Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What is the charge eating on me? Succulent Chinese? What's
a procedure?
Speaker 2 (00:08):
This is Roden Gabby versus the world.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
It's the most Friday Wednesday I've ever experienced.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
You're telling me.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Good to see you here.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
Luckily I woke up an hour after my larm should
have gone off. Oops.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Have your luck mate, Well that's pretty good self management
wherever you're working this morning or are you just up
and away? Welcome? Hopefully you got the extra little bit
of rest and darcy overnight in America. The reports after
we went to bed going that ceasfire that Donald Trump
said he broke it, you know, is that actually going
to hold through the evening? This is what NBC has said.
Speaker 4 (00:48):
We do want to start once again with the latest
in the Middle East, and there is a lot to
catch you up on this morning. That ceased fire between
Israel and Iran now appears to be off after the
Israeli Defense minister says Iran quote completely violated any deal
by launching missiles after it was supposed to go into
a fact.
Speaker 5 (01:05):
Well, President Trump, who initially announced that ceasefire and in
fact told an NBC News reporter he expected it to
go on forever spoke out just a short time ago
on these overnight developments and is none too happy, saying
both sides have violated the agreement, and he used an
ex lit of saying neither side knows what the f
they are doing, and.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
So what has happened since then?
Speaker 6 (01:29):
Sorry, so they've kind of gone back into a ceasefire apparently,
but Donald Trump has taken direct aim at Israel for
saying they were the worst of like they were the
worst defenders out of the two because they sent meant like,
so many more missiles than Iran did. And then also
questions are coming into and now about how many missiles
(01:49):
Iran has left because they've been fighting everybody. So at
the current stage, the ceasefire is on, but it's very shaky.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
Yeah, remembering that it was the US slash donald trump
support for Israel that had resulted in the US launching
those strikes. All right, I know what everyone's thinking. It's
not enough just to hear someone say Donald Trump said it.
Do you want to hear him dropping another bomb of
the f variety today? You don't hear this from ther
(02:19):
US presidents very often, but maybe it's warranted.
Speaker 7 (02:23):
I'm not happy with Israel. You know, when I say, okay,
now you have twelve hours, you don't go out in
the first hour. It just drop everything you have on them.
So I'm not happy with them. I'm not happy with
the run either. We basically have two countries that have
been fighting so long and so hard that they don't
know what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Do you understand that? We understand it. And I hate
when I agree with this bloke.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
So rare, so unnecessary to be throwing that kind of language.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
In time to get a point home, you know, to
start dropping some ath bombs. The actual bombs didn't work.
He thought at the time that he said that hadn't worked.
He's going, all right, I'm dropping another bond the variety.
Speaker 6 (03:04):
It's crazy that both countries agreed six hours after he
tweeted saying they should go to a cease fare, don't
you think.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Yeah, Pigrey. Pressure is a wild thing, and it works
on all sorts of scales, this being the biggest one
where you say something and everyone tries to act cool
and go along with it. Well Well done, well done.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
That's about sums up his presidency, right.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
I might mention that overnight, is this right? Donald Trump
was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for No, this
is correct. This is correct. He's been nominated for a
Nobel Prize Pie Peace Prize for negotiating peace. No. Yeah,
doesn't that come into a case by case, mate, And
(03:45):
so have you just focused on the case after that case?
Well done?
Speaker 2 (03:49):
And Gabby versus the world produced Chelsea?
Speaker 1 (03:52):
Is there a new scammeler for the act today? You've
been on the receiving and let's check whether or not
this is normal for the rest of this or it's
a new one. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (04:01):
So I've had some messages over the past couple of
days come through from oz Post, and I did think
that they were quite normal because I have ordered a
few things from oz post and I've only just recently
moved here. So the oz post message says that your
parcel is currently being processed due to an invalid postal code,
(04:22):
it cannot be delivered and it's been temporarily held. And
I'm like, well, maybe I did put in the wrong
post codecard. Yeah, so I thought that I had messed
it up, so I didn't click on it. But then
when Jared got home, I did ask him. I'm like,
do you reckon this? Is real, Like, do you reckon,
I've put my postcode in wrong, like I want to
get my parcels. And then he was like I got
(04:44):
the same message, but he also ordered stuff, so he
was like, I don't know whether we're both messa if
we've both messed it up. So he ended up not
clicking on it because our parcels ended up being delivered
and I just go through the OS post app. I
don't really trust like the text messages. Yeah, but I
was reading that someone did get scammed, and I was like, this,
(05:05):
it's actually happened to someone and they'd lost one five
hundred dollars because they authorized and they put through a
verification code and all this stuff, and they contacted the
bank and the bank and said we can't do anything
about it because you verified it.
