Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Powered by the my Heart Radio app from ninety six
AIRFM to whenever You're listening Today This is Clearsy and
leases podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Coming up with a podcast. Our Perth Pub Crawl continues
with Tom Tapping from the Rookies.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
We took calls on when You've got a body part
stuck in something.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
We discuss es scooters being suspended in the CBD after
the very sad news of someone losing their life.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
David Beckham is set for a great honor and so barrow.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
We'll talk about the bears and the Bunbury breeze.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Well, the East Scooters, Hey, I didn't take them long
to start rounding them up yesterday. Yeah, the trucks loading
them all up. It's been a very quite a swift
reaction really. Of course, the East scooters have been suspended
in the city of Perth following that awful death of
a pedestrian on the weekend. I'm in sort of I'm
(00:53):
in so many minds about the CODA situation because I
do see people, you know, arriving into the city in
the dark in the morning. I do see some complete
you know, people that shouldn't be on them, on them,
no lights, no helmets, dressed completely in black, and then
they'll get upset if I hit them, which I haven't
(01:14):
by the way, but it's I don't I've never been
a big fan of banning something because of one idiot.
But then again, you know, I also think that is
it okay for anyone to just get on these things
that go really fast without any sort of training or license.
(01:35):
I also wonder if maybe you should have some kind
of license to write and e scooter because it goes
fast and things that go fast, you should have been
taught how to control.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
All things that were known when the scheme started, as
in other cities.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
I'm in so many different sort of minds on it.
But we have learned this morning that Ambos have responded
to three hundred and twenty eight serious e scooter crashes
since the start of the year.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
Just this year, it has been a growing concern.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
So yeah, it's and but once again I say, you know,
should you should you be able to get on something
that goes lethally fast without any type of lessons?
Speaker 2 (02:17):
Yeah. And one of the things least it makes them
such a cool thing to have in your city is
the accessibility and the way they're just on all these
different corners, so that you've got the positive in that
and then so we're going to see the positives. But
that works in the favor of people not really caring
that much safety concerns, which seemed to happen in every
city to bring the scheme in and of.
Speaker 3 (02:36):
Course people are always very quick to say, you know,
the nanny state here, which it's actually not just us.
They were banned last year and banned in Paris.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
Paris the year before. Yeah, and they started. They had
the toughest regulations in the world over there. They limited
them to twenty k's an hour. They had like almost
like a referendum, a vote on it. The mayor put
a vote to it, and the vote was ninety percent
for the band.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
I don't know how fast they go, but I was
reading yesterday that people say the ones that you you know,
can jump on in the city, they will only go
a certain speed. Well, whatever that speed is, it's pretty
damn fast. So maybe it's too fast. I don't you
know when you look at them whizzing through.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
We were discussing this this morning. If you're in a
car and you get told you have to do twenty
k's in this car park, it feels really slow. But
if you're on if you're walking down on the pavement
down here, so now Saturday Buildings saying you're on a
street and someone goes past doing twenty or twenty five
k's on a scooter, it's bloody quick. It's just it's
all relative, you know, that kind of thing. But yeah,
you're right. Melbourne was August last year with the band there,
(03:33):
paris not it's not one hundred percent band. And if
you've got your own a scooter you can still ride that.
That's okay. This is about the shared ones that have
been banned, of course, But you know, I mean, this
is a tragic story. Some people, I heard a guy
on the news last night say it is a horrible story.
This man's lost his life. But it's they thought he
thought it was an knee jerk reaction to that horrible story.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
But yeah, caused by as I said, one drunk idiot.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
So that person who's you know, in all kinds of trouble. Now,
that causes that takes away the benefit of these things
to the other people who forgets thrown on tracks. So yesterday,
as we saw in the news.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
As I think so often, maybe some education in things. Yeah,
before you can just jump on anything and think I
can I can operate this because I wouldn't get one
because I don't have great balance. I don't think i'd
be very good on it, so I don't.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
Well, especially if you don't ride things on a regular basis.
Given people a bike, you know, it might be different
if you're on a road and rot o and you've
got a bit of time to do a bit wobbly
for a while and then get used to it again
or whatever.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
It's definitely in the I don't know the answer to
this month.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
Quite often hopping on these busy city streets. Yeah, but yeah,
absolute tragic story.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
We will see what happens with this one. Let me
preface this without yeah please ow linguini how we think.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
We both said the same thing where we read this
story almost at the same time this morning. Crazy, wasn't it.
