nineteen
twenty two or twenty eight? Nineteen twenty eight was it?

(01:10:04):
I'll find out. I look at a bit of research.
Ninet for good evening, sounder. It's Marcus.

Speaker 12 (01:10:09):
Welcome, good evening, Marcus. Oh you are going to take
my call. That's not very good because I have to
admit and friends of mine who are listening to make
sure that I do it that otherwise I'm not allowed
on their property again.

Speaker 2 (01:10:29):
What's going on? Back up the track? What's happening?

Speaker 12 (01:10:33):
I have to admit that I am the world's worst
reverser in a car, because now their WiFi, A little
bathing which is near the letter box is permanently bent
from me running over it, and the letter box is

(01:10:57):
now as skew. And I have a little scratch, a
couple of scratches on my car from the damn letter box.

Speaker 2 (01:11:06):
Wow, I know there's a lot of information to disentangle.
There were you reversing in or you're reversing out?

Speaker 12 (01:11:15):
I was reversing now.

Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Because you should reverse? And what car have you got?

Speaker 12 (01:11:24):
I've got a Mitsubishi cult Plus.

Speaker 2 (01:11:31):
See how wide it is? Has it got reversing cameras? No?

Speaker 12 (01:11:38):
No, I haven't got reversing camera.

Speaker 2 (01:11:42):
It's quite a narrow car. It looks like a Suzuki Swift.
Do they live? Why don't you pack the car on
the footpath?

Speaker 12 (01:11:50):
Well I could, but I have trouble. I've got a
really bad back on waiting surgery, double surgery, and it's
just walking up the very long driveway. It is a long,
long driveway marker, and it's very easy to sort of

(01:12:11):
go from side to side as you're reversing.

Speaker 2 (01:12:16):
Yeah, I couldn't stand that.

Speaker 12 (01:12:19):
Yeah. Yeah, I'm actually quite a good driver. I think
I'm a good driver, but it's just the driveway for
some reason I have trouble with.

Speaker 2 (01:12:31):
And now, how many times have you crashed.

Speaker 12 (01:12:38):
Twice?

Speaker 2 (01:12:40):
Okay?

Speaker 12 (01:12:42):
Yeah yeah on the leaderbox and wife over.

Speaker 2 (01:12:47):
You shouldn't make them shame you though, I mean, hell,
I many. Everyone makes mistakes, I know, I.

Speaker 12 (01:12:53):
Know, but they they'll be in fits of laster now
because I've rung up and said it.

Speaker 2 (01:13:01):
But anyway, how much damage is done with how much
is done with the how much is damage is done
with the Wi Fi and everything? What's the value?

Speaker 12 (01:13:13):
Well, they're still getting their Wi Fi and they're still
getting their reception, so there's no damage ready. It's just
on a little angle compared.

Speaker 2 (01:13:26):
To appreciate your honesty, Sounder, thank you for calling up.
I'll get to the text and your calls too, Please.
Marcus of a naval vessel from another country had a
reef off the Coromande or Marlb resounds or any other
part of New Zealand and contain almost one million letters
of diesel that was leaking into our shores. We would

(01:13:46):
be outraged and everything possible would be expected to ensure
that minimal damage was done. Our media downplays as seriousness
the potential disaster for large storm. It's that area causing
the ship to break up and flood the area with
diesel and oil. Our news goes on about Luxon being
down in the poles. Who cares about Luxon? Why are

(01:14:06):
we not outrage at the possible disaster We're responsible for?
What the heck? Peter, thank you. Get in touch Marcus
till twelve. She's all on reversing, reversing cameras, the Aurora,
the Clangers, everything, Lorraine ats Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 28 (01:14:24):
I Marcus. I just my family living in Denver and
Colorado have just posted on Facebook the most beautiful photos
of the Aurora over there, I believe, actually like ours.
Just stunning because.

Speaker 2 (01:14:41):
If we look at Denver and that's my son's that's
my son's name. Yeah, what's its latitude? Oh, because it
seems to be a long. It seems to be not
where you'd expect.

Speaker 28 (01:14:56):
No, but they've got they've got mountains and lakes and
things just exactly like we have here. The photos are
just beautiful. So and that's colors.

Speaker 2 (01:15:07):
That's just happening now, is it. Yes?

Speaker 28 (01:15:10):
Yes, I think all that's going on over there at
the moment with their weather and things that they're well
removed from that, and it's just beautiful, clear nights with
lovely auroras. So it's an amazing world we live in.

Speaker 2 (01:15:24):
And I see there's some reports there they are and
there is there's even a town in Colorado called Aurora.
I appreciate that, Lorraine, thank you very much. Wow, Ellen,
it's Marcus. Good evening.

