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July 28, 2025 • 61 mins

We talk about parenting styles (among many other things) today and your opinions were quite... eye-opening? 

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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. Well
here is our podcast. What a day?

Speaker 3 (00:20):
Well I read letter day.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
You had a beautiful, seamless experience with Facebook Marketplace the.

Speaker 4 (00:25):
First time in the history of the world. Remember this day.
Remember where you were on the twenty ninth of July
that someone actually had a pleasurable Facebook experience?

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Facebook pleasurable? Pleasurable? Facebook pleasurable? Was it marketplace experience?

Speaker 4 (00:39):
Meaning that and when smoothly the item was what we
paid for.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
There was no haggling over money. We got there.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
It was easy, no problems, eye takers, no tie kickers, was.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
All good, all right, Well lucky Jonesy. We put dad
bods to the pub test. Sasha Baron Cohen has just
an incredible amount of weight and all I guess he's
lost weight because he works out. He's on the cover
of Men's Health UK and a whole lot of women
are saying, you know what I preferred you before?

Speaker 2 (01:05):
Yeah, what's with dad? We talked about the rise of
the fate parent.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
If around and find out parents, this is parenting with repercussions.
If you say take a raincoat and the kid doesn't
take a raincoat from the nineteen thirties, and.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
All the kid gets wet.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
If you say there's lasagna for dinner, I don't like it,
then you don't about breakfast. Toys are on the floor,
bad luck. I'm going to throw them out, and you
have to stick to it.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
If you're of a certain age like me and yourself.
We were raised on the faith o.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Parents, and because many of us were, and many parents
took that to the extreme, some in our generation are
slightly traumatized, which is what led then to us very much.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
We became the snowaring we became.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
You look at their keys.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
I got cut for my daughter's car, not once, not twice,
but thrice.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
I got keys cut for a car because she kept
losing them.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
If that was you'd have been thrown in the bin,
car and the bin.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
My point is, when I stopped doing it and then
she lost the last set.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Of keys, I said, well, you just got have to
work it out yourself.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
So she had to go and pay expensive locksmiths and
stuff to get Yeah, and she hasn't lost a key since.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
I'm still a silk. I've seen my accountant. You so
he said, what's this for? I said, Old Jack had
a minor praying in his car and what's this? Oh,
he smashed his phone. You know, I'm still a big
sook with that stuff. I wish I was stronger. We're
going to talk about that also, Emma Gillespie for That's Entertainment.
Jamie Lee Curtis is having an upswing in her career.
Jamie Lee says she's planning her departure from Hollywood. Doesn't

(02:28):
want to hang around too long.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
She's just on the way.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
She wants what she want, Jamie Lee and gets my
goolies is.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
All in this podcast. That a miracle of recording. We
have so many requests for them to do it again.

Speaker 5 (02:48):
Mistress Amanda's MS killer. Amanda doesn't work alone.

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Friend is in a back room making the tools of
the trade.

Speaker 4 (02:57):
I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot.

Speaker 6 (03:01):
A legendary part Jonesy and Amanda the actress.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
Congratulations May right now going to and you're doing a great.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
Job anyone Selfie, No Goo good radio.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
Sorry but it's a twist set and Amanda's shoot Timy.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
We're on the air of Top of the Morning. To
you miss moss Hues, how are you.

Speaker 1 (03:31):
I'm all rightfully but emotional today my friend Melanie, and
I don't want to cry about this, but she's my
bestest friend. She's in a car this morning on the
way to hospital. I've spoken about Mel and her daughter
Jests before. Mel's my friend from my school days. My
Barry Manilo buddy joined at the hip the two of us.
Melanie is on her way to hospital to donate her
kidney to her daughter Jest today.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
So Mel, I wish you all the love in the
world and for Jest today.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
So it was just around Christmas time, really, Jess it
had wasn't feeling great. She'd had a bit of a
kind of a stomach upset. So the almost asymptomatic went
to have a blood test and they said, you're in
full renal failure.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
So their lives have spun on the head of a pin.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
Really, and Mel over the last few months has been
cleared to be her donor. And imagine those emotions too.
You do anything for your child, but this is a
big operation from Mel as well. She wanted to be
the donor, but at the same time, as she got
closer and closer to it, she goes.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
You know, this is big surgery too. So they're both
having their procedures. They're separate teams that are linked somehow today.
And I wish you both all the love in the world, Yes,
your new Jess as new life begins now, a new
world of health and mel all the love for what's
going to happen today in hospital for maybe up be four.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
Or five days, and then you know, then onto recovery.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
Healing vibes heading your.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
Way, vibes from all of us.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
Might the surgeons be great, May everything go in your favor.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
Absolutely, Wow, it's big stuff. It's a big deal.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
I have enough trouble learning my kids a car.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Well, rather than you, you know, the kidney lended, I
don't think you get it back. It is another thing
to have blood tests and get checked. She's just this gorgeous,
vibrant girl in.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
A most selfless thing to do.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
Yeah, And luckily for her, she'd been traveling the world,
she'd come home, she'd moved back in with a parent.
She had been living in a flat. She moved back
in to save some money to buy a place. And
so luckily she's you know all this stuff. Well, the
world collapsed around her. She had a family around her.
So yeah, as we often say, often say, the world
spins on the head of a pin.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
It's real life stuff.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
It really is. It's a mum's love right there, Isn't it?

Speaker 7 (05:41):
All?

Speaker 2 (05:41):
The best to you both? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (05:43):
On the show today Tuesday or the Fruits of the
Tuesday PI Emma Gillespie's going to swing by Jamie Lee Curtis.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
Is it just me or do you think that Jamie
Luke Curtis.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
Has lost her She jumped her own shark.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
I feel that she's had a resurgence as being the
every woman and isn't she amazing? And she's become a
bit strident. Maybe we don't like strident women. Maybe that's
what she's shaves sock stripe.

Speaker 2 (06:05):
Less strident women. Maybe that's the thing.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
And that's a hill you can die on on your own.
We're going to put dad bods to the pub test.

Speaker 2 (06:13):
Are we.

Speaker 4 (06:16):
Instagram makes us return and we can't do anything until
we do The Magnificence seven.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
Question number one, what do you call the large body
of water that covers most.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
Of the earth that was closed gen nations?

Speaker 4 (06:27):
We have for you the Magnificent seven. There's seven questions.
Could you go all the way and answer all seven
questions correctly?

Speaker 2 (06:33):
If you do that, Amanda will say I also.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
Say that Melanie is being the donor for her daughter
yesterday for the.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Kidney years, but that that's so it's not every day
that that can happen, which is why we need organ donations.

Speaker 2 (06:48):
Well, I'm down on the organ donation then for sure.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
And if you had a liver transplants right, So organ
donation is a big thing in my family too.

Speaker 2 (06:56):
You've got a lot of people in your life with
organ donations.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
But aren't we lucky that they do get the organs
that they require. But that's only because people are the donors.
So I'll get to it.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
I've decided to donate my brain to science.

Speaker 3 (07:08):
Oh need a pencil holders in Camden? What's this walnut
on my desk? Hello Bromwan, how are.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
You good morning?

Speaker 3 (07:18):
I'm good, How are you very well? Question number one?

Speaker 1 (07:20):
What do you call the large body of water that
covers most of the earth.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
The ocean?

Speaker 4 (07:27):
What kind of nut is used to make natella brom one?
You know the history of this time in the war,
the Italians, their chocolate ration was rationed and so the
old mate Gino decided to mix the hazel nuts with chocolate,

(07:48):
and so it was born.

Speaker 3 (07:50):
He wasn't a manure kind of specialist mixed.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
That would be a whole different.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Let's play lyrical assassin, Ram, I'm going to read some
lyrics or do you want to do it? Brandan, you
do it, read some lyrics and you have to tell us.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
What I know.

Speaker 8 (08:04):
You have problems with the lyrical assass Well, this one's different.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
It's because sometimes you you need to sing them. But
this is this is.

Speaker 4 (08:10):
An interesting is where we quote the lyrics to a
song and you have to work out where they're from.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Here we go.

Speaker 4 (08:15):
They call me Stacy, they call me her, they call
me Jane.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
That's not my name. That's not my name. That's not
my name. And walking here, that's not my name. Any ideas.

