Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
My heart podcasts here, more Gold one on one point
seven podcasts.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Playlists and listen live on the free iHeart app.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Everybody Man's Cutting Real, Everybody Stun's gotten Real Flow.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
It's the joining real food.
Speaker 4 (00:35):
J Flour.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
On the cutting room floor today. I love local news.
My local newspaper, this Georgia and Sutherland Leader. Unfortunately, because
of all the wet weather we've had, ended up in
my galler and my wife has run over it repeatedly,
not in one go because she's against local news.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
She was scareduled on the cover again.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
She's turned it into a pulp. But where else are
we going to read the letters to the editor? Where
else we going to get my outrage about youths on
e bikes.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
And people can get that outrage anywhere.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
And elderly people having falls and being assisted by either
a a good Samaritan or b they had their wallet
returned by a good Samaritan.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
Where am I going to get that information from?
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Well? Absolutely where maybe you go on your local Facebook page.
Well that's the wealth of stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Funny that one.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
I've got a story here that's come across my desk,
and this came from the area of Bundan noon. Unfortunately, tonight,
as my young grandson and I were walking the dog,
we witnessed a man doing his business in.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
The middle of Bundanoon Road.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
When we say business, we're not talking about he's running
a mister minute franchise.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Was he doing away in the middle of the road.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
He was doing the other one? No, please keep an
eye out, we yelled at the man, but he ran into.
Speaker 3 (01:57):
The bush nearby. Now this comes with the picture. I'm
just going to hold this up for you.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
To have a look, and I must have met that
is That is very good timing as far as getting
the shot.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Looks like he's crouching with three legs and.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
He's managed to You know, that should be part of
a photography competition because the actual.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
Getting that composition together to do the timing.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Like he's it's how do we describe what we're seeing.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Well, it's a sizable barrington.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
But it's acted from the moment it leaves and so
it coils. Let's just put it that way. It's in
mid air.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
It's midair, and we're talking about I reckon. There's probably about.
Speaker 4 (02:46):
A foot of space between between bump cheek and tarmac
and the photographer's managed to cut it, catch it perfectly
mid flight.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
You can't.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
It's like he's balancing on a stick. But let me
ask you this.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
Guy.
Speaker 1 (03:03):
The guy looks like he's under a street light in
the middle of the road. Why does he go near
a bush?
Speaker 2 (03:08):
I think he is doing it for their for the
what the attention?
Speaker 3 (03:11):
And I think, person, I'm going to say this right now,
I think the photographers in khuds.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
This with this.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Do you think he and his friend have made up?
Speaker 2 (03:20):
I was walking with my son. It's so it's so.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Sing Jack would do.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
Isn't something my son? This is your son.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
Have a good look at that bum, cheek because the
poo joggers they're they're kind of everywhere now, you know.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
I think it's like when my son went on the
local Facebook things and the frog fanciers yes said he'd
found something that was from the Amazon. It wasn't likely
to be in any one's backyard. They're just razzing. You
think that this is a joke.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
Look at the size of that pooh.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
It's as big as a pine cone, and it's trajectory,
it's been perfectly caught between pavement and as I said before, cheek,
what do you think is.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
The psychology behind being a poo jogger? Have there always
been them?
Speaker 2 (04:05):
Or do we just around?
Speaker 1 (04:07):
But now that we've got cameras and yeah, for people,
people who get a thrill from it.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
You see, Yeah, definitely public defecators get a big thrill.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
That's a thing for them. That's a thing, and you
know so much so it made it into popular culture.
Speaker 3 (04:20):
Do you remember the episode of Neighbors doctor Carl became
a pooh cyclist? That's right, this, this particular this, I
kid you not, was an episode on Neighbors.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
Oh no, chain is lost.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
I get yes, that's right.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
You keep going.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
Well, let me see, it's all right as long as
you're an experienced bike Beginning here.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
I was on faster than you. I can catch up.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
I didn't realize I was dealing with a leading expert.
By the way, I'll work it out.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
Enjoy. She rides off.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
Then doctor Carlder's a furtive look around, pushes his bike
into the to snap one.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
Off, to snap one off. He's wearing lycra that's not easy.
Do you think though, that the timing was just off?
He'd had a coffee riding back. Oh god, did you
hear what?
Speaker 2 (05:21):
She said again, Yeah, but it might.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
Be the timing when they go for a ride. He goes,
Oh the coffee is.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
That's what That's what they all say. And you're an
apologist for pool joggers.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
Now, no, I want to give them a ticket Tate Parade. Brendan.
