Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
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,
what a show today. It was jam packed.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
We spoke about seagulls and magpies. We spoke about the
Golden Bachelor going the pass the bda.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
I thought it was I thought it was respectable tongue all.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
What about the woman that passed the dog?
Speaker 3 (00:32):
Okay, step two is not respectable?
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Why are we having relationships and marrying AI? I've got
my own insights into this.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
What about Instagram today? I thought he was going to
lose it all, but at the death he came back
extraordinary one two thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Well, what a spoiler alert.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
You probably already heard this, and the tribal drum is
beating for forget money, this is what I'm getting.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
The millennium inheritance.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
That's what it's been called, all the garbage that's being
passed down from generation to generation.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 5 (01:14):
The miracle of recording.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
We have so many requests for them to do it again.
Speaker 6 (01:17):
Mistress Amanda and MS Killer Amanda doesn't work alone.
Speaker 4 (01:23):
Friend making the tools of the train.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot.
Speaker 6 (01:29):
I've been a legendary part Jonesy, Amanda the actress.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
Congratulations, were right now, Josey and Amanda, you're doing a
great job.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
Silk Now good radio.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Sorry but it's a tongue tongue twist set and Amanda's
shoot time we're.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
On the air. Tell her the money to you. Amanda,
how are you today?
Speaker 1 (01:55):
I'm well, how many weeks have we got before we
go to the fruited plane?
Speaker 4 (01:58):
Four weeks to go, four weeks of waking up to
this beautiful city.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
We'll be joining you in the afternoon from the past
next year.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
How are you feeling about that?
Speaker 4 (02:11):
I feel good when.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
You know I've never as we've often discussed this, I've
never fought the hours. But I'm looking forward, I think
to just a recalibrating life a little bit.
Speaker 3 (02:21):
Yeah, what do you think? Yeah, Mom's so.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
I'm looking forward to an energy shift, and maybe I'm
hoping that energy will be a calmer energy.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Yeah. I like the idea of it. We've been doing
this for a long time.
Speaker 4 (02:32):
Yeah, and I'm one hundred million years young.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
You are one hundred million years young. Remember when I
first started working with you. You're only forty two.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
I was excuse me, what I was younger than that.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Well, I first met you when you were We're not supposed.
Speaker 4 (02:46):
To mention everyone's ages, Brendan.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
I shut it right, because that's right. Because they're worried.
That's right. They're worried, and we're too old.
Speaker 4 (02:52):
That's the sense.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
That's the thing.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
So I start a sentence where I'm very happy to
talk about my agent.
Speaker 4 (02:57):
Think that's right. I'm not supposed to.
Speaker 3 (02:59):
Yeah, well, I know I'm fifty.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
I mean, not even fifty. I was forward to my
fiftieth birth.
Speaker 3 (03:05):
The other day.
Speaker 2 (03:06):
I was talking to someone and I said, well, I've
just slow down because I'm forty seven now, and I'm
just thinking that i'm forty seven. Then I thought, hang on,
I'm not forty seven or fifty seven, and I thought.
Speaker 4 (03:17):
My memory is the first thing to go.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
I had this moment of no, I'm forty seven.
Speaker 4 (03:23):
See, it doesn't matter.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
If those numbers just don't matter, and if we if
we've shared anything in these years of being here where
all everyone's going through stuff and we're all your age
just doesn't matter. Having the best day of your wors day.
We all learn by now that age doesn't matter for
any of it.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
As long as you're doing it, as long as you're
alive and you have oh, as long.
Speaker 4 (03:45):
As you put some energy into what you're doing.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
Who cares?
Speaker 7 (03:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (03:48):
I look at my mate, sailor Jerry. He's seventy eight
and he's just he's just doing stuff. He's riding motorbike,
sailing boats.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
Starting a new breakfast show.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
He's gonna be a new breakfast showing. We do have
an action packed show today.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Our special guest is Paralympian Michael Milton Midland.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
He have you seen him ski?
Speaker 2 (04:06):
He's a one legged skier, he's extrawd and he's heading
off to Europe to start training for the twenty twenty
six Winter Games.
Speaker 3 (04:14):
He is our great white hope. He's going to do
it for us.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Where are the Window Games ivery in?
Speaker 3 (04:18):
I want to go there? Italy in what's a courtina?
Speaker 8 (04:22):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Nice? Yeah? Yeah, it looks really good.
Speaker 4 (04:24):
Back of an old car, an old cortina.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
The Italian slopes are very good, nice, very good. I've
never been, but I've seen the Italian job. They look good.
Speaker 4 (04:32):
You drove a car down there once.
Speaker 3 (04:34):
It looks good.
Speaker 2 (04:35):
And we've got Instagram makings return and we can't do
anything until we do the Magnificent seven.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
This question number one, which vegetable, is notorious for making
us cry when we cut it.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
Gem Nation.
Speaker 4 (04:47):
Has John Farnum joined sixty minutes.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
I why are you mate?
Speaker 4 (04:53):
I want to do nice stories.
Speaker 3 (04:55):
Do all the nice only do nice stories because Fatam
is the nicest guy.
Speaker 4 (04:58):
Yeah, that's right, you've met him, oh many times. He's lovely.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
But I told you that story many years ago.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
I was hosting a thing at Cariendale Shopping Center in
Brisbane and the Romeos Hard album and just come out.
So I've done the big DJ intro of here, ladies
and gentlemen.
Speaker 4 (05:12):
So are you working for the local radio?
Speaker 2 (05:14):
I was waiting for B five in Brisbane and the
place was packed. There's about eight thousand people there.
Speaker 4 (05:19):
Were you popular? Or was he?
Speaker 3 (05:20):
I think they was there for me?
Speaker 2 (05:22):
But then Farnham was coming down this elevator, glass elevator.
And while he's coming down the elevator, so what's this
Blake's story to the record company.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
Oh that's Jonesy. In fact, his wife just had a
little baby.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
Romany John comes out, So hey Jonesy, how I congratulations
on your little baby. Romany regards Dal and gives me
a big hug. I never met the guy before. That's
the sort of duty, that's the sort of duty is
and that's why we love him. Of course we do,
like we love the magnificent seven seven questions? Can you
go all the way and answer all seven questions correctly?
If you do that, Amana will.
Speaker 4 (05:55):
Say, don't call him Johnny.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
No, no, you still meet people who call him Johnny.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
Cover to rest. Question number one is going to Anne
and Saint Clair. Hello, Anne Jones and Amandallah.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Which vegetable is notorious for making us cry when we
cut it.
Speaker 4 (06:13):
An onion, which.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
Really reality TV show is known for its logo of
a large eye and.
Speaker 3 (06:21):
It's a big Brother.
Speaker 4 (06:23):
Are you watching it? I am? Is it any good?
Speaker 9 (06:27):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (06:27):
You know, I can't help myself, but yeah, I'm not
sure yet.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
I like it because it's a bit like the og
You don't think so?
Speaker 2 (06:39):
I know that they had the they last time they
did it, they try to turn it into.
Speaker 4 (06:43):
Survive, Live Island and stuff, but this time.
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Around it's a bit more. You're just getting those conversations
in the chats.
Speaker 4 (06:49):
And what these days?
Speaker 1 (06:50):
When Big Brother first began, we didn't have access to
people's lives like we do. Now you can watch someone's
life who you don't even know, every night on TikTok
or whatever. Has that changed it? What's interesting about this ant.