Speaker 9 (08:30):
It's bringing a bill, But I can't think of the
name of the song.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Sorry, Bromwe perhaps James of Quakers Ill Nurse James.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
You know the name of that song?

Speaker 10 (08:41):
No, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (08:43):
I me have a crack. They call me Stacy, they
call me her, they call me Jane.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
That's not my name. It's not my name, that's not
my name. What's the name of the song.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
It's like I'm singing the band podcast man playing lyrical assassin.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
Tanya's in Georgia's hall. Hello, Tanya, Good morning Jamesy and Amanda?

Speaker 10 (09:06):
Hell, are you very well?

Speaker 3 (09:07):
Which song has these lyrics? Tana, they call me Stacey,
they call me her, they call me Jane. That's not
my name. That's not my name. It's not my name.
What's the song that's not my name? Yeah, it is.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
That's a song.

Speaker 3 (09:21):
But I love the song.

Speaker 11 (09:24):
I love.

Speaker 9 (09:28):
This.

Speaker 3 (09:29):
Next question is choice for you Tanner.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
According to astronauts, what does space smell like? Is it
a rotten eggs, be burnt steak and welding fumes or
see sweaty old socks.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Oh, I'll go a.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
It's not rotten eggs, not unless you're in a very
enclosed space station.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
And Amanda is in the capsule. What about that egg
you wanted to eat yesterday?

Speaker 1 (09:54):
I hard boiled some eggs and then I sort of
eat them throughout the week.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
And I think I left that one a bit long.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
And you know what she said to me, Nick?

Speaker 3 (10:02):
What did I say?

Speaker 2 (10:04):
Nick? Said? Amanda said to me, she said, do you
think this is off?

Speaker 3 (10:07):
Half? Of it.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
It looked like one of the thousand year old eggs.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
There's a little bit black on the inside.

Speaker 2 (10:13):
You're gonna get runny bottle.

Speaker 3 (10:15):
Hello Nick, good morning, How are you good?

Speaker 1 (10:18):
According to astronauts, does space smell like burnt steak and
welding fumes or sweaty old socks? Oh, don't be it
is burn steak and worlding fumes.

Speaker 2 (10:30):
I love that smell.

Speaker 3 (10:30):
I know your house smells is that.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
I love the smell of welding fumes.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
Originally Amazon only sold what kind of product?

Speaker 2 (10:38):
Nick?

Speaker 3 (10:40):
Are They first known for selling.

Speaker 7 (10:45):
Okay computers?

Speaker 3 (10:48):
Sorry?

Speaker 1 (10:48):
Nick Rodney's in hard Pllow Rodney. Originally Amazon sold only
what kind of product?

Speaker 10 (11:00):
It was?

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Books? I love the books. Somewhere between a coffee and
a dessert.

Speaker 4 (11:04):
And afrigato contains espresso poured over what other in green?

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Yeah, sort of alcoholic.

Speaker 4 (11:13):
I had an avocado on Saturday night we had for
dinner for my sister's birthday. You know what I had
with it, Trambuie as the alcoholic content.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
My family were not dessert eaters, but Harley loves an africado,
and my sons therefore love and affrigada.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
We should start when this fails, and it probably will.

Speaker 3 (11:29):
Just an Avogado restaurant.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
No, just one of those food truck vans.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Affogado, Sure, Avogado, this one, don't you? Question Number seven
for you, Rodney?

Speaker 1 (11:39):
What TV award show is on this Sunday? I'm going
to be presenting an award at those very logos?

Speaker 2 (11:48):
What are you presenting?

Speaker 3 (11:49):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Oh, you don't even know.

Speaker 3 (11:51):
Well I kind of know, but I'm not going to say.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
You don't want to say. It's all you know. It's
not one of the ones the Off Broadway Awards, is it.
I'm not the best advertorial. I weir as well, that's me.

Speaker 4 (12:03):
I'm hoping and hope again your soul gets.

Speaker 2 (12:06):
Up this year.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Oh well, there's the catch cry.

Speaker 12 (12:09):
Congratulations to your running You've won the jam pack an
amazing three hundred and sixty five symplan padded three hundred dollars,
two hundred and forty gigabytes of data with unlimited standard calls,
SMS and mms, one hundred dollars to spend at.

Speaker 4 (12:26):
San Search, romwe On, Shean and shop sixty percent off.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
Are you getting all this down?

Speaker 3 (12:32):
I want you doing a good job.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
And Jones in Amanda characters for the color and some
standard pencils. I say running, is anything you'd like to
add to this?

Speaker 10 (12:39):
No, thank you very much, that's great good.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
It's a bit of a word salad, I know, and
you've done very well.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
Don't think we need any more words.

Speaker 5 (12:46):
Jonesy and Amanda podcast.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
We do need your drag name Frindover, Haley, Davidson, Color, Sakos.
I've read that out without three read Hello there, Hello,
I'm going to fix through the German like a big
book of mutual good for you on this day. Ninety
seventy eight, the Grease soundtrack went to number one in
the States, and of course it features an array of

(13:14):
classics from the movie, including that big fan favorite You're
the One that I Want.

Speaker 3 (13:18):
Now.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
We know that John Travolta can sing, but it's never
actually spent much time in front of the microphone. But
recently he joined his longtime pal Ringo star that's random,
he joined him on stage.

Speaker 13 (13:30):
Have a listen, that's Ringo's that Johnny would be.

Speaker 3 (13:43):
John with him.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
That time on stage with a beatle did some kind
of trick because, apparently, according to friends, John Travolta has
been inspired to launch a music career, wants to record
an album and maybe apparently go on tour.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
He made Ringo sound good with that something. Maybe you
should get Ringo to come with him.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
Is he the one that you want? Who knows? Let's
put it on now.

Speaker 4 (14:10):
My wife called me yesterday and she said, the words
strikes fear into any man's heart.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
Wou'd she find?

Speaker 4 (14:18):
No, No, nothing like that. I've bought something on Facebook Marketplace.
Can you pick it up for me?

Speaker 3 (14:24):
Okay?

Speaker 4 (14:25):
Yeah, yeah, and you instantly, Because no one in the
history of Facebook Marketplace has ever had a smooth transaction.
It's always is this thing for sale and you go, yeah,
it's still available, and you never hear from them again,
or you get a time waster, or you get a
low ball that comes along after you've agreed on the price.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
The people when there's stuff that's for free and they
come and say, now I don't like it.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
Why is it like that? You know it's free?

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Can we negotiate on this.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
I've never sold anything on Facebook Marketplace for that very reason.
I don't want to have human interactions.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Helen's doing some renovations and she found these French doors
nice and they're at Stanwell Tops.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
How far is it from your house?

Speaker 2 (15:07):
Probably fifty sixty ks, so that's a.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
Big deal to phone you during the day.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
She said, you don't have to go now, but can
you get them. At some stage I went, yeah, no worries.
I'll have a sleep and a ponder and then I'll
sort it out. So I woke up two in the afternoon.
I'm like a little kid. I woke up a two
in the afternoon, did your milk? And I was less.

Speaker 4 (15:30):
Crumpy, and I thought, you know what. I contacted the
man and I said, can I come now? And yeah,
sure of course you can. I had the sweetest run
from home to Stay on the Top that I've ever
had in my life.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
And that is a beautiful section of.

Speaker 4 (15:45):
Raid when you're going down Lawrence Hargrave drive there winding
through and I don't drive cars off and so I
have my old Turtle Land Cruiser, which I don't drive often,
so it was nice just to get that on the street.
I had the radio on, I'm just driving down the road.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
Got there.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
The doors were sitting out the front, beautiful doors, exactly
what we're after. The man was extremely helpful, so much
so I was going to put them on the roof
rack of my land Cruiser, and he said, no, you
know you can fold all the seats down in this car.
I said no, he guys, yeah, you can put the
passenger seat right down. I've only had that car for

(16:20):
thirty years.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
I didn't know that put the doors in.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
Paid the cash, and he looked at me, and I
looked at him, and we both said together, this is
the best Facebook market Place transition that's ever had or transaction.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Did it bite you in the bum or did it
end up being okay? You got home safely, no.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
Bum bite right, managed to get through the school.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
Doors, didn't fall out the back of your car.

