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August 11, 2025 • 59 mins

Have you ever had a 'supernatural' pet? Wait until you hear these spooky stories!

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
My Heart podcasts here more gold one on one point
seven podcasts.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Playlists and listen live on the free iHeart app. Well,
what about our podcast today? Stand back and have a
good look at it.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
Some of it's weird. Cliff Richard last year, or it
might have been the year before, went on a very
famous English breakfast show on the television and told an
unusual story as to why he didn't have a photograph
taken with Elvis Presley. Why didn't meet Elvis Presley, who
was his biggest hero ever.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Yeah, it's probably the biggest lack of self awareness I've
ever seen from somebody in an.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
Interview, and made Cliff look incredibly shallow.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Also, in the pub test, donating your dead pet to
the zoo as food?

Speaker 3 (00:52):
Does that us?

Speaker 1 (00:53):
The pub test? The tribal drum is beating for my
supernatural dog. There's a new movie out called good Boy
or so. The movie's about to be released, and apparently
it's terrifying through the eyes of the dog. You see
this dog seeing all the bad ugity boogaite supernatural forces
around the owner. Apparently it's freaking people out.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
Yeah, well, you look at dogs in movies. They seem
to pick up on stuff, don't they. Well that is true.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
They say, don't go in there. Well they don't say that.
They always go ower to the ground. True, and then
the stupid human goes and walks in and gets chopped
up by a chainsaw.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
Dogs, I told you, Sorry, vallet I could speak.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
The PM Overnight has announced, Well it's a groundbreaking bit
of news from US in foreign affairs.

Speaker 3 (01:35):
Well we unpack this, or we get an adult to
do it.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
How don't we get a grown up doctor Keith Suitter
to talk about Australia acknowledging Palestine.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
That's all coming up in this podcast.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
That a miracle of recording. We have so many requests
for them to do it again.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
Mistress Amanda's mis Amanda doesn't work alone.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
Friendom making the tools of the train.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
I've heard them describe him as a drunken idiot, the.

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Legendary part of Jersey and Amanda the actress.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
Congratulations right now. And Amanda, you're doing a great job
anyone biggest silkie giant, good radio. Sorry, but it's a
tongue tongue twist. Set Amanda's shoot timing.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
We're on the air, top of the body to you, Amanda,
My little Valua jackets and friend, that's me.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
Second, I'm going into a smoking lounge. I was at
Channel nine mocking lounge or a mocking lounge.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
I didn't mention this.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
On Friday, I was at Channel nine leaving and you
know who I almost ran into me.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
Literally on my motorbike, Karl Stevanovi. He was in his
get out of town full drive.

Speaker 2 (02:53):
I was coming in and we almost had a on
accident in the car park at Channel nine.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
Would you have cracked the headline? Big accident between the
two of you? Would you That's the thing. Remember that
time I was on an aeroplane with Zizi Top and
Carol Burnett, and I thought, if this plane goes down, I'm.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
Not cracking a mention. What are you saying?

Speaker 1 (03:13):
I think you know, no offense, But the story would
be Castiphnovic in accident.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Kills motorcyclist and is barely barely injured. Yeah, and we'd
all go few next and the guy on the motor let.

Speaker 1 (03:25):
Me checked Melotto numbers.

Speaker 3 (03:27):
We had a good chat. We had a bit of
a chat. Just here he's going well, he said to
say hello.

Speaker 1 (03:30):
Is what I saw him at the logos. I saw
him on the red car of course.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
Yeah, you saw him in the leaves wearing the glasses.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
He said, I think he saw see in one of
the interviews that the logos have become kind of woke
these days. I think what he means by that is
that there's no bottles on the table anymore. At the beginning,
there might be like just to no, actually the waiters
bring around the wine and so gone of the days
and think. It's the same with the radio awards now
where you just help yourself. So you don't see any

(03:56):
loosey goosey performances up on some.

Speaker 3 (03:58):
Of the radio awards. They've been XNAT. They're gone just
for this year, you know, yeah, just for this year.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
What was the reason?

Speaker 3 (04:04):
Because we won two in a row and that was it.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
We won it and that was it. I don't know why.
But they're gone now. But I would dare say that
that's it for them forever.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
No, I don't think so. The LOGI wards so much
for people think to watch it. This year there was
an increase of seven percent from last year. Huge numbers,
three point four five million at any given point over
the night. It's the biggest three point four to five
not three hundred and forty five million. Everyone in the
world tuned in and some people had even been born

(04:35):
or watching. This is the biggest TV audience for the
LOGI since twenty twelve.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
Is that the new telemetry that they have though, where
they count arms and legs and everything else.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Yes, But at the same I've said that if someone
was the terrestrial, it doesn't matter because the point of
this or was.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
The terrestrial number one point four to three. That's I've
reached nation.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
Well, don't speak over me. I'm trying to give you
some information. That's the biggest audience since twenty twelve and
seven percent from last year. So it doesn't matter what
the telemetry is. That's what means the thing and the
red carpets are a big significant What do they get?

Speaker 3 (05:07):
How much did they get?

Speaker 1 (05:08):
Numbers don't they will consinue. You're going to dispute them.
A national average of one point two million. The highest
is twenty sixteen.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
When I was on Dancing with the Stars in twenty thirteen.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
Oh, this is what we're going with.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
I'm just saying I got one point to me, and
that's what I got in twenty thirteen. That's what Dancing
with the star's got I'm just saying that that's that's
its history.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
Yeah, but this was considering how people have felt about
the logies.

Speaker 3 (05:27):
Of course I like it.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
I think since COVID people feel differently about Australian television
and people are into the log.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
I just thought it was a little bit in I thought,
there's John and donover Heights or Betty of Blackdown does
she care?

Speaker 1 (05:40):
But these are the shows they watch, you know. It's
not like the Real Estate Awards where we don't know
who the people are.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
Oh, come on, people are what about mister Soul.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
He's got mister Sould, he's got a post, he's got
a billboard up. But these are shows that people watch, Yes,
and so people do have a vested interest in seeing
who is the gold who people vote, people are voted.
That's what all this is about. I think people have
a vested interest.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
I always feel for those real estate agents when they
put their phone number up on the billboard and they
call me any time and it's outside of Parba something.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Yeah, it used to be you'd put your office number.
Now because it's a mobile, it's.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Your mobile number nine. And if you're a good looking
woman or man, you're going.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
To get or if you're not. Either way, you're going
to cop some ras and you'd have to just constantly
answer unsolicited numbers.

Speaker 3 (06:26):
Yeah, drive me crazy. We have an action packed show today.
We're going to talk to Dr Keith Suitor.

Speaker 1 (06:33):
He is an expert in international relations. We've spoken to
him before. What does it mean that Australia is now
going to be recognizing Palestine? What are the implications of that?
Much to discuss.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
Also, Instagram makes us return and we can't do anything
until we do the Magnificence seven.

Speaker 1 (06:47):
Question number one, which food chain has the slogan eat
Fresh m Nation?

Speaker 3 (06:53):
We have the Magnificent seven for you. There are seven questions.

Speaker 2 (06:56):
Can you go all the way and answer all seven
questions correctly?

Speaker 3 (06:59):
If you do that, Amanda will say I might ask.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
You if you think the logies are still entertaining, if
you like watching the logos, That's what I'll ask you
if you win, So get prepared.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
Debbie's in Campbelltown.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
Hello, Debbie, Hello? How are you do you watch the logis?
Do you like them?

Speaker 6 (07:16):
No?

