Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, hello there, what an action pack podcast we have
for you.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
We looked at the phenomenon of the Hok Tour Girl.
She became world famous for being interviewed on the street
and making a sexual reference. She's now the Hok Tour Girl.
She's leaning into this new fame and she's got a
new podcast called Talk to Her.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
How come I haven't gone world famous because I've made
many sexual.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
References on the street like Habba habber.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
And four and all that happens to you is you
get tased in the.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Next going on with that, also, the tribal drum will
be beating at least ned Kelly wore a musk.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
A lot of events recently that have made people go,
come on, what's going on here? Do you remember the
Willie Wonka event in Glasgow disaster? There's been a bridget
and ball in Detroit that was a disaster, and now
is American cookies which are called Crumble. People were lining
up at a new pop up store for them. But
it's all been a bit of a ripoff.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Down to the Jones.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
No matter arms for the pub test salary transparency does
that pass the pub test?
Speaker 2 (00:57):
And Gina Chick, who won the very first season of
A Lone Australia will be winning us.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Enjoy the podcast. A miracle of recording. We have so
many requests for them to do it again.
Speaker 4 (01:14):
Mistress Amanda and miss Killer Amanda doesn't work alone.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Friend making the tools of the train.
Speaker 4 (01:23):
I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
The legendary part.
Speaker 5 (01:28):
Jonesy and Amanda the actress, Congratulations, we're there right now.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Josey and Amanda, you're doing a great job. Anyone silky
giant good radio.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
Sorry but it's a tone tongue twist set and Amanda's shoot.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Tim, we're on the air the morning to you manage.
Did you notice my bike leaking oil this morning?
Speaker 2 (01:54):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:54):
She walked past.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
I have to say two things. No, but don't read
anything into that. Because I have car park blinders, I
kind of recognize my own car and the carp I.
Speaker 3 (02:06):
Did the service on Madona. The Harley and Harley Davison's
take three oils, so my Jack bikes they will take
one oil. I know this is fascinating to you, but
Harley Davis got the primary, they've got the gearbox oil,
they've got the engine.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
Do its people just wake up.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
It don't help you anyone three to deal with you.
Caddies they don't have They have a dry clutch.
Speaker 3 (02:28):
That's why you might notice when you pull up next
with your caddy at the lights, it sounds like it's
going to fall to bits.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
But don't be alarmed. It's just the well, no, I know.
Speaker 3 (02:35):
That's the dry crutch. In fact, yeah, I just did
you know.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
I saw a thing. Have a look, run down and
have a look. I'll host the show where you go
and pandit to your little girlfriend in the car park.
You're jealous, No, I'm quite all right with you in
your array of bikes. I saw this funny thing yesterday.
It said here's a photo. It says getting out of
your car in the nineteen nineties was alike. And there's
four images. The first one taking the radio out, yeah,
(03:01):
because you were scared to.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Be stolen, or the face.
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Of the radio, face of the radio, the dial kind
of thing. The second one was an old crank thing
of winding up the window with a handle. The third
one is putting on a crook lock, and the fourth
one was then putting out like one of those aluminium
sun reflective sheetings on the front wind screen. It took
you an hour to get out of your car.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
But these days, no one has a clublock or a
crook lock anymore.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
No, But also, when's the last time we ever heard
a car alarm? We don't have car alarms.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
You only hear an old ship box cars going off
that no one's going to steal because it's actually failed.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
And you just hear the alarm goer ninety four sileaky
game all night.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Remember they used to be all there's a cacophony of
car alarms and you wouldn't even look to see it
was being stolen. As well, that's a car alarm, Carlin,
But why don't we have them anymore?
Speaker 1 (03:55):
Car's got the immobilizer now.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
And like so if it's not, if it's not the
the key, it won't start.
Speaker 3 (04:01):
Well, now, what's happening those little flog kids that break
into your house. What they do is they break into
your house and they grab the fob keys because you can't.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Like the old days, you'd steal a car, you get
the packing tape down the side and you'd you know,
you get there. There was a skill in it, there
was a skill.
Speaker 3 (04:16):
The kids these days, they just go into the house,
take the car, take the fob key. And a lot
of people leave their keys in the car in the garage,
which is not wise because then they can just take
your car and drive it. And also I think that
might avoid your insurance as well.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
Do you remember this is another admission of my lack
of car knowledge. My car click click opener, yep, it
wasn't well. The first car I had at one of those,
and when it stopped working, I threw the whole thing out.
I didn't realize there was just a battery inside, you know.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
I see I couldn't a car once because you had
a bug on the windscre it's broke and like this anymore.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Enough years of so I can admit that to you. Yeah,
you'll never bring it up, and I know that that's
what I appreciate about you.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
I won't. I won't bring it that. You're a person
that ran out of petrol in your car.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
A car that will measure the millimeter your car will
run out of fuel.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
You ran out of fuel.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
There's a center in Germany who will tap me on
the shoulder saying you've only got thirty k's left.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
From put fuel in your car.
Speaker 3 (05:21):
But what do you do you run out of field
and in the harbor tunnel, which is the worst.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
I became the hazard that they warn you about when
they do turn on the radio. Turn on the radio,
some loady has broken down. That was me, that's you,
that was mean, that's you. That's what you do. Anyway,
any way, you should silly to you.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
We should get your drive like lady I should be
wrapped in nerth Maybe you should do the show from
home in your own little studio. Action packed show today
two thousand dollars up for grabs with Instagram, also with Foxtel.
We're testing your TV knowledge and you can win.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
Cash with that.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
You can win cash with that.
Speaker 3 (05:59):
What's surprising results yesterday when we did it. I'm looking
forward to playing it.
Speaker 2 (06:02):
People are nominating their favorite shows, but they're not necessarily
knowing all the answers. Also, you may remember the first
winner of Alone Australia, Gina Chick. What an extraordinary woman
she was and is she's joining us on the show.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
We can't do anything though, until we do the Magnificent seven.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
Ready for question one. I am from the famous film
What's the First Rule of Fight Club?
Speaker 3 (06:22):
I'm just going to go down to the car park
and check if that gasket is held out on my bike?
Speaker 2 (06:26):
I would you like me to check it out? What's
a bike?
Speaker 1 (06:29):
You throw it out? Leaking Gama's I'm sort of streaming
down on sitneing in town this morning. It's lighter in
the studio at this time.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
I've noticed our social media lighting is less attractive for
me now that there's more light coming in. So I
might just put a thick blanket over the window between
us and the view.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
You used to complain about that at north right? Didn't
you winge? At north right? I said, look, what did
a man is?
Speaker 2 (06:53):
I used to say that she was like a budgy.
Speaker 6 (06:55):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
We were in a small box and then the only
light was through a small window and that was pulled
a blind down on it.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
And I was the mean man that didn't let the
little budgy have the sun on her face. And now
I get you.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
I give it lanket.
Speaker 1 (07:11):
You want to put up a blanket? What's wrong with you?
We have the magnificence seven. There are seven questions.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
Can you go all the way and answer all seven
questions correctly? If you do that, Amanda will say, do
you have a look at your bike?
Speaker 1 (07:22):
No, I didn't. I completely forgotten.
Speaker 3 (07:25):
I was rocking out to Electric Blok. I'm sure it's okay.
I bought a gasket off the internet. Not a genuine
part of.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
This is where your cheapness will bite you.
Speaker 3 (07:36):
No, just because the thing is to get a Harley
Davidson gasket, I've got to take you to a Harley
Davidson dealer.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
And I just couldn't be bothered doing that.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
That place, Harry Baby.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Harry Vavidson.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
And the gasket I put in is leaking, and so
I had to put the old gasket in. So I
think the old gasket's going to hold though, anyway. Jackieson
Campbell sitting on the edge of a seat.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
Jackie, I, well, thank you, good morning, good morning. Question
one from the famous film, what's the first rule of
fight Club?
Speaker 7 (08:06):
You don't talk about fight club?
Speaker 1 (08:08):
Talk about fight you are, Jackie, just talking about it.
Speaker 3 (08:10):
Which vegetable shares its name with a measurement for the
purity of gold.
Speaker 8 (08:16):
Carrot?
Speaker 2 (08:18):
That's right.
Speaker 5 (08:19):
Question three, Let's play riffrash, Okay, Jackie, what song has
this famous riff?
Speaker 9 (08:42):
I know the song and I know the title of it.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
Jackie is in wattle growth hies, sir, Hello, Jonji and Amanda,
how are you very well have listened to this famous riff?
Speaker 2 (09:02):
What's the song?
Speaker 9 (09:04):
Is that killer?
Speaker 1 (09:05):
Queen?
Speaker 9 (09:05):
By queen?
Speaker 1 (09:06):
Is it a laser et cetera?
Speaker 3 (09:17):
Yes, they're in the seventeenth century, that's the sixteen hundreds,
Young upper class men in Europe would travel across the
continent in a right of passage known as what was
it a the Grand Tour?
Speaker 1 (09:28):
Be the Nobleman's Journey or c schoolies?
Speaker 10 (09:35):
Let's go the Nobleman's Journey?
Speaker 3 (09:37):
No, you'd think so, but no, thirteen WSFM is our number.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Why don't you call us? Some play the Magnificent Seven.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
The seventeenth century, young upper class men in Europe would
travel across the continent in a right of passage known
as what.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Well Kentickie's not an option here? Interestingly? Is it the
Grand Tour? Or is it schoolies?
Speaker 1 (09:54):
The GM nation?
