Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
You're listening to a podcast from News Talk Said Bee.
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Speaker 2 (00:23):
Hello, my beautiful beanies, and welcome to the bean for Tuesday.
First of yesterday's news. I am Brian Hart, and we
are looking back at Monday. We're trying to attract Ossie
visitors here. I think we're trying to attract any visitors here,
aren't we? Is there reason for optimism? Are things actually
(00:47):
starting to look up? Pints too expensive? And are they
actually pints and sticking plaster talk? No, but you didn't
think I was.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
Going to say that.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
But first up at Destiny Church, what a what an
inspirational performance, Actually a couple of performances from them over
the weekend. Great guys.
Speaker 4 (01:10):
They want to hold up their signs and chant their
slogans failure, jack boots, do what you will. Everyone has
the right to protest peacefully, but storming into a community
library imposing their own version of how to live on
others not. Tomicki said there may have been some pushing
(01:32):
and shoving, but that he would smack anyone who was
trying to pervert his child in a room. Oh really,
I wasn't going to go there, But seeing as Tomocky has,
you'll have probably seen the posting that's been doing the
rounds for some time now, The post that shows a
chart with two different groups have been convicted of sexually
(01:56):
abusing children in New Zealand between nineteen ninety and twenty
twenty two drag queens on one side, church leaders and
members on the other. Number of drag queens have been
convicted of the sexual abuse of children over thirty two years. None,
not one, number of church members have been convicted of
(02:18):
the sexual abuse of children over thirty two years. Twenty two.
That is the tip of the iceberg. So yeah, when
it comes to perversion, Tomacke might want to have a
long list of the history of church groups over the
past few years.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
I often think when Temicky and his crew go out
there and share the hate, when I come Monday morning
when the members of this so called church are back
at work and then the colleagues say, hey, what'd you
get up to the weekend, and they just go, ah,
(02:54):
great weekend, mate, We just went out and really hated
it a whole other people it was so good. That
must be amazing news talk has it been I wonder
what any visitors from Australia have available were if they
were following the news. Do you follow the news when
you go overseas? I try not to.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
If we can imbue the belief in Australia that a
visit to New Zealand is a must, then that will
continue to pay its way for generations. It's the same
for European visitors. The people I know who came here
from Europe for their oe and became my friends here
are now the parents of kids who then return. The kids,
having heard the legends from mum Zoe and New Zealand
(03:34):
are the ones who come back. My partner Zoe was
in Germany and her friends' children's are the ones who
have come to New Zealand to find more found out
more about the exotic foreigner who landed in their parents' mints.
So it's important to remember that every time we go
overseas and meet others, we go as ambassadors and we
promote repeat business of inbound tourism here. But for everywhere
(03:56):
aside from Australia, we are still a major trip with
big journeys and big bills. So Australia is very cheap
and very important for Australians. We're a three hour flight.
We're just like them. We speak the same language as there,
but we're exotically different. Our scenic delights are delightful, and
thanks to our stuttering economy and dommer, we're relatively cheap
as chips. Of course, everyone there must come here, and
(04:18):
their children and their children's children and so on. In fact,
this is a campaign that should never stop, and in
fact this is a campaign that we need to renew
year after year after year.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
I do wonder if there's an opportunity to go a
bit negative without tourism campaigns in Australia. You just put
up light heaps and pictures of all the things that
are wrong with Australia snakes, spiders, jellyfish, sharks, floods, fires,
(04:55):
Australians obviously, and then you just on the other side.
Speaker 6 (05:01):
I don't know picture of.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
Treatm that did work on.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
Me Qu's talks in them.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
Are things actually looking up? Surely not? What is Ryan
Bridge think?
Speaker 7 (05:17):
What I can report to you, dear listener, is a
mood shift taking place in this country. And I'm not
talking about on the news and the media from the
talking heads. I'm talking about a down at the bar,
chatting to your mates, supermarket check ats, checkout style, mood shift.
People are talking about this country differently, differently than the
(05:39):
way that they were last year. Not everyone, but enough
to notice a difference. You can only be depressed about
the state of something bad for so long before it
becomes very unhealthy, and I think we have reached that point.
People are talking about opportunities. How to make this country
a better place to live in. How can we make
more money, how can we build better and bigger companies,
(06:02):
How can we encourage more enterprise? What can we do
to keep our kids in New Zealand? And rather than
wanting to bugger off overseas, we have turned this place
around before we can do it again. And I reckon
despite all of the doom and the gloom that you
will see in the news this evening, we are on
the road to doing just that.