Speaker 3 (07:17):
I don't watch them.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Well that's a vote of one.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
That's a that's a a bow.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
About bow for the logans from Debbie Question number one,
which food chain has the slogan eat fresh? Subway?

Speaker 3 (07:30):
Subway sixty years old today?

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Sub Yeah, been around for sixty well not in Australia
for sixty years.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
They've been in Australians about the nineties.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
I remember doing one of those Macappy days and I
was talking to McDonald's manager.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
I said, what about the subway, Johnny, youre worried about that?
And he said, who's going to eat salad sandwiches? Really?
Next minute? Why are you laughing?

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Didn't you get offered to invest in boost? Jes said,
who's going to drink juice?

Speaker 4 (07:57):
You know?

Speaker 3 (07:57):
Instead?

Speaker 2 (07:59):
He lives in a banks faster I put thirty thousand
dollars into a Harley Davidson Yes, which I still.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
Like to appreciated in value every week now of sixteen thousand. Possibly.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
What was the name of Sabrina's cat in Sabrina the
Teenage Witch?

Speaker 3 (08:13):
Tibby?

Speaker 6 (08:15):
Oh? I can't remember.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
James and windsor.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
H James, good morning, How are you very well?

Speaker 3 (08:24):
You can continue your senses on the lake.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
I'm losing interest. You've taken one last James, James, did
you watch the logans and do you like the logist.

Speaker 7 (08:35):
I hardly even watch TV, to be honest.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
Well, that's too because Amanda is off the TV.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
Since I'm on the television. Thank you to see the piano.

Speaker 3 (08:44):
I love the piano. But right now you're here, right now.
But let's talk about James didn't answer that question.

Speaker 1 (08:51):
No, that's not question number two. What's the name of
what's the name of Sabrina's cat and Sabrina the Teenage Witch?

Speaker 3 (08:59):
Uh Salem, let's play understand.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Although ironically James watched Bewitched.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
It wasn't Bewitched, it was Sabrina the Teenage Witch. All right, James,
see if you can tell which song has this riff?

Speaker 3 (09:32):
What's the song?

Speaker 1 (09:33):
James, is it? What's the name of the song?

Speaker 3 (09:43):
Click?

Speaker 1 (09:44):
Click click, I can hear you. No, no, podcast.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
We are into the Magnificent seven.

Speaker 1 (09:53):
Certainly are and were up to question number three, which
is riff raff, and we got John of Cambden, Hello, John.

Speaker 7 (10:01):
Hi John.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
What's going on?

Speaker 6 (10:06):
Not much of the way to work?

Speaker 1 (10:07):
Good, that's not usual question. Actually that would be good.
Question number one?

Speaker 3 (10:12):
What's going on?

Speaker 8 (10:13):
What's going on?

Speaker 3 (10:14):
If you could tell us, we'd really appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
We're playing riff rapp. See if you can tell what
song this rifts from.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
It's your face melt.

Speaker 7 (10:25):
Yeah, it's just like smooth.

Speaker 3 (10:28):
Smooth, I'd so smooth.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
You know now the competition, you know that we shouldn't
be banning that about That was a poor, poor bit
of judgment there, Question person, question person, you want to.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
Smooth doing right now? Let's tune over to say I'll
just flick over.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
Brandon. That's not a very gracious thing to do.

Speaker 3 (10:53):
This could be.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
Question number four for you, John. A group of pandas
is known as what is it? A? An embarrassment? B silly billies?
See a cutie pies of pandas? I'll go with an embarrassment.
A group of bands is called an embarrassment?

Speaker 3 (11:11):
What word in the dictionary is spelled incorrectly? John?

Speaker 7 (11:17):
Incorrectly?

Speaker 3 (11:18):
Correct?

Speaker 1 (11:19):
John's I read that in my head case?

Speaker 3 (11:22):
It's not a damn fool? You're not a damn fool?
Did you know a manda? Gullibles? Not in the dictionary?

Speaker 1 (11:28):
Bo, John, don't fall for it. Don't fall for his ways.
Question number six. Who painted the famous artwork Starry Night, Oh.

Speaker 9 (11:41):
By?

Speaker 1 (11:44):
That's cruel to cut him off, Midby.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
Let's go to Jennifer of Minter.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Hello Jennifer, good morning, good morning, Who painted Starry Night?

Speaker 6 (11:54):
That'd be Vincent Ben go very good.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
Yesterday on the show we had Furnace and the Who.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
It's a band that plays a whole lot of incredible mashups.

Speaker 7 (12:05):
I don't know, sorry, I was so good.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
I just have a bit of inspire.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
Brian put a bit of Furnace sign Furnace.

Speaker 3 (12:13):
And the Who Who to beget. Susie is in Glenmore Park.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Hello, Susie, Hi, do you know the name of the
band Furnace and the Fundamentals?

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Are the Fundamentals? Are they going to be performing a
night of the backs?

Speaker 3 (12:30):
We should go team to today. Let's take you boy, Brian.
Let's do it Ryan with a B. Would you like
to go?

Speaker 10 (12:35):
Brian?

Speaker 3 (12:36):
Of course. I congratulated to you.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Susie've on the jam package all coming away an amazing
three hundred and sixty five day simplant faded three hundred dollars,
two hundred and forty gigabytes of data with unlimited standard calls,
SMS and mms. One hundred and fifty dollars to spend
at the Guildford Hotel.

Speaker 3 (12:53):
Unmissible sports and epic eats.

Speaker 2 (12:55):
At the Guildford Hotel and Jonesy demandic charricatures for you
to cover in some standard pencils.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
Susie, anything you want to add to this.

Speaker 8 (13:02):
Oh no, that's fantastic.

Speaker 11 (13:04):
I'm just so I'm so happy.

Speaker 3 (13:06):
My daddy hospital certainly my how's he going?

Speaker 7 (13:12):
Oh he's not too good.

Speaker 6 (13:13):
But anyway, my day.

Speaker 11 (13:15):
So thank you very much.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Yeah, Jonesy and Amanda Podcast.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
You got to be customed.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
Oh Brendon, you want to call this competition that?

Speaker 3 (13:31):
And I said, don't do it because you can't do it.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Coming through the German Echo Big Book of Musical Facts.
Well you got on this day in nineteen eighty five,
your favorite band in the whole wide world, the band
that the wife doesn't get in.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
The divorce, Dire Straits. They released the hit Walk of Life.
What's your beef for Dire Straits?

Speaker 1 (13:54):
You know, I don't know. I just you know, they're
not my thing. Harley loves them, loves Mark Knopfler. All
of that came in here a number of times, chucked
by you.

Speaker 3 (14:06):
He was charmed by you. He's a nice he's very
nice man.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
He looks but he doesn't look like a rock god
does he? I think he also had a bit of
the touch of the sinus. On that day we had
to break out. The team's suitor fed nine eighty five.
Though they released Walk of Life.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
It was one of the biggest hits for the band,
peaking at number seven on the US charts and reached
number two in the UK.

Speaker 3 (14:29):
Big number two. Did you see this? A few years
ago and produced.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
By the name of Peter Salomon blew up the internet
net with his discovery the Walk of Life could fit
over the ending of almost any film, and he did
a whole bunch of them.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
One of my favorites, though, is what he did to
the end of the matrix. Have a list of.

Speaker 4 (14:46):
Borders or boundaries of world where anything is possible.

Speaker 6 (14:54):
Where we go from there?

Speaker 3 (14:56):
There's a choice I'll leave to you. So it works
that one works works? Which one do you take it?
The red or the blue? That one works?

Speaker 1 (15:05):
What are we going to play the matrix?