Speaker 3 (04:53):
Yes, woman's hand got stuck somewhere. A woman has been
freed from a pasta machine, a pasta machine in East Yorkshire.
In East Yorkshire, Fire and Rescue services were called to
an address in Pocklington this week yesterday actually or no,
(05:14):
yes yesterday after a female's hand became stuck in a
pasta machine. Now, I don't know there's you know, there
are pasta machines and there are pasta machine. I had
a very simple one that you're wound.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
I used it once, put it on the edge in
the kitchen.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
As my grandmother used to say, buses and trains. Fine,
player was just about taking the stuff, the spaghetti out
to hang it on the line outside. You've got to
hang it all over. You can go to Herdi's Advice
and Fresh Pasta Trouble. Any who, this woman hand stuck
in a pasta machine, she's okay. She they treated her
(05:54):
after they released her from the machine, and she's all right.
That's basically all there is to the story. But we
want to say, we want to ask you on thirteen
ten sixty five, or you can taket zero for seventy
six ninety six, ninety six ninety six. When have you
got a body part stuck in something?
Speaker 2 (06:12):
Now, there are rules.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
There are rules.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
We don't want to hear about every situation that's ended
up in the emergency department. I think we don't want
we're talking about there. This is to being two tickets
to see Jimmy Barnes at Riverside Theater on Sunday, the
eighth of June. But it could have been even an
arm or a shoulder in.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
A pool fence red an arm or a shot. Well,
how many kiddies do you recton? I've got their head
through some sort of railing, a fence, railing, a pool,
fence railing, a banister railing. You have heard the great
incident of nineteen seventy five at less Moody Primary School
when I got my leg my knee stuck in a
pipe when we were playing Lost in Space.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
This is the end. The young paramedic fireman.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
Release me from the pipe. Because we used to line
these concrete pipes when we're out the back of the school.
You wouldn't have them there now. And we play Lost
in Space. These were our pods when we were taking off.
I was penny, of course, and I put my knee
up for some stupid reason, and then I couldn't get
my knee back down again. It remains to this day
the most embarrassing moment.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
I'd like a fiery and I'd like one now, one
that doesn't look like a squirrel. Oh god, yeah, you're
right about things now that they wouldn't have near primary
schools or playgrounds, because we had a thing called an
ocean wave of tearing up primary right, And it was
in the sand pit between the upper school and the
little kiddie school, right. And I'm sure some kid got
tied in a not on one of them months and
(07:32):
they I think his head got stuck in one of
the smaller holes on this ocean wave because it was
just like middle bars all joined together. I don't know
how that made the funny thing. Definitely not definitely principally
comes down untie, this kid from grade four, his head
stuck in the small hole.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
Well, if you want to put yourself in the running
for those barsy tickets at Sunday night, when have you
got a body part stuck in something? On the text
got an anonymous one says when I was three, I
got my head stuck in a potty seat.
Speaker 4 (08:02):
Was wrong?
Speaker 2 (08:03):
End, that's getting the kids will do anything before not after.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
Possibly, it's like Jeanette, how you.
Speaker 3 (08:11):
Doing, Hello, Jeanette, this is about your twin sister. I believe.
Speaker 5 (08:16):
Yes, we thought we were going to help mum do
the washing. And we had an old ring of washing machine, yes,
and we had the long sheets, and Leanne's arm got
stuck in a sheet and got pulled through the ringer
right up to under her shoulder and just kept on rolling.
(08:36):
I took a bit of skin off. I'm that sure
was all fine.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
That's where the expression through the ring Jeanette, My grandmother
had one of those, and to this day, if I
smell velvet soap, right back there to the old copper copper.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
Thanks Janette. Hopefully lean didn't end up with too much
mosquit or trauma.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
Charlie and two rocks, yours is your son? What happened?
Speaker 6 (09:07):
Hello, Charlie? Hello, Yes, he got stuck between the fence
and a planter that was right up against the fence,
the corrogated fence, So he was calling out a little
help help, And I went out there and he was
stuck like a little plank in between the plant of
(09:27):
box and the fence and had to lift him out
to get a ball.
Speaker 7 (09:31):
A little point, going to get a ball, absolutely yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:36):
No idea of to mention at that age.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
About the ball, very very thin and long.
Speaker 8 (09:44):
He is even to this.
