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August 24, 2025 59 mins

How do you get your partner's attention? Is there a specific sound? Word? Signal? Wait until you hear these ones!

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
My Heart podcasts, hear 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 Monday.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
I thought it went all right.

Speaker 1 (00:20):
I thought it went all right. We spoke about one
of the new ways that people are choosing to have
their remains disposed of. It's called a water cremation, and
you pretty much soak in some essence, get jilted from
side to side and end up as a watery soup.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Meanwhile, Snowtown's going hello over here, anyone.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
We tried it first. We were first, what about taxing
a spare bedroom? If you're living with one other person
or on your own, and you've got a big house
with a number of bedrooms, is it fair that you
get taxed or that you also get some tax incentives
to downside? We'll put it to the pub test.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
I can see a lot of model train rooms being
set up in houses all over the country.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
It's a train room, I tell you.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Jelaine Maxwell interesting developments with her getting transferred from maximum
security prison to minimum security prison with hot and cold
running crafts.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
Well, this is the thing. She has spoken to the
Deputy Attorney General very Interestingly, he's a former lawyer of
Donald Trump's. It seemed quite out of line that he
went in there to speak to her alone. And you
will be stunned the thing she has revealed about what
went on in her association with Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
You know what I love, Tell me infrastructure, and I
like old infrastructure being made new again. Well, Lara train station,
it's going to happen, apparently, according to Chris Mins.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
Well there you go. We go to the Iowa State
Fair and the husband calling competition and ask you via
the tribal drum, how you signal your partner in the wild.

Speaker 4 (01:49):
That's all in this podcast, a miracle of recording.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
We have so many requests for them to do it again.
Mistress Amanda's MS killer.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
Amanda doesn't work alone.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
Friend making the tools of the train.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot.

Speaker 5 (02:15):
I've been a legendary part Jonesy, Amanda the actress. Congratulations
right now, Josey and Amanda, you're doing a great job.

Speaker 6 (02:26):
S good radio.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Sorry but it's a tongue tongue twist.

Speaker 5 (02:33):
Set Amanda's shoot, Timy, we're.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
On the air.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
The body to you man in my little black shirted friend.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
That's a jump off, But thank you? Did you think yeah,
did you think like it's not mo hair? Anything's on
my hairy shoulders? I'm just here in a boob tube.
You like I've got hairy shoulder.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
Up against the black backdrop of the studio, it just
looks like you're a head.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
Just floating like in one of those science fiction shows.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
Like a Mulley grub grubs.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Unless my head in a jar, I could do the
show with my head just being in a jar by fluids.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
Did you have a good weekend?

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Lovely weekend? Some came out?

Speaker 3 (03:11):
How Elae was that? Well? The Golden All came out?
It was great.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
The foot he was on on the weekend? How did
you go with your footy, Chippy?

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Let's see. I'm having a look now because when I
was watching the Roosters and the Rooster's loss, I was
really annoyed because the universe knew they were going to
lose because the dart picked the eels. So let's have
a look. The Expert's got five out of eight right,
dark got four out of eight right, So overall, now
smart it has picked twelve has picked twelve winners. I

(03:40):
picked ten over the years.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
It just goes to show it, doesn't it.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
Not far behind, though, yeah, but start behind. Since I
started aiming and being better at it, I'm not doing
as well right because it was the chaotic nature of
it that gave me a chance. And now that I'm
trying to aim and be correct, it's not going so well.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
You're starting to sound like jas Haslar in a press conference.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
It's none of your business. We'll talk about this isn't
for that. This forum is not for that.

Speaker 3 (04:04):
Well, it is for this right now. We're talking about
it now. It's happening, isn't that what he said? Yeah,
but that's what I'm saying to you. This forum, this
is the right forum to be talking about it.

Speaker 1 (04:14):
Look, the people who have decided that, who's decided that
forums not for that?

Speaker 7 (04:18):
That?

Speaker 1 (04:19):
It's not for that? How do you go this? On
week This weekend, did the Sharks win the by Brendanosue?

Speaker 3 (04:28):
They won the bike quite successfully.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
They won it ugly, as the Sharks tend to do,
but they won the bike.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
So we all slept well. It was great. It was
a great weekend. I managed to get in the surf,
I got some waves, it was nice.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
I should google while I'm sitting here the ladder, shall
I to see? I think the Roosters are out of
the top eight.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
Yeah, no, Brian is nodding his head, Ryan with a B.
They should be number eight, says Ryan with a bee.

Speaker 1 (04:54):
Okay, let's have a look. Raiders, Storm, Bulldogs, Warriors, Broncos,
Sharks are sixth. Panthers Roosters are eight. You're quite right there,
you go and Brian's team of Sea Eagles ten. Just
to stab him a little bit on the way through.

Speaker 3 (05:11):
I think prior knew that he didn't need you to
bring him up to aware. He's aware.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
Action packed show today, m gillespie with that entertainment, those
Menendez brothers, we're going to talk about that. You know what,
I'm kind of glad that that guy's not getting out
on parole.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
I think at the end of the day, he did
kill his mum and dad.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Well, he did kill his mum and dad. It was
a level of intent. I think he's being judged on
the history.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
I feel that the universe has done the right thing then.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Yeah, but you know how we've had this praise of
people having eco burials and things and being buried in
cardboard boxes. I've heard of a new one, a new
kind of cremation that Elsey, if you're interested in not
if you personally Brendan are interested in it, because I've
said it all up outside the studio.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
Great, these radio starts are getting beyond, and.

Speaker 1 (05:59):
One of us is going to drive next year.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
The Fruit and Plains have drive. Once he's Big Drive Show.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
Once he's Big Drive Show, you see how I drive,
it'll be chaotic.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
Instagram makes his return and we can't do anything until
we do the Magnificent seven.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
Question number one, what luxury item is Rolex, famous for
making cham Nation, we have for.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
You the Magnificent Seven. There are seven questions.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Can you go all the way and answer all seven
questions correctly? If you do that, a man will say.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Well, Brendan has said no to this elaborate equipment I've
set up for his special cremations outside the studio. I'll
give him more details a bit later on. He might
change his mind when he sees it.

Speaker 3 (06:37):
I thought it was a dunk tank, but well, you
know it kind of is.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Dunk tanks are so nineteen ninety eight Rodney the advent
of the.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
Dunk tank dunk, every TV show, every charity event. Un
Get Fatty Vaughton sitting on a little platform. You throw
a ball and you'd go into the water.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
Fat He's doing it right now.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
So his wife set went up for him at home.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
Throw something at him?

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Does it on Saturday night? Rodney's in West Hoxton.

Speaker 8 (07:03):
Hi, Rodney, good morning, guys.

Speaker 7 (07:06):
Are you right?

Speaker 1 (07:07):
Well? His question number one for the Mags seven? What
luxury item is Rolls famous for making?

Speaker 2 (07:14):
What singing activity means empty orchestra in Japanese?

Speaker 3 (07:19):
Rodney, Japanese.