This is toilet paper at the.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
If we can time it right, you know, that should
be winning an award. That that photo. Okay, now just
check the picture. Is it your son's bum? No, every buddy,
it's time for Chelsey and the Man's Room on the
(06:01):
cutting room floor today, Amanda.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
We've had so many dating shows. We've had mothers who
what was it?
Speaker 5 (06:08):
Was it?
Speaker 2 (06:08):
We've had Milf Island. Milf Island had when's you on that?
Speaker 1 (06:12):
I was the island? Haven't we had? What was is
the mill Island? Is this a different one? There's Love
Island where there's mothers who go on this dating island
show and their sons. We're going on a dating island show,
not realizing they're all on the same island. So the
mothers hooked up with other people's sons.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
Yeah, it was dreadful, dreadful, dreadful island.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
We've had a dreadful island. We've had crabs island, We've
had all kinds of dating things. The only thing left
is to play on people's virginity. So there's a new
show that's just started. It is called Are You My First?
Have a listened to the trailer?
Speaker 2 (06:49):
Twenty one people have come to Paradise looking for island,
and everyone here is a virgin.
Speaker 1 (06:54):
I want to have that sign me up. Nobody believes
I'm a virgin.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
My favor is while I'm waiting, sex is scary because penises.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
Are scary looking. Do you have any interest in putting
as in mc cream on a chest eggs months? I
can see myself as in my virginity version, but I
also love to watch.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
A porn Oh my goodness, I'm just not ready for
this yet.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Well, I don't understand the psychology of this. If you
were a virgin for some reason, it's because, as someone
said there, they had religious considerations, or there's shyness, you
just haven't met the right person. If you're that kind
of character, why would you go on a show like
this where you're filmed doing all of it?
Speaker 2 (07:34):
Do you think fake virgin virgin? A virgin a virgin?
Speaker 1 (07:38):
Do you think or or is there a category of
show off influencer virgin?
Speaker 5 (07:45):
Is that what this is?
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Because to me they seem like two separate things, but
maybe they're not. Maybe it can be a virgin, but
a big giant show off who wants to film every
aspect of your life.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
Yeah, well that's why we're heading these days. And I
think we've got a more chaste generation.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Yes, I think so, they're drinking less, probably having relations
later or actually I don't think the stats bear that out.
I don't think that's true.
Speaker 3 (08:05):
Well, the young that young lady in there that says
she hasn't had sex, but she watches porn.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
That's the interesting thing as well. So they're watching it,
but they're not doing it because a lot of porn
is quite terrifying, it's quite scaring you. I don't want that.
I don't want that in there. I'm not doing that.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
But I'll let someone film me going onto an island
to discuss seeing that. Go in there.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
That's that's where we're living.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
That's where we're living. Where are the privacy? You know,
when Kim Kardashiin got robbed at Paris Fashion Show, remember that,
and all the diamonds were stolen.
Speaker 2 (08:38):
Yeah, and she was tied up in her hotel set
that up, didn't he.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
No, this was someone's being convicted. They were baddies.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
They tipped them off.
Speaker 3 (08:47):
He said, my girl's got all the jewels here, and
told that to local reprobates.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
Well, I don't think he wanted that for his wife.
Is that what you're saying he's saying.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
I think maybe, But all those guys are always going around.
We've got heaps of jewels and bling bling bling, so
maybe they just butt.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
A security guard stuffed up that night. It was a sincere.
It was a terrifying incident for her, and I wondered
if that was the moment where she would choose to
step back where privacy would become the new black. We're
living your life privately. That that might have been a
lesson that might have come from that, but it didn't.
I keep wondering when that moment's going to come.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
I would imagine when your mother released a sex tape
of you than me or better, she took it.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
To the post office and she mailed it out. She
sent it to Darryl Summers in the stamp and self
addressed envelope.
Speaker 2 (09:39):
Funny as Photos going him red.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
Is John and the man's cutting floor. It's John's and
the man's cutting floor. It's John's here and the man's
cutting floor.
Speaker 2 (10:03):
On the cutting room floor. Today. You like stories from
medical journals, don't you very much?
Speaker 5 (10:09):
So?
Speaker 3 (10:09):
Do you remember the olden days they used to use
leeches to cure various ailments.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Yes, they thought that by draining the blood or drawing
the blood.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
Is what we call its drawing the blood out.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
And it was also they would make people. You would
draw blood out of people because they thought that people
had too much.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Blood and get out the bad humans.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
But in a way as well, that is it kind
of is true. If you've got too much iron, you
go and you go and get rid of a bit
of a bit of blood there.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
And they used to put maggots onto here. Would they
do it again now they're still doing forms of that now.