Speaker 3 (09:45):
Day, just in case it happened again, Hopefully not help
helping that voice anymore. Thanks Charlielie why.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
Yeah, that curiosity, but also that that willingless just to
get the toy back. Big deal, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
That's all that mattered that ball.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
It's a lot of people I'd love to hear from
you today. You might have something different, different body part perhaps, yes,
or a different persons. There are rules when did.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
You get a body parts stuck in something? We've had
quite a few texts. One just made Claesy cross his
legs involved a zip. Thank you, Steve can say, because
it disturbed Clezy enough the first time a zip in
prim Gavin in Eglinton said when he was ten or eleven,
(10:30):
dad was in the navy and he went on his
patrol boat and sliding down the rails got his arm stuck.
He followed that up. They had to remove the rails
and he followed that up by throwing up on the
captain of the ship. One from Maria says in the
eighties had a spiral perm. We put it under the
hair dryer and as my hair dried had expanded and
we had three girls trying to get their hands into
(10:52):
the dryer after it called to release the long spiral
curlers that had wedged up against the sides in side
the dryer. I've said many times to you, Clarzie, that
when I got to spit up herm in the eighties,
pretty much the same thing happened to me, where my
hair just went up and joined in the middle of
kind of big horrible rage.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
As you were killing those We'd love to hear from
this morning, Jess has given us a call. Now Jess
is in Biff. Can I just welcome? This is about your.
Speaker 7 (11:19):
Sister having start eight Yes, beautiful, My beautiful sister took
her young family over to the Gold Coast. They did
some theme parks and on one particular ride, my sister
had her young daughter on the mixt and roller coaster,
which is a bit like a motorcycle set up with her.
Speaker 9 (11:37):
Sidecar, so her daughter was in the side car.
Speaker 7 (11:41):
And as she was getting us sordered, the harness bar
came over.
Speaker 9 (11:47):
The top of her had tinned her in a position
where her bosom, which she's quite well endowed, had pinned
her bosom for the whole ride, and she was trying
to get their attention, but they which she was just.
Speaker 7 (12:00):
Loving it and having the best time.
Speaker 9 (12:06):
Trauma bruises, yeah, quite nasty.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
In the end, trauma. Yeah, no more, no, no, it
sounds like a good a good excuse to give that up.
Speaker 9 (12:19):
Thanks Jess, definitely, Thanks guys, Thanks Jesse.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
Have a great day. Isn't it bizarre when you think
about someone waving frankically?
Speaker 3 (12:25):
Yes, no, that was not waving drowning. No one more
Dutchy and goslu.
Speaker 10 (12:31):
Good morning, Happy Friday. Now, good luck to all those
lucky buggers that got through to the coast movie trip
later on, Yes, good man, Well, way back in nineteen
ninety one, I got a finger on my left hand
stucking a little gold circle, and I've been stucking and everything.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
Boom.
Speaker 10 (13:00):
If she's listening, Darling, I love you. You know I'm only.
Speaker 3 (13:02):
Doing theoryious and we didn't say that it had to
be an unpleasant experience.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
Moment got stuck, Hey, Garren, you think you don't pay?
You pay?
Speaker 5 (13:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (13:19):
Bye?
Speaker 3 (13:20):
Oh well, winter, there's nothing like getting your spiral perm
stuck in the trying winter.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
Today?
Speaker 3 (13:26):
Is Maria in heathreach put the put the spiral new
eight spiral perm under the dry to dry, and as
it dried it expanded and was stuck there that it.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Was all hands on deck.
Speaker 4 (13:37):
What Maria?
Speaker 2 (13:38):
He won two tickets to see the legend of himself
Jimmy Barnes on his Defiant tour Defined He Is an
Unbreakable at Riverside Theater this Sunday, the eighth of June.
Defiant the album is out today.
Speaker 11 (13:50):
More Crazy, More podcasts Soon, Let's talk sport with Adrian Barrage.
Speaker 6 (13:57):
When you've got to get worky, You've got to get
into work Blumber.
Speaker 9 (14:00):
Their eight trade stores are everywhere, so when you need
it you can get it or check out work clubber
dot com dot a you good morning.
Speaker 4 (14:07):
Good morning, everybody excited.
Speaker 11 (14:10):
What a night it was for Australia, for Australia at
the stadium, Absolutely sensational, historic night in Little Old Perth,
barring a monumental five gold feet against Saudi Arabia on
Wednesday morning. We're going to the World Cup for the
sixth time in a row. Do you guys remember when
Alouissi had that penalty shirt? Remember that, That's what it
(14:33):
was like being at the ground.