Speaker 1 (07:26):
Well, it's it's a word. You will know you think
about it. If it's it's a something that lots of
people do, empty orchestra. Have a think about what you'd
be doing. Greg's in Blacktown, Hi, Greg, Are these clues helping?
Not really?

Speaker 8 (07:43):
But what was the question again?

Speaker 1 (07:45):
The question?

Speaker 3 (07:46):
What's you? Greg?

Speaker 1 (07:48):
What's singing activity means empty orchestra in Japanese? A singing
activity that you do in public, empty orchestra? You know
the word. It's what people do and they've had a
few drinks if they're bold.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
Greg, Let's play the not so secret sound? Greg? What
is this soundund.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
Greg? Er, I see that's the sound of the buzzer,
now Greg, the buzz of Greg maybe got confused because
we still had our background music going over him. Maybe
would that have confused him?

Speaker 3 (08:32):
No, I don't think so.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
Do you think Greg was just confused?

Speaker 3 (08:34):
I think it just happened. It's just, you know, it's
this time of the morning. It just happens. But life
goes on. As John Mellencamp.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Professed podcast The Magnificent Seven, we're at the question number
three do you not so secret sound?

Speaker 1 (08:49):
This is going to go to Craig in Camden, South
Hello Craig, Good morning Greg Craig. What is this sound?

Speaker 8 (09:04):
An acoustic guitar?

Speaker 2 (09:06):
What does the primary piece of equipment use by the
Ghostbusters to capture ghost Craig?

Speaker 3 (09:11):
Is it a the spectral vacuum?

Speaker 2 (09:14):
Be a proton pack or see a ghost blaster?

Speaker 3 (09:22):
Yeah? The proton Yeah, and they put it on.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
The room full of nerds right now.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
The little storage facility. And don't cross the streams.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Don't cross the streams.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Question, you're a furinal Craig.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
Case and lisha trouser ghost. I want trouble there in
the film industry, Craig. What's the primary job of the
foley artist? What does the foley artist do?

Speaker 9 (09:48):
Pick a thing up?

Speaker 1 (09:50):
No, not the clapper board.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
No, it's the clapper kid. John's you never want to
be called that. Well, who's the best boy?

Speaker 1 (09:58):
I think there's different layers of director's assistant, best boy.
I think the best boy might be the clapper kid.
Unless best boy helps with the lighting on.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
The key grip. What does he do?

Speaker 1 (10:10):
He's very popular at a party?

Speaker 3 (10:11):
John, Hello, John?

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Do you know what the foley artists were?

Speaker 2 (10:16):
Going?

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Very well? We're up to question number five. Do you
know what the foley artist.

Speaker 8 (10:20):
Does as a special effect?

Speaker 2 (10:23):
He does well, sound the sounds you know walking on Yes, Fari.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
Used to do this when he was working in films.
This is part of what he used to have to do.
If you're walking, you see someone walking along in gravel,
walking through a litter box or something like that, or
you you know, you make the sounds of horses with
two coconut harps, that kind of thing.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
You know.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
David Berry who came in the other day, he was
in Outlander. He played Lord John John Gray, and he
demonstrated how they do kissing in the in the audible sense.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Demonstration.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
Please, that was.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Too intimate, too much question number six in which Australian
city did you find a building that was nicknamed the Toaster.

Speaker 8 (11:15):
Australian.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
Yeah, yeah, it is Sydney.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
We're looking at it right now. That's where Alan Jones lips.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
Remember there was that big outrage when it started. It's
the betterlong apartments. Now it's that building right down near
the circular ken It it's blocking everything and then you
just get used to it and there it is.

Speaker 2 (11:33):
That's it's fine and you know, aprapa Vellan Jones. He
popped up in my feed recently doing something. He was
just doing some stuff. He was, you know, a nice
suit on. He was talking about something. Is he back
on TV or radio or something?

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Can I I've forgotten where we are in the process
he has he's been convicted or it's still before.

Speaker 3 (11:53):
I think it's still I think it's still going. But
he can still do other stuff.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Right where things are in the green tracksuit?

Speaker 2 (11:58):
Yeah yeah, yeah, he looked very stylish. Who won in
the Cowboys versus Tigers game last night?

Speaker 3 (12:05):
It was a thriller unfortunately the Cowboy. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
Although we were presuming you're a Tigers fan, John.

Speaker 8 (12:14):
I certainly am.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
They played well, though, and.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
They've got the new stadium coming mate, come on.

Speaker 10 (12:20):
Oh good, yeah, I'll crack well good.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
You'll be about one hundred and fifty eight. But still.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
They might they might win the premiership.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
Then congratulations, you've won the jam packets all coming your
wage on two hundred dollars to spend, A Bavis to
Dessert Bar World Famous Desserts, A Bavis to Parramatta.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
And brightonless Sands, A double.

Speaker 2 (12:41):
Pass to the Life of Chuck, Charles Krantz, a genre bending,
life affirming journey and Jonesy amounta charcatures for the cover
in some salor pencils.

Speaker 3 (12:50):
I say, John, anything you'd like to add to this?
The West Tigers, Yeah, go to the Tigers.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
The Life of Chuck sounds like your description every Saturday
night you've ever had, Brendan.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
It sounds cleat.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (13:02):
I like genre bending, of course you do.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Jonesy and Amanda.

Speaker 6 (13:08):
Podcast, Josie and a Man, those are two great names.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
I've thumbing through our jam and that a big book
of facts. On this day.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
In nineteen eighty six, Paul Simon released his hit you
Could Call Me Al.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
This was kind of his first re emergence, wasn't it
after Simon and Garfunkle.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
Well, he'd had a hit late in the evening that
came out six years earlier. It'd have been a while
great songs. When he kicked garfunk lads said I could
do this by.

Speaker 3 (13:41):
Myself, kicked out the garth. It's been like a garfunkle
Simon and go funkle Paul, and it's you and me.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
Oh come on, and okay, let's look at it. You
know I'm haul on your roads. No, you know very well,
Simon and your garfund.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Anyway, Paul Simon was at a party and this is
where he came up the inspiration for you can Call
Me Al.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
He was at a party with his wife Peg.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
When a dude thought that Paul's name was Al and
his wife's, Peggy's name was Betty.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
And you can call me Betty if you've cat me al.
That's on.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
And then he went on trip to South America and
met a band called Stamella, which sounds like a venereal disease,
but Stamella sound like this. So Paul put it all
together and he came up with this. That's how it happens, baby.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
You know I'm Paul you're art Gama. Throughout the years,
there have been ways of different looking at different ways
of disposing of human bodies. Obviously in a tribal sense
that people have always honored the dead body somehow. But
in our Anglo Saxon culture, pretty much we put a
dead body into a casket, put it in the ground.
The caskets have changed over the years. You can get

(14:58):
Barbara culand I think was buried in a cardboard casket.
People who want to be environmentally just go back to
the earth with no big wooden cases left behind, etc.
What about this? Do you think you'd be interested in this, Brendan,
because by and large cremation hasn't changed over the years.
This is a thing now happening in the States called
water cremation, an increasingly popular method of managing dead bodies

(15:23):
by dissolving them in chemical baths. Many choose it as
an emotional lifeline, in a genttle way to release those
they loved from the living world. I'll tell you about
the process. It's called alkaline hydrolysis, known more colloquially as
water cremation. It's been gaining popularity in the States. Let's

(15:46):
go through the details inside this particular funeral home in
West Baltimore. A long silver chamber full of water seaweed
flops back and forth over a platform. Within it, a
body is dissolved, so it moves back and forth. It
tilts and the skin, the flesh, and the organs and

(16:09):
into amino acids and sugars with each tip of the chamber.
Right in a matter of hours, all that remains are
bones and the leftover watery solution.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
And what do they do with the watery solution?