Speaker 3 (10:39):
One thing back many many years ago, I'm thinking about
the eighteen hundreds.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
Here there was a theory that to cure constipation.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
You would get your practitioner to put fingers up your
bot bite and that would sort out the constation.
Speaker 1 (10:58):
Probably would that used to That's why we went into
accountcy so only how to work something out with a pencil.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
So there was a thing and an invention that was
because the.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
Doctor said, let's invent something to stop me having to
do this.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
I don't want to do this anymore.
Speaker 3 (11:14):
So they came up with a rectal dilator, and rectal
dilation was something which would cure everything from constipation to
mental illness, so they thought. In fact, the guy then
invented the rectal dilator.
Speaker 2 (11:31):
Doctor F. E.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
Young wrote in one of his journals, which he was
the editor of as well, I was a magazine, praised
rectal dilation as a cure for insanity, claiming that at
least three fourths of all the howling maniacs in the
world were curable in a few weeks after they had
a bit of his rectal dilation.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Before you get to exactly how it worked, I reckon
if you went into any emergency ward, there'd be a
variety of people who had been trying to do their
own ritual dilation.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
I'm howling, maybiaca. So I put this broomstick up my.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
Mom, I fell over in the shower, and next minute
my mental illness was cured.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
For some reason, an egg whisk went up there. So
what was his why it was in the shower. I
don't know what.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
Well, I've got a picture there, which doesn't help for
people in the podcast. But as you can see, they
look like four bombs that they would drop in World
War two.
Speaker 1 (12:25):
Spark plugs, yeah, spark plug no.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
No, I like the bombs getting dropped over the Germans
in World War Two. And they were made of hard rubber,
and they came in sets of four sizes.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
Oh, how do you know what size you are?
Speaker 3 (12:40):
The instructions here well find out see, I guess the
instructions were maybe used by any intelligent person. Their use
accomplishes for the invalid just what nature does daily for
the healthy individual.
Speaker 1 (12:53):
Oh, it doesn't if you don't pierce it from the outside.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
Ever, if you will prescribe a set of these dilators
in some of your obstinate cases of chronic constipation, you
will find them necessary in every case of this kind.
This is just word salad from the eighteen hundreds.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
A salad would help word or otherwise.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
So that it starts with the little one. I see,
so you just bore a bigger hole. Time locks the three.
There was also this one's perfect.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
There was a lot of to be used directions to
be used only on prescription of a physician's advice, no doubt.
You go and see doctor Young himself and you said, Doc,
i've got a head ache, and he goes, I've got someone.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
Else says I've got a hang. Now I've got something
for that.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
I've got such the thing. But there was a whole
rave members of positories that was a thing.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
Well, you know, did you have lack sets when you
grew up? Why don't always talk about number twos and
bottoms on this podcast. That was a big deal when
I was younger. I don't know. It was my mother's obsession,
but we were constantly giving those little chocolate blocks that
were laxatives. Clearing you out was such a big deal.
Cod liver oil.
Speaker 2 (14:05):
Did you ever have that cod liverill on.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
A spoon with a bit of maple syrup or something?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
No, we have maple syrup. We just got the og,
just raw cod liver oil.
Speaker 3 (14:14):
The kids these days a getting in a capsule in
avited flavored gummy or something by Guy Sebastian and his missus.
Speaker 2 (14:21):
Well, this is.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
It's very specific. Whereas this one we had. Mom made
this solution of sulfur and it was on a tea
spirit and you drink it, you know you had it
was viscous.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
My mom was telling me a story the other day
about my grandfather and grandmother. When she was little, she
had the worms all the time, and they used to
give her enemas regularly to get rid of the worms.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
My grandfather, my father, tells this same story that he
had a grandmother who used to come and visit. She'd
get off the train at Chiligo, Yep, from Chiligo. She'd
come to visit them wherever they were living at the time,
and she brought her own apparatus with her. He said
it looked like a small tuba and he still remembers
bending over looking at the corner while she went to work.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
So what did she do?
Speaker 1 (15:11):
She just gave an animal, gave him an enema, and
what would clear you out? I think everyone was obsessed
with clearing you out.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
Animal is good or bad for you. They can be
very bad.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
And people get obsessed to those coffee animals and all that,
because coffee is what.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Did yeah and you and your bum hoole is quite
a receptive area. That's why they try to take it
to parties. That's why the drugs. That's why that story
about Stevie Nicks.