Speaker 11 (09:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (09:56):
All right, WSFM, HOWO there it's Jersey Demander. He's a
grand bar Now, I guess kirkybab because his daughter France
has been had a baby.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
She had a baby.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Don't say who too? Because it's one of the questions
in the Make seven.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
It is too. That's how it all works. That just happened.
Where did the Magnificent seven? Hello? It's Jonesy Demanda and
we're up the question number number four.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
It's going to Rick and Curabilly. Hello, Rick, Ricky, Ricky,
thank you. The seventeenth century, which is the sixteen hundred,
young upperclassmen in Europe would travel across the continent in
a right of passage? Was it known as the grand
tour or as schoolies?
Speaker 7 (10:32):
I would say as a grand tour?
Speaker 2 (10:34):
Who these days is known as a grand hok tour?
Speaker 1 (10:37):
Everything hot tour? These days we live in a howk
tour world? We do?
Speaker 3 (10:40):
Who has been announced as the new coach for the
Brisbane Broncos?
Speaker 7 (10:47):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (10:52):
That one?
Speaker 1 (10:53):
Sorry?
Speaker 2 (10:53):
Rick?
Speaker 1 (10:54):
Thanks?
Speaker 2 (10:54):
Is he replacing Kevy Walters? That's Saturbaut Kevy Kevy the
Bronx a grand final laugh?
Speaker 1 (11:00):
How quick it is? How quick it is? Just keept
churning through like being a wife of Henry the eighth.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
If you're a football coach.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
Michelle is in Richmond?
Speaker 2 (11:07):
Hello, Michelle, Hello, who's been announced a more coach of
the Brisbane Broncos.
Speaker 7 (11:13):
That would have to be Michael Maguire.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Where's he from?
Speaker 9 (11:17):
He?
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Was West Tigers, so hopefully make the Broncos go as
well as the West Tiger's are big going. That was
some time ago, but he was our State of Origin
coach and he got.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Us to win us.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
That's true, That is true.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
I think so good on him.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
Which American former professional skateboarder is nicknamed Birdman.
Speaker 7 (11:37):
Would be Tony Hawk.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Yes, he's become a grand Part two.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
So Tony Hawk's son has had a baby with Kurk
Cobain's daughter.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
So Riley Hawk and they've had a little Ronan Walker
Cobaine Hawk.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Nice.
Speaker 12 (11:50):
Nice h.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
There's another hot tour in there.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
That's a lot to us.
Speaker 2 (11:56):
Question seven, she's on our show today. Who on the
very first season of Alone Australia.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Oh you just said her, Michelle.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
Her name is Steve's and Burrell. Hi Steve. Do you
know the name of the first winner of A Lone Australia. Yeah,
And she's got a surname.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
I like Phronsie was obsessed with them a baby bird.
Speaker 6 (12:30):
Gina.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
Sorry, Steve, Chelsea's in Maryland, Chelsea, do you know the
name what Gina's surname? She won the first series of
A Lone Australia chick.
Speaker 3 (12:46):
Congratulations to you, Chelsea, You've won the jam packets all
coming away, a double pass to Keith Urban's High and
a Live World to ur.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
I'm just laughing at your reference. Phonsie was obsessed with her.
Speaker 1 (12:57):
He was obsessed with It.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
Was always a clo I know, the nineteen seven.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
And then a chicken come over and make out with her?
Is it on me too, Phonsie? No, I wonder how
that would look these days.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
I think it was all consensual and there was no
power disparity. He had an office in the toilet. It
was of anyone's boss.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
Back to Chelsea.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
You're going to be seeing Keith Urban's High in the
Live World Tour Tutos Bank Arena.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
That's next year in August. Tickets are on sale now
from ticket Tech. Don't you buy them, Chelsea, because you've.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
Already got them one hundred and fifty dollars to spend
at restaurant three one seven.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Are you a Celiac Cilia, Chelsea?
Speaker 3 (13:35):
No, but anyway at Sydney's only CILIAC accredited venue.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
But they have all kinds of foods, great foods.
Speaker 3 (13:42):
Jones demandic coacter choose for the color and some Sadad Pencils, Chelsea,
anything you'd like to add to this.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
Thank you, You're welcome.
Speaker 5 (13:50):
Jonesy and Amanda Podcast.
Speaker 12 (13:56):
We've got to focus.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
We have places to be. I'm going to fix through
the German Acts, a big book of musical facts.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
On this day in eighteen eighteen. In nineteen eighty nine,
go back to the Baruk period.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
I strapped on a bustle and I went into the town.
On this day. In nineteen eighty nine, Tom Petty released
his hit I Won't Back Down. Guess which list This
song has been added to the songs that Trump is
banned from playing list. Tom Petty joins forty two other
artists who've made a public announcement denouncing Trump using their music.
(14:35):
Here are some of the other heavy hitters. You may
have heard of them, Abba, Celine, Dion, Elton, John Foo, Fighters,
Rim Prince, the White Stripes. The list goes on. Do
you know what list doesn't go on? The artists of
the artists who've given Trump permission to well, the artists
that support him that allow their songs to be used.
There's Kid Rock and there's this guy, Scott bao Less.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
When we want together just fell into before or tune.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
You can't produce your way out of that?
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Is he trying? Is this real?
Speaker 2 (15:15):
It's real? He was the big star. This is what
the happy days and jonesy and let's get what was
in that cas I'm going to stop like this.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Just tell job set there's a little bit of this.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
He has to get one single note.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
Don't pull off Scott.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Now where were we?
Speaker 1 (15:39):
Let's play this.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
JA podcast.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
It is the second of October or October as they
used to say in the good old days.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Anyone still do Rocktober? Does that happen? Is that a thing?
Speaker 2 (15:54):
Maybe another radio station still does it?
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Should we do it?
Speaker 8 (15:57):
Maybe we should bring it back, Maybe we should do
what we do October? October or October. We would just go, oh,
I hate this song, but that would be every day,
would no? We love every song we played. It is
seventeen to seven. It's interesting talking about talk to a
hawk to a girl. You remember hawk to a girl?
Speaker 6 (16:19):
Dude?
Speaker 2 (16:20):
On that day, let's set up where that happened. There
was a girl walking through the street and someone was
just talking to people in.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
The street, how they please their man in.
Speaker 2 (16:27):
Yeah, and so she said it made a sexual reference,
which was that which then in our modern world has
gone viral and she is capitalizing on it. She's made
a million dollars. She's got hocktur merchandise. Yeah, all hat
t shirts, all kinds.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Of stuff, like a sape dispenser that would be handy.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
No I saw, I saw one that has her face.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
And did you press it? And stuff comes out of
her mouth?
Speaker 3 (16:53):
Well, you've got to make hay while the sun shines,
tour while the sun shines. She's managed to parlay that
into many things. I mean, doing this radio bit for
a long long time, and now every man and his
dog seems to.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Have a podcast out there.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
I've got one, am I the Dog or the Man.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
Double a Chattery. It drops on Thursday. It is a great,
great podcast.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
It's not as good as hot tour of this HOWK tour.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
She's got her podcast called Talk to Her. It's already
got one hundred thousand subscribers.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
You know it happened?
Speaker 1 (17:21):
How does it happen? This is the world we're at.
This is a bit of a talk tour.
Speaker 13 (17:26):
Hello there, and welcome to episode three of Talk to Her.
I'm Haley and I'm Chelsea and our especial guest other day,
Come on in here.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
Girl, And then she goes and talks to people, mainly
country stars that I've never heard of.
Speaker 2 (17:38):
She kind of not close my mouth and she ti yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
And then they have chats and nane chats like this.
Speaker 12 (17:44):
I haven't I've been.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
I don't think I've no, no have you?
Speaker 6 (17:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (17:48):
What's your? What's your? I you in Magi sim where
you got pooky?
Speaker 2 (17:53):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (17:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 12 (17:54):
Blow me down here so you have a pooky, I
have a pooky.
Speaker 13 (17:57):
Pooky'll actually be here and probably like an hour stop
stops together. I personally want my friends to eat my siblings.
I mean, they're already part of the family. One I
just you know, seal the deal exactly.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Well, okay, so they're skirting on soft incests there.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
I believes she's having aship with her friend's cousin on
her own.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
It's a gateway having off with your own cousin.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
That's my podcast, Kissing Cousins.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
This is the world we're living in now. You know,
we might as well just give up.
Speaker 3 (18:29):
Really, because people on the internet have been kind to
talk to her petition to rename Tuesdays to tour Days.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
Talk about this one someone saying, I can't believe it's
October already.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
Already, before I found tour, I was going to unlive myself,
but now I'm rich, have a wife for three kids.
Speaker 2 (18:49):
This one, I removed the life support from my dying
friend to be able to charge my phone to listen
to talk to her.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
Okay, what about this one? I was pulling someone out
of a burning car. Then I heard talk to her.
Episode four was out, so I stopped everything I was
doing in time to tune into greatness.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
Oh dear, And I think this one says it all.
Speaker 2 (19:08):
Don't read that last one.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
I was smoking an embalming fluid joint, watching adult circumcision videos.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
But this came on.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
People are loving it. People are loving it.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
Did I say the double a chattery drops on Thursday?
Will you be talking about this stuff?
Speaker 2 (19:23):
Well, I've to give my cousin a call Soft Incests Osis.
We were speaking on Monday with our entertainment guru, Emma
Gillespie about Lana del Ray. I really love Lana del Ray.