Speaker 3 (15:07):
Let's put it on. I was pop on the counter,
jam Na.

Speaker 1 (15:11):
I've got a story about Cliff Richard, who I have
met actually and was one of the nicest men I've met.
He's wearing a parachute pants suit.

Speaker 3 (15:18):
He likes to wear the parachute stuff.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
Yeah, this was when I was in England for Fergie
and Andrew's wedding. When I was there with the Midday
Show and we interviewed Cliff Richard. He was so nice
and he didn't have to be. I was a researcher,
meaning that you know, I wasn't sure I wasn't the
person interviewing him, but he was so lovely. But then
I've come across this interview.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
This is resurfaced.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
Here's an interview we did in twenty twenty three on
a very famous morning show called This Morning, an English show.
That show and so the presenters Alison Hammond, Dormino Leary
and guest host Sarah Ferguson, who actually was the one
I was just mentioned I was there for her wedding.
I didn't go to the wedding, just so you know.
I was there with a media pack.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
Yeah, who was in the pack?

Speaker 6 (15:58):
Me?

Speaker 1 (15:59):
Actually it was an amazing day because I was there
with the Midday Show and Ray Martin and at one
point we were watching the procession of all the carriages
coming into Wow was it Westminster?

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Abby?

Speaker 1 (16:11):
I can't even remember. I was so excited and I'm
standing next to Dame Edna, and Princess Diana comes along
in a carriage, sees Dame Medna who's standing next to me,
and she waves. It was such a heady time.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
It was extrame Edna. Did you say, hey, look she's
waving a me. Yeah, she's waving meme A pomp pomp jumper.
That's what she and I still have to dress up
in drag.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
But Cliff Richard has gone on to This morning show
in twenty twenty three and he was asked.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
One of his biggest heroes, Elvis Presley.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
He was asked if he'd ever met Elvis, and his
answer is quite extraordinary.

Speaker 3 (16:49):
Do you ever meet Elvish?

Speaker 4 (16:51):
No? I did not. I have one chance through a
journalist when I was promoting Devil Woman in the State.
He said, oh, I know Elvis because he knew that
I was influenced, and he said, would you want to
meet him?

Speaker 3 (17:04):
I said yeah.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
At the end of the interview, though, I said, can we.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
Put it off? Because he was he put on a
lot of.

Speaker 4 (17:10):
Wheat, and I thought, if I'm having a photograph taken
with him and it's going to be hanging on my refrigerator,
He's got to look good as I put it off,
and of course then he died.

Speaker 3 (17:22):
And they're a little bit heavier. Oh yeah, and she's.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
Heavier, the host saying that you shouldn't put of because
a bit heavier. She's a heavy woman. And she said,
that's why I've never come around your house.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
I'm gissing, she's just a heavy warm.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
If I waited till Barry Manilow was handsome, i'd never
get a photo.

Speaker 3 (17:40):
And straight there was that.

Speaker 2 (17:44):
But at the picture Cliff's got in his houses he
got in his self awareness. It looks like one of
those portraits that gangsters get in the house.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
You know, the dead trump, Well, they get all the
dead people. They're all together in one room.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
What's the portrait?

Speaker 3 (17:57):
What is it?

Speaker 1 (17:57):
It's got els and as young, slim Elvers, yes.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
Slim Elvis and Cliff singing next to Elvis.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
You know, a lot of people were appalled at that
Cliff looking. You know, at least if he's got the
picture on his refrigerator, he won't stop him eating, might't
stop him overeating. I'm guessing.

Speaker 2 (18:16):
Nations pos And let's get on down to the Jonesy
to matter of Arms for the pub test. This is
something you brought to the table this morning, and I
wasn't into it.

Speaker 3 (18:24):
I call it right on brutality. It's all those righty
on people going, yeah, they want to be cool.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
No, I don't think it's that at all. I don't
think there's any wokenness in here. You don't be frightened
Brendan donating your dead pets to the zoo? Does it
pass the pub test? This was in the news last week,
but I've just been reading further on this. This is
a zoo in Denmark, but they're not the only zoo
who does this. They've asked people to donate their pets
that need to be euthanized. They're not taking animals that

(18:53):
don't need to pass away, and they're feeding them to
its captive carnivores. They have taken smaller pets, rabbits, chicken,
skinny pigs. Often they don't take dogs and cats because
they know they're a little bit more emotive. But they
say the animals are gently euthanized by trained staff and
used as food goes to waste. We ensure natural behavior
and nutrition and wellbeing of our predators, so the food

(19:13):
goes to the lions. The tigers, the lynxes, and carnivores.
And they say here that predators need the whole prey, fur, bones,
and organs, as this contributes to enrichment and nutrition and
well being. So they've been doing this for a long
long time. And the story I saw this morning was
a woman who donated her daughter's horse that was about

(19:33):
to be euthanized. So she said, the horse was about
to be put down. Her teenage daughter made the decision
to choose to feed this horse to the lions. She said,
I gave my daughter various options, and she chose the
one with the zoo because it made the most sense.
She wanted her pony to benefit other animals. Other people

(19:55):
have said this is quite outrageous. They said, how is
putting a dead pet on a plate for a caged
animal anything close to reenactment of nature. It's interesting because
I don't have a pet horse, I don't have a rabbit.
And I go, well, that makes sense. The thought of
my dog going to be to feed line.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
I remember Ripley, the dog before Mini, and that you
had him feeder to lie it, yeah, ethanize it it, yeah,
and then put down when she was fifty. Imagine then
the vets.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Hey, you know what, we could rip it out to
the local safari park and I'll throw it out to
the wilder beese.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
You know what's interesting is that otherwise they just pretty
much I'm assuming that the vet clinic get burnt in
an incinerator.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
Illustrated the skip.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
So when you put it like that, why not why
not give it?

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Yeah? But whether it's the start of the slippery slope.

Speaker 1 (20:42):
Alive, you don't mince grandma, you don't do that.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
Let her run around in the game park.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
To mimic nature.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
I'm only fifty four.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
I've got an ingrown to all.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
And that's it. Too bad, grandma betting it wrong.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
Let's keep this as it's intended to be, donating your
dead pets to the zoo? Do is it past the pub?

Speaker 3 (21:04):
I don't like it. I'd rather not know.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
An Amanda, what do you know about numerology?

Speaker 3 (21:12):
Nothing?

Speaker 1 (21:12):
How many fingers am I holding up?

Speaker 4 (21:14):
Just one?

Speaker 3 (21:16):
Hello?

Speaker 7 (21:17):
There?

Speaker 2 (21:17):
There was some slightly alarming news on our already stretched
bail says system on Channel ten news last night.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
To see this.

Speaker 12 (21:24):
An accused killer has been ordered to send hourly selfies
after ankle monitors were scrapped across the States. Amen Manly,
who's pleaded not guilty to a murder charge, has also
been ordered by the court to purchase an iPhone for
his supervising officer in order to send the photos. He's
among dozens of criminals having their bail redetermined, with ankle

(21:46):
monitoring ceasing as a release condition next month. The government
scrambling to bring accused criminals before the court after it
was discovered that bail Safe, a private company that was
monitoring bail conditions, was shut down without notice.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
So the ankle monitors were working. So now he's got
to buy his prole officer of.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Phone so to receive the selfies one.

Speaker 3 (22:07):
Of phones you give you kids that don't do it
and a cheap o plan.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
But he so he has to take a photo himself
every day.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
The proof of incarceration exactly, Johnny hardened criminals out there.
This is a life we're living.

Speaker 12 (22:24):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
Anyway, good workmans are at every given minute gam nation.