Speaker 18 (01:15:37):
Hello. I just can't believe what I just seen. I've
just been down to my backyard and just with my
eyes I could see a red glow tearing up to
the sky about forty degrees. I've just been taking photos
of it. It's just as extreme to see this in Willington,
just with your eyes. Where about believable?

Speaker 2 (01:15:52):
Ellen, Where about some Willington are you?

Speaker 12 (01:15:55):
Oh?

Speaker 18 (01:15:55):
Quite a good sight. Actually, I'm in the west where
the sky is quite dark looking to the south western
Qrory are quite high up and it's very variable. This
thing changes every second. It's unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
So is it like search lights or are you seeing
blues and greens?

Speaker 18 (01:16:12):
It's a weird glow, like as if there's being a
nuclear war over the Verton. It's just a massive weird
glow and it keeps changing, like every second that the
intensity of it changed, and sometimes it's just very faint,
and then sometimes it's like the photos were just absolutely extreme,
like because the camera picked up so much.

Speaker 2 (01:16:33):
And even without the camera you can still see the color.

Speaker 18 (01:16:37):
Yeah, you can see the comss. What amazes me. I
mean to see the color with your eyes from a
place like Wearrington, which is you know, quite away north.

Speaker 2 (01:16:45):
It sounds like you haven't seen it there like that before.

Speaker 18 (01:16:47):
Allan I saw that last really made you one. I
got photos as if I was an Antarctica. That was unbelievable,
that one. But I justn't expect this to be happening
at this level. Your program does a great service in
telling people, because you read out a message just recently
that someone said it was increased somewhere down south, and

(01:17:09):
and that lured me. I actould have another short aga
because my brother he sent me a message earlier this
evening saying my nephew my niece sorry, and also in
Quory had Barren some kind of Facebook Facebook network that
alerts people about auras and and she'd taken a photo
just with a just for a cell phone. I'm using
a proper camera on a tripod.

Speaker 2 (01:17:30):
But ellen were there other people they're looking at it?

Speaker 18 (01:17:34):
U here there was quite a few lights on the
house around the place. I don't think people realize what's
going on. But to see this with the with the eyes,
this red bow just periodically increases. But to see it
because years and years ago I photographed with an aurora
from Coron at peak and and it's mainly as I

(01:17:54):
talk and see the intensity is increased thinking and for
current at peak, because you could see these like search
flight like beams, but they're like silvery. But when you're
tok the photo you could see all these different colors.

Speaker 2 (01:18:04):
But that was just can you just tell me where
in care you are?

Speaker 18 (01:18:10):
Well, it's there's a street that goes up into the
hills in the west west Western Hills basically, and so
it's probably about seven hundred feet about sea level here.

Speaker 2 (01:18:20):
I say, is it on the way to the Makra
bike park? Is it with it as kind of as uh?

Speaker 18 (01:18:26):
I know, it's not quite as far as as but
you can see. It's easy to know where to look
because you can see the Southern Cross is basically outside
is cloudy. That's the other thing that's amazing. Cloudy. It's
cloudy here. But there was a game in the clouds
and it's for an aurora. It's overpow moon like clouds.
I mean, it's not like it's a day night doesn't
have what what?

Speaker 2 (01:18:46):
What road are you on?

Speaker 18 (01:18:49):
Why don't I say that on the air sort of
a can come ste your camera? Well, I don't know.
I just for the broadcast, really enough.

Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
I should pay, but I'd love to hear from you.
Thank you, love your excitement. Stewart. It's Marcus.

Speaker 22 (01:19:04):
Good evening, good day, how you Marcus.

Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
Good Stewart, thank you? How are you?

Speaker 22 (01:19:09):
I just can't complain at all, actually, thank you very much.
Just enjoying the night.

Speaker 20 (01:19:16):
And I.

Speaker 22 (01:19:19):
Just have a slight criticism in regard to that text
you read out about the ex worker from Manauanui who
who knows what caused the accident or the sinking. Yes,
and it seems to me that we have a hell
of a lot of armchair admirals, to quote Judith Collins,

(01:19:40):
we have a lot of armchair admirals who think they
know best. I think what they should all do is
just shut up and let the report come out and
we'll go from there.

Speaker 2 (01:19:51):
Instead of Guest would have thought too.

Speaker 22 (01:19:54):
Yeah, well, I don't think we need to guess. I
don't think we need to vilify anybody. I don't think
we need to second guess anybody at Let's just all
shut up and let them get on with it.

Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
Appreciate that, Stuart. Thank you. Someone says, driving south from Timidoo,
the Aurora is going off. That's from stew Marcus. Can
anyone see the Aurora out or Tartara in the cargo way?
Please anyone as anyone's out there, If they can see it,
it might be worth driving to Ariti Beach anyone or Tartara.
Let us know. Graham, it's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 14 (01:20:28):
Hello is that you Marcus?

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
Yes, Hi, Graham, welcome, welcome, welcome, Oh.

Speaker 14 (01:20:32):
Yes, Gram Yeah, I was Olive and Coopol just out
of christ.

Speaker 2 (01:20:38):
I love Hey, I love cap. We had a very
good holiday and Kipoy last year.

Speaker 14 (01:20:44):
Oh really no, it's great, great, great place anywhere else. Yeah,
I was just skidding and dress put it on pajamas
and I went to hop into bed, and I was said, oh,
where's my glasses? Because I wear glasses and looking around
everywhere and I laid on the damn things. Oh yeah,

(01:21:05):
sort of be the these things that you know, spots
could go over your ear and.

Speaker 2 (01:21:13):
There what are they called the arms?

Speaker 14 (01:21:17):
Good? Good question. Actually I don't know. I don't know
what they call. To be quite on us. Yeah, I've
got them on now. But there was a wee bit
sort of my glasses are but sort of have you
got one?

Speaker 2 (01:21:35):
Have you got two piers of one?

Speaker 5 (01:21:36):
Peer?

Speaker 14 (01:21:37):
Oh, I've just got the one pier actually.

Speaker 2 (01:21:41):
Actually called the arms of the glass are actually called
the temples.

Speaker 14 (01:21:45):
Oh the temple okay, it's right here to Yeah. Yeah,
they'll be able.

Speaker 2 (01:21:51):
I believe they'll be able to fix them at the
up door. They'll be able to sort them out for you.
Well they well they'll heat them up or they'll do
things with the screws and stuff.

Speaker 14 (01:22:01):
Oh, let's see, that'd be great if they could. Yeah,
I just sort of bring.

Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
Yeah, no good. There was a good flowery gram. Thank you, evening, Simon.
It's Marcus.

Speaker 17 (01:22:11):
Welcome Marcus.

Speaker 21 (01:22:13):
How are you good?

Speaker 2 (01:22:14):
Thank you? Simon?

Speaker 21 (01:22:16):
Yeah, good good, Hey, we've our parents over in Barcelona
for the America's Cup, and I was just trying to
figure out. I've been on Sky trying to figure out
how we get the coverage is it? And I just
thought i'd give you guys a ring.

Speaker 2 (01:22:31):
Who's there? Your parents?

Speaker 21 (01:22:34):
Yeah, our parents are over there year, they're in Barcelona,
and they said, go on to stuff. So we've been
on stuff and well, I won't say anything derogatory, but yeah,
because it's coming up I think in a few hours.

Speaker 17 (01:22:49):
But Simon, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
Some Sky, Simon. I have found the America's Cup to
be unbelievably easy to watch, and I find it, I
find it impossible to avoid. And I just got to
the stuff website on my phone or TV three on
my TV at home, and it's there, but it's not.
It's not on tonight. It's Sunday morning.

Speaker 21 (01:23:15):
Oh shit, Okay, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:23:18):
So it's the Women's America's Cap tonight.

Speaker 21 (01:23:21):
But it's yes, I know I saw that and we
haven't done very well there.

Speaker 2 (01:23:24):
Okay, well yeah, yeah, so it's twenty four it's twenty
five hours away, but Jesus, isn't it. I'll be That's
so I've never known a guy lest I mean, I'm
not technical, but yeah, well it's unbelieva. You just click
on stuff and it's at the top. You watch your
fifteen second ad and it's down your throat.

Speaker 21 (01:23:48):
Down. Yeah, I know. Okay, well that's cool, thank.

Speaker 2 (01:23:51):
You, So no worries. I've enjoyed your call twenty one
away from at twelve. Wow, I enjoyed that quick flurry
of calls and Mellory up the mountain? Can someone please
tell me how to cook one lamb shank? Yeah, Kevin Marcus, welcome?

Speaker 25 (01:24:09):
Yeah, who built that frog it? If it's got seven
generator backup generators?

Speaker 13 (01:24:15):
Or that.

Speaker 25 (01:24:19):
PLAYTHM made you make you a phone round to the
boulders of it. We'd like a frog up. And by
the way, could you put a backup generator and hang
on them? And could you put on another generator just
in case the backup generator goes.

Speaker 2 (01:24:39):
I'll tell you what, could you do another one just
in case the first one of the second one go?