Speaker 3 (05:21):
You've allowed it to happen.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
It's a shoddy bank of those people with no.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
No that's it. If you if you've gone through the
process of making that payment, even though it's to a
dodgy person, that's on you. If they steal your information
and then and then steal your money that way, then
the bank will step in. But if you've done it,
if you've gone all right, here's my money. Then they're
not covering you on that, right.
Speaker 1 (05:45):
Yeah. Well, I don't think it's exclusive to cameer and
I don't think it's new news. But you had the
presence of mind to not click on the link. And
you're better than me. I've clicking links like an you are.
Speaker 3 (05:55):
Oh, you had to do the training like fifty times
in this office.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
And they love getting to they can state they know tricky.
I don't know if anyone else's workplace does this, but
our I T department sets up fake you know, phishing things.
Speaker 3 (06:08):
To see if you'll get done by it, and.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
Then to teach you a lesson and make you re
sit the online training. And so when they got me
twice in two days, I was like, that's nearly three.
Speaker 9 (06:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
And now now now I get people going, what checking
your messages? I will be checking nothing. What do you
think of that?
Speaker 3 (06:23):
And so they've tricked me so many times.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
Correct and it serves them right, So good luck trying
to contact me out. I'm going to play a little
game here with two of you. I want you to
buzz in with your names when you can tell me
what classic Ossie thing. This is a play it for you,
(06:47):
but test your buzzy, please, Gaby, test your buzzy please, Chelsea, Chelsea, Okay, excellent,
here we go.
Speaker 10 (06:53):
Quie prevents Trick Quick Studios Australia. This is quite a
bud bar time of Travis.
Speaker 11 (06:58):
You're about to see nude peoples.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
And he thoughts, yet, no, are we going to snog? Sure? Okay,
now I'm just playing you audio. I'm going to add
visuals now and let's see if that helps.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
Well, look at Andrew g that'sgic history in the Miking.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
No one's buzzing in here, so entry g. Back in
that day, there was a channel called Channel V and
it was.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
I think that was a pay TV channel, isn't it you?
I said, free to all.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Chelsea was quite a disadvantage because and Gabby was at
a disadvantage because you didn't have Channel V with the pay.
Speaker 3 (07:47):
TV because there was like Fox telling the city and
there was a star in the regions and being a
star way down the track right.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
And who knew what music channel was on what? But
Channel V ended up being the biggest it was. It
outshone MTV at the time because MTV was just you know,
dragged and dropped in from the US, and so Andrew G,
Jabber Yumi, all these people who were stars of Australian entertainment.
Now James Matheson started out as the hosts on Channel
(08:17):
V this channel, so.
Speaker 3 (08:18):
Did Osha then Andrew G have a ponytail just before?
Is that what I saw?
Speaker 8 (08:23):
It was a.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
Crazy time, Jabba. They locked Jabber and regurgitated the band
in a bubble and in a in a you know,
sort of an area in a city somewhere in Australia,
and they weren't allowed to be released until the Gurge
had written and recorded a new album. Jabba had a breakdown.
He disappeared for like a couple of years. Poor guy. Yeah,
(08:48):
it happened. Happened live and rules back then, Hay, there
were so few rules. In the middle of his breakdown,
he was knoted up and I think he broke out
of the bubble. He just got start because it was
a it was a serious problem. He talks about it
now obviously he's okay. Anyway, Channel V was a really
important part I guess of nineties, you know, music culture
(09:11):
in Australia, and so with all the new streaming mobs
coming into Australia and taking ownership of shows and all
sorts of assets. So we notice Binge is essentially losing
all its shows to the new Max streaming service. As
far as the ownership of MTV is concerned, Foxteel is
about to lose it. Oh and so all these decades later,
(09:32):
they're bringing it back. Channel V's back get in there.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
Well, he's got nothing else going on. He got fired
from the Bachelor, he's.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
Got nothing with the stars.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
But that's over suits all right.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
But the good news for Chelsea is that the other
thing that Foxteel are about to lose is CMT, the
Country Music television. So they're bringing back the other channel
that used to sit alongside Channel V that we haven't
had in Australia forever, and that is CMC, the Country
Music Channel. And I know that you go to that
(10:05):
big CMC festival this year. Yeah, and so now you
you'll be having it three hundred and sixty five days
a year.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
On Fox Tell. Yeah, on Foxtel.