Speaker 12 (22:31):
When God I wanted to get on right now, windows.

Speaker 10 (22:39):
Your head on a yell, hell.

Speaker 2 (22:44):
Down to the Jonesy the man of arms for the
pub test donating your dead pets to the zoo?

Speaker 3 (22:49):
Does it pass the pub.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Test Well, a zoo in Denmark, has asked people to
donate their pets to feed its captive carnivores. They want rabbits, chickens,
guinea pigs and horses. I was reading this morning about
a woman who had to euthanase her daughter's horse, her
teenage daughter, and the daughter said, yes, let's donate it
to the zoo because the zoos say that they need

(23:10):
the further bones of the organs. It's not enough just
to mince something up.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
His horse died and on the farm and they had
to dig a hole for us, a massive hole for
this horse. And you know, it took a bit of
that was on his land. And it's pretty grizzly having
to do that.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
I don't know people in suburbia that have got horses.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
What they do, well, well, that's right, what they What
this zoo does is it will take the hook the
animal for you, euthanase it kindly and deal with that.
This woman who did this with the horse, she said,
we got to say our final goodbyes.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
She said.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
She was so impressed. She later tried to donate another
horse was too big to fit in the zoo's fridge,
ended up as dog food, but these are fridge.

Speaker 3 (23:55):
At two o'clock in the morning. I'm dying for a snack.
Here a horse for a zooper due.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
So how do you feel donating your dead pets to
the zoo?

Speaker 3 (24:07):
Does it passed the pub test?

Speaker 6 (24:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 11 (24:09):
Absolutely. If a horse is used amazed by a bet, it.

Speaker 8 (24:13):
Has to be buried at least two meters feat two
hundred meters away from a water source and two hundred
meters away from your neighbor's fence.

Speaker 7 (24:19):
So that's really hard to achieve.

Speaker 8 (24:21):
You have to get a man in with an excavator
and it can be really emotional, and I think it's
a really nice waiver do it.

Speaker 11 (24:28):
I believe that your pet is put your pride and joy,
and to give it to another animal in the zoo
that he's just really inhumane.

Speaker 8 (24:35):
So no, it doesn't pass the pub test.

Speaker 6 (24:38):
Keep him at home.

Speaker 8 (24:39):
Going the I think if they can, we'll get inclimated.

Speaker 10 (24:41):
I think it does. I offered my wife to fit
me to some poor polar bear if I'm dying, because
I want wildlife to survive, and I think there's no
problem with it.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
So he wants his wife to feed him to a
polar bear. Imagine putting him in your suitcase, saying to
border security, I'm off to the north Pole.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
What about the specifics of that other lady who two
hundred meters from all.

Speaker 3 (25:04):
That's from your neighbors.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
That's how it is now.

Speaker 3 (25:06):
And then you've got to get a man in with
a back home really hard.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
But also with that what middle caller who said bury
them in your backyard if you buy a property, do
you want to know that there are ten dogs and
cats buried underneath?

Speaker 3 (25:19):
Yeah, my friend Rosam West's joint. What about that.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
Sha podcast, Well, it's one of Australia's most famous songs,
most emotional songs, this one how to Make an make
the graving?

Speaker 3 (25:36):
I get you every time I hear that great song?
What about it?

Speaker 1 (25:38):
Well?

Speaker 3 (25:39):
What about it?

Speaker 1 (25:42):
The song, as we know is about Joe. He's writing
he's in prison and he's writing a letter to his
family just before Christmas.

Speaker 3 (25:50):
Hello Dan, it's Joe here. I hope y'all keep them well.
So twenty first of the semi Areena last bell. If
he gets good behavior, he'll be out of there by July.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
Well, yesterday in the Melbourne newspaper The Age, Paul Kelly
posted a death notice for Joe, the incarcerated narrator of
that very song, nestled on page thirty three. The obituary says,
Joe died of sudden misadventure. Well, I read you the habitue.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
Please, with great.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Sorrow, we announced the death of Joe by sudden misadventure?
Was he still in prison moving now?

Speaker 3 (26:26):
He was out of there by July.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
But he's a their doo will, so I would say
he's probably a repeat offender.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
Croy probably rhymes with that.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Something or because of Victoria's lacks bail laws, prasting around
with a machete gag.

Speaker 3 (26:40):
Sure I was chopped off his own head with a machete.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Anyway, death by sudden misadventure. Those other words were filled
in by Brendan Jones much loved father, husband, brother, brother
in law and uncle to Dan, Rita Stella, Roger, Mary, Angus,
Franken Dolly. We'll miss you badly, Joe. You loved life
and went hard at it. You love music, food, football, celebration,
tall tales and strong argument. We can still see you
cooking up a storm in the kitchen at our big

(27:05):
family gatherings. Pots and pans on the go, barbecue, smoking, out,
glass of wine in hand, your beloved reggae music on
the stereo, Junior Mervyn Linton, Quacy Johnson, Gregory Isaac and
the like. You fill up everyone's drinks and teasing the
little ones. Christmas won't be the same this year without you.
Who's going to make the gravy? But we know you'll
always be with us, hovering above us, floating all around us,

(27:28):
making sure we get it right and laughing when we don't.
And then it goes on to say the funeral in
service will be on August fourteen, followed by wake to
end all wakes. Further details to follow. What's intriguing about
this is people? Apparently last week Paul Kelly also posted
a picture of the actress Justine Saunders, who plays Rita

(27:48):
in the series. He is writing a letter. She's filmed
writing a letter. So there's always been talk of another
reader writes a letter. I think is going to be
the follow up song for this speculation about where this
is leading.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
Maybe she becomes Reader the eater, eater O God and sucks.
Just hear me, do I have to hear you out?
Broking Margarine?

Speaker 1 (28:15):
Maybe that's what she does to make ends meet der
Will husband has been roaming with African gangs in Melbourne.

Speaker 3 (28:23):
From watched Watch Too Much a current affair. I love
Where's Joe? I don't mention that I know well who
knows where? What this means Paul Kelly has released Paul
is going to want to do a co lab. Do
you think I've got my pen? Please? Ready to go?

Speaker 1 (28:42):
We'll wait and see.

Speaker 3 (28:44):
Jonesy and Amanda podcast. Jones and Amanda. What do you
use your tongue for? None of your business. Of this
job's food. We've got the job for.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
In Square Brendan, as the cloud heads on out to
see from our vantage point here in North Sydney.

Speaker 1 (29:02):
The rain band rain band looks broader.

Speaker 3 (29:05):
No, it's heading out to see what great?

Speaker 1 (29:07):
What if you're out to see?

Speaker 3 (29:08):
That's not good?

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Okay, apologies if you're Captain Sindbad out to see Captain Sinbad.

Speaker 1 (29:13):
Anyways, the world is a conflicting and difficult place and
people are finding unusual not unusual ways. We're reverting in
a way to childhood and to deal with it. The
sale of soft toys for adults is going off. All
this la boo boo kind of stuff we're buying kids
stuff for adults by way of comforting ourselves. I've heard
of a couple of unusual ones, Brendan one in particular.

(29:37):
I'd like to run by you. We'll do it next
here we go.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Also, the Prime Minister has announced that Australia will recognize
the state of Palestine.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
What does that mean? It's nothing to do with la
boo boos. We'll talk to doctor Keith's suitor. That's coming up.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
As well as adults, we are turning to all kinds
of childish ways, I guess always from our childhood to
self soothe. I know people turn to alcohol, drugs, all
the rest of it.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
Well that's my go to. Which of those? Ye? Which
just yes? Which one? I said? Alcohol and drugs?