Speaker 3 (14:34):
Yea that everyone spent two weeks singing here we go.
Speaker 11 (14:38):
Here Ye did anyone rip their shirt off? Aloisis Sailors Yeah,
started coming out. Thank god they got rid of them.
He kept his shirt on the hero of the night
Asiza Hitch and it.
Speaker 3 (14:55):
Wasn't here we go, it was Olaya.
Speaker 4 (14:59):
He had drove me.
Speaker 11 (15:03):
That she is the worst chance of all time. So
the Soccross pulled off a win. Seriously for the Ages one.
You'll win over Japan, the Blue Samurai, the Samurai Blue,
whatever you want to say. The goal came in the
absolute last minute, so we were all that over.
Speaker 4 (15:18):
We're all over us. All night looked like it was
going to be a drawer.
Speaker 11 (15:21):
We'd have to go to Cudy Arabia and sort of
try to hang on and we'll see what happens on
Wednesday morning.
Speaker 4 (15:26):
And then this, well, then this happened.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
Well, that's a lovely churn.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
By riding agree the cutback that you got tell next
Pach believes.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
The very last minutes of the game planch it fast to.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
Two years.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
After all that.
Speaker 11 (15:49):
Pressure has maybe just maybe st Australia to the roll cut.
Speaker 4 (15:56):
In twenty twenty six.
Speaker 11 (15:59):
You cannot scraps worth the wait, Simon Hill, that's one
of his last games.
Speaker 4 (16:04):
He's going to call over here.
Speaker 11 (16:04):
I think a pretty good call, wasn't it was? If
there was a roof on the stadium lease. It would
have blown off. Seriously, it was. It was quite remarkable.
And so we just need either a win or a
drawer to guarantee a World Cup spot, or lose by
five goals to actually be knocked out. So we're sweet,
we should be there. This could not happen. And then
there was this beautiful young man. There's three west Dos
(16:27):
he's playing. And then there was this beautiful young man
called Alessandro Cicati or Chicati they'd say in Italy, wouldn't
at least, and he's father immigrated here.
Speaker 4 (16:44):
The center just down the road, Tender Chicati. And anyway,
he was returning from injury.
Speaker 11 (16:53):
So seven months ago did an a c L and
he's come back in world record pace and he's had
people helping him, and his goal was to be here
on this night to play Japan and maybe get in
the World Cup. And he got very emotional getting interviewed
after the game.
Speaker 12 (17:06):
I'm just yeah, I'm so happy.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
Oh.
Speaker 12 (17:11):
I think the single anyone out is would be would
be wrong. And I think they all know who they are.
They're all here today and they all know that their
role and what they've what they've helped me do and you.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
Know it's all it's all thanks to them as well.
I'm serious, had to be there.
Speaker 3 (17:33):
It's very emotional.
Speaker 4 (17:34):
He watched The Young Boyfriend Perth anyway, so that's it.
We're there.
Speaker 11 (17:38):
It's a big day for Western Australia. The battlef of
bunburyes on this weekend as well Sunday hands Over bun Vegas.
They're calling it resemble Vegas.
Speaker 4 (17:52):
You reckon, but.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Just it's good.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
Smell out North Melbourne hosting this. It's interesting North Melbourne
hosting the Eagles in.
Speaker 11 (18:01):
But I know they've sold the game for a couple
of million bucks two games in a row.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
What's that nightclub down there? They told you about superflies
something superflies.
Speaker 11 (18:11):
On this week about superfloes anyway, Memories fly to bus.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
Straight straight from Melbourne.
Speaker 11 (18:20):
Yeahour's that. So both both teams training at hands Over tomorrow.
The ground looks great. The new grand stands around the
place kicks up to about fourteen thousand people.
Speaker 4 (18:30):
Can get in.
Speaker 11 (18:31):
Apparently the weather's going to be fine. There is this
southwesterly that blows though. It's unbelievable breeze. Yeah, it's like
being serious.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
Because you're talking about yes, yeah, yesterday.
Speaker 11 (18:42):
It blows to one end, the northeastern end, and so
seventy five percent of the goals will be at one end.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
So if you really want to gast.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
Chicago down there. I lived there for a couple of
years in the eighties and I went, what the.