Speaker 1 (16:22):
I guess you just put it down the drain or.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
Turn it into coconut water.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Death care professionals say that water cremation appeals to those
who resonate with the idea of themselves and their loved
ones departing the earth through water. Like maybe it's a
burial at sea.

Speaker 3 (16:37):
I like the idea of a burial.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
Would you rather be eaten by fish creatures or dissolved?
I guess this is what would happen to your body
in the in the ocean. You would gradually dissolve. It's
a gentler process, they say, and it's a cleaner alternative
to fire cremation.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Yeah, I don't like the idea of fire cremation. That
freaks me out a bit.

Speaker 1 (17:00):
Do you want to do you want to take up space?

Speaker 3 (17:02):
You want to take space.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
Buried upright on your bike, as much space as you
call it.

Speaker 3 (17:07):
I want to be propped. I want all my bikes
buried with me, and I'm in some sort of chariot
and they're all in front of me. Yeah, so I'm
going to need a big bit of space.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
You're like those men who insist that their nine wives
jump into the funeral pile. All your bikes are there.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
But it's interesting, what are you doing about my bike's
or wives?

Speaker 1 (17:28):
As baby boomers start to move into the generation, now,
who are you know? The older people passing away? This
is why we're seeing these shift in things. I was
interested to see that there's a new song that's become
very popular at funerals. It's not always look on the
bright side of life. It's this the theme from Jaws.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
Yeah, I know, I was letting a bed in. Really.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
Yeah, the theme from Jaws is being become more and
more popular for people with their final farewell.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
Do they play this as the caskets going into the kiln.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
It'll be interesting if they play it and the casket
tilts up and then just gets dragged under. Could combine
them with the water a creamation and comes here.

Speaker 3 (18:11):
That'd be good. Yeah, we know, Actually what I wanted
my funeral. I want this.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
The sweet. I'll write it down so I remember.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
That's a good collab as integration man Jones. Let's get
on down to the Jonesy demand of arms for the
pub test today.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
Taxing spare bedrooms? Does it pass the pub test?

Speaker 1 (18:40):
Here's how it was described on the news last night.

Speaker 9 (18:42):
We mismatched between the average size of households and the
average size of a home is prompting experts to propose
attacks on spare bedrooms. Your research from Cotality revealed a
third of Australian households is made up of just two people,
while the most common.

Speaker 11 (18:59):
Property is three bedrooms.

Speaker 9 (19:01):
It suggested that a levy, along with the removal of
stamp duty, may encourage shrinking families and empty nesters to downsize,
freeing up supply.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
So the composition of the home has changed throughout the
years as kids move out of the nest and new
norms are adapted by society. As of July twenty twenty five,
seventy five percent of homes are comprised of a couple
or one parent, with or without dependence. Twenty seven percent
just live on their own, and most houses are built
for the standard four to five person family. Because things

(19:34):
are changing the age we are now. We would in
the old days have been retired, we'd have downsized, we'd
have sold our house. We would be living in smaller accommodation,
freeing up those spaces for the next generation to take over.
That's not happening anymore. So we are staying in our
houses longer with less people in them. It's interesting. We're

(19:55):
not being forced. There's not going to be a bedroom
gestapo going around counting how many bedrooms you've got, but
there may be tax advantages to lure you into moving on.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Well, they did this in England. Back in the old days.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
They had the window tax, so how many windows you
had in your house, you got taxed for those windows.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
You say, olden days, like eighteen hundreds or yeah.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
Long time ago.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
And then they started breaking in the windows. So I
could see if this and this is just a thought bubble,
this idea, but if this happened, all of a sudden,
people are gonna have a lot of rooms with train
sets and gyms and all sorts of stuff.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
It's not a bedrooms bedrooms anymore.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
It's my sewing rooms.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
Like what happens if.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
You're want of those families that you got Mum and
dad and Denny, everyone packed into about a three bedroom
house and there's six of you living in there.

Speaker 3 (20:44):
Do you get a rebait?

Speaker 1 (20:46):
Interesting, isn't it? Because we are looking at ways to
ease this housing crisis. What's it going to take. One
of the problems is that we, as baby boomers and
Generation Jones, are holding onto our houses longer than previous generations.

Speaker 3 (21:01):
Go and give them a house away to some kid
so they could live in it.

Speaker 1 (21:05):
We're selling. They're not giving your house away. There'd be
tax rebates to make it financially viable for you. You're not
being forced to do any of these things. This is
an idea that's just been mooted. What do you think
taxing the spare room? Does it pass the pub test?

Speaker 3 (21:21):
We'd love to hear from you.

Speaker 5 (21:22):
Jem jam Nation, the legendary boat Jersey command of the Actress.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
I always like new infrastructure. I'm excited about the Wallara
train station for many.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
Years going to be reopened as a train station.

Speaker 2 (21:38):
MINSI reckons it's going to happen. Chris Mins has said
it's going to happen in twenty twenty seven. So if
you go back to the seventies, the Rand government they
completed that line to Bondai Junction from the city, the
Eastern Suburbs line, and the Wallara station was always going
to be there, and then it was decided it was
going to be too expensive, so it was going to

(21:58):
cost them three point four million dollars, which is laughable now,
but that's worth a bit if these days.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
I don't know what it's.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Working, but it's all there and it's not going to
if they can do it. They're saying for the year
after next to have it up and running.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
Well no, no, they're going to start building it in
twenty twenty seven. So oh okay, help me a bit
of mucking around.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
I was just reading a newspaper article from nineteen seventy six,
the Battle of Wallara, one of Sydney's poshous suburbs.

Speaker 3 (22:24):
We don't need it, we don't want.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
It, says the Preserve Valara committee, led by attractive housewife
and former antique dealer missus and Annette Proctor, and surveyor
David Sulman, and so there was another lady, Lady Fradden,
or of Edgecliffe Road.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
She wanted it to happen. So it's been going around
for some time, it is.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
But they also proposing that a chunk of that will
be used for space for housing.

Speaker 3 (22:51):
Yeah. Yeah, so they build, you build it, they will.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
Come, instructure will all go around.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
And then young families move into the area.