She kind of sing these ethereal kind of songs.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
Booster love me when.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
So she's a very kind of she's remade herself. Emma
was saying, into a very glamorous kind of young ingenue,
like she's in the thirty is now and we were
talking about the fact that she has married a man
who takes swamp tours, swamp alligated tours. He doesn't take them,
he hosts them. He takes tourists out on swamp alligated tours.
(20:12):
He's a snippet of him from YouTube. Oh, it was
like a veil. He's a full swamp guy. And we're
talking about this and digital Jenna, who works with us,
said I've been on that tour. We were stunned, like
(20:33):
it's you. You are Lana del Ray adjacent right now?
Hello Jenna, Hello Jenna del Ray. Jenna del Ray, talk
us through before we get to what he's like, what
happens on the tour?
Speaker 9 (20:44):
Okay, So it's an airboat tour, which means it's this
random like pavo boat that goes through New Orleans.
Speaker 2 (20:52):
It's like an it'd be like remember gentle Ben that
show if we were younger, one hundred.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
Years airing her brain and it is.
Speaker 2 (20:59):
So it's sort of you know, skirts on the top
of the glade.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
It's a punt with a big fan on the back. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (21:05):
Yeah, and it has the big fan and everything. So
this was in New Orleans and it goes through one
of the rivers and you get a tour of the
alligators in the area and stuff.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
And how was a tour go for?
Speaker 2 (21:16):
Oh like two hours? And how many of you are
on the punt?
Speaker 9 (21:19):
There were probably about like ten to twelve of us.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
And do you wow, that's a big punt. Yeah. Do
you see a lot of alligators.
Speaker 9 (21:27):
So there was one that he said that he claimed
to have pulled out of the water. It was a
baby one, but I looked behind him and he got
it out of a box, so he couldn't actually take
it out of the water.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
Nah.
Speaker 9 (21:40):
And then he's like, oh, here, wait a second, I'll
put the the rubber band around its mouth and all that.
And he was just handling it and I'm like, no,
you just got it out of the box.
Speaker 12 (21:48):
But then we all got a photo with it.
Speaker 9 (21:50):
And then he said, I'm going to throw it back now,
and he made it a noise, splashing noise.
Speaker 12 (21:53):
But I saw it go back into the box.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
Oh, Jenna, that is like those snake guys. Snake guys.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
Oh, there's a snake the car of the petrol stage.
You'd all come along and it gets on a carr
and affair. The guy's put the snake in his own car.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
The guy that used to go diving and he'd find
a skull all the time, he'd put that skull there himself, exactly. So, Jenna,
what was he like?
Speaker 14 (22:13):
Like?
Speaker 1 (22:14):
Age?
Speaker 2 (22:14):
I mean, when were you on the tour? When was that?
Speaker 9 (22:16):
So it was twenty sixteen, and let me say it
was a kentiquy tour, so like a lot of people
were munted on it, and so they didn't really know
what was going on.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
So how many people were munted on the punt?
Speaker 12 (22:31):
Probably about ten of them? Right, But he was he
was nice.
Speaker 2 (22:35):
Did you look at him and think there's some something
grunty and like earthy and manly about him?
Speaker 12 (22:40):
Absolutely not.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
He was just a swamp guy, right, But still, did
you think there could have been a chance for you
and he.
Speaker 9 (22:47):
No, Well he was already because he was engaged for
twelve years before he met Lana, and then they were
engaged for a month and got married.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
So you were interested?
Speaker 12 (22:56):
No, I was not interested at all.
Speaker 9 (22:57):
And then at the end of the tour, I completely
forgot you had to tip the tour guide, so I
didn't have any money on me, so I put on
like the one cent coin and I made it sound
like I put in a lot, but.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
It was just on history. Yeah, yeah, got out of
the give you well for me with this man. And
so how old is he?
Speaker 2 (23:17):
How old was he when you met him?
Speaker 12 (23:18):
He would have been like, probably in his forties.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
Ruggedly handsome, Chris Hemsworth grunty is kind of what I'm thinking.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
No, not at all.
Speaker 9 (23:29):
I didn't think any thing of him, and none of
the others did as well, And even when they're mounted,
did not at all.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
The punt bladed del Ray's going Hang on a minute.
That's the title of my boyfriend, Jenna. Thank you, thank
you for being part of the awkwardness of the other day.
I wasn't playing with Jenna's hair.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
It was one of the other girls of the type
that's just been cleared up.
Speaker 12 (23:50):
Yeah, that was a bit awkward.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
Well it wasn't me though, yeah, m hair. Thanks General
chair Nation.
Speaker 9 (23:58):
Right.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Three more instance, and Amanda's spit on that thing.
Speaker 3 (24:07):
You have ten questions sixty seconds on the clock. You
can pass if you don't know an answer. Will come
back to that question of time permits. You get all
the questions right one thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
You can make it two thousand dollars. You have to
answer a bonus question, but it is double or nothing.
Speaker 8 (24:20):
He's a into man, Sam, Hi Sam, Good morning, right there, Sam,
We're very well.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
Let's see what we can do for you. Ten questions
sixty seconds. Say pass if you're not sure? Are you
ready to start our questions?
Speaker 11 (24:33):
There?
Speaker 7 (24:33):
Ready to go?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
Okay, Sam?
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Here we go? Question one traditionally what color is paper?
Question two?
Speaker 2 (24:40):
What is four plus three?
Speaker 11 (24:43):
Seven?
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Question three?
Speaker 2 (24:44):
In which sport would you play on the green?
Speaker 8 (24:48):
Pass?
Speaker 2 (24:49):
Question four? What kind of store is my?
Speaker 14 (24:51):
To?
Speaker 2 (24:51):
Ten? Question five? True or false? The Statue of Liberty
is the world's tallest monuments? Question six? Which Olympics would
you find curling? Question seven? Queen Mary of Denmark is
from which Australian state or territory?
Speaker 1 (25:10):
Question eight?
Speaker 2 (25:11):
On which body part would you find a septum piercing?
Speaker 3 (25:16):
No?
Speaker 2 (25:16):
Question nine? Which pop star is playing Harley Quinn in
the New Joker movie? Question ten? Traditionally what metal is
associated with? Panning?
Speaker 10 (25:27):
Gold?
Speaker 2 (25:27):
Back to question three? Which sport would you play on
the green? Question five?
Speaker 1 (25:32):
True or four?
Speaker 2 (25:33):
True or false? Statute would be the worlds tallest monument.
Question six in which Olympics?
Speaker 1 (25:37):
Which is.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
In which Olympics would you find curling?
Speaker 1 (25:42):
Which one? Winter?
Speaker 9 (25:47):
Winter?
Speaker 2 (25:47):
Yeah on the ice and Lady Gaga is playing Harley
Quinn a new Joker movie. Oh seven one hundred bucks
to be getting on with and thank you.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
You did well, you did well? Do you remember? Thank you?
Speaker 2 (26:07):
Mar that dodgy Willy Wonka world in Glassy people were outraged.
Speaker 3 (26:12):
I know they're trying to replicate it worldwide of how
dodgy it is.
Speaker 9 (26:15):
I know.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
So the fact it was terrible became famous and trying
to do that. People were promised all kinds of stuff,
chocolate fountains. They turned up. There was a bowl of
Minty's and that was about it. Well, there's some others,
not scams, just disappointments that I've been reading about this morning.
We'll talk about that next. So we were talking earlier
about the Willy Wonka experience. It was a build this
(26:36):
is in Glasgow. It was billed as an incredible interactive.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
Experience, a world of imagination.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
They promised chocolate fountains, chocolate delights. There was none of that.
Children were instead offered a half cup of lemonade and
the small ration of jellybeans, and there was sort of
like a local version of a nighter graduate standing in
a costume. That was pretty much it. Well, there's been
a Bridgeton all held in Detroit. Have you seen the
footage of this Bridgeton? Massive show. People love the idea
(27:05):
of dressing up in period costume to go there, and
people went to huge lengths. I saw footage of people
who just looked fantastic. What they were promised was that
they would be stepping into an enchanting world of the
regency era with all the quote sophistication, grace, and historical
charm of a typical nineteenth century night of luxury. People
(27:25):
pay it up to one thousand dollars for tickets. Some
of them are one hundred and fifty bucks, but up
to one thousand dollars. There's going to be dinner, an orchestra,
professional photos, and a valet and all the punsy stuff
that you would love for all the all the bridget
and stuff. Instead, well there was nothing. Instead, there were
(27:46):
tachy decorations, there was one loan violinist, there was no orchestra.
I saw in the corner of a room there was
a vase with a plastic flower in it on the floor.
Speaker 10 (27:55):
That was it.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
And the entertainment was a woman in a g string
on a pole. Oh, it's not so bad, and she
said that she was booked just a few hours before
the event. And the food they ran out of food,
some of which guests said was still was served raw
and was just handed out by a woman in a
jumper and jeans, and people were leaving this. I'm looking
(28:18):
at something here that says the event started at seven
six o'clock. At seven o'clock they watched twenty people leave.
Speaker 3 (28:26):
And you've paid one thousand bucks, paid up to a
thousand bucks to be there, and Kelly wore a mask.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
What about this? There is a US based cookie company
that has gone viral. It's like in and out Burger,
you know, sudden the Australians are going, we want this stuff?
Speaker 14 (28:40):
What is it?
Speaker 9 (28:40):
What is it?
Speaker 2 (28:41):
It's called Crumble. Sounds like a dating app, doesn't it?