Speaker 4 (16:42):
They're still in my car in the garage, just sitting
there enjoying those doors.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
Is that what they were for? They just going to
leave them there?

Speaker 2 (16:53):
Well, you know that's the next part of the job.
I've got to get him out.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
Yeah, that's that's for another time.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Then someone's got to put him on the house.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
That's for another time.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
But like, really, that's a pretty sweet deal.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
You should buy a lottery ticket because that's a pretty
surprising result.

Speaker 4 (17:07):
There's one on Facebook Marketplace now it's been scratched already.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
It's for free. That's a problem with this scratchy. It's
been scratched. I'll still take it, Nato.

Speaker 4 (17:21):
Let's get on down to the jonesy amount of arms
for the pub test.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
You'd probably be by now.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
I have seen Sasha Baron Cohen's most recent rig.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
And I don't want to body shame anyone, men or women,
but it's worth looking at the people who've commented on this.
Maybe I'm obfiscating my own opinion here, but he has
shared the cover of Men's Fitness UK on Instagram. He
is incredibly cut, so what we say is mustly he's lie.
The shirtless photo of him doing pull up supposing with
gym equipment, he has said this is not AI. I

(17:54):
really am an I am egotistical enough to do this,
he said, is launching his midlife crisis. He has said,
is debuting a new character, a middle aged man who
replaced ber with protein shakes. So there's someone that said afterwards,
I thought this is one of those comedy cooking aprons
featuring a male Torso does look like that, does look.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
Like that.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
He's found the perfect body for himself. But this article
is saying I'm not sure that many women would find
his pumped up pecks a thing of beauty. There's something
deeply attractive about a man pursuing a passion, but there's
something troubling when that passion turns out to be sculpting
himself in the image of a cartoon character. Oli Merz,
the British singer earlier this year, showed off a body transformation.

(18:42):
He had photos before and after, and it sparked a
big debate. Men thought he looked great afterwards they saw
that as aspirational. Women By and large, the majority of
women who commented on that.

Speaker 3 (18:53):
Said they preferred the first picture.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
It was a body that would pick you up, hug you,
take you camping, have fun shenannigans, be enjoyable to be around.
And this is the comments here they're seeing. Women do
not generally like muscular bodies. Men think that women do,
but we don't imagine. It's the same as men preferring
curves to skinny women. Women dress and look maybe the
way they are for women, maybe men do it for men.

(19:18):
But the dad bot I think many women are comfortable
with a guy with a dad bod. What do you think, Brendan,
Because if the men like this look. Do you think
that they look better?

Speaker 2 (19:27):
Well, it looks healthy, but is it healthy? Doesn't look healthy.

Speaker 4 (19:30):
We had a publicist here that coorded the idea of
what's that album album?

Speaker 2 (19:35):
The book what's called Men's Health magazine magazine.

Speaker 4 (19:38):
I said, would you be interested? This was back when
I was relevant.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
Is this You'd have to have a body transformation?

Speaker 2 (19:44):
And I said what do you have to do?

Speaker 4 (19:45):
And I said, you know you do a lot of exercises,
is now, So it's not that hard.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
You just got to give up beer, okay.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
And that was the end of that.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
That's right. Suddenly were the centerpiece for Open Road.

Speaker 4 (19:57):
Just I love having a beer, but you're going to
eat a plate of seeds?

Speaker 2 (20:01):
You know. I don't want to do that. I think
there's a lot to it. And I could see why
women would find that on a pearly because.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
Because the man who's obsessed with himself is unattractive? Is
that part of maybe what that image says?

Speaker 2 (20:14):
Yeah, that's the very image of narcissists.

Speaker 1 (20:17):
Yeah, theyugh do men like women who look like they're
working really hard on their bodies. Oh, women look for
different things in men, As this woman says here, you
look for comfort, You look for someone to hug you,
You want to put your head on someone's chest, that
kind of thing.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
What do you think?

Speaker 3 (20:32):
What do you think the dad bot? Does it pass
the pub test?

Speaker 2 (20:35):
Thirteenth damnation? Oh my god?

Speaker 4 (20:38):
Jones and a man Kale was just meant to be
a decoration.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
You don't know where you heard that? Fund fact on
this very show when I told you that, where did
you say you don't listen to a word I sung?

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Did you say something to you?

Speaker 3 (20:49):
No?

Speaker 4 (20:49):
No EM's joining is later on the show when you're
talking about Jamie Lee Curtis and the rise and fall of.

Speaker 3 (20:55):
Jamie Lee, because what I mean the fall? There's no fall.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
In my books, there's a bit of a fall.

Speaker 11 (20:59):
Well.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
It's interesting because she started as a you know, a
teen actress, a daughter of famous parents, and in her
recent years she's in her early sixties, maybe midi sixties,
she's found a new resurgence. She's won an oscar, she's
doing interesting roles, and she's a critic of cosmetic surgery.
She's an outspoken critic of having late nights. She's becoming

(21:20):
a bit of an outspoken critic full stop. So I
think she's I think EM's talking about the fact that
Jamie Lee is preparing for her Hollywood exit, so you
never know what have you.

Speaker 3 (21:31):
Prepared from an exit for this from this show, my
Hollywood exit.

Speaker 4 (21:38):
The joker in Batman walking away from that hospital, which
is brought up.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
But I am like Jamie Lee Curtis. She's recently before
the Oscars. I mean she was nominated for an Oscar
to have a pre Oscar event for all the nominees
and she said, oh my god, I'm not going to.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
Go to that.

Speaker 3 (21:52):
It starts at seven point thirty. She's hilarious podcast. When God,
I wanted to get on right now.

Speaker 10 (22:03):
I'm no windows a yell.

Speaker 4 (22:12):
Down at the Junty Man of Arms in the pub
test today it's all about Sasha Baron Cohen.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
Well, he's gone on the cover of Men's Fitness UK
and he is looking quite different. He's completely He looks
a bit like Iggy Pop, doesn't. He's all live muscle,
all glistening bag for the walnuts. Yeah, and he's sort
of joking saying, I'm hard launching my midlife crisis and
I'm a middle aged man who's replaced ber with protein shakes.

(22:37):
As someone said, I thought this is one of those
comedy cooking aprons featuring that fake male Torso he's not
doing it for women, or maybe he.

Speaker 3 (22:45):
Is, but women.

Speaker 2 (22:46):
Is he trying to get Isla back women?

Speaker 4 (22:48):
Not in a ravene sense, but get her back?

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Well, women by and larger responded to this by going,
I preferred how you look before. Olimmr's and English singer
same thing had a body transformation. Women say, we prefer
how you look before, and we're not bodied. I don't
want to body shame anybody, but by and large the
comments from the women were, I prefer thanks me a
man to pick me up, to hug me, to take

(23:11):
me camping, someone I can put my head on his chest.
Someone who's obsessed with himself at the gym isn't attractive,
but men do. Men probably maybe like that in women
who put their appearance first.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
Women want someone to take them camping. Is that a thing?

Speaker 1 (23:26):
Not every woman, but someone who a man who can
be loosey goosey with himself maybe, do you know what
I mean? Kind of not stitched up having to work
so hard to present this gym image?

Speaker 4 (23:38):
Well, do you do you want to give up beer
and eat nothing but seeds for the rest of your life.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
This is the quote that was here in this article.
Women do not generally like muscular bodies. Men think we do.
We don't. I imagine the same when we think that
men prefer skinny women to women with curse?

Speaker 2 (23:54):
Is that why I'm so repellent to women? God?

Speaker 3 (23:58):
Oh, dad bods? Do they pass the pub test?

Speaker 7 (24:04):
I'm fifty years old, and I think the dad bod
passes a pub test because I think.

Speaker 10 (24:09):
Having a dadbod and man boobs myself, I think women
are more interested in somebody who looks after them, not
more interested in looking after themselves.

Speaker 6 (24:18):
Hiding behind a dadbod is usually all sides sorts of
medical conditions like heart disease, fung disease, overweight. I'm not
saying you've got to be ripped, but it's usually hiding
some massive health concern.