Speaker 1 (22:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:59):
I was just looking on Google Earth. There's a few
tennis courts on that train track there.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Well at least they're not racecourses because that lobby would
not let anything happen happen at rose Hill exactly.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
Good luck. What that means you? I like new infrastructure.
It's what you do. And it's like the Alfred's Point Bridge.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
You ever gone across the Alfred's Point Bridge When they
built that back in the seventies, they put the foundations
down for the future of a new bridge, So it's foresight.

Speaker 3 (23:25):
I love this stuff.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Okay, well look watch this space. No instead of well,
instead of not in my backyard, it's going to be
not in my lifetime because this is this stuff takes
a lot.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
I want everything in your backout. I'm putting an airport
in your backyard.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
I'm happy for it. Sh podcast.

Speaker 3 (23:45):
Let's get on down to the joke pub test. I
want to get right now, windows.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
All today. Taxing the spare room? Does it pass the
pub test.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
It's not so much just taxing the spare room, it's
offering incentives for people to sell their family homes and downsize.
We're finding that seventy five percent of homes are comprised
of a couple or one parent with or without dependents,
twenty seven percent live on their own, and homes are
built for the standard to four to five person family. Really,
so this is a plan to in a way, find

(24:31):
ways and incentives to free up more housing for other
families to come into the market.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
The government should stop mucking around with their red tape
and holding back on das and just let things happen.
Let developers do their bit build more houses olden days.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
But in the olden days, people our age weren't living
in our family homes without ould children, or weren't in
our family homes on their own.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
Like for our parents, it was affordable sort of housing.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
That's true now, but we're working longer, so we need
to We need to have somewhere to live. We're not retiring.
There'd be tax incentives, as I said, like abolishing stamp
duty those things. How would you feel about this taxing
the spare bedroom? Does it pass the pub test?

Speaker 12 (25:15):
I think it's ridiculous taking your spare bedrooms.

Speaker 8 (25:18):
It doesn't past the pub test. By all means, incentivize
anty to downside, but don't penalize. People have got hard
all their lives to get what they've got now.

Speaker 13 (25:27):
Taxes, taxes, taxes and more taxes, Like really we paid
land TAXI paid it, and now.

Speaker 10 (25:33):
They want to taxis for a stare bedroom. I don't
think so.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
No, it doesn't.

Speaker 10 (25:38):
The governments are losing the plot.

Speaker 13 (25:41):
Why give incentives tax incentives for people to move out
of their homes, use.

Speaker 6 (25:46):
That money and build more homes.

Speaker 12 (25:49):
A taxing centive will only create road which will waste
more money.

Speaker 10 (25:53):
I don't have cashion the bank to give my kids
to put a deposit down. But what I have is
a big house and they can live here as long
as they need to. And I now have five adults
in my home. We're using up all out of our space.
And that's what I can offer them. And I'm not
about to stud so quick. If I'm still working and
I'm in the area that I've been working in for years,
it's convenience to me, So why would I want to

(26:14):
sell them downside?

Speaker 3 (26:16):
You You've got what you've got.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
This is ridiculous.

Speaker 10 (26:18):
You're not bringing in more people than they can house
immigration simple.

Speaker 8 (26:25):
Coming here for.

Speaker 3 (26:26):
The infrastructure.

Speaker 8 (26:27):
These governments people need to work for us. What are
they doing.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
I agree with you, brother, I agree. I get a
train set room.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
And you've got a train set room. You've got a
sewing room, You've got a walking around room, a gaming room, corner,
a sauna, a sauna, you've got a thinking room. It's
the smallest room in the house.

Speaker 3 (26:50):
Are there any questions?

Speaker 1 (26:52):
Well, as we know the White House, President Trump has
been under a lot of pressure to release the Epstein files.
Some are saying that's why there've been all these visits
with Putin et cetera. Distraction, distraction those that's what the
critics are saying, because none of the information has been released.
Very interestingly, Gallainne Maxwell has been interviewed by the Department

(27:13):
of Justice, who've just released the transcripts of that interview.
There's some cynicism and I'm one of those cynical people
around this her interview with the Department of Justice. I'll
talk about why that was not the usual way these
things are done. But in light of that interview, she's
been moved from a high security Florida prison for men
and women to an all female minimum security prison in

(27:35):
Texas known for its arts and crafts programs, So her
security has been downgraded. She has been moved to an
easier prison, although the government is saying there's no we
are not promising anything to her. We're just asking her
to be interviewed. So here's what's happened. She was interviewed
by the Department the Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, a

(27:58):
high ranking Department of Justice official who happens to be
a former personal lawyer of President Trump's. So President Trump
and no one would dispute this has got rid of
a lot of people from the Department of Justice who
he felt weren't on his side. So this is no
longer a separate entity to the Oval Office. This is
almost an arm of the Oval Office. So the decision

(28:20):
for this man, his name is Todd Blanche, to conduct
this interview personally was widely criticized as highly unorthodox. Legal
experts have said that nothing have said that this high
level involvement with no FBI agents or investigators is highly
unusual and could undermine any of any of the evidence.

(28:41):
There's no rigor around it. So they're saying that the
lack of the FBI being present or sworn investigators undermines
the reliability of this interview. Having such a high level
politician and a political appointee of Donald Trump's conduct this
interview rather than career Department of Justice prosecutors or agents

(29:02):
has raised concerns about potential political motivations. So let's put
that aside, and let's see what we've discovered through this interview,
the transcripts of which have been released. It won't surprise
you to hear that she did not bear witness or
hear anything improper or illegal. No activity by any of
the prominent people previously linked to Epstein. How interesting. So

(29:27):
she saw Donald Trump, she never saw him having a massage.
She just knew he was friends with Epstein. She doesn't
remember any other things. Bill Clinton doesn't remember him getting massages. Nothing.
Prince Andrew all of that photographic evidence was doctored etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
She said, I have never recruited a mass sous from
mar Lago. I don't ever recollect doing that. Interestingly, Donald

(29:50):
Trump himself has said recently he had a falling up
with Epstein because Epstein was recruiting massuses from mar O Lago,
one of whom was Virginia Goofray.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
That's right. He recently deceased.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
That's right. So Maxwell says she has no memory at
all of doing that. She When talking about Trump, she says,
I don't know how they met and how they became friends.
I saw them together. I remember the few times I
observed them together. They were friendly, they seemed friendly. Nothing
untoward happened. So all the people who've been the high
ranking people, prominent people who've been accused of inappropriate behavior

(30:24):
are all, according to her, in the clear. This, of course,
is outraged the many the scores of women who have
told a different story about Gallaine Maxwell trafficking them and
the people they were expected to perform for the family
of Virginia Gouffrey have said, we are outraged the content
of these transcripts is in direct contradiction with Felon Gallaine

(30:48):
Maxwell's conviction for child sex trafficking. During this bizarre interview,
she's never challenged about her court proven lies, providing her
a platform to rewrite history. They've also said this, if
our sister could speak today, she would be most angered
by the fact that the government is listening to a
known perjurer, a woman who repeatedly lied under oath and

(31:10):
will continue to do so as long as it benefits
her position, her family said in their statement. So they
said this is she is a monster who deserves to
rot in prison for the rest of her life. So
this once again tries to make liars out of all
those women who told the same story and had been
vindicated with these convictions. And she doesn't think that Jeffrey

(31:35):
Epstein killed himself. That's the only what did you say
about that?