Speaker 11 (18:54):
Hell the windy City? Oh my god, you got blown
into superflies.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
About seventy kilos I did super flies.
Speaker 8 (19:03):
True.
Speaker 11 (19:03):
Now I've got to just be serious for one second,
because you know that Tasmania may not get there the
nineteenth license now for.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
The acting on down there.
Speaker 11 (19:12):
So there's been this big political bust up least so happened,
and most of the politicians are saying, why do we
have to build a billion dollar stadium. We've only got
five hundred thousand people, and that's like two grand each,
isn't it. Basically everyone has to get in two grand.
So it's it's now seriously in doubt whether they'll go
down there now the AFL, So, I guess who's got
(19:34):
a billion dollar stadium that's one of the best in
the world that doesn't get used a lot, and who
might be able to snaggle the nineteenth license.
Speaker 4 (19:42):
So a bit of rumblings and stirs.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
Yeah thirteen.
Speaker 4 (19:45):
Our people are thinking, you know what if this falls over?
What about us? What about a team in Bunbury.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
I was going to say that bunners, Bunners bring bunners.
What you call it bunnersas I don't know.
Speaker 4 (20:00):
But that's got a Yeah. Quakers Quakers one.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
What about the gerror the gerald and geriatrics or something?
Speaker 4 (20:08):
Yeah, it could go out.
Speaker 11 (20:08):
There are quoals actually are they like little kangaroos. They're
very cute, somewhere between a Quaker and a kangaroo. So there,
so they're they're the rumblings at the moment. A Bunbury
based team they can fly straight into Busso Melbourne teams
you know they wouldn't play down there, but you know
they when I said sorry, the Melbourne teams wouldn't fly,
(20:33):
I know the team would be based in Browny they
could fly.
Speaker 2 (20:36):
I forget about Bumbury, West Coast yours. You got Freemantle
and he's no perfer because I've got the president already.
Speaker 4 (20:44):
I don't think we could afford it.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
But not those dirty rotten Royal stopping.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
Big news come out second on the ladder Royals.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
What else is on the cards?
Speaker 4 (20:51):
Barough well, I'm glad you asked. Only got and strike there.
Speaker 11 (20:57):
Take Care supercars are in Perth this week that Wanna
Route and we're trying to name the Bunbery team. And
there was a couple of drivers around my work yesterday
Brodie Castecki w a one of the Bathurst great driver,
Will Davidson who's been on telephone and done limb sinking
and all the rest of it. The way they market
themselves is quite remarkable, but I didn't understand as well.
(21:23):
I mean, apart from all the motor racing going on
at Wanna Roue, the complex or this precinct that they're
trying to build around Burswood and around the Opta Stadium,
it's actually going to be like an entertainment and sports precinct.
So ten days of the year there's a bit of
motor racing and then they're going to put this.
Speaker 4 (21:42):
You've been to Meyer's.
Speaker 3 (21:43):
Music Ball having my music bole in Melbourne.
Speaker 11 (21:45):
Sydney, Sydney, isn't it. Yeah, that's right and that holds
ten thousand. It's enormous.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
They usually do the Carrols Natural amphitheter.
Speaker 11 (21:53):
It's beautiful and the one we're building is twenty thousand
wice the size huge.
Speaker 4 (22:00):
Just what was the concert you went to recently?
Speaker 2 (22:02):
I saw the Teskies there in the summer, but it's
not the infrastructure wasn't there, so they had to build
it from scratch.
Speaker 11 (22:06):
So I'm getting coached here by Kostecki and Davis and
they're telling me about this stuff going. It's going to
be unbelievable. I know they've got a vested interest. Cyclists
can use it. And anyway, so that that was the
supercars in town at the moment. His nickname is Bush
by the way, Kostecki because he famously this is unbelievable.
It was at the Norwell Motiplex driving with his cousin Kurt,
(22:29):
and their brakes failed.
Speaker 4 (22:31):
At one hundred k's go Bush and they were heading Bush.
Speaker 11 (22:34):
And guess what Brodie did. He jumped out of the
cars doubt and survived.
Speaker 3 (22:40):
Left the other guy in there without a parachute.
Speaker 11 (22:43):
His cousin in the who was driving Kurt, was drying.
It was like Starsky and Hutch or something. The jigs
have hazard Yeah to the door. Anyway, there is some
big news today. I believe there could be a big
announcement around League and the Perth Bear'll be announcing their
new coach.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
Something to do with big hands, big hands coach has got.