Speaker 14 (24:32):
Men who've gone put themselves first, the gym and foremost
and do not play a relationship first is quite selfish.
I'd actually prefer to be with somebody who's nice, think cuddly,
what takes about places, and just be them.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
Of course it does.

Speaker 10 (24:46):
I mean, I'm a dad.

Speaker 14 (24:46):
I've got a bod, so I'm a dad bod.

Speaker 7 (24:49):
But simply as it is, it's.

Speaker 8 (24:51):
Fair enough to what men do fair enough too. They
like to be taking out camping for women, not all
the women. This woman doesn't never take me camping us.
It's interesting, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
We've had the era of well, maybe we're still in
the era a free range pair of snowplow parents who
remove obstacles to make love easy for their kids.

Speaker 15 (25:13):
Free range parents, though, aren't they the ones? They all
our kids a great deal of freedom, just do whatever
the hell they want. Gentle parenting. It's called, by and
large this new I read an article just this morning
in the Wall Street Journal. The headline was, goodbye gentle
periling of parenting. Hello, f around and find out, FAITHO

(25:35):
muck around and find out if you'd rather a mako
kind of a mafoo, doesn't it? Some of the parents
are ditching the softer approach they're saying to child rearing
and taking a harder line.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
They're going to out feral their they're feral. So this
article calls it FEIFO f around and find out. And
it's based on the idea that parents can ask and warn,
but if a child breaks the rules, mum and dad
aren't standing in the way of the Repercussions could be
as simple as didn't bring a raincoat, walk and downpour,

(26:10):
don't feel like having lasagna for dinner. See if you
can survive till breakfast. Left your floor or your toy
on the floor again, it's in the bin under the lasagna.
Parenting that's light on discipline has dominated the culture in
recent decades, it says, But critics blame this approach for
some of gen Z's problems in adulthood, surveys that show
young adults are struggling with workplace relationships because they were

(26:32):
never told no, suffering from depression and anxiety because their
parents lend in to all of their problems.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
So maybe there's something in this. It's interesting, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (26:41):
But others are saying that this parenting debate is reflecting
the debate in wider society. The divide in wider society,
the paradigm of gentle parents versus feifaux parents is kind
of as saying here snowflake kids versus marga kids.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
It's not political, but in the.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
Style hardline parenting is necessary for a child's survival in
a harsh world.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
That said, this particular faitho father. He said that of
the participation trophy is over, it's caused us all to
get a bit soft.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
I've kind of agree with that as well. I think
that's true. But having said that, there's bits from both sides.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
There are, and why can't we raise kids with both sides?
I know the big point is to be consistent. This
woman here has said that by being a gentle parent
all that mindful adulting has robbed parents of their freedom
as well, because we tippedo around our kids' emotions all
the time, where our whole lives are geared around if
our kids okay. And someone else has said here that

(27:44):
that gentle parenting is okay. It's a good idea that
she said, how come feelings have now been equoted with
raising equator with raising snowflakes?

Speaker 3 (27:53):
That feelings are weak?

Speaker 1 (27:55):
She said, I'd rather not scare my children into obedience,
but have them trust me. If my kids are in trouble,
I don't want them to say Mom's going to be.

Speaker 3 (28:03):
Mad at me. So people feel weird about creating a
generation of soft kids.

Speaker 4 (28:09):
You're gonna have a bit of that fear as well
for the kid that there's going to be consequence.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
Well, this same woman who has said I want I
like gentle parenting apparently then posted a picture of a
bike mark on her child's arm because she said, my
kid bit me.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
Last night, and I bit he that, and there you go,
and there you go. At some point we have to teach.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
Our kids that there are consequences and there are repercussions.

Speaker 4 (28:31):
So as a kid growing up in the seventies and eighties,
my whole life is marked by moments where other people
disciplined me, whether it be the brothers at school when
I was at the Catholic school they beat the hell out.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Of you, or just to see.

Speaker 3 (28:44):
But that doesn't that's well.

Speaker 4 (28:46):
I remember one time, as soon as you're just talking
about this, I remember I was one of my dad's
mate's places, swimming in the pool with a diving mask on.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
And I got out of the pool and I threw
the diving mask.

Speaker 4 (28:58):
Being a kid on the ground, so I sort of
got up to the edge of the pool, took it off,
PLoP back in the pool. Next time I came up,
my dad's may grabbed me and cracked me on the
head and said, that's a two hundred dollars diving mask. Mate,
they cost a fortune, and my dad's standing. He didn't
say anything, and he was a full on crack.

Speaker 2 (29:16):
On the head.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
See, and I'm saying that's a good thing.

Speaker 4 (29:19):
But from that moment, like here, I am at fifty
seven and I've remembered that as clear as dye. So
there's possible that made me in a way think about
other people's stuff because I look in I've got a
lot of cool stuff, and kids will come thinking it's
a good thing. Look, I'm not saying it's a good thing,
but I'm just saying it's certainly. Whenever I near a
diving mask, I treat it with care.

Speaker 3 (29:40):
Whenever I near a diving mask, I go into feutal
position and sold for an hour.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
If I see Jacques Cousta, you can go break down.
You're at the shops.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
But modern parenting, we all talk about how we can't
help ourselves. We want to be our kids friends, and
that's not our job. You can't be And there's a
fine line between and as this woman says, you don't
want your kids to be frightened of you.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
You want them to trust you. There's a lot of
issues here.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
There's shades of gray All thre through this, but maybe
we are coming out of the gentle parenting and heading
more into the f around and find out parents here.

Speaker 3 (30:16):
But as you say, a combination of A and B
would be good.

Speaker 5 (30:20):
Jonesy and Amanda podcast.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
Jones Happily Captain Birds rex Hunt kissed them.

Speaker 11 (30:32):
There.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
Now, do you remember, Brendan last week we were talking
about going back in a time machine. Actually, what you
fantasize is about I'd go back and I'd kill Hitler
as a baby.

Speaker 2 (30:42):
And then problem.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
We were listening to a comedian talk about it and
he said, well, imagine going for a job interview and
they say, look here you've killed a baby. Yeah, but
it was Hitler, and you go, who's that? He goes, Oh,
there's your problem.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
We established you're going to go back for not at
the concentration camp time, but.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
Before when he's a bad in so you can justify
the killings.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
Look what's happening.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
But in the process of discussing all that, I talked about,
where would you like to go if you had a
time machine.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
I'd love to go back to ancient Egypt or the
court of Louis the fourteenth.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
And here's what you said, I'd go back to the
snow in eighty seven.

Speaker 3 (31:19):
You can't go back to just like a few decades.

Speaker 2 (31:22):
You go back to recent times, because there was that lady.

Speaker 3 (31:27):
I keep going, Please, we'd love to hear it.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
An old lady.

Speaker 8 (31:30):
So old lady who I was nineteen, she was thirty five, right,
and but this is taken of what I'm just saying.

Speaker 4 (31:39):
She put the you know, she said how about it?
And I said no because she had a husband anyway.
But by the bike, here's me.

Speaker 3 (31:49):
I'd go back to the ancient court of France. I'd
go back to the Egyptian.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
I'd go back to the snow push you all those
eighty ski pants.

Speaker 9 (31:56):
You know.

Speaker 1 (31:59):
You talked ad nausey that entire show, on and off
it about that experience or lack of experience.

Speaker 10 (32:08):
You know what.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Why the reason I'm bringing this up is a digital Jenny.
I know that's something she'd like to bring in.

Speaker 2 (32:16):
No, no, no, we're doing it next Gemation. And I
don't think we need to keep harping on.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Well, you kept harping on it. We were talking about
your memories. I said about a time machine. You wanted
to go back down your own lifetimeline, and in this life,
wouldn't go back to a moment of missed opportunity in
the snow.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
You went on and on about it on.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
More. I just thought about my thing going back to
the snow. Am I going back now as.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
A fifty seven year old because she was thirty five,
So now I'd be way too old for her.

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Mate.

Speaker 3 (32:48):
It was the appeal that she was older. Yeah, the
only appeal was.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
Just your smoke at high Anyway, we did the math.

Speaker 3 (32:57):
She'd now be seventy four or something, and she'd probably
look at you and.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
Go like, might be some granny.

Speaker 3 (33:04):
Oh you're a grandfather. You're a grandfather. Now it's a
just right.