Speaker 3 (31:39):
That?

Speaker 1 (31:40):
Or she just said he does not kill himself. This
was a failing of the prison.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
System, right, Okay, as she's got hot and cold running
crafts in minsect.

Speaker 1 (31:48):
Now I'm off to do some pottery. Nothing is seen,
so let's all stop looking people. Jonesie and Amanda Podcast.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
Amanda this rain, though the local news is or squished
up on the driveway and someone ran over it, so
it's going to be tire printed.

Speaker 3 (32:14):
It's just a big pulpy mess. Now do you read it?
I love reading The Leader. It's great.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Where else are going to get my fix about e
bye kids riding through the mall?

Speaker 3 (32:23):
Or the local business awards? Who's going to win that?
I'm never gonna know whether it was Kathy from Kathy's
Cheap Cuts.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Is that meat or hair? I'm not too sure that's
what the shop should be called.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Well, I'll never know because my wife when she drives
up the driveway like brum Miller, she's run over my Leader.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
Oh no, oh, you'll never know if it's meat or hair.
Who's going to win this year?

Speaker 3 (32:48):
I can't be bothered going on line to read it.
I just wanted to. I want my local I'm tactile.
I need it.

Speaker 1 (32:57):
I saw a social media post on the weekend that said,
the fact that middle children are going extinct is the
most middle child thing I've ever heard. It's true, and
this is true. Children are dwindling. In the seventies, it
was common to have three or four children. Today, almost
sixty five percent of women with children only have one

(33:19):
or two. So the middle child is becoming increasingly rare.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
You're from a pair.

Speaker 1 (33:26):
Yep, I've got an older brother and me, So I
don't know the middle child thing. Is it true that
middle children, if you've got more, if you've got three,
factions appear.

Speaker 12 (33:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Maybe, well were always pairings off.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
We've got three, you've got four. I've got three kids.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Oh that you meant you were from a family of four.

Speaker 3 (33:45):
Well, you know, I've got three of my own kids.

Speaker 1 (33:48):
Yes, and do you find it four?

Speaker 3 (33:51):
Where I was the oldest? That's great. The oldest is great.
You're king of the world, you're king of the castle.
The youngest is.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
Good as well, because you get all the stuff where
everyund moves out.

Speaker 3 (34:00):
And the parents are a bit more lax about things
like drinking and borrowing.

Speaker 2 (34:03):
The car and all the stuff that they used to
crack the whip on me about my youngest got away
with more than I did.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
Well, your daughter romany is it then?

Speaker 3 (34:13):
The middle child, she's the little Marsha Brady.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Well, that's the thing, jan The most famous middle child
was this one, Marsha, Marsha and Marcia. There are common
stereotypes about middle children that they're considered to be neglected,
therefore resentful, they have no drive, they have a negative outlook,
they don't they feel like they don't belong. The middle
child syndrome has often been written about, do you think

(34:39):
your daughter has the middle child syndrome? Actually, the needy
one does.

Speaker 2 (34:43):
She sandwiched between the boys though, so there's two boys
and a girl, so I think that works out well.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
So she gets a lot of attention.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
Right, Yeah, because in popular culture, and I don't know,
because I didn't grow up in a family where there
were three and I've only got two sons myself, they
were always seen as the ones who are always winging.

Speaker 3 (35:02):
Yeah like Jan, like Jan, Yeah, like Jack.

Speaker 8 (35:05):
Tell you what the problem is?

Speaker 1 (35:07):
You have to wait in line for everything around out here,
so it's always borrowing you things. I never have.

Speaker 14 (35:12):
Any privacy because I've got too many brothers and sisters.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
I wish I were an only child. Was that an
episode where things went wild? Was an only child? I'm
guessing that that's where that story es went.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
Bidden sheets and chains to scare people from buying the house.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
Yeah, and.

Speaker 3 (35:30):
Plan during the clan.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Interesting social advent if middle children do disappear. But also
we're facing the end of cousins. They're talking about the
concept of changing families also includes the great cousin decline.
The family trees are no longer wide. They're tall because
there's less branches. People are having less children, so you

(35:59):
there are less cousins, less offshoots to the family tree.
In the seventies, the declining cousins from the average of
seven cousins in the seventies to four or five now.
So cousins are declining. And what they think that means
is that even though cousins aren't necessarily the foremost relationship
in your life. We got used to get a lot

(36:21):
of advice from cousins before it didn't have the emotional
pressure points that would if you got advice or sort
help from a sibling. So cousins were important.

Speaker 3 (36:30):
Unless your Lebanese. My Lebanese mate, he's got a Mellian cousins.
Four of them are panel beaters.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
Well, aren't you lucky the way you ride your bike,
that's very lucky.

Speaker 3 (36:40):
Jamacious entertainment.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
On your dance and shoes.

Speaker 12 (36:46):
Don't give me your best shot.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
The editor of the Daily Oz is m Gillespie, and
she's here with everything.

Speaker 15 (36:53):
Menendez brothers, well, Eric and Lyle are back in the
headlines the Menendez brothers who, in case you forgot, somehow
murdered their parents brutally in nineteen eighty nine in their
Beverly Hills mansion.

Speaker 16 (37:07):
The case has been back in the media over the
last year because there was a Netflix show called Monsters
that came out last year, a dramatization of the events,
but really kind of brought the story of these brothers
to a whole new generation. And since then there's been
this big legal push to get them out of jail.
And we had these parole hearings over the weekend and

(37:29):
much to the shock of the global community, I think
they were both denied parole. They've been denied parole for
another three years, so they're going to be in jail
for probably.

Speaker 11 (37:39):
At least another three years.

Speaker 3 (37:41):
So how many years does that make that all up? Now?
It's thirty years.

Speaker 16 (37:44):
They went prison in nineteen ninety three, that was a
hung jury nineteen ninety six, so thirty years they've had wowy.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:52):
And the reason that they've up for parole is that
new evidence through this documentary. No one has said that
they didn't murder their parents, but there were validating reasons. Yeah,
that's what came up in the documentary.

Speaker 16 (38:04):
There were some new evidence, like some letters that emerged
alleging abuse by the parents towards other people. Because there
was always this concern that the boys had lied about
physical abuse, particularly by the father. Then other people came
forward and said they had been abused, and that kind
of strengthened the self defense argument. But we've also heard

(38:24):
a lot over the last year that you know, Eric
and Lyle have really rehabilitated themselves in prison, that they've
been these upstanding kind of members of the community, that
they've been involved in outreach mental health programs, and that
they're real leaders within prison. But we heard through these
parole hearings a bit of a different story that maybe
doesn't paint them in such.

Speaker 11 (38:42):
A positive light.

Speaker 16 (38:44):
Over the last thirty years, Eric Menendez in particular, was
refused parole because of frequent rule violations, including drug use
and physical altercations. He's openly admitted to using heroin since
being incarcerated.