Speaker 10 (07:05):
Intrigued with the people and there is the first sort
of range of them.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
Know, yeah, maybe it's a little bit luckier rich.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
Yeah, I've turned you around and I've done I've done
a John Lewis, That's what.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
Was he used to do.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
Let's play the not so secret sound? And what is
this sound that sounds artificially generated?
Speaker 9 (07:30):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (07:31):
Dolphin?
Speaker 2 (07:32):
Metallica once said again get us world record for becoming
the first band to play on all seven continents? What
was there one hour show in Antarctic called? Was that
a freeze them all b into Snowman? Or C Master
of Ice?
Speaker 11 (07:54):
Three?
Speaker 9 (07:55):
CE?
Speaker 4 (07:56):
No, when you said three, do you mean C? Sorry, no,
it's not Master of Ice?
Speaker 3 (08:01):
And then we'll live it there.
Speaker 2 (08:04):
Podcast the Magnificent Seven We find ourselves and that question number.
Speaker 4 (08:08):
Four, it's going to Laura and Kirawe. Hello Laura, morning,
Jonesy and Amanda Hello, Hello, We're.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Down to two options here. Metallica, who apparently set the
place on five over the weekend.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
I posted mate was there with missus Imo and their
kids at Metallica in the mosh pit and he's lost
his phone.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
His phone's gone into the air and I'm never.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
Going to give that back And they just miraculously fell
on the ground next to his feet.
Speaker 4 (08:39):
Lucky.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
And the paper, The Herald did an incredible review for
them this morning, saying, well, they've set the bar very
high for ACDC next weekend. Oh yeah, you can they
live up to the hype that Metallica has given so anyway?
His question numberfore Metallica once set a Guinness World Record
for becoming the first band to play on all seven continents.
What was there one hour show in Antarctica called? Was
it freezom all or Enter Snowman?
Speaker 3 (09:07):
Question number five?
Speaker 2 (09:07):
The Millennium Foulca one was a spaceship primary primarily commanded
by which Star Wars character?
Speaker 12 (09:15):
Ah?
Speaker 13 (09:15):
That was Han Solo.
Speaker 4 (09:17):
Yes, it was the.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
Fastest hunker junk in the galaxy? Was he goes twelve
past six? Question number six the Kessler run. I don't
know what you want from me, Brendan.
Speaker 3 (09:27):
Star Wars people like that, Okay, I can't help wrong.
Speaker 4 (09:30):
Question six.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
In what setting would you typically find a bunsen burner.
Speaker 13 (09:36):
That was in the science labs?
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Allowed to use the buns in these days?
Speaker 2 (09:40):
They probably wouldn't be allowed to because they set themselves
on fire or something.
Speaker 4 (09:43):
Did you set yourself on.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
Back in our day?
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Where used to just light that thing up all the time,
cooking all sorts of things.
Speaker 4 (09:49):
You dinosaur meat? Yeah, of course we did.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
You know the science lab was a thing of rotten
egg gas and bumps and burners.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
That was it science.
Speaker 4 (09:59):
Hang on a minute, your rights in the playground? Question six?
Speaker 3 (10:02):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (10:03):
No, question seven? This is where we go.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Who did bear shoes in the finale of the Golden
Batch La last night?
Speaker 11 (10:10):
It was shock?
Speaker 4 (10:11):
It was Sonny, Sonny, Sonny. Here's the moment, Sonny, when.
Speaker 14 (10:18):
I think about the future, the life I want to live,
I can't imagine doing.
Speaker 5 (10:24):
It without you. I feel so lucky that I found you.
Speaker 9 (10:27):
Oh my god, I love you. Oh God.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
He dropped the words Sonny, Sonny, long, Sonny, and bear
there's something two pounds.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
I really thought. I thought that Jeanette was going to
be in there.
Speaker 4 (10:39):
What do you think, Laura, did you watch it last night?
Speaker 5 (10:41):
Here?
Speaker 13 (10:41):
I thought, sure it was Laura or the other girl.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
That's Laura, that's you. Did you think it was going
to be you?
Speaker 4 (10:51):
I should I should be up there getting wind blown?
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Did you can I ask you this question, Laura?
Speaker 2 (10:56):
There was a little bit of, uh, you know, I'm
not offensive tongue, but there was a little bit of
tongue kissing.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
Between We saw that too.
Speaker 3 (11:03):
Did you think it was too much?
Speaker 2 (11:04):
Because I was watching it with the family and I went,
that's not bad tongue as far as time.
Speaker 13 (11:10):
The children didn't like it.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
Now, I would like we might put this to the
pub test, Laura, because I think it's interesting. And I
asked this at the very beginning when The Bachelor, the
Golden Bachelor first started. Does the public want to see
the older generation have PDA? You see it on Love Island,
you accept it. Do you want to see that on
The Golden.
Speaker 3 (11:28):
Bachelor on Love Island? That's too much tongue, way too much.
Speaker 4 (11:32):
Anyway, Laura, you've won.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
Congratulations to you. You have won the jam package all
coming away. You've got a three hundred dollars a Masi card,
great deals on the Mason Mobile and home internet plans,
a double pass to the Sydney Good food and Wine Show,
Christmas Market and Jonesy and Amanda Character Choice Fear the
color in and some stalear pencils so you can color
as well.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Laura, thank you, Thank you very much.
Speaker 8 (11:58):
Thank you, Laura Jonesy and Amanda podcast.
Speaker 4 (12:06):
And Amanda, what do you know about numerology?
Speaker 3 (12:08):
Nothing?
Speaker 4 (12:09):
How many fingers am I holding up?
Speaker 2 (12:10):
Just coming through the German that got big book of
musical facts.
Speaker 3 (12:15):
But this is a red letter day.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
In nineteen eighty five, Go West released King.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
Of Wishful Things.
Speaker 4 (12:21):
I love that song and thanks to.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
The Internet, a lot of people have put this forward
for misheard lyrics because there's a lot of misheard lyrics.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
Yeah, and there you.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
Know, there're a bit I don't know what's wrong with peoples.
For example, what are people hearing well this line here?
People are saying that that is pooh myself, but it's not.
It's clearly not the other fool myself, fool myself.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
The other one is pull myself.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
There's another one here, and I'll play it to you
and you can make your own conclusion. A lot of.
Speaker 3 (12:59):
People are saying that that is.
Speaker 4 (13:03):
What obviously what what what? But my number two aren't
stinking that's the word. There's another one.
Speaker 3 (13:13):
The last one is this one. And I can't say
what people think this is, but.
Speaker 4 (13:22):
The think, what do they think?
Speaker 3 (13:24):
It's not tears, but it's another fluid in your eyes?
Speaker 4 (13:28):
They put again, what's wrong with people?
Speaker 2 (13:37):
I don't know When that song came out in nineteen
eighty five.
Speaker 3 (13:40):
The Will of Purity, there was no internet.
Speaker 4 (13:44):
There's no internet, there were no bodily fluids.
Speaker 2 (13:47):
Happy fortieth birthday, King of wishful thinking.
Speaker 4 (13:51):
Whatever you're saying, GM.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Have you ever been swooped by a seagull? A seagull
seagulls nick chip.
Speaker 4 (13:58):
Oh, seagulls of nick chips and things. I've never been,
but do they swoop?
Speaker 2 (14:02):
They with their little nests. Its seagull season. The little
baby seagulls are coming out.
Speaker 4 (14:07):
And what does a baby seagull look like? Just to seagull?
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Really big?
Speaker 4 (14:12):
Yeah? Are they white?