I met the coach. He's got very big hands, has he? Yes?
Man we're thinking about.
Speaker 4 (23:12):
Yeah because Melbourninger is big Mel Yeah.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Meling Finger figures.
Speaker 11 (23:20):
He has got a very funny nickname that will not
be said on this finger on this show. So could
be Malmaninger could be announced today a head of state
of origin in a couple of weeks time Wednesday week
and before I get in trouble, I'm getting out of
you friendship while I was away.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
What happened to you, guys? How many quadrial of you had?
Speaker 2 (23:41):
Seventy five?
Speaker 4 (23:43):
Take care? Take care anyway, we curry, We got to go.
Speaker 11 (23:47):
Friendship and finalists Arena Saberlenka, Coco goff And in the
men's Yanick Sinner and Jokovic in the semis right and
Mussetti and al Koraz our Choraz versus Sinner for the
final There and if you're doing not doing anything Tomorrow
ago at ten am at Laplane Park, Mineral Resources Park,
all the best young players WA's Under eight eight team
(24:09):
playing Victorian Country in the championship and all the scouts,
all the recruiters. Everyone will be there watching the next generation.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Very good. Thanks, take care, take care to buy some condrils. Man,
there's sure.
Speaker 1 (24:23):
Report on ninety six AIRFM.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
It's been revealed Nick Jonas of the Jonas Brothers is
going to play Kiss guitarist and singer Paul Stanley. This
is the weirdest guy, yeah in the upcoming by a pick.
Shout it out loud. They're also apparently very close to
casting Gene Simmons. Production begins next year. Billy Joel's documentary
And So It Goes premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival
(24:49):
in New York yesterday, but Billy had to miss it
because of his recent brain condition diagnosis. The likes of
will be Goldberg, Tom Hanks, and of course Robert de Niro,
because we're all there, Billy Joel and So It Goes.
We'll stream on Max I believe sometime in the next
few months. They were saying sometime this summer, but referring
(25:10):
to the American summer, so we'll see, okay. Movie mates
Hugh Jackman and Ryan Reynolds have teamed up to buy
the Bonds Flying Ruse sailing team. They're going to share
the team with competitive sailor Tom Slingsby. Have you seen
these things? They performance foiling catamarans. They're are above like
(25:30):
those things you know, the surcles that are above the water,
but a whole boat. They're so fast. So the Aussie
team is going to compete under its new ownership in
the New York Sailing Grand Prix this weekend. This is
Ryan's second sporty type endeavor. He co owns the Welsh
soccer team Wrexham alongside actor Robe, that guy in the
(25:54):
in the Sean Diddy Coombs Chial which is into its
fourth sordid week now. The judge Nellie Diddy out of
the courtroom yesterday because he was allegedly and I quote
flashing facial expressions at jurors. He was nodding and looking
at the jury, which the judge called absolutely unacceptable. Eyes
to the front. And David Beckham is set to finally
(26:18):
be awarded a knighthood. Fifty year old Beckham will become
a Sir in the King's birthday on his list next week.
Next week now he'll be as posh as the missus.
Actually seriously, she will be known as Lady Beckham.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Oh okay, that's the inst title, is it.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
I guarantee you there's never going to be a lady scary.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
No, maybe not even baby.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
More likely baby she's married to the f one guy.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Actually you're right, probably not a lad sporty baby not
We've always run out of the spicy that's.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
All, isn't that? No ginger's marriage, just one guy. Sorry,
spices all mixed up.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
Well to go through your spicetraw.
Speaker 3 (27:01):
What happened to baby and get.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
It sorted over the weekend?
Speaker 1 (27:04):
More Clezy ALLASO, more podcast.
Speaker 11 (27:07):
Soon we would be singing a man at work song
to twelve hundred people and men at work and began
the roads. I don't need to the people party in
the venues, but the bands was a wavel Cley lissas
per Pub Crawl at Pinocchio's.
Speaker 9 (27:19):
Magnet House is resurrecting Pinocchio's for one night only Magnet House,
a mecca of dance and diversity right in the heart
of the city.
Speaker 2 (27:27):
The man who is fresh out of the Air Force
and onto the stages of perk with the rookies, Tom
Tapping and Ghetto Mate.
Speaker 5 (27:32):
How are you?
Speaker 8 (27:33):
How are you guys? How goodning? Thanks for thanks for
playing that beautiful love song is balled.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
In so sweet, beautiful, artificial anthem, all of that.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Yeah, how are you tell me?