Speaker 1 (30:08):
That's my go to might go to? All right, what
you do on your weekends is your own business. But
adults are buying Teddy Bears at the sale of soft
toys for adults is going up.

Speaker 3 (30:18):
All this lab boo boo craze. So that's weird, well
is it? And does it matter?

Speaker 2 (30:22):
I have no judgment towards that. By the way, if
you want to buy, if you're going to surround yourself
with la booboos, that's that's all.

Speaker 4 (30:28):
Well.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
And I have a one of those heat packs. It's
like a bean bag thing. It's only small and I
don't heat it up. But I can't sleep at night
unless I'm cuddling that.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
I just find that more and more people you talk
to are buying those flat bears that have got you know,
it's almost like a hot water bottle, but it's.

Speaker 3 (30:46):
A bear like.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
It's like a stuffed toy, and you have that in
your bed. What about this? This is an interesting thing
that men are doing in a stressful human world. This
article says mermaiding is gaining popularity with men. It's cosplay
where men are dressing as mermaids. But they're saying it's
great exercise?

Speaker 6 (31:07):
Is it?

Speaker 3 (31:07):
Merman?

Speaker 1 (31:08):
Merman? Exercise a deep sense of community, something to take
them out of their everyday human lives. Would you try
something like that a good exercise? When do you see
a mermaid or merman with a gut that's hard work
keeping that towel going.

Speaker 3 (31:25):
They've got a hard work and tail.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
As I saw it, said, someone saw someone say the
other day with the littlest mermaid, which are her friends?
And which ones is?

Speaker 3 (31:33):
Who choose as a bra.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
There's many questions because obviously she's taken them out of
their home to use the shells as a bra. The
other ones are her friends.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
Well, she's got shell bro I was thinking of the
one that's in Copenhagen, the seven the statue, the seven
ton Mermaid.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
Yeah, she wasn't with that bra. Yeah, they don't make
shells that big. But here's another thing from Japan or China.
Adult pacifiers are trending. People are buying dummies for adults.
I'm going to give you one, and I'm ready.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
To catch this.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
What's the desk?

Speaker 3 (32:03):
What about the pacifier? There you go.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
Adult pacifiers a popular trend in an adult design for
attle kid. Well, it's the same thing. To cope with
stress and anxiety. People are buying these. They're being marketed
to provide psychological comfort, help with habits like smoking. I've
started to chew chewing them in my car, and I
don't like doing it, but I find that my life

(32:27):
is so sped up that I can't even relax in
the car. So let's put these in and see what
we think.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
So is this some sort of I don't know. I
like it, this is try it.

Speaker 6 (32:40):
I like it.

Speaker 3 (32:43):
I can shoot you. You become some sort of weader.
I don't know what's happened to you. We don't have
to have any intervention.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
You know, it's better chewing them.

Speaker 3 (32:53):
This is for your only medical professions.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
I'm not going to wear a nappy. You're not going
to know what's going to happen.

Speaker 6 (32:59):
No, it's not.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
That's how it starts. It's our body blue started.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
Come on, and next minute, the medical professionals are saying
that there are potential health risks, changes in your jaw shaped,
speech difficulty, if you've noticed with you choking hazard hazard.
But you know what, I'm going to do it, Okay,
it can and look they say here psychologists say it
may be a form of avoidance rather than a healthy

(33:22):
way to address the root causes of stress.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
Who's going to address the root causes of stress?

Speaker 1 (33:26):
Look out the window. Life can be hard. It's too
exhausting to address why you're stressed. We know why you're stressed.
As you say, you turn to drugs and alcohol. I'm
going to have an adult pacifier.

Speaker 3 (33:39):
All right now, we'll just film that and put it
on only fans.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
Don't make this weird.

Speaker 3 (33:46):
Podcast.

Speaker 1 (33:47):
We'll surprising many yesterday, the Prime Minister has announced that
Australia will recognize the state of Palestine, contributing to an
international move towards a two state solution, a cease firing
Gaza and release of the hostages. It is a lot
to wrap our heads around. And what does it mean
for our international relations? Was this led by so many
protesters recently? What does it all mean? Well, let's chat

(34:08):
to fire affairs expert doctor Keith suitor Teeth.

Speaker 6 (34:11):
Hello, Yes, good morning.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
Well was this a surprise?

Speaker 1 (34:15):
It seems that just a few weeks ago Anthony Albnezi
was saying this wasn't on the cards.

Speaker 6 (34:19):
Well, it was a question really of when it was
going to be done, rather than if, So we knew
that it was going to be. It was in the
wind because you can see that Australia's other allies like Canada,
the United Kingdom, France were moving in that direction. So
Australia has decided to join that bandwagon. Three quarters of

(34:40):
the world already recognized Palestine, so Australia and a few
other countries are bringing up the rear.

Speaker 3 (34:47):
And it's just a gesture from our point of.

Speaker 6 (34:49):
View though, Well, Australia is not a major player in
the Middle East, but it does add to the momentum,
I guess for the recognition of Palestine. But if you're
really concerned about the suffering that's going on this very day,
it's not going to make much of a difference at all.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
We've broken with the United States and obviously with Israel
in doing this. Is this a sign of the new
world order that we're no longer so concerned about what
America thinks?

Speaker 6 (35:20):
Well, I think America is no longer worried about what
the rest of the world thinks, and so they're withdrawing
from a lot of their international commitments. I think the
big thing for America and Australia is China. So although
America might be annoyed temporarily with what Australia has done
over Palestine, the long term game that America is playing

(35:44):
is how do you manage to restrain China? And if
you're going to restrain China, you've got to have Australia
on side. So we also matter to America in its
long term struggle with China. So I think that Trump
might be annoyed for about five minutes. Remember, he has
the concentration span of a flea and then he'll move

(36:05):
on to some other issues. So I don't think it'll
be long term, inderious consequences for our relationship with the
United States, and.

Speaker 2 (36:12):
Our recognition of Palestine comes with a caveat, meaning that
HAMAS is no longer running the joint Is that true?

Speaker 6 (36:19):
That's true. So HAMAS controls one part of the Palestinian entity,
which is on the Gaza Strip, and there's another Palestinian
organization that controls the West Bank, which is a much
larger area. And so what countries are saying, including the
Arab League.

Speaker 3 (36:40):
The Arab League is.

Speaker 6 (36:41):
Twenty two countries formed after World War Two who can
never agree on anything, and yet in the last few
days they've all come together to agree that Hamas should
not be part of any sort of long term settlement
in the Middle East. So we're getting an international opposition
to Harmas that's been building up.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
What impact will this have on Israel's decisions in the
next few weeks.

Speaker 6 (37:06):
I don't think I have much at all. Prime Minister
that know, who has expressed his anger at what Australia
has been doing along with the France, UK, etc. But
he's got his own long term agenda for trying to
reoccupy Gaza. This is very controversial even within Israel itself.

(37:29):
There are a lot of people who have worries about
trying to reoccupy all of Gaza, and that also includes
his own defense force. The head of his defense force
has actually come out and oppose the Prime Minister, which
is bizarre. So you've got worries in the defense Force,
former intelligence agencies, and a lot of ordinary Israelians who

(37:50):
are saying, we don't want to go back into that mess.
Keep it, we don't want to go back to reoccupying Gaza.
So Prime Medicine now, who's got one of the most
difficult jobs in the world, has got right wing members
in his cabinet keeping him in power, and they're the
ones who are saying we've got to reoccupied guards. Meanwhile,
many of his own citizens are saying, no, we don't

(38:12):
agree with.