Speaker 3 (14:13):
Like they're gray, but they look big. They're like you
think they'd be smaller, but they come out really bigger.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
It's weird because I don't know how it works. Because
when you see magpies, baby magpies are a different color
and they're fluffy. But seagulls are born as adults.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
Well, if you yell at a seagull, it's likely to
leave you alone.
Speaker 4 (14:32):
It's a country song.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
The University of Exodus Center for Ecology and Conservation did
an experiment. They placed fries in a tupperware box in
the middle of the cornwall there and they had had
various tests. They had some different like a Robin's song.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
Not Robin, gibb Robin, like a little bird, I.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Understanding, and a male voice yelling no, stay away, that's
my food.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
And which was more effective.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
Kept the seagull away.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
So they did a massive study to hear if you
yell at a seagullt go away.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
Do well, it's that's that time of year because and
the magpie swooping season.
Speaker 3 (15:12):
The magpies pies are a different kettle of fish, so.
Speaker 4 (15:16):
They will swoop you and try and get your eyes.
Speaker 3 (15:18):
I was riding home the other day and I watched
this guy on his push bike.
Speaker 2 (15:21):
So he's got his stack hat on with all the
cable ties and on the cable tiess got these big
orange flags.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
And on his bike he's got more orange flags. And
I thought, what is more.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
Looking like a dick with all the flags and stuff,
or a magpie swooping you.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
I think I take my chances with the magpie.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
There is something humiliating about a creature small than a
chicken flapping around your head and you're looking ugue it off,
sounding like John Howard. But there's something dangerous. They can
They can rip your eye, rip your erot and cause
you to fall off your bike.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
Yeah, there's savage birds.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
So is it a male thing that see? Men have
no vanity when they ride bikes, or they wouldn't wear
that liker.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
That is true.
Speaker 4 (16:02):
So men don't care what they look like when they're
riding bike.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
No, they don't care at all. Although my brother got
attacked by an EMU one time. That was distressing.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
Distressing you, you said, you and your grandfather both left
your heads off and you still are.
Speaker 4 (16:16):
How many years ago was that, Jason?
Speaker 3 (16:23):
We weren't in hospital.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
And let's get on down to the Jonesy. You man
of arms for the pub test the Golden Bachelor pd A.
Does it pass the pub test? The batchy has been run.
Speaker 4 (16:37):
And won it wrapped up last night? He chose Sonny Long, Sonny, Sonny. Yes.
Speaker 14 (16:45):
When I think about the future, the life I want
to live, I can't imagine.
Speaker 5 (16:50):
Doing it without you. I feel so lucky to have
found you.
Speaker 9 (16:54):
Oh my god, I love you.
Speaker 4 (16:56):
Well that's what happened.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
And then they patched on a very windy hilltop Sonny
and Bear.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
They do sound like pandas or they sound like killer whales?
That do we putting on a show at sea?
Speaker 3 (17:04):
Wol I thought it was going to be Jeanette.
Speaker 4 (17:06):
I know you did. A lot of people did.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
What about you? When he wrapped it up, well, he was.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
Trying to, you know, do his platitudes, and she said no, I'm.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
Maudie, and I don't blame her. I like Jeanette.
Speaker 12 (17:16):
Jeannette, you deserve a love worth fighting for her. I'm
so sorry it's not with me, and I know this
is this hurts.
Speaker 4 (17:32):
I'm fine. I read your eyes a minute. I walked
up here.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
I do really care for you.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
Don't disrespect Sunny by saying anything like that.
Speaker 4 (17:45):
I hope you're very happy, both of you.
Speaker 6 (17:48):
I'm sorry, sorry, so stop saying it.
Speaker 3 (17:55):
Okay, yes, thank you?
Speaker 5 (17:56):
Sure?
Speaker 4 (17:57):
Yeah, She stumbled off down the mountain.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
What's these bachelor people making people walk so long?
Speaker 3 (18:04):
In humiliation?
Speaker 4 (18:06):
Rageous started to walk into ruined bag, but I.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
Did as I was watching it, though he was. There
was a bit of tongue kissing with Jeannette.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
I didn't see him tongue kiss Sonny, but I just
thought it was not an offensive tongue.
Speaker 4 (18:20):
Well, how do you feel about the PDA.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
That's what we want to talk about, because there's been
some discussion here about the older generation. This is what
I was wandering as soon as they mooted the Golden Bachelor.
That's how people feel about a lot of people felt
uncomfortable that he kissed all when women were eliminated, he
kissed them on the mouth when he gave them a rose.
There was one mass elimination where like a ten went
(18:45):
home in a go and he kissed them all on
the mouth if.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
He had to break out of the chapsticks too much.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
But there are some reasons. There are some reasons why
we get the ick about older people. It's well, I'm
wondering what you think. We're conditioned by the media to
see romance as young. So the lack of representation of
slightly older people feels unexpected, and that maybe is giving
some people the ick.
Speaker 3 (19:07):
We asked Laura just about this about the Who's Laura.
Laura was before on the magnificent side, right.
Speaker 4 (19:12):
The children didn't like it?
Speaker 3 (19:14):
I would like that children didn't like it? No, and
well sprew you kids.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
Well, well that's the thing in real life.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
It happens, but do you want to see it.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
We associate older adults sometimes with parents and authority figures.
Speaker 4 (19:27):
So we have the ick about that.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
How have you felt watching the PDA on the Golden Bachelor.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
I didn't want to see this on the Golden Bachelor, Darling,
Yes I love you.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
She was going to town on the dock.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
She was. That was the dog Pashi kiss the Golden Bachelor,
not the Golden Retriever.
Speaker 4 (19:51):
The Golden Bachelor PDA. Did it pass the pub test?
Speaker 10 (19:55):
Damnation the legendary bird jerseymand the actress.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
We're all shocked by the Golden Bachelor's selection of Sonny over.
Speaker 4 (20:06):
Jeanette, Who's who's all shot?
Speaker 3 (20:08):
Every was shocked.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
I thought Jeanette was the lady all the way. But
it seems to be sunny and bear.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Now, which they do sound like their too. Killer whales
put on a show at SeaWorld.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
Also, we were shocked by the PDAs aw.
Speaker 4 (20:21):
Yes, Darling, yes I love you too.
Speaker 3 (20:26):
And so if that's not with the Bachelor. That's her
macking on.
Speaker 5 (20:30):
With a dog.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
That was someone macking on with a dog.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
As you say, one bitch too many on reality television.
We will talk about that next The Golden Bachelor PDA
The dogs out of it people, How did you feel
about seeing older people having PDA on the telly?
Speaker 2 (20:43):
Also, Michael Milton will be joining us. He's going to
be jetting off to Europe tomorrow to start training for
the twenty twenty six Winter Games.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
He's our paralympian. He has an extraordinary story.
Speaker 2 (20:53):
You know, fun fact he is the world record for
fastest downhill Have I guess how fast downhill skiing?
Speaker 4 (21:00):
One hundred kilometers two.
Speaker 3 (21:01):
Hundred and thirteen kilometers.
Speaker 4 (21:03):
Per hour and he hasn't been booked.
Speaker 3 (21:06):
You can run that pasty when he chanses.
Speaker 4 (21:11):
Podcast.
Speaker 15 (21:12):
When God, I wanted to get on right now, I'm
taking now, go to your windows over, stick your head
on a yell.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
Down to the jonesy demand of rams for the pub
test The Golden Bachelor PDA.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
Does it pass the pub test?