Speaker 11 (39:01):
He was found with tobacco.

Speaker 16 (39:02):
And marijuana in his cell, a lot of contraband offenses,
a lot of mobile phone offenses. Both of them have
been found with mobile phones several times over the thirty years,
Eric was involved in frequent fights and violent incidents. He
was also found with prison wine and supplies to make
prison wine and substance gatherings. So he held little kind

(39:25):
of weed smoking parties in his prison cell apparently, and
this is one of the standout infractions for me. He
was found in abuse of excessive physical contact during visitation.
Cited for intimate conduct with his wife in the prison
chapel while his then nine year old stepdaughter was present.

(39:47):
So that's some misconduct. There was a visitor assault and
some other kind of other assaults all.

Speaker 3 (39:55):
Blended, so hang on. So we they were in the church.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
So he married her outside of it because he would
have been in jail.

Speaker 11 (40:02):
No, they got married afterwards.

Speaker 16 (40:04):
So yeah, they became prison pen pals, I supposed and
they got that.

Speaker 3 (40:09):
Some women love that stuff.

Speaker 2 (40:10):
Yeah, they are in jail because I don't think it
works the other way around for men. Men don't do
it so much for women. Although you probably wore because
the woman's always in jail.

Speaker 16 (40:18):
Yeah, it does end up being the kind of that narrative.
Li Al, though, is also denied parole for lots of
conduct and contraband missteps, persistent sel phone violations, he was
actually banned from having family visits for three years because
he had so much self phone possession, drug involvement. He
has gang affiliation. Apparently in prison he's joined a bunch

(40:39):
of gangs. So there's all these kind of pictures that
have been painted in these hearings of kind of these
men who really haven't rehabilitated themselves during prison, that have
been naughty boys, which goes against the image that their
lawyers have been portraying, which is, you know that they're
fully reformed and that it's time for them to be released.
They're both in their fifties now, and they've been in

(40:59):
prison since their early twenties. They were eighteen and twenty
one when their parents were murdered. But yeah, there's this
sort of all this abusive authority that's come to light.
Their lawyer, meanwhile, will shock you to know that he has.

Speaker 11 (41:11):
Denounced the hearings as rigged.

Speaker 16 (41:13):
He said that the Department of Justice and the Attorney
General's Office have rigged all of this as a big
media show, and that they haven't fully taken in the
evidence of their rehabilitation. So the strategy is to kind
of discredit the hearings. There's still the chance that they'll
be released on a clemency appeal by Californian Governor Gavin Newsom.

(41:34):
He could override the decision, but that looks extremely unlikely
now that we have all this evidence of their behavior
over the last thirty years. The board did recommend that
Newsome undergo a one hundred and twenty day legal review,
so there'll be a bit of a kind of inquiry,
I suppose, into these findings and their conduct over the
last thirty years, and then there'll be a final sign
off from Gavin Newsom in a few months.

Speaker 11 (41:56):
But I'd have to say it's not looking good.

Speaker 2 (41:58):
Maybe you should be on the proboard, the very naughty boards,
and they.

Speaker 3 (42:02):
Should stay for the rest of their lives. Thank you,
MS editor, Daily.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
Say Shit Podcast.

Speaker 11 (42:15):
It's a free mon instance.

Speaker 2 (42:19):
Jon and Amanda's Rock in the Suburbs. Ten questions, sixty
seconds on the clock. You can pass if you don't
know an answer. Will come back to that question of
time permits. You get all the questions right, you win
one thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
You can make it two thousand dollars by answering a
bonus question, but it's double or nothing.

Speaker 3 (42:35):
You risk it all Vinnie. What about Mini last week?
Two thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
On this Vincent? His name is Vincent's Nie to me?
All right?

Speaker 3 (42:43):
Jeremy is in Leapington.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Hello, Emma, Hello, Hi Emma? How old are you?

Speaker 10 (42:51):
I'm fourteen?

Speaker 1 (42:52):
Fourteen. Well, you're probably in the drop zone of knowing
more things than adults do because you're in the learning.
You're soaking it all in head.

Speaker 3 (42:59):
You know a lot of stuff.

Speaker 8 (43:00):
Emma, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (43:03):
What do you mean?

Speaker 1 (43:04):
Come on, Emma, Well let's see how you go today.
We've got ten questions sixty seconds. What you do you
need to know that? If you're not sure, say pass
because we might have time to come back. All right, yes, Emma,
good luck, because here we go he comes. Question number one,
what's the name of our station? Question two? How many

(43:27):
children do I have?

Speaker 10 (43:30):
Two?

Speaker 1 (43:31):
Question three? Suzuki, Maserati and Honda types of what cas?
Question four? How many inches are there in a foot?

Speaker 8 (43:44):
Twelve?

Speaker 1 (43:45):
Question five? If you're in the Barossa? What state are
you in?

Speaker 10 (43:51):
South Australia?

Speaker 1 (43:52):
Question six? What type of fish is known as the
chicken of the sea?

Speaker 14 (43:57):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (43:57):
Task?

Speaker 1 (43:58):
Question seven? Who can pose the moonlight sonata? And ode
to joy?

Speaker 13 (44:05):
Bejoven.

Speaker 1 (44:06):
Question eight, what's the most expensive spice in the world?
Question nine? Victoria is famous for making what, oh it
was coffee? Victoria makes coffee. You did well them, but
let's go back over some of them. The name of

(44:27):
our radio station WFM used to be As of this year,
we're GOLDFM. And I reckon you would have got the
type of fish that's known as chicken of the sea.

Speaker 10 (44:41):
I'm not sure that was.

Speaker 1 (44:45):
And the most expensive spice in the world was saffron.
Have you heard of saffron?

Speaker 7 (44:50):
Oh?

Speaker 13 (44:50):
Yes, she's very expensive.

Speaker 1 (44:54):
She's posh. Spice is the most expensive of them.

Speaker 2 (44:57):
Did you get a bit of teacher vibes from Amanda
going through your work there?

Speaker 1 (45:03):
I'm not going to make you pick up papers at
lunchtime though, Emma, thank you.

Speaker 3 (45:08):
I have to go for playing going to an EMU
parade all over Sydney.

Speaker 1 (45:15):
The Iowa State Fair. We always hear in Australia about
the state fairs in rural America, and they sound like
great events, don't they. That's where you meet boys and
you you know, it's like the Easter Show, I guess right.
And there's boots scooting and there's sideshoe alley and there's
corn on the stick and all that kind of well,
what about this on the stick? They have a competition

(45:37):
called husband calling, and men, if I know anything about men,
they love it when women use a shrill voice to
beckon them. Have a listen to these girl women competing
to win the husband calling competition. Deep deep, Some of

(46:09):
the comments underneath this have been interesting, and they said
there's no such thing as white culture. Since on another
person said, I love being a lesbian.

Speaker 3 (46:19):
My wife doesn't yell out anything to me at all,
does she does?

Speaker 1 (46:22):
She not never need your attention in any way?