Speaker 1 (38:12):
That with this recent decision. What role do you think
that the recent protests have had and the people power
we've seen.

Speaker 6 (38:21):
I think that the protests, particularly the one that took
place in Sydney over the Harbor Bridge, has taken everybody
by surprise. It was dreadful. Whether the rain was bucketing
down and yet you had that record number of people
attending the rally, and I think that that would send
a clear message to the politicians that this is an
issue which has really touched people's hearts. I've been talking

(38:43):
on the Middle East now for half a century. I
have never yet before noticed how much sympathy there is
now for the Palestinian cause there's been a real sea
change in opinion. Previously, people would have been very sympathetic
towards Israel. That's the environment in which I grew up
in brave little Israel that have taken on all the

(39:04):
Arab countries, etc. Now Israel has seen as an aggressor country,
punishing poor Palestinians. So there's been a huge sea change
in public opinion, and I think our politicians belatedly have
come to realize that there has been this change. And so,
as you know, with a politician, they always have to
find the crowd, and they didn't run in front of it.

(39:25):
And that's exactly what the Prime Minister has done.

Speaker 4 (39:28):
Well.

Speaker 3 (39:28):
Hopefullly, if they can sort it out, that'd be great.
If I can sort it out at the end of
the year, we'd be happy with that. End of the week.
Let's make it. It'd be great.

Speaker 6 (39:36):
Look, I'm very pessimistic about the Middle East. You've got
too many people making too many claims on too little land,
so I think it's going to be very difficult to
have any long term peace settlement there.

Speaker 3 (39:49):
Well, doctor k thank you for joining us.

Speaker 1 (39:52):
It's always a pleasure to talk to you. Thank you
very much.

Speaker 6 (39:55):
Thank you, and.

Speaker 2 (40:04):
Amanda's rock the kasbar. Ten questions sixty seconds on the clock.
You could pass if you don't know an answer. We'll
come back to that question of time permits. You get
all the questions right, one thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
Yeah, and then you can turn it into two thousand
dollars by answering a bonus question. But it is double
or nothing.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
Holly, isn't clear.

Speaker 9 (40:22):
Hello, Holly, Hello, good morning.

Speaker 1 (40:24):
How are you very well?

Speaker 3 (40:26):
Holly.

Speaker 1 (40:26):
I'm looking at the ten questions in front of you.
I hope these are all in your wheel.

Speaker 3 (40:30):
I haven't given the questions to Holly.

Speaker 1 (40:32):
No, I mean questions in front of me.

Speaker 3 (40:34):
Matte. You're facxing the questions each and no.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
So Holly, let's see what we can do. Ten questions
sixty seconds. If you're not sure they passed because we
usually have time to come back. All right, beautiful, al right, Holly,
here we.

Speaker 3 (40:48):
Go, good luck. Question number one.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
Finish this an apple a day?

Speaker 9 (40:52):
Keep the doctor away?

Speaker 3 (40:53):
Question two?

Speaker 1 (40:54):
Sleepers and studs are.

Speaker 3 (40:55):
Types of what.

Speaker 9 (40:58):
Hearing?

Speaker 1 (40:58):
Question three? What colors are the Australian national sports clothes
green and gold? Question four? How many flavors are in
Neapolitan ice cream?

Speaker 9 (41:07):
Three?

Speaker 1 (41:08):
Question five? Broom is a town in which Australian state.

Speaker 9 (41:13):
West Australia.

Speaker 1 (41:14):
Question six? Who made the car the commodore.

Speaker 3 (41:17):
Holden?

Speaker 1 (41:18):
Question seven Lee Harvey Oswald is known for assassinating who,
my goodness past question eight? What team does Litoral Mitchell
play for?

Speaker 9 (41:30):
Oh god, I'm going to say Brisbane.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
Oh plays for the.

Speaker 3 (41:39):
Just see that little flick pass he did on the
weekend at the back?

Speaker 1 (41:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (41:47):
Oh my lord?

Speaker 1 (41:48):
And do you know do you know who leave Harvey
Oswald assassinated?

Speaker 6 (41:55):
Oh my god?

Speaker 3 (41:56):
JFK blowing away? What else do I have to say? Apologies?

Speaker 9 (42:00):
Oh I was just listening to him.

Speaker 3 (42:03):
I'm sorry, Holy but thank you for playing.

Speaker 9 (42:06):
That's all right, yes, thank you for having me.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
Maybe a man should send you the questions next time.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
Maybe I should not be Happy Man Sit Podcast. There's
a certain time in the evening where my dog, it's
probably about seven thirty eight o'clock, just runs up and
down the corridor. And she's thirteen, so she's not a
sprightly dog. She gets and I know the ZOOMI is.
She's never been the kind of dog who gets the
inexplicable zoomies. And as she gets older, there a slight

(42:35):
hint of not dementia yet, but this is inevitable, the
slowing down. Well, she just doesn't hear her name called,
or she looks at the door for a while, and
you try not to read too much into it apart
from aging. But there's a new movie out and it
hasn't been released yet, called good Boy, and it's supposed
to be absolutely terrifying. It's I'll read you the tag here.

(42:59):
The director has said, do you ever wonder why your
dog stares at empty corners, barks for no reason, refuses
to go into the basement. Good Boy is the story
of a dog who sees everything that goes bump in
the night. And this is a story about a dog
who's the director's real life dog, a brown and white Retriever.
He fights to protect his ailing owner from a sinister

(43:21):
supernatural force.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
After this, loyal dog moves to.

Speaker 1 (43:25):
A rural family rovese to a rural family home with
its owner Todd, only to discover supernatural forces lurking in
the shadows. Dark entities threaten his human companion. The brave
pup must fight to protect the one he loves most.
The story is told through the dog's eyes. The imagery
that's gone with this is just a dog and these

(43:46):
dark spidery hands reaching out towards it.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
Because you see those movies and the dog. The owner
is always oblivious to what the dog sees. But often
the dog is going, don't go in there for good speak,
don't go into those woods.

Speaker 1 (44:00):
Take a shower.

Speaker 3 (44:01):
Now, what are you doing, you fool? You're gonna get
chopped to bits.

Speaker 1 (44:05):
Yeah, And sometimes in these movies it's the dog that
gets possessed.

Speaker 3 (44:09):
In this one, Kujo, what was that?

Speaker 1 (44:11):
What happened there?

Speaker 3 (44:12):
They got rabies? The same Bernard.

Speaker 1 (44:14):
Was someone trying to steal the brandy?

Speaker 3 (44:19):
Yeah, no it didn't. It wasn't that sort of it.

Speaker 1 (44:21):
Just that's the same Bernard.

Speaker 3 (44:23):
Yeah, I mean that's a stereotypical star. They're sitting there going.

Speaker 1 (44:27):
Excuse me, or sometimes I liked sometimes it's filled with grain.

Speaker 3 (44:31):
We're not all rescue animals, you know, and do.

Speaker 1 (44:33):
Other things like get rabies. But sometime movies what if
your dog does see things? What misdisturbs me?

Speaker 3 (44:44):
It's funny you say that. My daughter and her my
potential son in law. They're getting married next year, so
that's all going to be engaged. They're engaged. They've moved
into a place.

Speaker 2 (44:54):
And the part time dog, you remember the part time dog,
he got duplicate her because I wouldn't let her.

Speaker 3 (45:00):
Have a dog because you can't look after the dog.

Speaker 1 (45:02):
So now the dog lives with them.