Speaker 8 (27:45):
I'm going really well mate. I'm on the beach in
your poon in Queensland as we speak, and it's twenty yeah,
I know, it's about twenty two degrees. And the Ringo
my best mate is chasing seagulls are very good.
Speaker 3 (27:58):
Oh what what breed is ring Day.
Speaker 8 (28:02):
Name it?
Speaker 3 (28:03):
He's a bit of that.
Speaker 8 (28:04):
Yeah, yeah, he's the least challenged in the band, and
everyone reckons his Everyone reckons his sitting dorky though I love.
Speaker 2 (28:14):
Yeah, well, it's half half the temperature him. It's eleven
degrees in person and rain around it. Mate. We wanted
to bring up some memories, of course, and the Rookies
were a band that you played the raffles and rock
wells and and as I mentioned, I know that someone
posting this week that video of you guys at the
Warrick Hotel. Great memories.
Speaker 8 (28:33):
I hadn't seen. I'd never seen that video until last
night when Carlo Carlo posted it. He threatened to do
it a few times and let that loose. And I
don't recognize the skinny bloke they got up and sang it. Yeah,
I don't know. Some some well he wasn't long haired
in those days. You're right. What many people didn't know
(28:54):
is i'd I'd come out of six years in the
Air Force and I've been a DJ around person in
pubs at places like the Warwick and the Clovidale and
mostly the well the Bolger basically, which was the Sundowner
or the stage door or whatever you want to pull
it on any particular week, and and and worked with
(29:15):
I heard Pete Borg and Todd this week, and worked
with bands locally like the Motors and Trains and and
and the Preludes so Todd with with beavers and Harlequin
tears and stealing the Beam and all those sorts of bands.
And and then while I was still in the Air Force,
I called a excuse the intentional pun, but a really
(29:38):
crappy little band called Spens and and uh and uh
and and true story, we we called it s Bens
because the Daily News wouldn't let it, let us call
it cunning stunts and why not yeah no humor, no, yeah,
and we're going.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
To sound.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
Or anyone after an absolutely well we did.
Speaker 8 (30:06):
We did get called worse at various states that Yeah. Yeah, so,
so we sort of had a bit of an initiation.
I was in the Air Force. We used to play
like places like the Boragoon and we'd go down to
some leisure in in Rockingham or down to Bunbry or
Bustleton or whatever. And and also some of our highlight
gigs and some of my best mates from those days
(30:28):
we're in the Air Force and we would play pay
nite discos every second Thursday up up at p s.
And they were they were wild affairs. And there's some
stories I would love to tell it.
Speaker 3 (30:42):
Well enough to show sometimes the name the Rockies actually
is that something? Does that come from? Something to do
with your time in the Air Force.
Speaker 8 (30:50):
Yeah, that was so. Gary Grant approached me and and
he'd been playing in the whole bunch of bands around
the place with Hustler and various other incarnations Bowery Boys
at one ste and he approached me towards the end
of my time at Air Force and said, look, you're
not very good, but I think you've got a bit
of potential and and so we decided to form a band.
I went to my parents placed the dinner one night
(31:13):
and broke the news to them I was going to
leave my government contract in my career and my trade
and going for a rock and roll band. And yeah,
and anyway, after they.
Speaker 3 (31:22):
Died, job parent aside.
Speaker 8 (31:27):
Yeah, yeah, it was very very funny. And and so
we formed and we started auditioning and rehearsing and such
and and and we we found a drummer that could
play the drum solos from Power and the Passion by.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
The oil robhers. Not easy to emulate, no, no.
Speaker 8 (31:47):
So Rod Paigeels came in and he auditioned with us
and literally had charted that drum solo right down to
the last cow bell. So we've gone holy holy whatever. Yeah, yeah, heck,
that was the word I think you and and and
so we thought, oh, he's a guy that can play.
And then we got Mel McIntosh on guitar, who you
(32:10):
know now now and I sort of never never really
saw right, but he was, you know, a great guitarist,
really terrific guitarist.
Speaker 4 (32:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (32:18):
And then and then we auditioned a second drummer, a
bloke by the name of James Morley. And and so
James was sixteen and auditioned as a drummer and as
a drummer. He was a really good truck driver and
and and you know, so it is a very funny story.