Speaker 2 (33:09):
You brought in digital Jenna.

Speaker 3 (33:10):
Digital Jenna had please.

Speaker 4 (33:12):
Tell me she's not outside the building, because I don't
want to know she's inside.

Speaker 3 (33:16):
Have you checked the children.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
I'm working with? Seventy four? Thank you, Brendan. That's a joke, Jenna.

Speaker 3 (33:26):
Never been in a hot tub in my life, and.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
There was no hot tub. Okay.

Speaker 11 (33:30):
So over the weekend, we actually got a message on
our TikTok account from somebody who says, as an aside, Jonesy,
this Carol, you speak of in the hot tub in
the eighties.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Are you sure it wasn't Carolyn?

Speaker 3 (33:43):
It could have been my mother. Do you have a charge?

Speaker 2 (33:48):
Now?

Speaker 4 (33:48):
This is nothing unless I'm the Lord and it was
an immaculate conception because I did the right thing.

Speaker 3 (33:56):
Well do you is this a child of carov? Said Carol?

Speaker 2 (34:00):
What?

Speaker 3 (34:00):
What's the years? Do we know anymore? In from We
don't know the years?

Speaker 2 (34:03):
That's it was?

Speaker 3 (34:03):
She a Carolyn.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
I can't remember that much.

Speaker 3 (34:07):
You seem to remember a lot you. I don't remember that.
I don't remember he actual name, but I remember a lot.

Speaker 2 (34:13):
Nothing happened.

Speaker 4 (34:14):
Okay, although if I had a time machine, now I
know that's enough for that, Jennal, let's just shut that
one day.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
If there's any more information, If there's any more information,
should we try and find Carrol stroke Carolyn.

Speaker 2 (34:37):
Stroking?

Speaker 3 (34:38):
I love how you sick.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
You don't know her actual name because you didn't pay
that much attention. You've known every other minutia of this story.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Back to front ski pants are very distracted.

Speaker 1 (34:46):
Okay, everyone's groaning out there in the production room.

Speaker 2 (34:52):
Do you know why I just had a flashback? She
went skiing with Ian Moss? Did she.

Speaker 3 (34:58):
Do you wish you were her or him in that
scenario because you love them both. Podcast Entertainment, Put on
your dance and shoes.

Speaker 10 (35:11):
Don't give me your.

Speaker 4 (35:12):
Best shot when the news is fitzedprint em Blesbie from
The Daily Osho.

Speaker 2 (35:18):
Hello, I want to talk to.

Speaker 16 (35:20):
You about a new interview with one of my favorite actresses,
Jamie Lee Curtis.

Speaker 3 (35:24):
Do we love her debating this earlier? I love her,
and now I'm not so sure.

Speaker 1 (35:31):
I've interviewed her a couple of times and she kind
of I really like her, but she wants to be
the most relevant person in the room. Right So I
find that she has claimed her middle agedess in a
great way, and she's won an oscar and she says
women shouldn't have plastic surgery. She said women need to,
you know, stand up, be this, don't don't be body obsessed.

(35:54):
All wonderful messages, but there's a certain marmishness to her.
I like to go to bed earlier, don't marke up, don't.
I don't know she's decided that she's.

Speaker 2 (36:04):
Thought she's gone full blown Karen, Wow, that is.

Speaker 16 (36:08):
An indict She's done this new interview with the Guardian,
which is exactly as you've described Amanda, she's very kind
of empowered by aging. She's very critical, great messages, exact messages,
great messages. The journalist writes that she gets to the
interview extraordinarily early and that that's kind of a bit intimidating.

Speaker 2 (36:28):
And she speaks to.

Speaker 16 (36:29):
Jamielee Curtis about being so early, and she said that
she doesn't give.

Speaker 3 (36:32):
A S word.

Speaker 16 (36:33):
I don't know if we can say that word breakfast radio.

Speaker 2 (36:36):
But she.

Speaker 16 (36:38):
That she is early all the time because she wants
to kind of people to be on their toes. She
wants to kind of disrupt things and get there and
ruffle feathers.

Speaker 1 (36:47):
She does make people feel uncomfortable because she likes to
be the smartest person in the room.

Speaker 3 (36:51):
Yeah, and you can tell that from this interview.

Speaker 2 (36:53):
She's really zany.

Speaker 16 (36:54):
There's this photo shoot that the companies where she's got
these big kind of wax lips, these fake, fake lips
on as this kind of comment on aging in Hollywood.
She speaks about rejecting cosmetic culture. She said, the wax
lips is my statement against play stick surgery. I've been
very vocal about what she calls, quote, the genocide of
a generation of women by the cosmeceutical industry complex who

(37:17):
disfigured themselves.

Speaker 2 (37:18):
The wax lips really send it home. She speaks about
how when she was twenty.

Speaker 16 (37:22):
Five, she underwent plastic surgery because she was on set
and a cinematographer told her that her eyes looked baggy,
so he refused to shoot her that day, which that's
pretty messed up. You go to work, get sent home
because you're on twenty Haggie in your twenties, so.

Speaker 3 (37:36):
No wonder she is the way she is.

Speaker 16 (37:37):
But she's promoting Freaky a Friday, which is the sequel
to Freaky Friday. Several decades later, she's back. Lindsay Lohan's back.
Lindsay Lowen is playing a mum of a teen daughter,
and instead of in the first movie when Jamie Lee
Curtis is the mum of Lindsay Lowen being the teen,
Lindsay's thirty seven, now Jamie sixty six. There's a fifteen

(37:58):
year old girl and the movie does a four way
body swap. Curtis is the grandma and there are these
teenage girls who are influencers.

Speaker 2 (38:06):
I'm personally worried.

Speaker 16 (38:07):
Freaky Friday was a big part of my childhood as
a millennial woman.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
And I'm not sure it's going to go well.

Speaker 2 (38:12):
But that sounds good.

Speaker 11 (38:13):
I need to hang on.

Speaker 3 (38:14):
So Jamie, the grandma become of influencer teenager.

Speaker 16 (38:20):
Yes, the grandma becomes one of the teenagers. The mum
becomes one of the teenagers, and the teenagers become the mom.

Speaker 2 (38:26):
And the grandma.

Speaker 3 (38:28):
Push had a bit fire.

Speaker 4 (38:30):
I think maybe they're Yeah, I could see it the
other way around. If I put on my director's pantaloons,
I'd say that.

Speaker 2 (38:39):
Jamie Lee, they swapped the three way swap, you know
what I mean.

Speaker 3 (38:42):
Yeah, it was like a step too fast, but I
think you're right.

Speaker 2 (38:45):
A man curio.

Speaker 16 (38:47):
Since Jamie Lee Curtis won this oscar which was for everything, everywhere,
all at once the movie last year, she's had this
huge resurgence. She's starring in The Bear, that awesome TV
show on Disney Place. She had like a one off
episode appearance, like a cameo, and it was so amazing.
She was Emmy nominated that now they've made her a
regular character on that show. So she's really having this
sort of renaissance.

Speaker 2 (39:08):
But she insace.

Speaker 16 (39:09):
She's kind of been prepping herself to retire.

Speaker 2 (39:11):
For the last thirty years.

Speaker 16 (39:12):
She sort of describes that her parents Tony Curtis, gently.

Speaker 2 (39:17):
Were ostracized as they aged.

Speaker 16 (39:18):
She said, basically, once they started to lose their good looks,
she watched her famous parents kind of slowly disappear from
the spotlight, and then it was really sad. So she
said that she's kind of backing off herself, that she
doesn't want to be at the party when she's no
longer invited.

Speaker 2 (39:33):
But I don't know if that's true. I think she
really is. She's throwing.

Speaker 1 (39:38):
She throwing the party, and she's reinvented herself from being
seen as a dipsy younger actress in the Holyood in
the Halloween movies. Yeah, she's reinvented herself at just the
right time. She should be leading the crusade. But don't
be cranky.

Speaker 2 (39:50):
Didn't Yeah, Tony Curtis, he went on, he was still viable. Ladies.
He see him coming into a restaurant.

Speaker 3 (39:57):
That was Dean Martin.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
I was Dean Martin. That story is great anyway, we're
two bosomy ladies.