Speaker 3 (46:24):
No, No, I do.

Speaker 2 (46:26):
Remember one time I was with your husband and yourself,
and we're at a shop, one of those places in
one of those small towns as as antique shops, where
you're wandering through looking at cords that no one's going
to buy. You would not buy these otherwise unless you're
in this small town. And Harley whistled at you to
get your attention. He went like that, and the look
of rage on your face. I looked at her, you know,

(46:50):
I said, made I'm glad I'm not getting that look
in what world ever?

Speaker 1 (46:54):
Whistle for me again? Whistle at me? Sure, but to
whistle at me, don't ever ever do that again.

Speaker 3 (47:03):
But all hardly did was so.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
What am I bought a collie? Don't do it?

Speaker 3 (47:11):
Don't do it. It's when you're in a spot, like
you're at Bunnings or something like that. You don't want
to yell out at your wife, so I just ring
her on the phone. We sometimes go to Bunnings together.
We've become one of those couples.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
Dancing. Before you know it, we're matching clothes on a second.

Speaker 3 (47:27):
Rold dances on a Saturday night.

Speaker 2 (47:29):
Yeah, that's right, notcuty, that's a bridge too far from me.

Speaker 1 (47:34):
Line dancing, you'd love it. Well, the tribal drum is
going to beat for this. How do you signal your partner?

Speaker 8 (47:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (47:41):
Right?

Speaker 1 (47:42):
Do you whistle at them? Do you go? Day?

Speaker 8 (47:44):
Well?

Speaker 3 (47:45):
Friends vows started calling each other Mum and dad.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
No, no, no, no, but this.

Speaker 3 (47:49):
Is not It's like when they decided to go into
m way. We had to shut it down.

Speaker 1 (47:53):
Of course you did. This isn't what you call them
in driving. This isn't what you call them in prime.
Signal your partner out in the wild, How do you
signal them?

Speaker 3 (48:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (48:02):
Do you what do you do, sendophore, send up flares.

Speaker 3 (48:05):
I don't think the whistles so bad. What about a cool.

Speaker 1 (48:10):
That's better than a whistle? A whistle is how you
get an animal's attention.

Speaker 3 (48:14):
That you'll have a bunch of boy scouts coming straight towards.

Speaker 1 (48:16):
You, which might give like that might not be a
good thing.

Speaker 3 (48:19):
In this current climate.

Speaker 2 (48:23):
Podcast the travel drum is beating. How do you signal
your partner when you're in the wild?

Speaker 1 (48:33):
Stand answer a stance? Please?

Speaker 3 (48:38):
Jenny has joined us?

Speaker 1 (48:39):
Hi, Jenny, Hello, Marco? Is that his name? No? Yeah,
But imagine if your husband's name was Marco and you
call out Marco, everyone in the whole shop would call out.

Speaker 8 (49:00):
Unfortunately, no, not a Marco.

Speaker 10 (49:03):
Right, But it works works better with my daughter. But
we do find each other eventually.

Speaker 2 (49:11):
In bunny So you're in Bunnings and you yell out
Marco absolutely.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
And they respond to that. Do they call back or
let us know where you are?

Speaker 8 (49:21):
Sometimes I get a giggle, I laugh.

Speaker 10 (49:23):
Sometimes I get a phone calls.

Speaker 3 (49:27):
Mom, I'm going to wait in the car, and how
would how would your daughter?

Speaker 10 (49:32):
Thirty?

Speaker 14 (49:35):
Still prim embarrassment We use it all the time, especially
in bullies and souls and Bunny thank you.

Speaker 3 (49:45):
Jenny Peter has joined us.

Speaker 1 (49:49):
Hi, Peter, do you do the calling? Are you the
one who's been called?

Speaker 12 (49:52):
I'm just about giving up on that. My wife now
has hearing us unless you're standing in front of her
waving your arms madly or throw something to at her attention.

Speaker 3 (50:01):
No hope.

Speaker 12 (50:02):
And then if you raise your voice so she can hear,
she says, stop yelling at me, and I'll say, are
you hearing agent, Yes, yes, we'll turn them up, but
I surrender, just giving up on it.

Speaker 1 (50:15):
You've been living a separate life ever since. There's nothing
also more patronizing, saying have you got your hearing agen? Yes?
I do, Yes, I do.

Speaker 2 (50:23):
Audience is young today, well, thirteen fifty five, twenty two.

Speaker 3 (50:29):
If you're under the age of a thousand, we'd love
to hear from you.

Speaker 1 (50:31):
People can have hear of any age. Brander, I dream
of it in here sometimes.

Speaker 6 (50:36):
Jonesy and Amanda podcast, Brendon and Elevanda and you're on
the same show.

Speaker 3 (50:46):
Let's start wearing libst fantastic.

Speaker 2 (50:49):
The Ohio husband Calling event has been run and won
the Tribal dramas beating. How do you signal your partner
when you're out in the wild.

Speaker 7 (51:01):
Oh, oh, dear, hello Karen, Karen, A call passed down
from my mother.

Speaker 1 (51:13):
Right, And so she used to call you like that.

Speaker 8 (51:17):
Yes, yes, she calls all all us cons use it. Yeah,
that's how she used to use it on my dad.
Like if we're out and about in the shops, and
I do it for my husband, if I can see
him and he's walking away in the wrong direction, then
i'm and he just sort of stops like a dear,
and you know he likes he just turns around.

Speaker 1 (51:40):
I'm like, and there'd be no derision from any other shoppers, nothing,
because he lost the will to live.

Speaker 3 (51:54):
Yes, Janice joined.

Speaker 1 (51:56):
Hi, Janice, how do you how do you but you're
making the noise? How do you do you municate in
the wild?

Speaker 3 (52:07):
How you whistled?

Speaker 1 (52:09):
Whistle to your husband?

Speaker 6 (52:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (52:12):
I whistle where.

Speaker 10 (52:13):
Ever brawn, whether it's shops, out the street or anywhere.
If he doesn't, he doesn't hear me, Like all his.

Speaker 8 (52:18):
Name whistle, and he hears me.

Speaker 13 (52:21):
Turns around and it comes.

Speaker 8 (52:22):
Where the whistle is.

Speaker 3 (52:28):
But there's no other way.

Speaker 8 (52:29):
I can get hold of it.

Speaker 10 (52:31):
Bad doesn't hear mine, He doesn't hear you whistle?

Speaker 1 (52:35):
I think it's probably selective defereness.

Speaker 2 (52:37):
I think there's a lot of women ringing up and
saying that men don't wear whistle at women unless they're
working on the building side, and see what swingy walks past.

Speaker 1 (52:46):
I think men pretend they can't hear their wives, but
then when she starts whistling, they know other people can
hear it too, and then they have to turn around.

Speaker 3 (52:53):
Tanure has joined us.

Speaker 13 (52:54):
Hi, Tan do him in the shopping center with my husband?
And if I can't find him in wars, I just
call out big Willy.

Speaker 3 (53:05):
You say, big Willy.