Speaker 1 (21:31):
How do you feel watching older people, they're in their
late fifties and sixties pashing off and that there was
a bit of tongue yesterday or last night, Bear chose
Sonny Sunny.
Speaker 3 (21:44):
Yes.
Speaker 14 (21:45):
When I think about the future, the life I want
to live, I can't imagine.
Speaker 5 (21:51):
Doing it without you. I feel so lucky to have
found you.
Speaker 9 (21:54):
Oh my god, I love you.
Speaker 3 (21:56):
So it's Sonny and Bear, Sonny and Bear. Poor old Jeannette,
you deserve a love worth fighting for it.
Speaker 12 (22:03):
I'm sorry, I'm so sorry it's not with me and
I know this is this hurts.
Speaker 3 (22:13):
I'm fine now.
Speaker 4 (22:15):
She was over it.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
I'm not fine either, had a lazy twenty on her
winning well.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
They all stood at the top of the mountain and
got wind swept. There is a certain this is what
I'm interested in, and when the show was first mooted,
I wanted to have and would feel about this because
we are conditioned to only seeing the younger generation being
romantic kissing, having PDA, and that lack of representation makes
this feel unexpected and could give some people the ick.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
But I would say this watching Golden Bachelor compared to
Love Ireland, the PDA is more appropriate for TV than
it is on the other one.
Speaker 3 (22:47):
Oh absolutely yeah, less.
Speaker 4 (22:49):
Dreadful, but he did.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
He kissed everyone on the mouth, even when he had
mass eliminations, kissed them all on the mouth.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
I have to get into the channel ten chapstick, the
big one you.
Speaker 4 (23:01):
Meant to and give it back.
Speaker 1 (23:03):
So the Golden Bachelor, PDA. Did it pass the pub test?
Speaker 16 (23:09):
Us old people need to live their lives as well.
Speaker 13 (23:12):
Let them see, let let me enjoy their lives as well.
Speaker 6 (23:15):
It most definitely does not pass the pub Destly, that.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
Sort of stuff just needs.
Speaker 11 (23:20):
To be kept in the bedroom.
Speaker 13 (23:22):
I mean, I think it's fine.
Speaker 17 (23:24):
Love is love, right, and if they're enjoying it and
caught up in the moment totally. It's just when they
get to like the sound effects and then.
Speaker 13 (23:32):
Just no thank you.
Speaker 16 (23:34):
But other lives it's all good.
Speaker 18 (23:36):
I'm fine.
Speaker 7 (23:36):
It really interesting that entire show.
Speaker 16 (23:38):
But if you can get it, go for it.
Speaker 4 (23:41):
It's true you're selling. Yes, I love you too. And
so she went home with that dog, the.
Speaker 3 (23:52):
Golden Bachelor, not the Golden Retriever.
Speaker 4 (23:56):
I had a night on my own on the weekend.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
I went down to the South coast with me, just
me and the dog and I always.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
Sort of our gold Jumper.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
All of that, sat looking out to the water, going
thinking deep thoughts to the only time I have deep.
Speaker 4 (24:09):
Thoughts, but I always have a daggy playlist.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
I take down my UI boom and sit down on
the grass and I have a bit of a moment
and I thought, God, my Spotify playlist has said a
daily mix for you.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
I thought it knows me so well. And then I realized,
I've trained it to know me.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Yeah, duh, I've trained the algorithm to know that when
I'm listening, down listening and I'm putting on a Spotify playlist,
I want Mousie, old school, whatever it is, I have
trained it. And that's how I thought.
Speaker 4 (24:41):
That's why AI relationships seem to be the thing.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
You can spend forty years with a human and you
think it knows you, and it does know you, but
it's not going to feed you back what you want
all the time.
Speaker 4 (24:53):
Whereas AI will.
Speaker 3 (24:55):
AI is compliant. It's the ultimate compliance.
Speaker 4 (24:58):
It is, and it's the ultimate thing of I see you,
I get you.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
It reflects back to you how you want yourself to
be seen, which isn't a human relationship at all.
Speaker 4 (25:07):
But look at these stats.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Three and Americans report they have some emotional attachment or
a connection to AI, seventy two percent amongst teens. Eighty
percent of Generation Z that's ones in their twenties claim
they would marry an AI. It's extraordinary, isn't it. It
is as I say, This is chatting, flirting, and confiding
in a digital mirror that consumes you and reflects your insecurities,
(25:32):
your fusual worries, and makes you feel good about yourself.
I was reading about a woman in Japan. She's thirty two.
She has had a symbolic wedding. It's not might surprise
you to hear it's not legal, but it's a symbolic
wedding with an AI character that she is created using
chat GPT. She started speaking to this chatbot at the
end of a three year engagement with a human and
(25:54):
she was looking to it for turning to it for
solace and advice, so their digital intimacy increased. She taught
it a personality, she gave it a voice, and through
their communication she found its respects, reassuring and helpful. She
called it Klaus. She got married to Klaus, and the wedding.
(26:15):
I've seen footage of this wedding. She's walking down the aisle.
She's wearing her ar glasses.
Speaker 3 (26:20):
Her glasses well ar glasses.
Speaker 1 (26:27):
So she could see Klaus in her glasses, and he
was projected onto a screen so the guests could see
him too. She's had a photo taken with a life
sized version. This is interesting. The two were married.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
Were the guests or virtual reality? We are a real guest.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
You have to have enablers to help you with this.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
I was thinking, my daughter's getting married, it'd be great
if we just have virtual reality guests and I won't
have to pay so much for booze and food.
Speaker 4 (26:51):
Well, that is true.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
The two were married by a local couple who specialize
in marriages to anime characters and fictional figurines. So she
wore her ar glasses. A life size image of Klaus
was projected. She's had photos with a life sized Claus,
and she was holding her phone as she walked down
the arm so she could see him too, and through
the glasses that he's he looks like a teenager, an
(27:14):
anime teenager. And that's what I thought was interesting. This
is the girl's version of the sex doll. The girls
want a character that tells the mussy things so they
feel seen. Men want a physical representation of big boobs
and an open.
Speaker 3 (27:33):
That's it just all the bits, just.
Speaker 4 (27:35):
All the bits. The women want the emotion, the men
want the bits. Let's just how do we get along?
They're my insights for the day.
Speaker 8 (27:45):
Jonesy and Amanda Podcast.
Speaker 3 (27:53):
What have we got to lie on?
Speaker 5 (27:55):
In case Amanda sweat?
Speaker 3 (27:57):
Well, we've had the Golden Bachelor Darling.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Yes, I love you too, That's okay?
Speaker 4 (28:06):
Are you going to play that forever until she has her?
Speaker 3 (28:10):
Listen?
Speaker 2 (28:12):
We've had that. We had a woman marrying her ai avatar.
A woman has gone old school now doing the old message.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
In a bottle?
Speaker 4 (28:21):
Fig how'd that go?
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Well?
Speaker 2 (28:22):
She got a result, but it was not the result
she was hoping for. We'll talk about that next.
Speaker 4 (28:28):
She's married a dolphins.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
At one point seven. Hello, Then it's Jonesy and Demanda.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
Have you ever put a message in a bottle?
Speaker 9 (28:36):
No?
Speaker 3 (28:36):
Have you? No?
Speaker 2 (28:39):
According to the song by the Police, message in a bottle?
He puts it out there and then one hundred thousand
bottles washed up on the shore. So I thought Sting
was a big environmentalist, but clearly not. This woman has
been putting messages in bottles from her little hometown there
over in the UK, sends them out.