Speaker 3 (40:02):
Yeah, and it looked like he was actually sheveled and
being escorted out, and they said that was him going in, so.

Speaker 16 (40:07):
Come on, well they go freaky A Friday is out
on the eighth of August. I will be very interested
and skeptical about it, but I'll let you know.

Speaker 10 (40:18):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
M checkam bilespie out at the Daily.

Speaker 3 (40:22):
On and if you're going to be interviewing Jamie Lee Curtis,
be ready. She will be early and she's forceful.

Speaker 2 (40:27):
She's here now when I'm going to until next month.
Thank you, Ed Jadacious a free morning Instances and Amanda's
scream foom. Ten questions sixty seconds on the clock. You
can pass if you don't know an answer. We'll come
back to that question of time permits.

Speaker 4 (40:48):
You get all the questions right, Happy days, one thousand
dollars and we give you.

Speaker 1 (40:53):
An opportunity to turn that into two thousand dollars with
a bonus question, but it's double or nothing.

Speaker 2 (40:58):
Kelly is in Windsor Hi, Kelly, Hey, hey, going very well.

Speaker 3 (41:02):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (41:03):
So we've got ten questions in front of us. I'm
looking at them now. You have sixty seconds. If you're
not sure, say passed. We usually have time to come back.
All right, all right, Kelly, good luck, because here we go.
He comes Question number one, what is the name of
my co host?

Speaker 3 (41:18):
Question two? What's the cookie monster? Known to eat cookie?
Question three? Finish this?

Speaker 1 (41:24):
What goes up must come down? Question four typically how
many hours? How many ears is a person born with?

Speaker 3 (41:36):
Can you hear me? Where have you gone? Kelly?

Speaker 2 (41:40):
Kelly?

Speaker 1 (41:41):
Kellyfully, we're talking about ears and listening and she's not.

Speaker 2 (41:45):
What happens what's happened here? Well, Kelly, Kelly's gone. Kelly's gone.
Are there, Kelly, Let's try again?

Speaker 3 (41:52):
Are there? Kelly?

Speaker 2 (41:55):
A right?

Speaker 3 (41:55):
Can we restart the clock?

Speaker 2 (41:58):
I said too? You said two?

Speaker 4 (42:00):
Our phone system dropped out? All right, I tell what
we'll do. We're gonna stop. We're gonna stop, and we'll
come back and we'll do it again. Okay, Kelly, I
know it's not your fault, it's our fault. So we're
going to kel just stand by. What we're going to
do is going to whack on a song. We're going
to put on Toto Love Africa, and then we're coming
back with Kelly. She's going to have another crack at Instagram,

(42:23):
Hit the Funk and Wagnal's Kelly.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
Thank You.

Speaker 3 (42:30):
Podcast.

Speaker 4 (42:30):
If you just joined as Kelly of windsor out of
crack at Instagram and it all went a bit pear shaped.

Speaker 2 (42:36):
But when things go pear shaped, what do you make
out of that?

Speaker 3 (42:39):
A pair crumble?

Speaker 2 (42:40):
No, you do Instagram again? And Amanda's question sixty seconds
on the clock? Are you going to do the whole thing?
What about a new audience is coming in.

Speaker 3 (42:56):
Game in the last two minutes, Kelly, here's the story.

Speaker 2 (42:59):
I like him, I don't know about her so much.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
Your phone dropped out after question four. So what we're
going to do is start again, and we're going to
go with the same first four questions. If you get
any of those wrong, you could be mad at the man.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
You'll definitely if you make this up. Kelly's that's the
same questions.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
Let's go Okay, are you ready because he comes? Question
number one? What's the name of my co host?

Speaker 17 (43:23):
End?

Speaker 2 (43:24):
Question two?

Speaker 3 (43:25):
What is the cookie monster known to me? Question three?
What goes up must come down? Question four? Typically how
many ears is a person born?

Speaker 11 (43:36):
With?

Speaker 3 (43:37):
Question five? Who plays happy in Happy Gilmore Adam Tammler?
Question six, what's the main ingredients in risotto?

Speaker 11 (43:46):
Right?

Speaker 3 (43:47):
Question seven?

Speaker 1 (43:48):
Which Australian band saying about traveling in a fried out combi?

Speaker 3 (43:53):
Then it work Question eight, Oh is the chemical symbol
for what?

Speaker 2 (43:59):
What was that?

Speaker 3 (44:00):
Sorry?

Speaker 4 (44:00):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (44:01):
Is the chemical symbol for what?

Speaker 9 (44:02):
Oxy do?

Speaker 3 (44:03):
Question nine?

Speaker 1 (44:04):
How many continents are there on Earth? Push question ten?
What does NBN stand for?

Speaker 7 (44:13):
National Board by Network?

Speaker 3 (44:14):
Back to question nine? How many continents are there on Earth?

Speaker 11 (44:19):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (44:19):
There it is Kelly, Kelly, Kelly, hooray, you've kind of.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
Fudged your way over the lastngratulations, phone dropped out, it
all went your way.

Speaker 2 (44:30):
Well done, Kelly, you've won one thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (44:34):
Congratulations. There goes a big yep.

Speaker 2 (44:38):
And now Kelly, the question.

Speaker 13 (44:41):
Yourself.

Speaker 3 (44:42):
I'm going to ask you the question.

Speaker 1 (44:43):
When that music changes, it means you have to put
your serious pants on, and Jones you might have to
get his tempting pants out of the linen closet because
we have a chance for you to play for two
thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (44:55):
What happened to?

Speaker 14 (44:55):
I'm going to take the thousand.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
But let me just talk. Look how lucky you've been
so far.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
Remember what I said about stuff that was going pear shaped.

Speaker 3 (45:03):
We've made a pair of crumble and it wrong.

Speaker 4 (45:06):
Well, if you get it wrong, Kelly, that's not going
to happen because you'll get this right.

Speaker 2 (45:10):
But secondly, if you get it wrong, then people go,
what a legend? Kelly put it out there?

Speaker 3 (45:15):
So what happened right? Well, Kelly, No, there's no guarantees.

Speaker 2 (45:19):
I'm looking at this, Kelly. I reckon, you get this right.

Speaker 4 (45:23):
Break out the tempting pants. Let's put them up, Kelly.
I'm Kelly wanting towards Windsor with.

Speaker 5 (45:28):
This for you.

Speaker 14 (45:31):
I'm going to take a thousand bucks.

Speaker 2 (45:32):
Are you sure? You sure?

Speaker 9 (45:34):
Kelly?

Speaker 2 (45:36):
Can I get the question anyway?

Speaker 5 (45:37):
I think?

Speaker 3 (45:37):
Yeah, well we do.

Speaker 1 (45:39):
You've decided to take a thousand we take the pants away.
We're two thousand dollars, a thousand bucks to the table.
So we're going to see if you knew the question.
You're ready. So you've got one thousand dollars. But here's
what the bonus question would have been. It's taught you
to see if you would have known it. Yeah, how
many letters are there in the English alphabet?

Speaker 7 (45:58):
Oh it's twenty six?

Speaker 2 (46:00):
What did I tell you?

Speaker 9 (46:01):
What?

Speaker 2 (46:01):
Kelly?

Speaker 1 (46:02):
You have one thousand dollars and congratulations, Thank you guys.

Speaker 7 (46:06):
Can I have a shout out for sure?

Speaker 14 (46:09):
Go on to my favorite mate Irene over at the
other office at Berkley.

Speaker 3 (46:13):
Park, Irene. At the other office, Hello, and m Kelly
just said she's going to split that thousand dollars with you.

Speaker 2 (46:22):
Colonia Kelly. Congratulations, you you are a winner.

Speaker 3 (46:25):
Well done.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
GM gold b A one point seven.

Speaker 4 (46:28):
Hello there at Joonzi Demanda Public, Cloudy nineteen and City
eighteen in our west right now is twelve degrees.

Speaker 2 (46:34):
It is twenty one past eight. Enough of you, Whalen.