Speaker 3 (45:03):
Well, no, it lives with his mum and dad, and
the dog won't go into their house. Lilah was spooked
by the hands.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
That would freak met your house on an Indian burial ground.

Speaker 3 (45:15):
I know you've got it for cheap, but.

Speaker 1 (45:16):
Do you go in because you've got no sensitivities in
the world.

Speaker 3 (45:19):
Barrel in a cheap real estate. I'll take you to
a pooh in the backyard to make up for the
lack of a dog blood coming out of the lift. Yeah, whatever,
it was cheap, it's cheap, But sometimes dogs do. They
do have a sense. Tribal drum is sixth sense dogs.

Speaker 1 (45:35):
The tribal drum is going to beat for well. There's
movie is called good Boy. Good Boy, my supernatural dog.

Speaker 3 (45:44):
People.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
It's not the human barking dog man. He's a Louver
bill commercial.

Speaker 3 (45:51):
It just works gem. You know, dogs they do sense stuff.

Speaker 2 (45:55):
And when you watch horror movies, it's always the dog
that seems to pick up on everything and the dumbbell
owner goes and walks into whatever sort of grief he's
going to walk in.

Speaker 1 (46:05):
Having said that, dogs will also just look at the
back of a door or bark into a pantry, so
you never know. Sometimes dogs just do that stuff to
freak you out.

Speaker 3 (46:16):
But then a dog will eat the contents of a nappy, Yeah,
so how smart.

Speaker 1 (46:20):
They'll drink out of the toilet if you give them
a chance. So let's not due them to most skills.

Speaker 3 (46:24):
So let's not stop worshiping them yet.

Speaker 1 (46:25):
We're talking about a new movie called good Boy. It
hasn't been released ship, but it does sound terrifying. It's
it's a horror film through the eyes of a dog
as it sees supernatural forces around its owner. Spooky Douke's
tribal drum is bidding for this people.

Speaker 3 (46:42):
Jackie Kays joined us.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
Hello, Jackie, tell us about the supernatural dog.

Speaker 8 (46:47):
So I was about six or seven and I was
down at Hanging Rock with my cousin now when there,
you know, I know, with their black labrador, who was
the dumbest dog. I'm talking dumb as right, And anyway,
we went to this like a chasm in the rock
and Camble the dog just warn Nott moves his throat

(47:07):
and I mean to and like all his hair went
up on his back and he showed his teeth and
we're all freaking out, I mean, and none of usn't
seen the movie, so I didn't know anything about Hanging Rock.
And he was horrifying absolutely in the end with thumb
and went down and got our uncle and he had
to carry the dog out. And like, honestly, I'm in

(47:28):
my sixteenth now and even now talking about, oh my god,
it was so freaky.

Speaker 3 (47:33):
Was Hanging Rock spooky when you go around there? Just
all that area is spooky? Dookie?

Speaker 1 (47:38):
And was it after that, Jackie, that you heard about
what sort of the mysterious goings on there? And you went,
oh my god.

Speaker 8 (47:45):
I saw the movie and like, I'm going, oh my god,
he saw something like, oh no, it sounds and I'm
not I'm not superstitious. I don't believe it ghost nothing,
but oh my god, it's freak. And now I'm talking
about I'm going, what hair?

Speaker 6 (47:59):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (48:00):
What did you say from a big dumb labrador to
Beren's teeth? And that's a that's a big deal.

Speaker 3 (48:04):
You know, the picnic and hanging rock? What did they
take on the picnic? Remember?

Speaker 1 (48:08):
Because I was olden tops that should turned that into
a cooking and it wasn't a three piece.

Speaker 3 (48:13):
They're having.

Speaker 1 (48:14):
And when they sit down? Do they have lumber support
for a picnic? I'd need a small chair.

Speaker 3 (48:17):
These are the questions people wont answered. Annabel's with us.

Speaker 1 (48:20):
Hello, Annabelle.

Speaker 4 (48:22):
Hi.

Speaker 11 (48:23):
Okay, So ten years ago my dad passed away and
we thought it was a good idea to get a
little puppy. She's a kelpie cuff lab She's six weeks
old when we got her, and Netta had never met
my dad. The first time we took her out to
the cemetery, she was of fleash and she literally did
a little spin ran straight to his grave. That on

(48:46):
his brain in her hands, crossed and just looked straight
at the headstone. Me and my stat I just burst
into tears and creaked out, and we could not believe it.
We could not believe it. And to this day she
reacts to any photos of my dad and she will
like to come upset or anything, she'll come and see
with me and comfort me.

Speaker 1 (49:07):
Wow, I see these stories.

Speaker 3 (49:10):
They're lovely.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
And are you thinking, Annabel, that your dad come back
as the dog or the dog just recognizes the spirit
of your dad.

Speaker 11 (49:19):
I think the dog just recognizes who I lost and loved.

Speaker 1 (49:22):
Thee can bill out and say the well, because sometimes.

Speaker 3 (49:26):
I think Lilah, the potential sull in law's dog that
he got.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
To plicate my daughter reincarnating, is my dad who's come
back from the grave.

Speaker 1 (49:37):
What makes you think that?

Speaker 3 (49:38):
Sometimes I look at Lia's face and that's Dad. I
one time had a few business It is that you, Dad.
I was looking at Lilah because Lila loves me.

Speaker 1 (49:45):
Was Lilah around when your dad does?

Speaker 3 (49:48):
No way? He died back in twenty four And what
is it about her behavior? It's the face really, nothing
behavior just to the dog's face. The face just and
just very wise wise do I love that dog? But
I reckon it's my dad.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
I don't usually say this out I've never said this
out loud.

Speaker 3 (50:07):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (50:07):
Does it freak you out or come?

Speaker 3 (50:09):
It's very comforting, I said when she licks herself.

Speaker 1 (50:15):
You were ruining a beautiful moment.

Speaker 3 (50:17):
There stop that Jonesy and Amanda podcast.

Speaker 2 (50:25):
And all appearance had to hold up signs of reproducting
all this, And my wife's holding up beside this, says Scroto.

Speaker 3 (50:31):
She takes it to the airport when she's speaking, Well,
hello there, spooky Duke's.

Speaker 1 (50:35):
We're just talking about a new movie that's about to
be released called Good Boy. It's through the eyes of
a Dog. It's a really terrifying film, apparently, where the
dog sees the supernatural, bad usual that's surrounding its owner.
You we're just talking about supernatural pets and pets seeing things.
You claim that you or you don't claim you. But
you've said for the first time that you think your

(50:57):
daughter's dog is a reincarnation of your dad.

Speaker 3 (51:00):
Part time dog. Yeah, I think it is. And I
was just googling, well looking on my my real have
a look, take my phone. Don't zooming through that I
can see from here you rec are the old man.

Speaker 1 (51:14):
You know, it's one of those dogs that's got green eyes,
so it's got a human looking face. I can see
why you'd think that. I think, well, I don't know.
I don't know I've met your father.

Speaker 3 (51:30):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (51:31):
I can see why you might think so, because it
has it. That dog has a has very human eyes.
It's a bit disconcerting sometimes, so when you think it's
your dad, doesn't make you feel good.

Speaker 3 (51:43):
The aforementioned licking itself, But up until then it's fine.
The tribal drums feeding for this.

Speaker 1 (51:54):
Troy has joined us. Tell us about your supernatural pet.