Speaker 12 (01:24:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (01:24:45):
You could?

Speaker 25 (01:24:45):
I have a tooth for one deal. Anyways, I think
I think it's you know, according to the Internet, I'm
stretching it out of that. I think the Democrats sunk it.

Speaker 2 (01:24:57):
It's amazing how quickly people have pivoted to getting upset
about that.

Speaker 14 (01:25:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 25 (01:25:03):
I think when they seated the storm, they practice spirits
over there, and they thought, yep, we'll take it over
to America. But raw storms.

Speaker 2 (01:25:14):
He'll get rid of them.

Speaker 25 (01:25:19):
Yeah, won't anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:25:22):
Nice to hear from you, Kevin. Thank you. I appreciate
what you're saying. Joy, good evening, Welcome.

Speaker 6 (01:25:27):
Oh, good evening, Marcus, long time listener, Joy, Thank you. Marcus.
You're asking about wooden coat hangers. Yes, well, I don't
know if you've got a spotlight in your town, but
spot I have them.

Speaker 2 (01:25:45):
Okay, I have got a spotlight will be open tomorrow
because will be What do they look like?

Speaker 28 (01:25:54):
Right?

Speaker 6 (01:25:54):
Well, they are up in where you will normally a
lady might go looking for wall or cotton, yes, rather
than the fabrics or candles and things. And they are
in a cellophane bag, pre wrapped, and I think from
memory there's four or five of them in a bag
and they're just in a cilophane bag. And they've sort

(01:26:15):
of got them hanging on a little system there. And
you can buy two links and you can buy the
normal lengths that we associate a old fashioned wooden hanger,
and then you can buy a slightly shorter lengths.

Speaker 18 (01:26:30):
Okay, So I bought some.

Speaker 6 (01:26:31):
The other day, and I pad them with hobby fill,
and I cover them with lovely lace, and I make
beautiful artificial fowls and attach them around the hook to
make a lovely hanger for maybe a bride dress or
special outfit for a lady.

Speaker 2 (01:26:48):
Okay, well, I won't be going that far, Joy, but
I appreciate your input. It's hugely of used to me.
Thank you. That's what I need. I need fifteen wooden
coat hangers. I'll be off to spotlight, So I appreciate that.
Thank you for coming through. Joy sixteen away from twelve
marcust Or Midnight leg into the texts. Unbelievable about them, unbelievable, silly,

(01:27:10):
it's Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 8 (01:27:12):
Hi, how are you good?

Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
Thanks?

Speaker 8 (01:27:14):
Shelly, it's good. And the wee house they fuddy wooden
coat hangers.

Speaker 2 (01:27:22):
Won't worry about of Oh that's the answer is that
they look all right.

Speaker 8 (01:27:26):
Yeah they do. My other house hooked on them. So
we've been getting a lot of coat hangers.

Speaker 2 (01:27:35):
What's the other half hooked on them for?

Speaker 8 (01:27:38):
He just likes wooden coat hangers.

Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
Really, is he like a policeman or like an uniform
or something?

Speaker 8 (01:27:44):
Oh godness only, but yes, they hold the shirts better
because of being than the wire ones or the plastic ones.
And they have a little not along the wood so

(01:28:04):
you can do look good they are for them. Yeah,
they've got a thumbs up in my.

Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
Book five packs. Sick doesn't see that it came out. I'm
a big Warehouse fan. Five bucks for six, six bucks
for five. Thank you for that. Eight hundred and eighty
and nineteen nine Sharnette's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 23 (01:28:28):
Yeah, I concur with Shelley there. Warehouse is the place
to go. And a tip for holding things on is
that you put rubber bands on either end of them,
on either side so that your shoots and things stay on.
Some foozies and yeah, things like that.

Speaker 2 (01:28:47):
Brilliant. Now that's Tomorrow's sort of sort of out, Shane.
I appreciate you coming through that. Thanks so much. That
I've just clicked something on the screen there day can
you get those that thing to be minimum? I don't
know what I've done there, I clicked something bad. It's
all come up big on the call log. Go there,
you go, what'd you click? Well, I couldn't do that,
started talking about cutting your own hair, ended up with

(01:29:08):
coat hangers with a bit of clangers in the middle,
which is the snack from that we've talked much about
from Bedfordshire and Julian with his trailer and the Aurora,
So if you're a night owled, keeping eye on that

(01:29:30):
right throughout the night, because it seems like it's quite exciting.

Speaker 1 (01:29:33):
For more from Marcus Slash Nights, listen live to news
talks there'd be from eight pm weekdays, or follow the
podcast on iHeartRadio.
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