Crumbl Crumble And so Sydney siders were told that Crumble
was coming to Sydney, so people lined up for hours
to get their hands on official Crumble cookies. The cookies
were selling for seventeen dollars fifty whoa for a cookie?
(29:02):
And what happened is that they were kind of duped
in a way because it was a fake pop up
shop in that it wasn't the official company at all
selling their cookies to a Sydney Siders. Someone had gone
and bought a stack of them in the States and
was just reselling. I just brought them home and was
reselling the how did you get them through the quarantine? Well,
(29:22):
the organizers when all the beepit the fan had, they
broke down their profit and costs, saying that there was
never their intention to rip anyone off. We haven't really
made any money because it was expensive to import them.
It's all been above bought, et cetera, et cetera. But
people have thought that they were getting access to the
official Crumble cookie and so it was just old mate
(29:43):
who went over and bought some and ran out very quickly. P. T.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
Barnum said it, there's a sucker born every minute. I mean,
I've never queued up for anything.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
What about have you gone to an event? It's not
so much queuing up. Have you gone to an event?
Speaker 1 (29:55):
One that you and I were involved was that one?
Remember the American Chopper Show. The American Chopper guys came here,
and what were they supposed to do? They're supposed to
have this big event.
Speaker 3 (30:04):
It was this is a long time ago in two
thousand and five, two thousand and six, when American Chopper
was huge, and they were going to build a chop
er on Strange and then give it away. And then
all of a sudden, it was kind of strange how
they gave it away. They gave his chopper all away,
and there was this sort of confused Asian bloke on
stage and they congratulations and they whisked him away.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Then he went to Melbourne one up there again.
Speaker 3 (30:26):
And then a guy from the airport who works at
the airport sent me a picture of that chopper going
back to America and that was That was the ignomy of.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
The whole event. The event was dreadful.
Speaker 2 (30:36):
I remember also we left way early and we were
opposed to it. Weren't you supposed to be interacting with
all the.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Stars And they didn't want to talk to anyone, No, they.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
Didn't even they came out eventually to wave from a
balcony and home.
Speaker 3 (30:48):
Bush because they got you and I because we hosted
the press conference remember that they came here and it
was very successful and the you hogged all the question
I didn't hold you, asked Paul Senior.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
So tell me about your mustache. How do you keep
that so supple and soft?
Speaker 2 (31:02):
And then do you?
Speaker 1 (31:02):
And then twenty minutes of that was talk him talking
about mustaches.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
Do you remember though? I also I didn't see a
glass draw and I booked my head. I went into
it like a budget.
Speaker 3 (31:11):
So this is my moment to shine mustache. And then
you walk in and everyone's fussing about you, and.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Then it almost passed out.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Well watch where you're going. And so that event was so.
Speaker 3 (31:22):
Then they asked us, they said, well, will you come
out to Home Bush and do the next event? And
it was a totally different event and it wasn't the
press comings. So the boys were they weren't very good
at all.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
No, well, they weren't made to be those snows bike. Yeah,
it's like the Duck Dynasty guys. You know, you get
a show and it's all going to fall in a
heap because you get exposed as being the kind of
people that do do those kinds of show.
Speaker 1 (31:44):
But people paid good money to go and see them.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
Well, look the tribal drum is going to be for this.
At least ned Kelly wore a mask the event edition.
Speaker 1 (31:50):
At least Kelly wore a mask. I agree with what
that guy said, what that audio from. That was my
doll from the Little Doll Cute.
Speaker 3 (31:59):
We had dolls and they said, yeah, our cats, phrases, Yeah,
I can't remember any of yours.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
Tmes, just me walking into a door. But when what
event have you gone to that was overhyped and under delivered.
Speaker 3 (32:12):
Us the Tribal Driver's beating and this is on the
strength of the underwhelming Willy Wonker experience.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
Well that's right. Then we had an underwhelming bridget and ball,
and then yesterday city Side has lined up to get
I was going to say grinder biscuits crumble biscuits. Sorry,
don't make that mistake.
Speaker 1 (32:28):
Do not go into grinding biscuits.
Speaker 2 (32:31):
Biscuit Crumble biscuits is American biscuit that people cookie. Everyone thought,
isn't this amazing? Well no, it was just some people
who went over there and bought some and set up
outside of service station to sell them.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
You know what makes me feel that I miss out
on everything? I just I've never been on the trend
with stuff like that.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
How do people get onto them?
Speaker 2 (32:47):
It's like people that line up for bubble tea or
people line up for the latest whatever.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
Who's the first person that got bubble te and said
this is really good? And then everyone just gets in
the queue.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
Apparently we're being not necessarily ripped off, but.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
The tribal drumas beating for at least Kelly wore a mask.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
I'll actually what event was disappointing for you?
Speaker 7 (33:09):
Okay, So about eight years ago, I used to live
in South Africa and I had a little tea business there,
so I'm just setting the scene a little work here,
and I was invited to go to a high tea
event that was promised to be this beautiful event. Everybody
needed to dress up. There was going to be music playing,
there was going to be stall holders, the whole high
(33:31):
tea extravagance, giveaways, and a tea master presenting a tea seramony.
So that was what I was doing, right, And I
get there and there's nothing. Well, sort of in the
lead up to it, it was really hard to get
hold of the organizer as well. I was saying sort
of clue in that maybe there might be a bit
of a problem with this event. But I get there,
(33:53):
I bring all of my teas, I bring some teas
to sell, and I walk into this big, big hall
and there's a lot of big, long tables kind of
set up, and there's just a single white tablecloth and
each of these tables, but nothing else, no decorations. The
harpist turns up as well, and I'm thinking, wow, this
is really really close to this event starting. There's nothing
(34:15):
on the tables. What is you know they must have,
you know, maybe they've got like twenty butlers out the
waiting waiters out in the back ready to bring everything out. Nothing.
People start arriving and they are dressed up. They are
beautifully dressed up for this highty event, similar to what
you would wear to a Bridgeton event, and I'm thinking, wow,
what is going on here? The harpist then gets into
(34:37):
the corner and starts playing some music. So at the beginning,
everybody thought everything was okay, okay, But about an hour
into it, there's no tea given out and there's no
food given out. So South Africans are people that will
take it upon themselves to sort things out. They're not
going to just sit around and wait for something or
(34:57):
wait for an announcement. So they get up. They go
into the kitchen and they find boxes and boxes of
these sort of like Sarah Lee frozen cakes to what
should it be handed out, and they start bringing it out,
and all of a sudden, there's just this anger in
the air and it's almost like a riot. And there
would have been maybe like more than five hundred people
(35:18):
at this event, more than and they see me in
the corner, you know, with my teas, and I look
like I'm supposed to know what I'm doing. I'm not
even joking. They start coming at me and I'm going,
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (35:30):
I was just booked for this event.
Speaker 7 (35:32):
And they say, right, we're boiling tea. I'm not even joking.
These people who are dressed up, who have paid to
come to this event, They're like, we're boiling some tea.
We need some tea. Let us have your tea. And
I said, all right, So I start selling my speech
to these people. I start giving some of it away.
We find some boxes of sort of sponsored events under
the tables, and then next minute people.
Speaker 12 (35:54):
Are like taking the table boss.
Speaker 7 (35:56):
They're taking whatever they can find, and I just got
out of.
Speaker 2 (35:59):
There a riot arranging an event and please give them
a Lipton's.
Speaker 3 (36:08):
Meanwhile, this guy at the back running away with a
briefcase full of cash.
Speaker 2 (36:12):
Jonesy and Amanda podcast.
Speaker 1 (36:24):
We all remember the underwhelming Willie Wonker experience. That was
a big deal.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
It was a big deal, was in Glasgow. It was
billed as an as a immersive experience, chocolate fountains, characters
wandering around, was going to be incredible. It was none
of those things. Kid's got a small rationed bowl of
jelly beans and that was about it. Then we've had
the Bridgeton ball. This has just happened in Detroit. People
spent thousands of dollars on their outfits. Incredible. They were
(36:51):
told they'd be an orchestra, there would be all this
posh stuff, Bridgeton stuff. There was none of that. There
was a stripper or in a g string on a pole.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
I wanted to put in an evening with Jonesy Demander,
but you declined.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
I declined. And now we've got these cookies that are
called Crumble from the States and people were told, hey,
come along, and people had heard all about this. This
new viral cookie lined up incredibly overcharged and discovered that
in fact that these have just been bought by someone
and sold here in front of a service station.
Speaker 1 (37:23):
It's just black and gold cookies. That you just put
a tray of black and gold cookies.
Speaker 2 (37:27):
Well they are the actual cookies, but that's been bought
by someone and being resold.
Speaker 1 (37:31):
The tribal drummers beating four.
Speaker 2 (37:34):
Were a mask the event edition. Hello Teresa, Hi, good.
Speaker 6 (37:38):
Morning James and Amanda.
Speaker 2 (37:40):
What happened years ago?
Speaker 6 (37:42):
When I was with my ex He was ex police
and he said he's big boss back from the police force.
His daughter was getting married and we were invited to
the engagement party at dul and he went through my clothes.
He said, oh, you've got you've got nothing suitable. You
need to go and buy a new outfit, which I
was already insulted.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
Yes, so I went.
Speaker 6 (38:01):
I spent hundreds of dollars on a new dress, matching shoes, bag, everything. Anyway,
I asked him before that, I said, please, can you
ring and get the dress code? And you wouldn't do that,
And anyway, I bought this beautiful outfit. We got there,
we arrived to sit in a garage among everybody wearing
jeans and thongs and tank tops, and I felt so embarrassed.