Speaker 1 (46:39):
I may have touched a nerve with something earlier, so
I thought we'd bring it up again. I read an
article this morning in the Wall Street Journal saying that
gentle parenting is out and FAIFO, f around and find
out parenting is in. So generally speaking, f around and
find out parenting is based on the idea that parents
can ask and warn, but if a child breaks the rules,

(47:00):
the parents don't stand in the way of repercussions. Could
be like, you don't bring a raincoat, You're going to
get wet. Don't at your dinner. Well that's all you're
getting to breakfast. Your toys again on the floor. I'm
throwing them in the bin. Because we're seeing a lot
of that gentle parenting at the moment where It has
been said that this could be why gen Z has
problems in adulthood struggling with workplace relationships, because they've never

(47:24):
been told no anxiety and depression, because we've lean into
every emotion they've every had, ever had and tried to.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
Make life better for them.

Speaker 1 (47:31):
And you and I were talking a bit about this
that you said when you were younger, you remember being
crazy our era by your dad's friend.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
Yeah, the Fei fo parent and I was in the
swimming pool, had some diving.

Speaker 4 (47:45):
A diving mask on, you know, just swimming around the
bottom of the pool, popped up, got the diving masses
through it at the side of the pool, went back underwater.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
Next time I came up, he grabbed me and gave
me a big crow peck on the head and said
it's very far. Yeah, that's a very ex expensive diving mask, mate.

Speaker 1 (48:00):
And then we had a bit of a discussion around
that because I said, do you think that you said
you were quite traumatized by it.

Speaker 2 (48:05):
I remember it hurt like hell, but now you think,
but I didn't tell you one's things ever.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
Again.

Speaker 1 (48:10):
I think what happens is we've been gentle parents because
we grew up with the harder parent, we become gentle parents,
but also we didn't like how we.

Speaker 3 (48:19):
Were treated by and large. If you were cracked on
the head by somebody like that, as you.

Speaker 1 (48:23):
Say, Brendan. But now as you get older, you start
to think, didn't do me any harm. This seems to
be the pattern of how we remember our childhoods.

Speaker 4 (48:32):
Yeah, I'm not advocating that we go back to those days,
because they're still very vivid in my memories.

Speaker 2 (48:36):
From capital punishment, corporal.

Speaker 3 (48:39):
Punishment, which is the one where you don't.

Speaker 2 (48:41):
Corporal's the one where you don't kill them.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
Okay, in some schools.

Speaker 4 (48:46):
We had corporal punishment at school and I would never
wish that on any kid. But then when you see
those are lesche douchebags bashing up old ladies, you think, well,
maybe we need that.

Speaker 3 (48:55):
This is the interesting part about it.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
And they're saying it's kind of dividing as society has
been divided in a way. It's snowflake parent versus marga parent,
not in a political way, but softly, softly and hard.
One of the parents in this article who does a
softly softly approach so she doesn't want her children to
be scared of her She doesn't want to think that
feelings are weak. Having said that she did post a

(49:18):
picture of a bite mark on her kid's arm, she said, yes,
I did bite my child because she was biting me.

Speaker 2 (49:23):
Well, this is something I reckon. The tribal drama would
be for sure.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
If around and find out parenting, faithfue parenting, What do
you make of it? What are your memories have been
treated like that? And has it changed how you are
as a parent? What do you think about all of.

Speaker 2 (49:39):
This otherwise timeless back in my day?

Speaker 3 (49:42):
Well, it doesn't have me back in my day.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
You might be watching how your grandparents are being raised,
your grandchildren are being raised.

Speaker 3 (49:48):
You may have had a terrible time, as you say,
when you were younger.

Speaker 5 (49:51):
Jonesy and Amanda podcast their Brief Adult Lives.

Speaker 2 (50:00):
It's like a Meredith, a psychis hello.

Speaker 1 (50:05):
Well, we've had snowplowed parents who remove obstacles to make
life easy for their child.

Speaker 3 (50:08):
We've got free range parents, We've got gentle parents.

Speaker 1 (50:12):
I was reading the Wall Street Journal this morning about
f around and find out parents. Parents who will say,
will warn you and suggest things, and then if you
push their buttons again.

Speaker 3 (50:22):
They'll say, all right, here are the repercussions.

Speaker 1 (50:24):
Tougher parenting styles, faith parents, faifaux parent How do you
feel about this? Is it wrong to raise a soft child?
And I think the feelings are snowflaky. How has it
worked out in your house?

Speaker 2 (50:35):
Ravel Drama's beating for this. Michael has joined us.

Speaker 3 (50:39):
I'm Michael, good morning.

Speaker 10 (50:41):
How are you? Jones and Amanda?

Speaker 11 (50:43):
Right?

Speaker 3 (50:43):
Well, what do you think of the f around and
find out parenting?

Speaker 10 (50:48):
Look, I think it does work, but I think it's
got to be fifty fifty. Repercussions must happen. But there's
a way of doing it instead of smacking your child,
punishing them by removing their beloved things like iPads and
phones and you know, the old way of going to
your room. That does work. But when we were growing up,

(51:11):
he was a choice of weapon. How which weapon do
you want to be punished with? And then you're going
to smack, which which led to a lot of anxiety
and depression in these days.

Speaker 4 (51:22):
Yeah, and when you said it says I you're on
some sort of macab game show.

Speaker 3 (51:26):
What was the what were the weapons? Was it wouldn't
spoon and something like that.

Speaker 10 (51:30):
Yeah, I wouldn't spoon or a branch up a tree
and if it were too small, you were you were
made to get a bigger one. I felt or you know,
it could have been anything, but back then, he was.
Our parents didn't know any better, and that's the way
that they thought raising a child was the best way
of teaching them discipline.

Speaker 3 (51:48):
Yeah, that's right, and we do know better now because
it does lead to anxiety.

Speaker 4 (51:51):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (51:52):
Michael's line a crazy game, shower game mates, you go
use your weapon.

Speaker 2 (51:56):
What would you like the build or a treeh Thank
you Michael. You say, I'm well there these days and
was with us?

Speaker 3 (52:02):
Hi Anna, how do you feel about this new parenting style?

Speaker 9 (52:06):
Good morning? Would like to show some reason for my call.
And I heard what you were saying, Jos. Before that
you were traumatized, but we were resilient growing up. We
knew what was right and wrong. If our parents looked
at us that a way, you know, their eyebrows went up.
You knew you were doing a wrong thing, and you
stopped the young kids. But today I've got three young
kids and I've got a grandchild. You look at them

(52:27):
and they're all social media trade.

Speaker 5 (52:30):
You know, Mum, don't do that because that'll do, and
I think I've helped.

Speaker 14 (52:34):
For children of my own.

Speaker 10 (52:35):
I know what I'm doing, and they just they just don't.

Speaker 7 (52:39):
They're not resilient.

Speaker 9 (52:40):
They are really scared, and they push you over the
line because they look at you. They know they're doing wrong,
and they're still pushing it because they noticed no rescussions.
So I know we were a little bit traumatized growing
up because it was the strength of the boy law,
you know, the tools of the tray that we coughed.
But we knew what was right and wrong and we stopped.

Speaker 4 (53:00):
Yeah, in the eighties, seventies and eighties were a tough time,
but then again, if you go back further than that,
the thirties and the forties they were tough times as well.

Speaker 2 (53:07):
The sixties were sort of like, hey, amen.

Speaker 3 (53:09):
Well it's all it is. It's a pendulum swinging, isn't it.
Thank you, Anna. We are going to take more of.

Speaker 2 (53:13):
Your Call Jones.

Speaker 4 (53:16):
Podcast on this daily twenty ninth of July. You will
remember where you were when you heard of the faithou parent.

Speaker 1 (53:23):
If around and find out parenting where you say, okay,
here are the repercussions you have to live with that
gentle parenting. According to this article hasn't served our purposes.
Other people are saying, what's wrong with being a gentle
parent and seeing children's emotions as snowflaky. Others are saying
we need to go back to the harsher childhoods that
maybe we had.

Speaker 4 (53:42):
I became a snow plow parent because of the faifou
parent of my generation.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
Snowplow meaning you try and get all the obstacles out
of the way of you try.

Speaker 4 (53:50):
And when I was a kid growing up in the eighties,
and anyone my age would relate to this, you would
get yelled at by everyone people in the street, what
do you like to do?

Speaker 2 (53:58):
And what do you and then you'd have to go
and move some bricks.