Speaker 4 (28:55):
What kind of messages, just little.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Messages looking for love, and she's got her address and
all that sort of stuff.
Speaker 4 (29:00):
Wow, that's dangerous.
Speaker 2 (29:01):
She's got received responses from as far as Holland and
France over the years, but she says mostly they've just
washed back up on the beach.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
So clearly she needs a tie chart as well.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
What an interesting way to think she'll find love by randomly.
She might as well go into the pub and say,
who wants a root? Because from putting a message in
a bottle saying I'm up for it, here's my address?
Speaker 3 (29:27):
Really, is this your go to method?
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Like mc dundee mcdundee in town just look at for some.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Words, it sounds romantic. I don't know what films she's
seen that, you know. Living in a small coastal town
and someone says, yes, you's your handwriting makes me think
we're a perfect match.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Well, she got a nasty shock when one of the
letters came back.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
The letter came back in a box like a package
delivered to hers. It was a box full of rocks.
Speaker 4 (29:52):
Full of rocks.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
Yeah, because it cost her nine dollars to accept, and
inside the box, I said, please stop throwing rubbish in
the sea, it goes into Pemsby Bay or Norman's Bay.
One day later, many thanks a rubbish picker.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
So this woman's just a so she thinks that she's
sending these things to exotic locales and someone's going to
fall in love with her. It's just going to the
next bay and washing up on the beach.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
She's just killing the climate. Maybe she should go with
your method. It's probably a sure fight.
Speaker 1 (30:23):
Maybe environmentalists do not apply Jones.
Speaker 3 (30:29):
Podcast.
Speaker 4 (30:30):
Well, what a story this is.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
Our next guest has gone through more in one lifetime
than most of us will ever have to endure. And
what a champion. He lost his leg when he was
just nine years old. He survived cancer three times. But
Michael Milton is proof that nothing will stop him. He's
become one of the most decorated alpine skiers in Paralympic history.
Tomorrow he's heading off to prepare for the next Winter
(30:52):
Games in February.
Speaker 4 (30:53):
They're in the Beautiful was it? Malana Kutina? Beautifully? Michael
joins us.
Speaker 11 (30:57):
Now, Hi, Michael, good morning, guys.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Great to have you on the show.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
We were just talking about your Danhill ski record at
two hundred and thirteen kilometers per hour.
Speaker 3 (31:06):
Is that for someone with one leg or is that
for everyone?
Speaker 10 (31:10):
That's an open world record for an athletic with disability,
a world record for athletic disability, and an open Australian record,
So Australia as fast as ever a scaled.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Wow, Michael, that sounds terrifying to me. Is it ever
scary for you?
Speaker 11 (31:24):
Absolutely? Yeah, of course You're standing at the top of
this big snowcovered mountain and it's nearly vertical, and you
know you're going faster than you've ever been before.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 10 (31:37):
Absolutely. It's one of the key skills of skiing at
that speed is to be able to take that fear
and lock it into the back of the mind.
Speaker 4 (31:45):
So yeah, definitely unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
When you were nine and you lost your leg, was
it sport that got you through? How did you find
your way through? That's a tough thing for a nine
year old.
Speaker 10 (31:57):
Definitely tough for a nine year old. But you know,
I think the adaptability of being that age is a
real positive. But certainly, I mean skiing had a big
part of it for me because it was one of
the first questions I asked when they said we're going
to have to take you leg off. I'm like, well, well,
I'll still be able to go skiing. And it was
a long time ago. So my parents brought me a
(32:18):
VHS videotape a couple of weeks later of a guy
on one leg skiing and all through the worst times
of cancer. That would be what I would kind of
imagine myself doing. And having that dream, I think had
an immensely positive impact on the outcome of the treatment
and of course life since then.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
And you've had more batts with cancer since then, there
may must be.
Speaker 11 (32:40):
Do the short straw on this one, because wouldn't you think, okay,
right here, it's extraordinary what you've been through.
Speaker 10 (32:51):
Yeah, it's definitely, you know, a part of my life.
And after three different answers in three with three different locations, yeah,
it's kind of you know. One of the motivations that
has come back to skiing after being out of the
Parallelic Games for years I raised my last one in
two thousand and six is definitely the fact that after
(33:15):
three cancers it's probably more win rather than if for
the fourth one, and really just wanting to squeeze them
our out of life and do things that are fun
and make the most of the time that I have.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
How tough is it to come back after twenty years
out of competitive work like this.
Speaker 10 (33:32):
I mean, it's tough on lots of levels. You know.
I'm pretty fortunate that, you know, I had a long
competitive career. You know, Skiing in many ways for me
is like walking. You strap it on. It just kind
of happens without too much thinking. It's a great sport
because there's an athletic component, definitely, and at fifty two
years old, I'm not the same athlete that I was
(33:55):
twenty years ago. But there's also that kind of gravity
is driving you rather than your muscles and your body.
So it is the sort of thing that you can
do to a high level, to at an older age.
So there's definitely physical things, like you know, my leg's
been soare for months, just getting back into the gym
(34:16):
developing strength again, and then you know, and then of course,
particularly at fifty two years old, there's there's other things
consider in terms of my business and my family and
how that all works. I'm pretty fortunate that, you know,
with nineteen and seventeen year old kids, I can bribe
them with a trip to Italy and they're pretty happy.
(34:38):
But you know, my wife running our business while I'm away.
These sorts of things are all just a part of
that juggle.
Speaker 2 (34:45):
Well, Michael, we just wish you all the best, and
you're doing it for us. We're just so proud of you, mate.
Speaker 11 (34:51):
You know, I'm doing it for lots of reasons. I'm
doing it.
Speaker 10 (34:54):
You know, I've got a nit that as an athlete
there's always selfish components there, and then that's as an
athlete in some ways a positive part of things. But
you know, thank you very much for the chat and
for following my journey.
Speaker 4 (35:08):
It is sly Michael.
Speaker 3 (35:09):
All the best we're going to do is just go
downhill really quick.
Speaker 4 (35:12):
That's all you have to do.
Speaker 10 (35:13):
Yeah, you just point it down the hill, don't think
and close your eyes.
Speaker 11 (35:18):
Maybe not quiet, no, Michael Milton, thank you.
Speaker 4 (35:21):
Thanks guys, we'll be following you. Michael, thank you.
Speaker 2 (35:24):
Follow Yeah, Michael's journey podcast right now.
Speaker 4 (35:31):
The free money instances.
Speaker 2 (35:35):
And Amanda's back on ten questions sixty seconds on the clock.
You can pass if you don't know an answer. We'll
come back to that question if time permits. You get
all the questions right, one thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (35:45):
You can make it two thousand dollars by answering a
bonus question, but it's double or nothing.
Speaker 3 (35:50):
Jeremy is in Redford.
Speaker 4 (35:51):
Hello, Jeremy, morning, guys.
Speaker 17 (35:54):
How are you today?
Speaker 4 (35:55):
Very well? Thank you.
Speaker 1 (35:56):
Let's say if we can get you some money. Ten
questions sixty seconds. As Jonesy said, if you're not sure,
say passed because we might have time to come back.
Speaker 4 (36:02):
Okay, no worries, Let's do it. Jeremy, let us do it.
He comes. Question number one? What holiday do we sell
right in December?
Speaker 19 (36:11):
Christmas?
Speaker 4 (36:12):
Question two? Who sings? How to make gravy?
Speaker 8 (36:16):
Poor Kelly?