(38:23):
I went back to the car, I got my cardigan.
You know, it was awful, and everybody it was a
standard dress, jeans and songs and I'm dressed for a wedding,
you know. But anyway, I made the most of it
because the wedding was in Canberra and I wore the
same outfit.
Speaker 2 (38:41):
Dressed and being overdressed and both which would you rather?
Speaker 1 (38:44):
Would you be? Rather be overdressed or underdressed? Both of
them very I think overdressed is always better.
Speaker 2 (38:49):
Yeah, Still you didn't feel very comfyed by the sound
of it, Terresa.
Speaker 1 (38:54):
No, no, thank you, Teresa. Thank you a thousand bucks
on the strength for that. But nonetheless, young podcast, let's
get on down.
Speaker 3 (39:07):
To the jonesy demout of apps for the pub test today,
salary transparency.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
Does this pass the pub test?
Speaker 2 (39:13):
I'll tell you what. This is apparently a new trend
amongst the youngest, amongst us, because when we grew up,
you never ever mentioned how much you earned. You'd never
ever ask anyone else. But looking at this survey is interesting.
Eighty six percent of gen zs are open to discussing
the salaries fifty nine percent of millennials young people. This
is interesting. I this hadn't occurred to me. People are saying,
(39:36):
particularly young women, saying they want some transparency to see
if they are being underpaid as females, see if there's
a gender pay gap. And she said that it works
in your company's favor if no one discusses what they're earning,
because everyone can be underpaid and the company gets away
with it. Yeah, why don't know what everyone else.
Speaker 1 (39:55):
Ort not to talk about money? No, but I always
seems to be a thing now though.
Speaker 2 (39:59):
Yeah, but if everyone what everyone else is getting, how
can there be unless we go into the communist system
and we all get exactly the same and that works.
How can people not be resentful? How can people not
work as hard by thinking, well, I'm doing the same
job they are. I get why it makes sense for
everyone to know that as human beings. I don't think
it can work.
Speaker 1 (40:19):
My kids, well, one time they said, how much do
you make it?
Speaker 2 (40:22):
I said, what did you say?
Speaker 1 (40:24):
I said, just google it? Googled.
Speaker 2 (40:26):
It's never real. It's never true.
Speaker 3 (40:30):
Oh yours is, well it's not. I'm not saying anything.
You don't tell me how much you, and I know
that you get considerably more than How do you know that,
because back when I got you to come and work
over here, I said, pay or whatever she wants. I
don't care if it's more than me, but I know
if she does a radio show with me, it will
be very successful. They're about to flick me. Back in
two thousand and four, it was desperate time.
Speaker 2 (40:51):
I don't know what you earn, but you would upset
you if I was getting more than you.
Speaker 3 (40:54):
Probably, now it's been twenty years, we should be some
sort of pay parody.
Speaker 1 (40:58):
When your record, do you think, hey, this is a thing.
It starts to bring all this stuff up? It does?
Speaker 2 (41:03):
It brings it all up? How do you feel salary transparency?
Does it passed the pub testtis?
Speaker 1 (41:10):
Maybe?
Speaker 2 (41:10):
The last time I saw Gina Chick was when I
was hosting the Alone Australia Reunion. She just won the
first series. She survived for sixty seven days in the
remote worlds of Tasmania, Australia. Saw an inspirational, daring, strong,
emotionally available woman and it blew our minds. She has
a new book out called We Are the Stars, and
(41:30):
she joins us now Hello, Gina.
Speaker 12 (41:32):
Hello Amanda, and hello a Jenesy.
Speaker 1 (41:35):
Hello there, Gina. It's great to see you weekends.
Speaker 2 (41:37):
I saw you on the show. I mean you were
stitching a possum coat and you looked a little bit like,
oh well, no, she's one of those unusual survivalists. And
I think that you were such a surprise package because
you are so layered, you come from a family of writers.
You were very open about things that have gone on
in your life. What do you think it was that
(41:57):
blew us away?
Speaker 11 (42:01):
I think what I get the feedback about when I'm
wandering around in the streets and people stop me, is
that I managed to survive in a situation where we
usually see suffering on survival shows.
Speaker 12 (42:15):
We love watching people suffer.
Speaker 11 (42:16):
We sit in our lounge rooms and we're fat and
we're eating our pizza and we're warm, and there's people
suffering and we can shout at the TV about their
choices and enjoy their suffering in a way.
Speaker 12 (42:26):
But I didn't suffer. I thrived. I lived in harmony
with nature.
Speaker 11 (42:32):
I listened to and connected with nature, and I managed
to get all my needs met by doing that in
a way that we usually really only see with first
nations and you know, hunter gatherer and indigenous people.
Speaker 12 (42:47):
It's like that level of nature connection.
Speaker 11 (42:50):
And I sort of like toddled out there with my
bare feet and danced in the moss and talked to
the platypus and sang to the lake and pulled out.
Speaker 2 (42:56):
Fish and eel and landed on top of a wallaby
that you ate.
Speaker 12 (43:01):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, and you know, and I loved it.
I had a ball.
Speaker 3 (43:06):
But it was so therapeutic to watch it the way
you talked about your story with Blaze, your daughter who
passed away from cancer. You were pregnant, you got cancer,
and then you have that. I just remember watching the
story as it unfolded. I'm thinking, oh, thank god it
all worked out, Blaze survived, and then you tell her
how she passed away.
Speaker 1 (43:27):
It was like I remember, just like I didn't.
Speaker 3 (43:30):
I couldn't even expressed my emotion watching it at that time,
because we don't see that.
Speaker 12 (43:35):
No, no, And this is when I wrote this book.
Speaker 11 (43:38):
That was one of the things that I wanted to do,
was to talk about that kind of loss in a
way that doesn't break us as a reader, you know,
because we all go through loss, we all go through
things that you know that we love that leave us
in some way, and I feel like in our culture
we don't have a really healthy relationship ship with grief
(44:01):
or sort of like ways to be with grief in
conversations about grief.
Speaker 12 (44:05):
And so I wanted to share the way.
Speaker 11 (44:09):
I have moved through that loss, where on the other
side of it I am actually bigger and brighter and
wiser and more compassionate and more kind. And to be
able to write it in a way that the reader
can come through something like that that and be more
on the other side.
Speaker 12 (44:26):
Rather than less.
Speaker 2 (44:27):
Tell me about your grandmother. Is it Charmian or charmain,
Charmian charming, It's a combination of all of us. Charmian
Charmian Clift. I remember reading her works when I was younger.
Tell me the extraordinary story about all of that.
Speaker 12 (44:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (44:41):
So, Charmian Clift was Australia's first female columnist and she
was this groundbreaking, amazing writer. She was writing about multiculturalism
in the early sixties when it was the wide Australia policy.
She was writing about basically about sexism and about women's
sort of the empowerment of w when.
Speaker 12 (45:00):
It was how to bake a cake for your man.
Speaker 11 (45:03):
And she married a guy named George John Johnston who
wrote My Brother Jack, and they went to the Greek
Islands and lived this wild bohemian lifestyle, you know, writing
books and you know, carousing. Leonard Cohen stayed with them
for a couple of years when he first arrived in
Ageer before he bought his own house, and he was
part of their gang.
Speaker 12 (45:23):
And my mother was her illegitimate first child.
Speaker 11 (45:28):
My mother's adopted and so when I was twenty one,
the adoption laws changed and my mom found out who
her birth mother was and we found out it was
this incredible author, writer, columnist, thinker, you a trailblazer, and
this was.
Speaker 12 (45:44):
My biological grandmother.
Speaker 2 (45:45):
But also the emotion that's around, how come I didn't
have access to those to those people, Yeah, those great
writer brains and the family that they went on to create,
good and bad. Yeah, Yeah, of emotion around that.
Speaker 12 (45:57):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, I'm I'm so sad that you know,
I never went and met Leonard Cohen. And he credits
Charmian and George with teaching him how to write.
Speaker 11 (46:08):
And you know, a friend of mine used to go
to his concerts all the time and I always thought, oh,
I should go and say hi, and I never did.
Speaker 12 (46:16):
And it's one of those great regrets I really kick
myself about.
Speaker 1 (46:18):
That is extraordin say, this is the stuff that you
get from you. When was the last time you lit
a fire with nothing?
Speaker 14 (46:24):
Like?
Speaker 1 (46:24):
You just lit a fire, no firelight, there's no matches.
Speaker 12 (46:28):
Just just about ten days ago.
Speaker 1 (46:31):
Ten days ago, Yeah, I did that.
Speaker 2 (46:33):
Member. I robbed my two Amex cards together.
Speaker 12 (46:35):
Just know that's an extra extra special kind of spark,
that one.
Speaker 1 (46:39):
That one goes like silver when it goes. I'd love
to see Amandra alone.
Speaker 10 (46:43):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (46:44):
Every time I watch it, I just think, you know,
hats off to everyone. I can barely get to the
car park without needing help.
Speaker 12 (46:50):
I'd take you at camping.
Speaker 1 (46:51):
There you go. I'm not a cat.
Speaker 11 (46:52):
Oh, I reckon, I reckon. You could come out with
me and we, like, just for a night and you
would love it.
Speaker 1 (46:59):
About an hour.
Speaker 11 (47:00):
Okay, let's go out for an hour and we'll light
a fire and have a yarn around a fire around fishing.