Speaker 7 (51:57):
Good morning, Amanda and Jonesy here, aren't you very well?
It's actually my auntie and uncle's red cattle dog. They
brought a house out at Wilberforce, and reports were that
apparently they moved the cemetery up the hill. But then
they build all these houses and you'd go over there

(52:18):
and the red cattle would just stare at the back
door or in the kitchen, would bark at certain times,
would just run off. But during the night, some weird
things that happened in the house as well, because drawers
that open, the kettle would turn on, the toaster would
go off, and we were only young when we go

(52:40):
over and stay over there to visit them. But the dog,
the dog knew that something wasn't right.

Speaker 1 (52:47):
Oh, those stories unsettle me.

Speaker 2 (52:49):
Obviously, some sort of breakfast ghosts though, because they're up
in the morning toast teeth.

Speaker 1 (52:53):
No, that's in the middle of the night, sitting the table.

Speaker 3 (52:56):
Maybe they're early rises. Maybe they do breakfast radio.

Speaker 1 (52:59):
Wow, thank you, Troy, Troy. That's we've got more calls
coming through. This is really hitting a nerve.

Speaker 3 (53:07):
Podcast. The Tyble Dramas be my supernatural dog.

Speaker 1 (53:15):
Sometimes as dogs get older, they get a bit of
dementia and just look at the back of doors and
buck nowhere anything. It can freak you out. But I've
chosen not to be frightened other times, and the calls
we've taken this morning, dogs are onto it.

Speaker 3 (53:28):
Bridget has joined us.

Speaker 1 (53:29):
Slow Bridget, tell us about the super pooch.

Speaker 9 (53:33):
No, it was not a pooch. They're my cats. So
quite often we've just lost our little girl in January,
but quite often she'd be sitting with me on the
bed and she'd be.

Speaker 3 (53:46):
About a cat.

Speaker 9 (53:47):
Aren't you yeah, I'm talking about my cats. And she'd
be asleep on the bed with me, and I'd be
watching TV, and then all of a sudden, she would
half sit up and she would be staring out the
bedroom door, and her ears would be pricked forward and
she would be absolutely fixated on somebody. And I can't
tell you how many times this happened. And I would say,
who's there, who's there? And then all of a sudden

(54:07):
the light would change, see shadow, or I'd hear a
little knock or something like that, and then I'd say,
go away, don't want to know about it, don't want
to see you, don't want to hear it, go away,
And then everything would settle down, and it would happen
all the time, and or should be somewhere in the house,
and all of a sudden she'd sit upright and she
would be that freaked out that she would go and
run away and hide. And my big boy, he does

(54:29):
it now occasionally, and I know the ghost in my house.
I've had this my whole life. I'm not a clevolance
and I'm not psychic, but I have had people come
to me my whole life. In every single house that
I've lived in To this day.

Speaker 6 (54:42):
It still happens.

Speaker 9 (54:43):
I feel when my cats that have passed jump on
my bed. I've been stroked on my head, I've been
tapped on my shoulder. I've been told to get out
of bed in the middle of the night. I smell things.
I smell perfume. I smell smoke. It's not cigarette smoke,
and it's not would smoke. It's a really weird kind
of smoke that I can smell. I see shadows. I

(55:04):
see my cats, my cats that have passed, I see them.
I see them on the rug, on chairs and things
like that.

Speaker 1 (55:11):
And does it freak you out?

Speaker 9 (55:12):
A look in the early days, it happened after my
dad died when I was really really young. I saw him,
and then it kind of kept happening from there. There
was one house that I lived in in Crow's Nets,
and it was haunted and it freaked me out like
you wouldn't believe it, terrified me. I had to move
out of there. I actually had people in the house
in my room standing above me over my bed, and

(55:32):
I had I had to move out of there. Over time,
I just I'm okay. And when I feel my cats
and I see them I'm comforted, but over time I've
just gone not open for receiving. You don't want to
talk to you, go away. I bathe myself in white light,
and I say, just leave me alone because I'm not

(55:53):
I don't want to be open to that, because I
think it opens up the candle works.

Speaker 3 (55:57):
Took about sense, you know, towards the end, dead people
every day. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think you're in.

Speaker 1 (56:03):
You can be in control of that to a certain
extentard that's interesting. Bridget, thank you, thank you for your call.

Speaker 3 (56:09):
She sees a lot of stuff. Sam Nation.

Speaker 1 (56:20):
Twenty thousand dollars thanks to sell stocks and gravies. That's
what we've got for our favorite goolie of the year.

Speaker 3 (56:25):
What have we got today? What gets my.

Speaker 13 (56:27):
Goolies is you're following a car down the road. There's
a green light ahead, so they start slowing, start breaking,
and you've got to slow and break too, otherwise you're
going to re end them. Then they get through, and
then the light goes orange and you don't get through.
That really gets my gholies. Don't slow down for a

(56:47):
green light, dude, go just go.

Speaker 3 (56:50):
Go go just the speed limit, but just.

Speaker 4 (56:55):
Go go.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
There are some days where every light that happens too
and you're trying to find a park, every car is
taking out one and a half spaces. There are some
days where the universe is just.

Speaker 3 (57:04):
To get you write a song about that, all ironic.
Oh what else have we got? What gets my girlies?

Speaker 1 (57:13):
When you've been on a long haul flight.

Speaker 3 (57:15):
And you've been stuck up the back and you're so
cramped and you.

Speaker 5 (57:18):
Can't wait to get off that plane and the line
starts moving in the aisle, and then the person in
front of you stands up and starts using the overhead
locker and I don't just have a carry on, I've
got like ten items and you've just got to wait forever.

Speaker 2 (57:32):
It's a fine dance, though, isn't it, because you get
you're want to be keeno, but you don't want to
be the person that hangs around at the end.

Speaker 3 (57:38):
What about those people which you know?

Speaker 1 (57:39):
What's changed though? Is it because you have to pay
now for every bit of luggage. People are taking all
their luggages and luggage that's where the whole plane. That's
why I have to get on early because all the
spaces get taken.

Speaker 3 (57:49):
I know, I go up to the front of the
plane and you're long gone, are you? And the pilot
of well your father was apologing up and go with
the badding with the good. If you dipped out, contact
us via the iHeartRadio app. It is seven to nine, I.

Speaker 1 (58:07):
Say, recording my old Facebook friend gets a city highlight
flight for two take off in style seaplanes dot com?
Who has your seat?

Speaker 3 (58:14):
Also the jones in amount of teatower coming your way
as well.

Speaker 1 (58:17):
Some are calling it the circle of life. Others are
saying it's sparred. Barrack Becau Zoo in Denmark has asked
people to donate their.

Speaker 3 (58:22):
Pets to feed the carnivores. We took it.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
We took it to the pub test donating your dead
pet to the zoo. Jorhey from Marubra has this to say,
I think it does.

Speaker 10 (58:34):
I offered my wife to fit me to some poor
polar there if I'm dying, because I want wildlife to survives,
and I think there's no problem with it.

Speaker 1 (58:43):
Some interesting things he said if he's dying, not even
when he's dead, and.

Speaker 3 (58:46):
He's talking about the swimmers down at Bondi icebergs Well, Joey,
good luck to you.

Speaker 1 (58:52):
Right to police.

Speaker 3 (58:53):
That's enough Hi go lookie here he is.

Speaker 2 (58:57):
Here the golden tickets to the biggest music event of
the year at the iHeartRadio Music Festival.

Speaker 3 (59:03):
We will back from six tonight for jam Nation. Then
good dead to you, well, thank god that's over.

Speaker 7 (59:09):
Bye, good bye, wipe the two.

Speaker 1 (59:12):
Baby You're right. Catch Jonesy and Amanda's podcast on the
iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 3 (59:24):
Good Bye. Catch up on what you've missed on the
free iHeartRadio app.
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