Speaker 3 (15:37):
I don't know if this is urban myth or night,
but there was a roady that used to blow cocaine
up a bum.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Because that's quick absorption.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
But also her septum was falling away well, and.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
She used the other septum. But this is the stuff
about suppositories. They're quickly absorbed through that part of it.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
That's a very sensitive area. The anus is quite an
amazing muscle. I really go with me on this because
it can it.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Can release gas, it can release fluids, and it can
release solids.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
It's quite amazing. It's quite what are you laughing at?
Speaker 1 (16:07):
This was quite laughing at this as a podcast and
we're talking, we're broadcasting.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
Because that's amazing stuff.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Why doesn't it have a ticket tape parade? It does?
Speaker 2 (16:16):
It has every day. My wife's auntie, I know what
this story is. She had to get she had to
get her anus measured because.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
It was was she going for one of these dilators.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
It was too big and I thought, I mean it
was things falling out.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
Yeah, there was troubles and the doctor to measure it
with breaks out of measuring tape.
Speaker 2 (16:46):
I imagine, but Adie, what's the standard size for your anus?
A doctor would know? I don't know. You know, let's
not speculate.
Speaker 3 (16:53):
Because I'm always very mindful of my anus. I'm very
appreciative of it.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
How are you do you make a living talking at her?
Speaker 5 (16:59):
Well?
Speaker 2 (16:59):
You know, but it is and I think maybe we
should all.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Give don't have a day where we just wear a
brown ribbon.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
Brown ribbon day. This could be a thing. So there
you go. There we end this. Now there's a blast
from medical history. Thank you. Don't stuff things up your bottom?
Un does you want to?
Speaker 1 (17:17):
And then that's your own business.
Speaker 5 (17:19):
Yeah, yeah, this's got room for yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
On the cutting room floor today, Amanda.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
Let's talk about Nick Cannon. He he's a TV starre
and in the States. I didn't know him before he
married Mariah Ki.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (17:37):
I knew the name Mariah Carey's husband and they had
twins together with age.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
They had Monroe and Moroccan. If this Van's Moroccan, don't
bother knocking? Well that Van is rotten knocking and rocking
a lot because he has twelve children, twelve from a
variety of different women. And here he was being asked
about all his children just recently. What are their names?
Speaker 5 (18:01):
You want?
Speaker 2 (18:01):
You want our twelve twelve names. This is where I
usually get.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
In trouble, right because you don't know all that I
know all of them.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
But like all last week, you see, keep me, keep
me honest.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
There's Rock, Row, Golden, Powerful, Rise, Onyx, Legendary, Zion, zillion Zin.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
And just see this as where I who how many
you're missing too? I'm missing two?
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Yeah, miss geezy mistake. Can I take you through what's happened?
So in twenty eleven, he and Mariah Carey had twins,
as we said, Monroe and Moroccan. I think he called
them Row and Rock. That's when he was referring to
them just like I did do Row and Rock. Yeah,
sounds like an ice cream flavor. In twenty seventeen, with
(18:57):
a woman called Britney Bell, he had Golden Sagan cannon.
In twenty twenty with that same woman, he had Powerful
Queen cannon.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
So the name is powerful, Queen, powerful.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
Golden and powerful. In twenty twenty one, he with another
woman had Zion mixodillion cannon and zillion air cannon. Hr
not zillionaire but bazillion.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
So twins again. Yeah, so he's a twin provider.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
He's a twin provider. Sadly. He also had another child
with another woman that same year who passed away at
file so old. That baby's name was Zen, Little Zen
and Beer. Reading about that, but twenty twenty two, let's
talk about what happened in twenty twenty two. He had
five children in twenty twenty two to the one lady,
to five different women from what I can see here,
(19:48):
So Bree was a woman's name from selling Sunset. They
had a child called Legendary. That was in June of
twenty twenty two, right, just Legendary. Oh, hang on, just Legendary.
Then with Brittany, who is also with the mother of
the kids he's had is also golden and powerful. With Brittany,
he had rise Ris in September of this year.
Speaker 2 (20:11):
So he went back for mor Sultanas. Yeah, not a
kid's name, it could have been.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
So that's in September.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
Him and Brettnaney wrapped it all up and had the
rest of the kids.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
In that same month. With another woman called Laniesha, he
had Onyx Okay, and then with another woman called Abby.