Speaker 13 (53:07):
Yeah, he's his middle names William, so.

Speaker 3 (53:11):
Right, so you just yell big Willy. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (53:15):
He gets very embarrassed because because every everybody's staring at him,
his face goes.

Speaker 3 (53:20):
Of course, I'd like to get you on the on
the PA.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Big Willy required in ile four. You don't have red
spot or special.

Speaker 3 (53:32):
Thank you. No men called up about this unless your
husband the time he whistled at you.

Speaker 1 (53:38):
A bit A man called up. Member, was it Brian
I spoke to He said that his wife's death.

Speaker 3 (53:41):
Yeah that's right. Yeah, pretty much.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
Get out the semaphores.

Speaker 3 (53:45):
Thank you for all your calls.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
Shame Notion podcast.

Speaker 2 (53:51):
Something to ponder if you're going to get your morning
cup of coffee, So what are you paying for your
coffee now when you go to your coffee hut or
your coffee van.

Speaker 1 (53:59):
Well, I'm not much of a coffee drinker, but I
think sort of what's the standard coffee between five and six?

Speaker 2 (54:06):
But between five and six Over in the West Australia
they're paying between seven and eight bucks?

Speaker 1 (54:11):
Are they? Why is it more expensive there?

Speaker 2 (54:13):
I've got a lot of millionaires over there, you know
the fifo situation. You know they're all mining, you know
that sort of st Yeah.

Speaker 1 (54:18):
You feel sorry for people who are on regular wages
there because rent and everything else is checked up because
of that.

Speaker 12 (54:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
Yeah, So there's word that we could be paying up
to twelve dollars within three years for a cup of coffee.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
Is this Why has the coffee been so much more expensive?
Is it because of climate change?

Speaker 3 (54:35):
Now, it's got nothing to do with climate change.

Speaker 2 (54:37):
In fact, they're burgeoning because of the climate.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
Coffee it's just a week And why is it getting
more expensive?

Speaker 2 (54:42):
It's getting more expensive because there's an explosion of small
espresso bars with low overheads and the traditional cafes are
shutting because you know, no one's going in there for
their big banana bread and their coffee anymore.

Speaker 1 (54:56):
Well, then if there's more competition, why isn't it cheaper.

Speaker 3 (54:58):
Well because the big coffee shops.

Speaker 2 (55:00):
So if you go to big o' coffee shop, oh,
then it's going to cost you more.

Speaker 3 (55:04):
But if you go to a little.

Speaker 2 (55:05):
One of those little like your cafe, you know, but
those food truck and they're pretty expensive, it's aroused.

Speaker 3 (55:12):
They'd be confused.

Speaker 1 (55:14):
Okay, I won't and now I'm not. If there's more
people selling coffee and we have more options, they more competition,
and why aren't they cheaper?

Speaker 2 (55:23):
Because of the espresso bars, But they're hard to find
unless you've got a man bun and your name's Tark.

Speaker 1 (55:28):
And so the espresso bars, the expensive ones or the
cheap ones.

Speaker 2 (55:31):
The espresso bars are cheap because they're not paying the overheads.
But they might, but they've got to make a bit
of money out of this. Most businesses were currently operating
at a four percent profit margin while charging an average
of seven to eight.

Speaker 3 (55:44):
Bucks for coffee with milk.

Speaker 2 (55:47):
I don't know what the derision costs in all that
dismissive way they ask your name, how.

Speaker 1 (55:52):
They deliberately spell your name incorrectly on the cup mark
with the sea cock.

Speaker 3 (55:59):
One of the greatest mark with a sea cock. I'm
going to start drinking Team jam Nation.

Speaker 1 (56:17):
Twenty thousand dollars for our favorite ghoulie of the year.

Speaker 3 (56:20):
What if we got today, you know it gets my goolies.

Speaker 17 (56:24):
Headlce kind of hatched yesterday on a Sunday, when I'd
have all day to deal with it and send him
to school on Monday.

Speaker 1 (56:33):
Life's free no.

Speaker 17 (56:36):
Monday morning, five minutes before we walk out the daor
to school. Lie head lice, hooray, happy Monday.

Speaker 3 (56:45):
Yeah, they're going to bring back the good old, the
good old formulas we have when we're a kid. All
this woke stuff they've got now it's.

Speaker 1 (56:52):
Oh, oh, I'm so glad we're that faced the people.

Speaker 2 (56:56):
To get the strong stuff. You know that stuff was
caro pretty much as you said, was shaven bold.

Speaker 3 (57:04):
What else we got?

Speaker 12 (57:05):
What gets my goolies is when you're waiting at a
roundabout and somebody pulls up to the roundabout. They don't
have the blinker on until they're.

Speaker 3 (57:12):
Halfway around the roundabout. Then they put their blinker on
that gets in my grulies.

Speaker 2 (57:17):
Or your stalk gets confused on your car when you
go around the thing, you know and you've got your
wheel bit turned.

Speaker 1 (57:23):
Stalker is in a bird that was delivering a baby.

Speaker 3 (57:26):
You blink a stalk as if you know what that is?

Speaker 1 (57:29):
What?

Speaker 3 (57:30):
What with the bad? With the good? If you dipped out?
Contact us via the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 1 (57:36):
At seven to night, our favorite caller email or Facebook
friend wins a two nights stay for two at the
Moxie Hotel. This makes traveling so easy. It's an effortless hotel,
stay free, airport shuttle and award winning design.

Speaker 2 (57:50):
I dropped off someone at the airport. I forgot who
it wasn't I had something to eat there and I
was so impressed.

Speaker 1 (57:55):
Well, we played Instagram today. Ten question sixty seconds. Get
them all right? You walk away with a thousand dollars
double it for a bonus question. Fourteen year old Emma
from Lippington had to go, but she's struck. The name
was the station.

Speaker 3 (58:11):
Then she came back.

Speaker 1 (58:12):
She came back when we had more time, and here's
what she said. Then the name of our radio STATIONSFM.

Speaker 3 (58:19):
And you put that on top of Monica last week.

Speaker 1 (58:21):
Question two, how many years has this radio show been
on air?

Speaker 3 (58:30):
Are we having some sort of identity crisis?

Speaker 1 (58:32):
The station is called Gold these days, and we've been
on air for twenty some days. It feels like fifty
For now, right at you two, that's enough.

Speaker 3 (58:41):
He goes here. He's excited. Look at his little face,
because if we gave you.

Speaker 2 (58:45):
Ten thousand dollars to spend it irresponsibly in one day,
what would you do.

Speaker 3 (58:49):
I'd give it to the government.

Speaker 2 (58:50):
They could blow it, no worries, But for this is
for you, absolutely one day, blow ten k.

Speaker 1 (58:56):
In a day. It starts next with Higo.

Speaker 3 (58:59):
We'll be back from six to night for jam Nation.
See you then, good jet to you. Well, thank god,
that's over.

Speaker 13 (59:04):
Good good bite.

Speaker 1 (59:09):
You're right.

Speaker 6 (59:10):
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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