Speaker 3 (47:07):
One day, I packed sandwiches before we even left the
boat ramp and had already eaten and was starting on
the bait.
Speaker 11 (47:13):
Absolutely well, no part of part of me in the bush.
When it's you know, when it's me, I go primitive.
But when there's other people, we have food. I'm a
massive foodie and so you know, my friends make me laugh.
I mean sorry, my friends laugh at me because sometimes
when we go out on a really big adventure, like
I packed super light, I've got my you know, you know,
(47:34):
my fire kid and no blankets or anything.
Speaker 1 (47:37):
But I've just got the best food ever.
Speaker 12 (47:40):
Because you know, if you're going to be out.
Speaker 1 (47:41):
In a situation every night, it was great.
Speaker 11 (47:45):
No, I'm not going to make you eat meal, but
I might bring some actual, like some cracking food, and
you won't be eating Gina's.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Buttocks like you're alive when you're starving.
Speaker 12 (47:52):
Today, Well you wouldn't starve, that's for sure.
Speaker 3 (47:57):
Gina, it's always great to talk to you. You were
so great. We are stars as out today.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
You are a star.
Speaker 11 (48:02):
Jeni Chik, thank you, thank you very much for having
me jun Samasio podcast.
Speaker 2 (48:08):
When God, I wanted to get on right now, I
feel like I'm taking plezy Now your.
Speaker 1 (48:14):
Windows over, stick your head on a yell as hell.
Speaker 3 (48:23):
Pub test today, salary transparency. Does it pass the pub test?
Back in my day, it was the height of bad
manners to talk about how much money you made.
Speaker 2 (48:31):
But apparently the younger generations are into this. Eighty six
percent of gen Zetas are open to discussing it, fifty
nine percent millennials, and many are saying this is the
way the company can't rip you off, so that you
know what everyone's getting, you know what's fair. But it
makes for friction. I imagine I can't see human nature
being as it is that you can know what everyone
else not the band human nature you.
Speaker 1 (48:52):
Pay disputes inside your nature.
Speaker 2 (48:53):
Well, the thing is how it's human nature to want
what other people have, and if you don't, how can
it be a happy your work place?
Speaker 1 (49:00):
Of course, how do you feel, son, I'd like to
see pay parity between you.
Speaker 2 (49:03):
And I would your Brendan for example.
Speaker 1 (49:05):
I think that would be great.
Speaker 2 (49:06):
Okay, you don't want to take a big pag salery.
Transparency is a pass the pub test.
Speaker 9 (49:12):
No, I believe it's your.
Speaker 15 (49:14):
Own private business.
Speaker 9 (49:15):
It's a negotiation.
Speaker 6 (49:16):
Between the employer and employee, and.
Speaker 4 (49:19):
It's not for the general public.
Speaker 12 (49:20):
Yes, I think it does.
Speaker 7 (49:21):
I don't really have an issue with people knowing how
much I and it's just a personal thing. But it's
not something that's going to make me cranky with somebody
else earning more money than me.
Speaker 10 (49:30):
I don't really care.
Speaker 4 (49:32):
I express that's sort of thing to yourself, purely, like
talking about.
Speaker 10 (49:35):
Your love life.
Speaker 15 (49:36):
I want to know how much I'm getting If I'm
putting the same effort, I know how to do the
same job. I don't care if it's a boy or
whatever it is, man, woman, gender, whatever, I like, the
same page doesn't pass pumpkids for me.
Speaker 10 (49:48):
For the people that are earning too much money and
not deserving, it probably doesn't pass a pub test or
familiar past the pub test. So yeah, everyone should know
what everyone is professional sportsman, everyone knows what they get.
Speaker 1 (49:59):
So yeah, there it is.
Speaker 2 (50:04):
It's true. We all know what the footy stars get,
movie stars.
Speaker 1 (50:07):
And people on radio sep to talk about what they
get paid all the time.
Speaker 2 (50:10):
Not us, not us, because we're not on the radio.
Speaker 1 (50:13):
And I was watching the block again, so I'm dipping
it out of the block. I do enjoy it.
Speaker 3 (50:18):
I've watched it from its earliest days, and I do
say that the couples do tend to dove tail into
each other over there they.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
Pick the same duos every time.
Speaker 3 (50:27):
There's a lot of ye and people and they say
things like doing these ones and you know they they're all.
Speaker 1 (50:33):
Cliches and they're all ready to have some sort.
Speaker 2 (50:36):
Of like right, and they do. They get cast because
there are a certain type of person and then shock, horror.
They're not very good at renovating.
Speaker 1 (50:42):
Yeah, and there's always one that's really good.
Speaker 3 (50:44):
But it is a it is a great shape it
and I like seeing Scott is a friend of mine,
and I love seeing Shelley on the TV. There has
been a bit of conjecture about the product mentioned throughout
the show, though the member on pose.
Speaker 2 (50:58):
Men's thirty Rock they had to get four or five
posments positive mentions of client goods.
Speaker 3 (51:05):
And I like to see civilians try to work in
product mentions. You know, I've been doing this for a
long time.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
I'm very good at it. I'm very good at just
checking in mentions.
Speaker 2 (51:12):
Like I'm a bit croaky, I need a stripsal and Cole.
Speaker 1 (51:17):
Ask for it by name, but the blockheads will say something.
Speaker 3 (51:21):
You know, we had to go down to Reese to
get some PVC plumbing produced, saying do it again and
mention recent guys of Reese, we love Reese or I
went to Calati to get some tiles. I thought, maybe
because we're catching up, because the.
Speaker 1 (51:36):
Block has already been filmed. It's been done.
Speaker 3 (51:38):
But there was a particular episode last night and they
were memory. They were paying tribute to Anzac Day. So
they had someone playing the last post. Lest we forget
(51:59):
save Craig from our ten year this morning to play
the bugle on the block to do the last post.
Speaker 1 (52:07):
Yeah, was an honor.
Speaker 2 (52:09):
I didn't so Craig from Miner ten sponsored the bugle. Look,
we'll get one of our guys to come down and
give us a message.
Speaker 1 (52:18):
I didn't know that Minor ten had a bugle wile.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
Wow, this could be good to get next to the
bagpipe Island for her in case Grandma passes away and
she wants old Anxiet and played at a funeral.
Speaker 1 (52:26):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (52:30):
This is so interesting. From counseling to hypnotherapy and now
a debunk bot out of the US. It uses AI
to reduce a person's belief in conspiracy theories. All of
these things are being used to reverse the minds of
steadfast conspiracy theorists. Can it work? Our next guest knows
all too well about this. She found herself spiraling, going
(52:53):
viral for tearing masks off target shelves and massing millions
of views. She became a self proclaimed spokesperson for conspiracy
theories like QAnon. Now Melissa rain Lively is on the
other side, sharing his story and the incredible power it
takes to rewire your brain.
Speaker 1 (53:09):
Melissa, Hello, Hi, how are you? Why did they get
to you?
Speaker 13 (53:13):
Man?
Speaker 1 (53:14):
What happened? Melissa got to Don at the beginning?
Speaker 2 (53:16):
Hell, do you go down the rabbit hole?
Speaker 12 (53:18):
Think?
Speaker 1 (53:19):
Well, you know, it's funny.
Speaker 16 (53:20):
I mean, that's really interesting that you had mentioned that
they're doing this like reprogramming with people, because you know,
what is a conspiracy theorist anyway? I mean, I hear
it used as such a pejorative, and you know, being
somebody who's been a business owner for over twenty years,
I work in the influenced business, it was very easy
for them to pigeonhole me very early on during COVID
(53:43):
and try to discredit my discredit me by calling me
a conspiracy theorist, when the reality of the situation was
I was just doing a little bit more thinking, a
little bit more research than most people, And you know, there's.
Speaker 1 (53:55):
A great joke.
Speaker 2 (53:56):
You might have heard it.
Speaker 16 (53:57):
What's the difference between conspiracy theory and conspiracy Act?
Speaker 1 (54:00):
Do you know the answer?
Speaker 10 (54:01):
No?
Speaker 2 (54:02):
About six months?
Speaker 12 (54:04):
About six months.
Speaker 16 (54:05):
That's how long it takes for something that is considered
to be conspiracy to be proven true. And you know
what I say to people now is like, look, you know,
name one thing that I said during COVID that did
not turn out to be one hundred percent true. Name one?
Speaker 2 (54:24):
But what about you tearing the You went viral for
tearing masks off shells and things, and you said after
that that you you kind of were ashamed of that behavior.
What were they changes in you after?
Speaker 16 (54:37):
Well, here's the thing, Like I said, I've been doing
public relations for twenty years. Stunts are a part of
my business. Everybody wants to go viral these days. I
saw an opportunity to make a name for myself and.
Speaker 11 (54:49):
I took it.
Speaker 16 (54:50):
So do I regret making extra work for the people
who were working at the Target store that day? Yes?
Speaker 12 (54:55):
Did I try to purchase all the.
Speaker 1 (54:56):
Masks and clean it up myself? Yes?
Speaker 2 (54:58):
Would they let me buy them?
Speaker 15 (54:59):
No?
Speaker 16 (55:00):
Did it turn into an absolute circus that ruined my
life per year. Yeah, But did I come out of
the other side better for it and able to help
other people dealing with the not so nice end of
viral incidents and cancel culture. But you know, I think
masks were a scam. I would never wear one again.
(55:22):
And I think much of what happened with COVID was
completely a scam.