Speaker 2 (06:23):
If I'm going to be perfectly honest with you, I'm
not overly fussed over whether my kids go overseas or
stay in New Zealand. As long as they just go
away from me, They're still living in my house, and
that's it's just not acceptable. So yeah, please go away,
(06:44):
So there's.
Speaker 5 (06:45):
Some kind of.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
Kafuffle going on in the news over pints. What's a
real pint? How much one should cost? This is beer
we're talking about, and then turning a divulge into a
discussion over you get better value or better the air
and Australia, I don't know what's going on.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
I lived away from New Zealand for about twelve years,
back back and forth between Sydney and Melbourne, and I
sort of had just the comparison once moving back home,
you know, with the family, and yeah, just interesting. You know,
the drinking culture is different over there, Like you know,
you have like people over here and they go, oh,
(07:29):
you know, he's like to drink their drinks. You know,
they get get on it and this and that. But
it's it's it's further than that. It's it's it's just
it's not the case. They're not boozers as as we
are here, and the drinking culture is just so different.
Like you've you're almost raised around a pub or you know,
(07:50):
be a rural one or in a city one. It's
not a taboo kind of place that you go to.
There's good food, it's it's almost like a community hub. Right,
and we don't have that, Like we don't have that
and like using that, even using Sydney as an example.
(08:10):
You know, I lived in a city Sydney for for
years and you know, even there there's every second corner
has got a great pub and they're known for their
different things, and you know, the beers are cheap, they're cold,
the food is like we were blown away when we
moved over because we were like you could go and
(08:32):
have a ten dollar steak, rump steak, but you know
rump steak, chits salad and ten bars, like you wouldn't
get that hair. It's it's crazy.
Speaker 8 (08:45):
Yeah, I remember there's there's that way as well in England.
I remember when I lived over there. I lived in
a subur good Highgate and you know I'd get off
the tube and I'd go and have dinner there before
I went home, and there'd be families that always had
their dinner at the pub and you might have a
pint before you went home. It was a very different
approach to to bars, and there's no doubt there's some
people that went went hard, but it was just a
(09:07):
slightly more community center kind of situation.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
So Matt and Paul have been there. I'm talking about
how much better things are and other places? Well are
they or are they talking about how much better things
used to be in other places? So I don't think
either of them. We're talking about characters situation where they say,
(09:40):
we'll say you want to stake every night? People will
stake every night? And I was like, I need to
keep a colon cancer in it?
Speaker 1 (09:51):
News talk has it been?
Speaker 2 (09:53):
This isn't really podcasts. Really, this is the last little
bit there from Marcus. I mean I've listened to a
bit of it, and I know that it's something to
do with classes, so it should be good.
Speaker 6 (10:05):
Tell you what what do you reckon on? I won't
even say that. I don't know if this is going
to resonate with anyone. But plasters? What's with plasters? You
buy some plasters terrible? There's good and bad plasters. Aren't
there all fairly reasonably priced, but somebody we get them
(10:26):
to think cheap as creepers. You wonder how they've got
permission to sit anyway. I don't know where people will
go with that one.
Speaker 2 (10:35):
Yeah, I don't know where they went with that one either,
but it's certainly I think he's got a point. Actually
you don't always know. You know, A box of plaster
is a bit like a box of chocolates. You don't
quite know what you're going to get. And it's one
(10:58):
of those things too that when you go to buy
a new box, you can't quite remember what the last
ones were that were so good, and you think you
brought them. It's like bacon. You'll try to buy the
same bacon in your head that you everybody really liked,
and you get home and you make it, prepare your barbecue,
your good whatever you do with it, and it tends
out to be nothing like as good as the last
(11:19):
and you realize it wasn't the same. Same thing with glasses.
I mean, not that I'm cooking glasses.
Speaker 7 (11:24):
But.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Actually I've just got to the end of a good
coops of classes. I think there are lesser classed ones,
these ones, and then the more fabricy ones, and they've
been very good. But I just know if I go
and don't get the same ones, they'll get it wrong.
I'll get the ones that end up being in a
big loop. And you know, and this is they don't
(11:47):
stick on to the actual part you want them to
stick on to.
Speaker 4 (11:50):
You.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
You have got those have done.
Speaker 6 (11:53):
You go.
Speaker 2 (11:53):
I've talked about classes more than markets did that. It
was podcast really afterward looked completely blue up in your ears,
didn't it. I am Glen Hart. That has been used
to as I've been and we'll be bet with more
profound takes like that tomorrow guaranteed. Maybe US Talk is talking.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Zid bean for more from US Talk sid B listen
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