Now Abby is featured before Abby is the mother of
Zion and Zillion, that's right. In November of twenty twenty two,
he had Beautiful with her right, and then with another
(20:45):
one who who's the mother of zen who'd passed away,
pasted one. In December he had Halo.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
Oh, he thought, let's give it another go.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
Five kids in one year, all different months of that year,
and some of them were old partners, some of them
were new partners. And I wonder how he explained, who
are you going today.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
Off for christening? He must have a huge kia, that's
wonder what you're talking. He's got a key of Carnival.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
Do you think he's super fertile or do you just
think that women are drawn to him and want him
to be the father of their children, because there's choice
these days, we have choices to you procreate or not.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
Yeah, he seems to be able to. He's prolific with
the twins, that's for sure.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
Well, when you go out with him, maybe you just
look at him and you get pregnant. Yeah, he should be.
He should go around to IVF clinics and just.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
Look at people and that that could be a thing.
That could be a thing.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Everyone has Nick Cannon's baby.
Speaker 3 (21:42):
You get a baby, You get a baby, Everyone gets
a baby.
Speaker 2 (21:47):
Oh hey, happy boy?
Speaker 1 (21:49):
Is some more of John Ynn And then this curtain
move floor.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Hey, hey have you buddy?
Speaker 1 (21:55):
There was some more with johnes a Man Curtino floor on.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
The cutting room floor.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Today I saw a great thing from nineteen sixty seven,
and it was an article on how to talk to
your kid Comma the hippie. So you know how these
days skibbitty and all of that they're saying. This is
if you're trying to talk to your sigma.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
They your kid.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
What's what's the generation now? The baby's generation that say
teenagers alpens o generation out to talk to alpha? You
say skibbity, you say all that stuff. I remember a
few years ago people saying, oh sick. If your kids
saying sick, it means it's actually good.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Yeah, okay, yeah, yep.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
You know that all seems one hundred years ago now,
doesn't it. So have to listen to these words. This
by way of explanation as to how hippies were talking
in nineteen sixty seven. Well, like, we know all these words,
but these weren't used. Ironically, this is what the kids
were saying, and here's what parents were told how to
use these words. Acid head is an LSD taker.
Speaker 2 (22:54):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (22:55):
So if you get a note from the teacher saying
your kids and acid heads, you know what that means.
Speaker 3 (22:58):
In the nineties, acid wash was a gene, a gene
with a J, not a g Remember stone wash, stonewash
begat acid wash, and then it went.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
Away and then we just washed.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
What about blow your mind? How would you describe what that?
Speaker 2 (23:15):
That was the Timinthy Leary era.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
But the phrase is saying here when your kid says
a blow your mind, it means an overwhelming revelation.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
It's a mind blade.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
Yeah, bread, comma.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
Gold, any bunts, any bunts money.
Speaker 1 (23:32):
You don't even speak English, I don't understand what I.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
Was Funs and burn a nice little learner.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Well, Bread and gold were the ones from ninety sixty
cent bread Man.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
I'm not talking about a ship band from the seventies.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
I loved Breast. Excuse me, I can find a diary
out beneath a tree. If you don't mind that.
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Is the worst band in the world.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
How dare you bringing me down? Taking off a high cat?
Was a guy, a chick or a bird? Was a girl.
Speaker 2 (23:55):
Yeah, but he's a crazy cat.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Crib or pad was a home of home Comma apartment.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Well, that's all the gangsters. They're in the crib, chilling
in the crib.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
What about flower power? How would you describe that?
Speaker 2 (24:06):
That's a hippie, isn't it?
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Yeah, it's a carry and give flowers for love. Freak out,
go into another world. That's how they described freak out,
grass pot Mary Jane Acapulco gold.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
I'm not familiar with those terms.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Marijuana, Brendan groovy. What does groovy mean? I'm actually having
to explain to parents what groovy meant. It's not my
bag means my bag for me, nitty gritty gets down
to the tin tags out of sight, suck it to me,
give it to me straight straight, R E S P
E c T turn me on. Well, no, how would
(24:41):
you describe that?
Speaker 5 (24:42):
Sorry?
Speaker 2 (24:42):
I thought I was doing it now with my chat.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
Certainly you're not excite me.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
That means wow, okay, I do that as well. Let
me know and I'll get I'll stop.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Up tight. Well, I'm not uptight. Do you think I'm uptight?
You're a square man, You're the square.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
Such a square?
Speaker 1 (25:02):
What a trip means experience and where it's at, how
things are. But imagine parents in nineteen sixty seven having
to learn that language to understand their children.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
Yeah, you know, when you were here the kids these
days it sounds like you're standing next to a band saw.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
It's all.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
You know what I mean, it's other radio stations. That's
what happens when you give radio shows to footballers. Is
that exception.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
That'll get bad?
Speaker 1 (25:30):
I know, maybe people need to work on their adnoids.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
Okay, kids, stop it for today, come back tomorrow from
Mare Jonesy and the Man's gutting move for it