Speaker 1 (36:16):
Question three? What animal is the fruit? Loops mascot.
Speaker 4 (36:21):
Um? Question four?
Speaker 1 (36:26):
What color is the golden gate bridge?
Speaker 3 (36:29):
Red?
Speaker 4 (36:30):
Question five?
Speaker 1 (36:30):
Which flowers used to commemorate Remembrance Day are the poppy?
Question six? Which musician's nickname is the boss bridge springsty
Question seven? The Pharaohs ruled in which country? In question eight,
the anterior cruciate ligament is in which joint of the
body it's in the knee? Question nine, which Australian PM
(36:52):
was dismissed by the Governor General?
Speaker 17 (36:55):
That was Whitlam?
Speaker 4 (36:56):
Question ten? What animal says wolf? Wolf?
Speaker 19 (37:00):
A dog?
Speaker 4 (37:01):
Look can you believe it? That's your ten questions? Have
you got one thousand dollars?
Speaker 8 (37:05):
Jeremy, Jeremy, there you go, guys, that.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
Really tricky question ten might have thrown you.
Speaker 4 (37:15):
Jeremy. Congratulations, you want a thousand bucks?
Speaker 11 (37:17):
Yeah, thanks for that.
Speaker 4 (37:19):
Guys, Well, don't it makes it sound like you're wrapping
this up.
Speaker 1 (37:22):
I want to come yet, Jeremy, because you've got a
thousand dollars in this hand.
Speaker 3 (37:26):
You have one thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (37:27):
Put the serious music on in.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
This hand, one thousand dollars in your other hand. You
have nothing but imagine two thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (37:35):
Well, this is the dilemma, Jeremy.
Speaker 1 (37:37):
There's a bonus question in front of us here that
we're looking at.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
I don't know when I don't know, Jeremy. You strike me.
Speaker 19 (37:44):
As have I got a bird in that hand?
Speaker 4 (37:47):
I can't say. There's a bit of bushy at a bird.
Speaker 19 (37:50):
I could have.
Speaker 17 (37:51):
It's better than having the two in the other.
Speaker 10 (37:54):
Well, having your hand in a bush is even better.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
But well, you've won our hearts with that, Jeremy. Now, Jeremy,
this is a decision that only you can make. I'm
going to tell you this it's the question is not
as simplest question ten, but it's a bonus question, so
it shouldn't be you go with one thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (38:16):
You strike me as a well traveled man, Jeremy, this.
Speaker 4 (38:19):
Has nothing to do with travel.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
You strike me as a worldly man, a man.
Speaker 10 (38:23):
Okay, we're not here to make love to a record,
So let's do.
Speaker 4 (38:28):
It, Jeremy.
Speaker 3 (38:29):
I will say this, Jeremy, this is on your own head.
Be it okay, and you will lose it over than
if you get this question wrong.
Speaker 17 (38:36):
Let's do it.
Speaker 3 (38:36):
You've got six seconds to answer that question.
Speaker 4 (38:39):
Are right, Jeremy, Sure?
Speaker 1 (38:40):
Okay, deep breath, here is your bonus question.
Speaker 4 (38:43):
We've taken your one thing.
Speaker 3 (38:44):
Doesn't even have to put on the tempting pad.
Speaker 1 (38:46):
We've taken your one thousand dollars away, two thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (38:50):
Next to Brian.
Speaker 4 (38:51):
Okay, here's the question.
Speaker 1 (38:55):
Hypology is a study of which animal quick say something.
Speaker 20 (39:04):
Yes, God, you say, Jeremy, oh my goodness, goodness, I think.
Speaker 4 (39:15):
Please don't say he post. Please don't say he post.
Speaker 5 (39:18):
Wow.
Speaker 19 (39:19):
That was harder than the other ten.
Speaker 3 (39:21):
Yeah, but you knew it.
Speaker 16 (39:26):
At the bottom has actually come from for so yeah.
Speaker 7 (39:29):
I did know it.
Speaker 4 (39:30):
Jeremy, you are a genius. You've got it, you got
it all.
Speaker 11 (39:37):
Congregulate fantastic, Well.
Speaker 3 (39:40):
Congratulate the rest of the day off. Jeremy.
Speaker 18 (39:44):
Well, I'm all work at the moment.
Speaker 10 (39:45):
So I'm going to go back to work now.
Speaker 4 (39:46):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (39:46):
Well, obviously the other people at MENSA will be missing you.
Speaker 4 (39:50):
Jeremy. Thank you.
Speaker 9 (39:55):
WHOA.
Speaker 4 (39:55):
Well that was relatively straightforward. That was a hard question.
That was that was and he said he was going
to go for it. I thought, oh, no.
Speaker 2 (40:02):
Part of me was thinking, but then I thought, no,
he can do it, and he did.
Speaker 4 (40:06):
Well, congratulations, Jeremy. G I think we're our children will
be the.
Speaker 1 (40:11):
Last of the generations to well, maybe we were the
last of the generations to get the big, heavy furniture
and the stuff, the antiques such as they are the
stuff our grandmothers passed down, whether it's the family milk
jug or whatever it is, doesn't have to be expensive stuff.
But we felt an obligation to take things. Whereas the
newer generations just want a living in a funnel, minimalist life.
(40:33):
They're spending the money on technology, not on furniture. They
just want clean, easy living into in their homes here.
I think, by and Ie, you want to be clutter free.
So what's going to happen to all the crap that
everyone's going to inherit And I don't mean expensive crap,
I mean crap the buttudor advocate now this this morning
or yesterday they had this will always be yours one day,
(40:53):
says Mum, referring to a skip bin's worth of nicknappers.
Speaker 3 (40:58):
And it's true, sad.
Speaker 1 (40:59):
There's a man who has an online community. It's gone viral,
the millennial inheritance community where people just complain about the
crap you're going to get from their presence. Some said
autism doesn't didn't exist back in their day. I mean
here they were the crazy collectors. This is their version
of that nick knacks a boomer's avocado toast. You know,
(41:20):
this is all the stuff they're going to have to
go through, all of the stuff.
Speaker 3 (41:25):
I've got a lot of stuff, collectibles.
Speaker 1 (41:27):
Collectible, your cabbage patch dolls, anything with a face.
Speaker 4 (41:31):
Gets chucked, You get chucked dolls.
Speaker 1 (41:33):
All of that go go go Beanie Bunny, your Beanie bull,
those little dogs, beanie babies.
Speaker 3 (41:40):
This is the stuff. If you've got a lot of crap.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
I have an enormous amount of crap. I'm sure it
terrifies my children to think that one day they have
to go through all of them.
Speaker 3 (41:47):
You have a lot of jewels.
Speaker 1 (41:48):
Well, see that's what's interesting. I'm doing to them what
my mum did to me. These are the bits that matter,
and the rest of it as no emotional tachment is
if they're don't remember what I'm talking about. I paid
no attention when my mother used to take her through
the cabinet that had this came from idea, and I
wish I'd paid attention. Now, I really wish i'd paid attention.
Speaker 2 (42:05):
I've got a lot of motorcycle parts from motorcycles.
Speaker 3 (42:08):
I don't even have it anymore.
Speaker 4 (42:09):
See that's your version of the punch bowl.
Speaker 2 (42:12):
Yeah, and what I've done is I've got everything out
of boxes and I've put them on the walls of
my garage, so I.
Speaker 3 (42:18):
Know that I've got so it's easy to chuck out.