Speaker 2 (55:29):
So do you do you in your in your work
and your writings, for example, talk about how to help
people come to their own conclusions to come out of
a spiral.
Speaker 12 (55:43):
Well, I don't know what you're talking about. A spiral.
Speaker 16 (55:45):
I had the media telling me I was a conspiracy
theorist on things that have now proven to be one
hundred percent true.
Speaker 1 (55:52):
So at the time I was gas.
Speaker 16 (55:54):
Lit into saying things to get the heat off of me,
and I shouldn't have done it. I shouldn't have I
shouldn't have taken my foot off the gas. I shouldn't
have taken back any of the things that I said
or I did, because there were one hundred percent true.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
So with the so with COVID, the thing about a
worldwide pandemic, it's going to really only happened on one
hundred years.
Speaker 1 (56:17):
So, for example, with us.
Speaker 3 (56:18):
In two thousand and nine, we had the swine flu
pandemic that came through and that was a worldwide pandemic,
but it didn't have the heat that the COVID pandemic was.
And everyone's memories that, well, no one's going to be
around in one hundred years time, so we don't know
what happens with the next one.
Speaker 1 (56:32):
And I'm sure that a lot of people, in hindsight,
you go, well, we probably.
Speaker 3 (56:36):
Acted a bit too were a bit too strict on
these certain regulations and things like that, but.
Speaker 1 (56:42):
At the time, they didn't know how bad it was
going to be. Would you agree with that, Yeah, I
would agree with that.
Speaker 16 (56:48):
I mean, and at the beginning of COVID, you know,
I was also you know, very you know, concerned. You know,
I think that the way that the public was gas lit.
You know, I don't if you remember this, there were
you know, videos of people dropping dead in the street
in China that was pretty scary.
Speaker 12 (57:06):
Yeah, well, we guest were there were there was it.
Speaker 16 (57:10):
Ever proven that where people were dropping dead in the
streets in China?
Speaker 2 (57:14):
Well, a lot of people that died. A lot of
people died before we could have mass vaccination well.
Speaker 16 (57:20):
Look, you work in the media just like I do,
and you know that you can manufacture a narrative using
visuals and using certain language and even things like having
a COVID ticker across CNN. You know, counting the deaths
every day was sending you know, a spike of trauma
and fear and every single person and people were freaking out,
myself included. I mean, you know when they told me
(57:42):
I had to shut my business down, you know, that's
that's really where I was like, uh yeah, you know,
there's something more nefarious.
Speaker 2 (57:50):
Than was nears. What was nefarious? What's the hidden thing
that we're not seeing? What was nefarious?
Speaker 16 (57:59):
Well, I mean one of things as the greatest wealth
transfer in history. I think something like, you know, two
million small businesses closed in the United States. You know,
people were coerced to take a vaccine that was not
ready to be forced into the public. People who lost
(58:20):
their jobs over it. People have died, people have had
debilitating chemistry.
Speaker 2 (58:25):
I feel this is an old discussion. We're through all
this now. In Australia. The vaccine. I know many people
believe that they didn't want the vaccine, but the vaccines
did save lives our government supported people who did lose
their jobs. That's very different to the United States.
Speaker 1 (58:40):
But we're in a position.
Speaker 2 (58:43):
Why are we discussing this now? I must say I
was under the impression that you had been a conspiracy
theorist and that now you weren't, and we thought that
was an interesting journey.
Speaker 16 (58:54):
Well that's a great story, and you know, I don't
know how they do things down there on that penal colony.
Speaker 2 (59:01):
That's okay, I think we might wrap this up.
Speaker 1 (59:04):
This is a very old narrative that all there's a
big you're talking about.
Speaker 16 (59:09):
You're trying to pin me as a conspiracy theorist.
Speaker 2 (59:11):
Well, I'm sorry, I will, I'm sorry. I'm sorry that
that isn't you. I'm sorry if we've misrepresented you, but
I don't I'm not interested in a discussion about how
this didn't happen.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
All right, we'll have a few more vaccines.
Speaker 2 (59:21):
Thank you, we will. I've kept us alive and I
appreciate it. I'm sure you will. Thank you.
Speaker 1 (59:25):
Bye bye. Thanks Melissa. Yeah, okay, I don't know what
happened there.
Speaker 2 (59:30):
I thought she was like, well, we thought that she
We thought what was interesting about her story was that
she had was a conspiracy theorist and had actually found
ways to find ways to deal with that, and that's
what we were interested in. But if you do what
an old narrative, how boring is that old? You know,
go and have another vaccine.
Speaker 1 (59:52):
But if you do the really, if you do the
old math.
Speaker 3 (59:54):
So one hundred years ago when they had the Spanish
flu pandemic, the worldwide population was just around A B
and P and they lost I think on this is
off the top of my head, by the way, but
they lost proportionally, not as many people as we lost
this time round. So the vaccines are so it took
seven years for the vaccines to come through in one
hundred years ago because we didn't have the technology. So
(01:00:16):
families were lining up using the same syringes because they
just wanted to get whatever they could get one hundred
years from now.
Speaker 1 (01:00:23):
So in one hundred years from now, in the future,
no deaths will be excepted.
Speaker 2 (01:00:27):
Well, let's get on, no, I reckon, let's get doctor
carl On one day to discuss the figures of how
many Australians were saved by having vaccines, how many people
around the world were saved by having vaccines. We've discussed
this as an a nauseam. Why don't we just go back?
You know, honestly, I know there are still Australians who
don't believe in that, and that's fine. But if you're
(01:00:49):
going to talk science, you're going to talk figures. Let's
do that properly. Maybe get doctor carl on one day
or that was a waste of time. I sound like
Carle Sanderland.
Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
I don't think so there was a good I like
that chat Jonesy and Amanda podcast Wow Radio on somebody
walk up on the wrong side.
Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
Of the bed, I clean something up here. We did
that interview, then it sounds like we just got someone
so so I could be routed, And that wasn't what
the intention was. We thought that Melissa Lively was an
ex conspiracy theorist, and there's a lot of interesting work
being done at the moment to help people find their
(01:01:33):
way out of conspiracy.
Speaker 3 (01:01:34):
Well, there's a lot of stuff on the Internet, and
there's a lot of stuff that you can look at
from September eleven to Pearl Harbor to there's a lot
of stuff flat Earth.
Speaker 2 (01:01:42):
There's all the rest of it, and a lot of
and and we thought that she was an ex an
ex conspiracy theorist who was helping people reprogram in a
way in the new elasticity of the brain. And then
she said, we got the impression that no, sounds like
she's still quite She doesn't want to be called a
conspiracy theories because everything she says is right, which to.
Speaker 1 (01:02:04):
Me makes her conspiracy theorist.
Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
Emily's our producer who said you'd had some lead up
conversations with her that weren't.
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
That at all, the complete opposite.
Speaker 14 (01:02:12):
Rather, she sells herself as a de escalator, so she's
been hired to help people figure out the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
She herself.
Speaker 14 (01:02:22):
I have a quote here from her that said, they
tell you the institutions you're supposed to trust.
Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
Are lying to you.
Speaker 14 (01:02:29):
Anybody who tells you that QAnon is wrong is a
bad guy, including your friends and family. It happens gradually,
and you don't realize you're getting more and more deep
into it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
So her whole thing was that she spiraled.
Speaker 14 (01:02:39):
Her family gave her like an ultimatum, essentially, you're going
so deep into this, you choose them rass.
Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
And she went, oh my god, what's going on?
Speaker 14 (01:02:47):
And she's kind of become this face for rehabilitation to
fix her image, and I had called her a conspiracy
theorist over emails. I had given her a heads up
about what we were going to talk about. She was
warm with me about it and very interested. And I
find ironically that the way that she conversed in that
(01:03:07):
has sort of shot us.
Speaker 12 (01:03:09):
Off on the foot.
Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
Well, I don't want people to think that we got
her on so that we could just say, what are
you talking about? Because we thought that she was taking
a different kind of argument.
Speaker 14 (01:03:17):
Yeah, it was teet off from this this AI program
that she originally was interested in. And I think it's
kind of proven the point more that humans are having
trouble convincing other humans or helping them out of these spirals.
Speaker 2 (01:03:30):
That's why the AI press.
Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
Right so well.
Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
And when she's never going to convince us or not,
she's not going to convince me that there's a bigger
malevolence around the decisions that were made around COVID, and
we can't. I'm not going to be able to convince
her of otherwise either.
Speaker 3 (01:03:44):
Well, and I said that to it because the governments
at the time didn't know what was happening, you know.
Notwithstanding if the disease, if COVID actually came out of
China or a guy ate, a bat, whatever's that's.
Speaker 2 (01:03:54):
His big farmer did make money in all of that.
But I don't believe there was an evil malevolence behind
the whole, the whole idea of how there has got.
Speaker 1 (01:04:02):
To be a point where you trust. You've got to
trust someone.
Speaker 2 (01:04:05):
And I trust science, that's the thing.
Speaker 3 (01:04:06):
I trust science, but also our memories because no one
was around one hundred years ago when the last pandemic
came through.
Speaker 1 (01:04:13):
And that's the thing.
Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
And we've, as I said in this particular our time
doing radio show, we've seen two other pandemics, the swine flu,
bird flu one as well, and they were all considered
worldwide pandemics.
Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
But we didn't go crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
We didn't have the panic because you know why, in
two thousand and ninements swine flu came through, we didn't
have social media, so around just accepted what.
Speaker 2 (01:04:31):
We Let's accept too that a lot of people died,
of course before we had a vaccine, no one's imagining that.
Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
But because of science, they got the vaccine through quite quickly,
and a lot of people and rightly, a lot of people.
Speaker 1 (01:04:43):
I know wouldn't take the vaccine. I made a choice.
I did the choice to take it. But if you
we I wouldn't force other people to.
Speaker 2 (01:04:50):
Take well that these are all decisions that are made
with twenty you know, in hindsight, all the rest of hindsight.
This is an old discussion. This is a very old discussion,
which is why I'm sorry we went.
Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
We wanted to find out if Paul McCartney was alive
or deain. Really, that's what we wanted and you didn't
do it.
Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
Thanks Emily.
Speaker 1 (01:05:10):
Share Notion podcast.
Speaker 3 (01:05:15):
Better Foxdald keeps getting bigger and better, and to celebrate,
we're giving away loads of catch On our website WSM
dot com dot a you can register your favorite TV
show put your knowledge to the test for money.
Speaker 2 (01:05:30):
There's a sting, though. We do have one thousand dollars
on the line, so this can you can pick your
favorite subject. Carolyn from Illawong has picked Real Housewives of
Beverly Hills. We've got three questions relating to that show.
Here thousand dollars. If she gets questioned three correct, if
she gets any of them incorrect, until then you jump
on and you're playing for the money.
Speaker 3 (01:05:48):
I don't want to alarm you, Carolyn, but everyone that's
selected their show thus far has not won the thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
Oh okay, thanks for high okay.
Speaker 2 (01:05:57):
Thanks stay as high as whole, Miss m Well, you
have to get question three right to get the money.
But it all starts with question one. Carolyn, here's question
one for you from The Real Housewives and Kevity Hills.
Speaker 1 (01:06:07):
Here we go.
Speaker 2 (01:06:08):
Who was the only original cast member that's remained on
the show for all seasons?
Speaker 7 (01:06:14):
I would put that as being Lisa Rena.
Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
I don't think Lisa was there right at the beginning? No, no, sorry, Carol,
already out.
Speaker 1 (01:06:26):
We we talked about high Stakes. Cassie's in Ingeleberth. Hello Cassie,
how are you going?
Speaker 2 (01:06:31):
Very well? Who was the only original cast member who's
remained on the show for all the seasons?
Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
Was it? Taylor?
Speaker 15 (01:06:38):
Answer?
Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
No, See, I don't watch this show, so I'm on
the information I had in front of me if I
would have watched The Real Housewives. And you never know, Brendan,
you watch a lot of stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:06:48):
Kathleen is in Liverpool.
Speaker 2 (01:06:49):
Hi, Kathleen, do you know who was the only original
cast member still there?
Speaker 1 (01:06:54):
Yes?
Speaker 6 (01:06:55):
I'm going to say it's Kyle.
Speaker 2 (01:06:56):
It is It's Kyle Richards.
Speaker 7 (01:06:57):
There you go.
Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
In season five, Lisa Arenas Arena's infamous wine toss happened
in which city? Do you remember they tossed the wine
in season five?
Speaker 10 (01:07:10):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:07:14):
Which?
Speaker 4 (01:07:15):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:07:17):
Paris, that's the city of love, not wine throwing.
Speaker 2 (01:07:20):
I'd catch it with my mouth open. Belinda's in glen Wood. Hello, Belinda, Hello,
Hello New York.
Speaker 1 (01:07:28):
Are we going to go through every city in the world?
Speaker 2 (01:07:30):
Robin and Penser, Robin, do you know we're the infamous
wine toss in season five from Lisa Arena? Where did
that take place?
Speaker 15 (01:07:37):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (01:07:38):
God, I had no idea.
Speaker 3 (01:07:39):
Sorry, I think when you played Carol and Vanilla Wong
for this, she set us up to fail.
Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
Vanessa is in Balkham here.
Speaker 2 (01:07:45):
Hi, Vanessa, Bye? Will I give you a clue?
Speaker 15 (01:07:50):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:07:52):
Well, you know this is a city of women in
windows and partaking before other places were legal to take it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
It's Amsterdam. Answered that's very quickly, Vanessa.
Speaker 2 (01:08:02):
Question three, This is the question. There's no clues because
this one's worth a thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:08:06):
What was the name of the dog that Lisa vander
Pump and her husband adopted from a rescue, which later
became part of the Puppy Gates scandal.
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
That we're missing out on brandan with the show.
Speaker 9 (01:08:19):
It's just fun.
Speaker 10 (01:08:20):
What's that episode?
Speaker 1 (01:08:22):
So again Lucy Lucy?
Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
No, it's not Lucy and not Lucy Lucy. Grizilla is
in Gregory Hills.
Speaker 12 (01:08:31):
Hello.
Speaker 15 (01:08:33):
Hello.
Speaker 2 (01:08:34):
Do you know the name of the dog that Lisa
vand Pump and a husband adopted from a rescue?
Speaker 3 (01:08:42):
Is it Smoky?
Speaker 15 (01:08:43):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:08:44):
Smoking?
Speaker 2 (01:08:46):
Jean's in Liverpool, Hello, Jean, Hi there. Do you know
the name of the dog that they rescued that became
part of puppy Gate scandal. It's not It's gg Yes,
it is.
Speaker 10 (01:09:00):
Us.
Speaker 2 (01:09:01):
I am a fish.
Speaker 1 (01:09:03):
That's the dog speaking there. You have won one thousand dollars,
Gene Jean Jean.
Speaker 2 (01:09:09):
As simple as that.
Speaker 1 (01:09:09):
But it's not. This supposibly be the most convoluted figure.
Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
Many people do. Skippy tomorrow? Is that on Foxtel.
Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
Foxtel like a one stop shop for world's best entertainment.
Find your favorite blockbuster movies, drama, love, sport and now
even more streaming apps, Fox Talk, Tell all in one place.
Speaker 1 (01:09:24):
It'll be back again tomorrow.
Speaker 11 (01:09:26):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:09:27):
Jeane, Jem jam nationid getting close to twenty thousand dollars cash.
Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
Twenty thousand dollars house, would you like to win twenty
thousand dollars just for being a gholie of the year.
Speaker 1 (01:09:44):
That's what you have to do.
Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
Let us know what your gooolies are.
Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
What have we got?
Speaker 4 (01:09:48):
What's getting my ghoulies is where's the thank you wave gone?
You know, the one you give to thank another driver?
Speaker 1 (01:09:53):
So letting you in.
Speaker 4 (01:09:55):
I just did my hourly long commute home and I
let no less than probably three drivers change the lineanes
not one wave. I mean, what's happened? It doesn't really
take much effort, does it anyways? Getting my goolies bring
back the.
Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
Wave, Bring back the wave?
Speaker 2 (01:10:10):
You get bumper stickers?
Speaker 1 (01:10:11):
Mate? There was a radio station did they campaign?
Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
And still there likes to say bring back the finger.
Speaker 1 (01:10:18):
I think the breadth. I think the mixed breakfast show's
doing very well these days. What else have we got?
Speaker 12 (01:10:25):
You know what gets my gooolies?
Speaker 2 (01:10:27):
My gulie is driving in the right hand lane and
a car comes up I and you wanting you to
go faster.
Speaker 12 (01:10:33):
They get around you, and then they come up to
the same redlight as you. They didn't get anywhere that's
what gets my goolies no, because they.
Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
Probably would have got through the red light if you
weren't mucking around in the wrong lane.
Speaker 2 (01:10:46):
Come on, Brendan, we accept all goolies here.
Speaker 1 (01:10:48):
With the bedroom with the goody.
Speaker 3 (01:10:49):
If you do DOABT, you can always contact us via
the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
Was a favorite caller, email or Facebook friend gets a
thousand dollars thanks to Foxtell. They're like Fox so it
was like the one stop shop for the best entertainment
from all around the world. Blockbuster movies, drama, live sport
and now more streaming apps Foxtel all in one place.
Speaker 3 (01:11:08):
JONESI Man, Tita and Keyring going your way as well
this morning thanks to Fox will Tell. By the way,
Carolyn from Illawong was on the show showing off all
her knowledge about the Real Housewives of Beverly Hill.
Speaker 2 (01:11:21):
Well, she was the one who nominated that that was
the show. She wanted to be quizzed on three questions.
If she got question three right, she'd get one thousand dollars.
If she gets any of them wrong, you guys join in.
But she said nope, this was her domain.
Speaker 1 (01:11:32):
No one in the history of this has actually managed
to go all the way.
Speaker 2 (01:11:37):
Question one for you from the Real Housewives like Kevity Hills,
here we go, who was the only original cast member
that's remained on the show for all seasons.
Speaker 1 (01:11:46):
I would put that as being a Lisna on and
Carol improved that again.
Speaker 2 (01:11:54):
Today the answer was Carl Richard.
Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
Yeah, Cup, Carol, if.
Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
You've ever watched a Brandon I've watched half an episode.
Right at you, two, that's enough. Don't forget the song
to listen out for is Let's hear it for the boy.
You will hear that sometime before six pm. Give us
a call thirteen WSFM. You'll win a thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (01:12:12):
We'll be back from six to night for jam nation
here then, goodid you well? Thank god that's over. Good bite,
good bite, wipe the two.
Speaker 10 (01:12:21):
You're right.
Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
You catch Jonesy and Amanda's podcast on the iHeartRadio app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (01:12:32):
Good Bye, Jones.
Speaker 2 (01:12:39):
Catch up on what you've missed on the free iHeartRadio app.