He is, Yeah, we auditioned him after we auditioned Rot
(32:41):
and said yeah, mate, thanks, but no thanks, and he said,
and we said, we're still looking for a bass player.
And he goes, I can play bass, and yeah, yeah, exactly, yeah,
the ones that like to hang out with musicians. And
and so the following week he comes in and plays
the same songs. He got us to hire a guitar
(33:03):
and ant for him because he couldn't get one, and
he plays with the handful of songs and does back
in vocals and all the rest of it. We go, okay,
well your auditions. The drummer how long had been playing bass?
And he looked at his watch, I mean half an
hour and we've gone and we've gone no, no name,
not today, you idiot. How long?
Speaker 2 (33:25):
Half an hour?
Speaker 8 (33:28):
I've never actually held a bass before in my life,
than I thought. And what he'd done the week before
after the drum edition, he went home, took the top
two strings off his beating up old acoustic, learned the
bass lines and and fooled off. So we thought were
living a full.
Speaker 4 (33:46):
You deserve it.
Speaker 2 (33:47):
And then he went on play for the Angels.
Speaker 8 (33:49):
Of course, absolutely, he's still playing around.
Speaker 2 (33:54):
A very funny man, he is.
Speaker 8 (33:56):
Indeed.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
Indeed, since since those heady days you now you live
over East, I believe you have a Cold Chisel tribute band.
Speaker 8 (34:05):
I did, I did before I left. Yeah, so so
I did that for a while. We did. We did
an Angels tribute thing around the time that Doc announced
about the brain tumor, and James and and Dob Spencer
actually came back to Perth and played in that, which
was great, and so all sorts of we sort of going,
(34:26):
how do you get the Angels to play in an
Angel's tribute show? And you go, I don't know, you
ask him and and and so we did that and
it was just, you know, the eighties period was just
so good. There were so many good bands around, so
many punters spots yea. And the thing is that we
(34:49):
when we first bought, our first show was in in
NORTHERMN and and we actually spent around that nine months
just through in regional w A. We didn't play a
show in Earth for about nine Yeah, and we had
the Yeah, and we had the best roker in the world,
and I still missed my best mate Joey and Joey Robertson.
(35:10):
I know his son Cam actually contact with me last
night when he heard about this. And I remember Thomas
a little kid sort of running the mark and run
around sort of backstage, and and you know Raza and
Jabbie and and and all those guys. They were just
it was just so much fun. And you would go
and play like you know, Wednesday night in Bustleton or
(35:33):
Thursday night in Management or whatever it is, and and
really every other band and you know, I heard your
discussion with Todd the other day. Every other band at
that stage was playing sort of Duran Duran and Spando
ballet and wearing Philly shirts. I just I just wasn't
that talented. So so we had to go to guitar
(35:56):
rock and and sort of and I was a massive
Agents fan, so so you know, we did ancient Stacy,
these shoes on and oils and more Australian rock and
it really stood out from what everyone else was doing.
And when we eventually hit Perth, our first regular gig
in town was at the old Malan Hotel, which was
the time was only by John K.
Speaker 2 (36:16):
Watts.
Speaker 8 (36:17):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, and so we I think our
first night we had about twenty people there and fifteen
of those were friends and relatives and five people lost
and and and you know, it just built from there.
We sort of went on stage as this the place
(36:40):
was packed, and you know, within sort of six or
eight weeks, we you know, we had a couple of
hundred people there. And there's Joe from Rock Exchange card
Us and said, how are you getting two hundred people
at the Malings, like, you know, if you had clothes
on or you're not the fruit of it was No
one's ever done that.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
Yeah, your son, Tommy, so so many great memories. We
could look, we could hang around, but the radio doesn't
allow us for another half hour. Yes, that's awesome, really
good to catch up mate. We really appreciate your time.
Sounds like the beach is calling it.
Speaker 8 (37:15):
Yes, Oh, the beaches always call me to.
Speaker 3 (37:18):
Visit next time you're in.
Speaker 2 (37:20):
Yeah, yeah, come and take it. Eight.
Speaker 8 (37:21):
Yeah, Well I'm back in back in town and August
my son's getting married to a lovely Sam and so
we'll be in first for a little while in August.
And yeah, I love to catch up we.
Speaker 3 (37:31):
Played one on there, Tom guys hanging out for you
to throw the skin.
Speaker 1 (37:34):
Thanks Tom Tom tapping the rookie in nineteen six FM
Clezi and Lisa