Speaker 5 (42:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (42:20):
Well, I know what I've got and I could possibly
sell that stuff.
Speaker 4 (42:24):
She won't, but she won't.
Speaker 2 (42:25):
But I just told my kids just download it all
up and throw it awhile they have.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Every right to as awful as that is, But what's
the stuff you're going to get. The tribal drum is
going to beat for this. Forget money. This is what
I'm getting.
Speaker 19 (42:37):
That's forever stamp could be worth a fortune some day.
Speaker 1 (42:40):
Could be Just look those crocheted blankets, the candlestick holders,
the inspirational plarks. That's what you're getting, Ladro, that's what
you're getting.
Speaker 2 (42:49):
Thirteen fifty five twenty two of you man of the match,
Jack and Leamer saying I don't want Ladrow.
Speaker 4 (42:55):
Bad luck, bad luck, bad luck.
Speaker 3 (42:57):
Boys take it and like its podcast.
Speaker 2 (43:01):
A Man Online has gone viral after making a video
about the millennial inheritance community.
Speaker 1 (43:07):
All the stuff that people are going to get when
their parents move it on, whether they pass away or
move into it a retirement village or downsize.
Speaker 4 (43:16):
It's not going to be good stuff. It's just going
to be sho It's.
Speaker 3 (43:19):
Got to be worth something. I've got some good stuff.
Speaker 2 (43:21):
No, it's not my collection of road signs, street road
signs and number plates you've seen in prisons. Surely, surely
that's going to be worth something.
Speaker 1 (43:30):
The tribal job is beating for forget money. This is
what I'm getting.
Speaker 19 (43:34):
That's forever stamp worth a fortune someday.
Speaker 3 (43:37):
True Cat has joined us.
Speaker 4 (43:38):
Hello, Cath, what are you going to get?
Speaker 9 (43:40):
I et feral cats?
Speaker 4 (43:42):
I eight feral cats.
Speaker 17 (43:44):
I hate feral cats.
Speaker 16 (43:45):
I've had to learn to cook for them because they've
got gastro intestinal issue.
Speaker 15 (43:49):
Oh, touch them.
Speaker 17 (43:51):
That's what I'm getting, as well as a house and
a garage full of stuff.
Speaker 13 (43:54):
But just eight feral cats. H.
Speaker 3 (43:57):
So there is this?
Speaker 4 (44:00):
Is it worth it?
Speaker 3 (44:01):
By the definition of a feral cat, that means they're
they're feral. You can't you just let them go?
Speaker 9 (44:06):
No?
Speaker 17 (44:06):
No, I can't let them go.
Speaker 16 (44:08):
No, No, their mom's pride and joy.
Speaker 17 (44:09):
But I can't touch them.
Speaker 16 (44:11):
I can't pick them up.
Speaker 13 (44:12):
But you know, what can you do?
Speaker 3 (44:14):
What can you do? What you see?
Speaker 4 (44:15):
This is the thing.
Speaker 1 (44:16):
What can you do without breaking your parents' hearts?
Speaker 3 (44:19):
Thank you can enjoy that property.
Speaker 4 (44:23):
Bringing a few wheelers and see how you go.
Speaker 3 (44:25):
Mandy has joined us.
Speaker 4 (44:26):
By Mandy, what are you getting?
Speaker 5 (44:29):
Hi?
Speaker 16 (44:29):
It's not what I'm getting is what my kids are getting. Yeah,
And I've selected all their baby teeth as they lost
them when they were babies, So they're getting their baby
teeth back. When I go, every tooth wrapped in a
little bit of tissue with blood and all.
Speaker 4 (44:49):
Now, have you told them this? Have you told them this?
Speaker 13 (44:53):
Everything?
Speaker 16 (44:54):
Always, I've got your baby teeth in my little pouse
in my drawers. That's what you're getting. You're getting your
baby teeth back someone a denture mold for them for
their eighteenth birthday.
Speaker 1 (45:05):
But I'm like, yeah, saying tissue and blood okay, so sentimental.
Speaker 2 (45:12):
You're getting to tissue and blood, dastardly, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 8 (45:17):
Mandy Jonesy and Amanda podcast.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot.
Speaker 3 (45:28):
I'm not forget money. This is what I'm getting.
Speaker 4 (45:32):
Yay.
Speaker 2 (45:33):
My kids will be so happy with the stuff that's
coming their way, Oh won't they?
Speaker 1 (45:37):
Just they want some bike parts and all kinds of
things that smell like oil.
Speaker 3 (45:40):
Well, none of them are really in the motorcycles. And
that's the thing. I've got a few motorcycles, as you know,
and they're very dear to me. So I said, you guys,
just don't give them away to.
Speaker 4 (45:49):
Know and what's that backing up?
Speaker 3 (45:52):
You don't put him necessarily your.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
Drums beating for forget money. This is what I'm getting.
Speaker 19 (45:57):
That's forever stamp worth a fortune.
Speaker 3 (45:59):
Someday he could be.
Speaker 4 (46:01):
Hello, Lee, what do you get Hello?
Speaker 17 (46:05):
This is my husband's parents who have passed away, and
we had to clean up their house, their farmers, so
they kept absolutely everything, and going through everything, there were
every pair of.
Speaker 4 (46:17):
His false teeth. Oh how many, at.
Speaker 17 (46:22):
Least five he had false teeth, I believe, And when
he was very young he had all of his glasses
that he'd ever worn. It was five truckloads of rubbish
went to the tip. Opening up these pins and seeing
false teeth was just hilarious.
Speaker 2 (46:39):
That five dumb tip trucks of false teeth clacking down
the streets.
Speaker 4 (46:45):
There goes to chatter box. Oh thank you, Lee.
Speaker 3 (46:48):
Surely you can reapurpose them forself.
Speaker 4 (46:49):
I wonder if the parents thought, no, this stuff that's important.
Speaker 3 (46:54):
Catherine has joined, Hi, Catherine.
Speaker 4 (46:55):
Who's getting what?
Speaker 13 (46:56):
Good morning? I've got a garage full of about forty
pieces of Ladro, twenty dinner sets, sporting books back to
the nineteen hundreds. My parents were collectors and now it's
all with me.
Speaker 1 (47:09):
And how do you feel about what you might have
to do with that? Do you feel the emotional tug
of it?
Speaker 13 (47:15):
Absolutely can't throw it out, don't know what to do
with it, but can't just get rid of it.
Speaker 4 (47:20):
No, that's a big emotional dilemma.
Speaker 1 (47:22):
It is Ladro worth anything, but it meant something to
your mum presumably financial mum and dad.
Speaker 13 (47:27):
Well, I don't know, but there's only so many porcelain
clown heads you can have, right, yes.
Speaker 4 (47:32):
But this is where you're stuck because it meant something
to them. And passing on.
Speaker 1 (47:36):
Peter Walsh, I used to work with on the living room,
used to say, you don't have to keep everything to
keep the memory that they're just giving.
Speaker 4 (47:43):
They're giving you a burden.
Speaker 1 (47:44):
And if you know your mum's made a douner for you,
put a put the cover, a snippet of the cover
in a frame so you have the memory, so you
don't have to keep the actuality.
Speaker 2 (47:53):
Otherwise we'll you've just got switches a fabric that mean nothing,
So what's the point.
Speaker 1 (47:57):
But it's better than keeping the entire douna. It's hard,
caster and.
Speaker 2 (48:01):
I feel that one day you chuck it all out
and then they'll say, you know what Ladro's worth of me?