Speaker 3 (54:00):
Is this just because of the type of kids you were?
You were like Ginger Megsie made at all? When I
wasn't yelled out by anybody because I was in two
shoes them like it wasn't you.

Speaker 4 (54:11):
There was always degrees of trouble around, of course, tribal
dramas beating for you.

Speaker 3 (54:17):
How do you feel about the faith old parents, David.

Speaker 7 (54:22):
James and Amanda, Well, unlike you Jones, you I grew
up in an era where if you failed to do
one of your chores of an afternoon, or if you
set by to the house, the punishment was the same.

Speaker 5 (54:33):
You got.

Speaker 7 (54:34):
We liked the court. We like to call it convict punishment.

Speaker 2 (54:36):
You got flogged and.

Speaker 7 (54:37):
Then you got locked in your room and then you've
got bread and water for the rest of the week.
So and yes, I think, well harsh, but here I
am holding down. The job came over raising my kids.
With my kids never ever physically touched them. They their
punishment was knowing that they disappointed me. I think that
worked just as just as much like I'd get my kids,

(55:01):
I'd go out to do the backyard or the yards.
I should say, never ever told them they had to
do it, But I told him they weren't going to
the inside on their iPods or whatever it was.

Speaker 3 (55:11):
In the day.

Speaker 7 (55:12):
They sat outside on the on the table and chairs
outside until I finished. My kids smart enough realized, oh,
if we help dad, we'll get back in there quicker like.
So my daughter would start waiting, my son would go
and get the mara and all that out while I
was doing the edging, and they just put in and
they contribute in there. We're talking seven and eight and

(55:34):
ten sort of thing. They contributed how they did and yeah,
they know, but just the fact that they know they
were disappointed me.

Speaker 3 (55:41):
I think that's right, David. My kids are the same.
I think they would hate to think that they disappointed me.
And that's a big weapon you've got.

Speaker 2 (55:48):
Actually, we're very good with that. You with your boys, Yeah,
I don't know. I don't know how you did it.

Speaker 4 (55:55):
I often wonder, because you want a helicopter parent with them,
But at the same time, they respect and listen to
what's the formula wod I think it's because of the
time you make all that effort.

Speaker 2 (56:07):
That's why. No, it doesn't that makes me I think psychologically.
Do the kids feel well, mom and dad really went
to be No.

Speaker 3 (56:13):
They're not like rescue dogs. You'd be grateful.

Speaker 2 (56:16):
No, it's never that.

Speaker 1 (56:20):
My rescue children. Hello, Keith, how do you feel about
the safe O parent.

Speaker 7 (56:26):
Parent can go and take a running jump?

Speaker 13 (56:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (56:31):
I was brought up very sill to you guys. You
macked up, you got the punishment. I raised my three
kids the same way you masked up. There U was punishment.
None of them had access to the Internet or anything
until the fifteen, so we really after our kids, but

(56:54):
all three have grown up and they all contribute to society.
They have no issues having a respect for people. They
communicate quite well and they're very successful.

Speaker 1 (57:06):
So when you say that you you don't want that,
the f A a FO can f off you Actually,
do you think that uf around and find out is
a good style of painting?

Speaker 7 (57:19):
Yeah, you mess up?

Speaker 11 (57:20):
There is.

Speaker 10 (57:20):
There is punishment.

Speaker 7 (57:24):
People who the kids these days, they mess up, they're
just going to thank you to you later.

Speaker 2 (57:31):
That's true.

Speaker 3 (57:32):
It is interesting though.

Speaker 1 (57:33):
We are trying to create a culture where we don't
bully anybody, where everyone's feelings are met.

Speaker 3 (57:37):
And I want that culture, but at what cost. That's
a very we're stuck in the middle of all of this.

Speaker 4 (57:43):
That's in the leaflet for Jehovah's Witnesses. You know, come on,
it's not going to happen sometimes, you know where the
leaders we've got the experience, so you've got to learn
your experiences. You don't have to go around beating the
hell out of the kids. But if you see a
kid running e bike on the footpath almost not going
over old ladies, it's well within your rights to say
hey mate, and.

Speaker 3 (58:01):
How am i Jehovah's Witness.

Speaker 2 (58:02):
Well, that's what the Jehovah's Witness, Dave. You have let
them into your house.

Speaker 4 (58:05):
They've got that little brochure. It's got like everybody living
together at a harmonious.

Speaker 3 (58:09):
Okay, well there's your solution.

Speaker 2 (58:11):
Brenda Jones, thank you for all you, Thank You Sham Podcast.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
Thanks to Miselle Stocks and Gravies, we have twenty thousand
dollars for our favorite goolie of the year.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
What have we got today?

Speaker 17 (58:33):
What gets my gies is fitted sheet and the fact
that I have to pull them down in the corner
every day or several times a day because they do
not fit the actual mattress properly. Can you we please
make some fitted sheets that actually fit standard sized mattresses.

(58:53):
I am tired of having to pull it down in
the corner because it rides up.

Speaker 9 (58:56):
I am so over it.

Speaker 2 (58:58):
It really gets my gollie. They've got to get in
talk to the mattress people. Fitted sheet.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
At one point we had bunk beds for the kids.
I'm changing the sheet on that top.

Speaker 2 (59:08):
Bumm oh.

Speaker 3 (59:09):
My back has never recovering.

Speaker 2 (59:10):
But my kid's at a race car bed. That's hard
to change the sheets. And that thing.

Speaker 3 (59:14):
You still got those stripes on your sheets?

Speaker 2 (59:17):
They stripe? Okay, okay, what.

Speaker 18 (59:22):
Else don't we What gets my girlies is when I
go into the bathroom while my husband's in the shower
and he's got my face washer, and he's in there
and he's given everything a good scrub front and back.
And I said to him, oh my god, how long
have you been using that facewasher?

Speaker 3 (59:37):
For he goes every night?

Speaker 7 (59:39):
While I said, oh, you.

Speaker 18 (59:40):
Said to wash my face with, you idiot, Get your
own face washer.

Speaker 4 (59:45):
Oh yeack, get your own face washer. No man has
ever gone and bought his own face washed. Hence your sheets,
you know, because you see a face washer in the
shower and it's his door bets are off.

Speaker 2 (59:59):
Don't you think? What else are you doing with that thing?
With about it?

Speaker 4 (01:00:04):
With a good of you, you can always contact us
five the iHeartRadio app. You can win twenty thousand dollars
cash thanks to Masel Stocks Engrave.

Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
It's seven to nine.

Speaker 1 (01:00:13):
Our favorite caller email of Facebook friend when's a double
passed edge? Shearon's Loop Tour the Preestyle started on Monday.
All tickets are on sale today at three pm. For details,
head to Frontier Touring dot com get that.

Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
Jonesy demanded tetawel as well.

Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Now, the tribal drum was beating for what do you
make of FAIFO parenting? This is parenting where it's ever
around and find out? The Wall Street Journal had an
article about soft parenting is out? Parenting with repercussions?

Speaker 2 (01:00:40):
Is in the tribal drum beat for this? What about Michael?

Speaker 1 (01:00:45):
Michael said that he came from the kind of background
or the upbringing where you chose the weapon, and he
found it quite traumatizing.

Speaker 10 (01:00:51):
Yeah, I wouldn't spoon or our branch of a tree.
And who's too small? You were to get a bigger Oh.

Speaker 3 (01:00:58):
Okay, he's now advocate of choose your weapon.

Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
What if your dad was Paul Bunyan?

Speaker 7 (01:01:04):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
Au t That's enough rocks in a dungeon rock project world.

Speaker 4 (01:01:11):
Coming up next, Madigan is here the golden ticket to
the biggest music event of the year, the iHeartRadio Radio.

Speaker 2 (01:01:18):
Musical Festival in Music Festival in Las Vegas. That is
going to be great. Tomorrow we are back. It's Wednesday.

Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
That means talk talker, bring your own EO.

Speaker 2 (01:01:30):
We'll be back from six to night for jam good well,
thank God that's over.

Speaker 10 (01:01:35):
Good good wipe.

Speaker 5 (01:01:40):
You Catch Jonesy and Amanda's podcast on the iHeartRadio app
or wherever you get your podcasts. Catch up on what
you've missed on the free iHeartRadio app
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