Speaker 1 (48:05):
And it's not about what it's worth, it's it's connection
to the emotion that your parents felt for it. It's
the emotional connection that's what it's worth.
Speaker 3 (48:13):
Yeah, what's it worth?
Speaker 2 (48:15):
A man Share Notion podcast, And you've got to feel
about the millennial inheritance community.
Speaker 3 (48:21):
They have quite the burden they do.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
They're not going to be getting antiques, They're only getting
lago and teeth.
Speaker 4 (48:26):
From what we've been listening to this morning.
Speaker 3 (48:29):
Legal firm, even the tribal drama's beating for this.
Speaker 19 (48:33):
That's forever stamp could be worth a fortune someday.
Speaker 1 (48:36):
Forget money. This is what I'm getting. Hello, Emily, what
are people going to get?
Speaker 12 (48:42):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (48:43):
Well, it's what I got. My dear dad left me
a huge bucket of old dried chicken wishbones.
Speaker 4 (48:52):
Really he did bless him.
Speaker 7 (48:55):
When I was a kid, whenever he bought a chicken,
which was quite often, he would get the wishbone, put
it around his little finger, give me the other side,
and then we both had really hard which was really
difficult because they were always a bit greasy. Generally he
would win because he was bigger, but someone won. Usually
I would go flying backwards and we'd all have a
(49:16):
good laugh.
Speaker 16 (49:17):
But he kept them all and when I cleaned out
his flat.
Speaker 7 (49:21):
As you can imagine, he was a hoarder.
Speaker 19 (49:25):
I had.
Speaker 18 (49:25):
I found his.
Speaker 7 (49:28):
Pay slips from the BBC back in the sixties, Like
he kept everything. I found this huge bucket of those
chicken wishbones that he'd kept.
Speaker 4 (49:38):
That you'd actually split between him.
Speaker 18 (49:40):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (49:41):
Oh, do you think he kept them because of the
emotional nature of it or because he didn't show anything out?
Speaker 7 (49:47):
I think the only reason that he kept anything was
because of the emotional connection to it.
Speaker 4 (49:52):
So yeah, yeah, you must have felt very emotional finding that.
And what are you going to do with them?
Speaker 7 (49:59):
Well, to be perfectly honest, I'm really embarrassed to admit
this on national radio.
Speaker 12 (50:04):
But I had to let them go, Amanda, had to
let them go.
Speaker 7 (50:07):
Get them so exactly, here's your dad hanging on.
Speaker 3 (50:13):
This is my connection with my daughter.
Speaker 4 (50:15):
See yah, But you remember the memory that is the
thing you've told the beautiful story.
Speaker 7 (50:19):
Maybe that's that's right, and you gave me the opportunity
to do it.
Speaker 16 (50:23):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
There you go.
Speaker 4 (50:24):
Well, good, we freed your sage chicken bones.
Speaker 1 (50:29):
They'd make a good stop to which stop and the
human heads we won't talk about that.
Speaker 3 (50:34):
Thank you for all your calls.
Speaker 4 (50:36):
M Damnation.
Speaker 1 (50:46):
Twenty thousand dollars thanks to Miselle Stocks and Gravies for
our favorite goolie of the Year.
Speaker 3 (50:50):
What have we got today?
Speaker 18 (50:52):
What gets my gullies When I'm waiting in a drive
through and the car in front suddenly decides to blast
as windscreen wipe as we wash a fluid So of
course now it feels less like a Burger run and
more like I've just queued for the world's saddus car wash.
Speaker 4 (51:08):
When is the post to do it? If you do
when you're driving, other cars will get it.
Speaker 3 (51:12):
So you're one of those people this goes blasting.
Speaker 4 (51:14):
Everything when you should you do it in your own
driveway when you're supposed to.
Speaker 3 (51:17):
Do it, what's behind you?
Speaker 2 (51:19):
Like if you got a motorcycle behind you, then don't
go blasted.
Speaker 4 (51:22):
This woman said she was a car, so when should
you do it?
Speaker 3 (51:25):
She was a car?
Speaker 4 (51:26):
Brendon, I'm asking a serious question.
Speaker 2 (51:28):
Do you do what you do it that be aware
of what's around you when you're doing it.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
Just do it when there's no one around you. Just
the part of Sydney traffic.
Speaker 2 (51:35):
Is someone that's like four seconds behind you.
Speaker 3 (51:38):
Actually, that's not going to happen.
Speaker 6 (51:40):
What else have we got, my girlie is people who
think they can just park across my driveway at will
and blocking me in so I can't get out to
an important appointment. This guy in his damn Blue Prayers
has been parked across my driveway for the best part
of an hour. Now he just blistly walks along, gets
(52:00):
in his car and drives away.
Speaker 3 (52:02):
So those Prayers people are doing it for the environment.
Speaker 2 (52:06):
Watch where you're parking your car.
Speaker 4 (52:10):
I'll put more windscreen wipers on you.
Speaker 3 (52:12):
That's so? Is that you as well?
Speaker 9 (52:13):
Now?
Speaker 1 (52:14):
For you, it's no, it's not mead with the good.
Speaker 2 (52:18):
Four weeks to go till someone wins twenty thousand dollars cash.
It could be you record your coolie via the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (52:26):
Today in a seven tonight I'll fav recall an email
or Facebook friend wins an overnight stay at Park Royal
Paramatta in a deluxe king room with breakfast, you'll get
away to vibrant Low Carl's book your stay.
Speaker 2 (52:38):
Now, the tribal drummers beating for forget money. This is
what I'm getting after a video has gone viral about
the millennial inherent.
Speaker 1 (52:45):
Yes it's just full of crap. You're going to get
ladro and garbage basically. So Mandy from Mount Pritchard admitted
that she's the one that's kept a special something for
her kids.
Speaker 16 (52:55):
I selected all their baby tea so as they lost
them when they were babies there, so they're getting.
Speaker 13 (53:00):
The baby tea.
Speaker 16 (53:01):
That's every truth wrap. Get a little bit of tissue
with blood and all.
Speaker 4 (53:06):
You're welcome.
Speaker 3 (53:07):
I wouldn't mind that three bedroom you've got mum.
Speaker 4 (53:09):
That's Christmas and birthday.
Speaker 3 (53:11):
There you go. It's blood and teeth for.
Speaker 4 (53:14):
You kids, right are you too?
Speaker 2 (53:16):
That's that's what it's all about. We'll be back again
tomorrow and.
Speaker 3 (53:19):
For Tuesday show Action Back show today. Actually we're going
to scoot off.
Speaker 2 (53:23):
We own a Channel seven today to talk about the
new book Pump Up the Jet.
Speaker 1 (53:26):
We're on TV with Larry and Kylie this morning talking
about the book that celebrates our twenty years on the wireless.
Speaker 2 (53:31):
I thought we were doing anything for the Cross your
Heart bra what's that mean?
Speaker 3 (53:34):
That's you know, for the advertorial that was our pivot.
Speaker 2 (53:39):
God on a one point seven twenty five k Christmas
Free is coming up after nine o'clock with higo. We
will be back again tonight for jam Nations, so we
will catch you then see ya.
Speaker 3 (53:50):
Good day to you.
Speaker 4 (53:51):
Well, thank god that's over. Good bite, good bite.
Speaker 19 (53:56):
Wipe your eyes.
Speaker 21 (54:00):
Catch Jonesy and Amanda's podcast on the iHeart app or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 8 (54:12):
Jones catch up on what you've missed on the free
iHeartRadio app m