Speaker 6 (10:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
So I've got to get Fox Tell. I still don't
have it all, don't play as a kid, don't have
it now.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
This game again in twenty years and gave you like
reserve Fox still thing versus the world's distracted by these times.
This is extraordinary. So the European Athletics season is well
and truly underway. This is where the best in the
world go to race and so continental to a gold
(10:44):
ran last night and Ossie young fellow Gout Gout Is
he eighteen? He's still seventeen. He's a kid.
Speaker 6 (10:51):
I had no idea.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
I think he's so young.
Speaker 11 (10:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
Well he's gone up against the big guns and he's
made his debut in the Upan League. Let's see how
he goes in the two hundred meters. This is his
first time competing on the international stage.
Speaker 12 (11:08):
This there is Gout Gout. Quite a sensation, this young man.
Australia love him. Publics are the name Publics is just brilliant.
But now expects Amenya to lead into the Strait and
Gout the third from that, to come back. And once
they get to the Strait, his first race as a
pro in Europe. This from Gaut Gaut.
Speaker 9 (11:23):
Now he's got a target, Menya moving away from Memoizi
and the headband. A battle between these two and go
working so hard to get to him, and he gets there.
Gout takes it by meter and moving away twenty zero four,
battling all the.
Speaker 12 (11:37):
Way, the strongest part of his.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Race score one hundreds of the seconds before he joined
on a last thrius three or four in history to
go sub twenty in this part of the world. He's
broken the Australian record in doing that. And he's one
on debut. And if we have a look at age
for age comparison between him and Usain Bolt, which is
the thing that everyone does because they say, maybe he's
(12:00):
the next one a quarter of the second faster than
you're saying at this age.
Speaker 3 (12:08):
Incredible, that's amazing. And right at the start there, just
before they were about to get ready to take off,
he was just yawning like that's just another day. Maybe
that's a technique to get more oxygen into the system,
but it just looked.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
Like he was like, it is amazing when you see
these pro athletes in the build. So some of them
are like, I've got to pump up and jumping and bouncing,
and others are like, I need to maintain every single
ounce of energy I have and then build the last
second and explode. And so maybe he's one of those guys.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Well, maybe he's just so relaxed. He's like, I got this.
Speaker 1 (12:39):
Well, he's so relaxed that I think he's the only
one of these two hundred meter sprinters whose last fifty
meters was faster than their first one hundred and fifty
so normally the last fifty come off a little bit. Yeah,
he appears from my reading to be the only one
to have ever done that.
Speaker 3 (12:57):
So but he had that person he had to catch
up to and beat. And when you've got that competitive nature, you.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
Did deep that helps anyway. Australia, you booty. First things,
Fist baby, Olivia, you're one and a half year old,
has told Oliver Twist to hold my beer.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
That's correct. So I'm calling her Olivia Twist because Oliver
Twist was a pickpocket and Olivia is chasing him down.
That's skill. So last night I our bedtime routine is
a book and then a sing and a bit of
a cuddle and then she goes to bed. And I
(13:38):
was giving her the cuddle last night and she's very
busy at the moment. She's trying to talk a lot,
she's trying to do all the things. She's really in
that stage where it's hard for her to shut her
brain off to go to sleep, because there's so many
things that we're learning and doing and very busy.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
The greatest time.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Oh, she's just on, She's really on, and so I'm
trying to settle her down for bed.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Everyone noticed I I said the greatest time, and Gebby said,
nothing of the sort.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
It's taking while I get an hour over her to
settle at night minimum. So I'm like trying to calm
her down. I'm singing and trying to get her and
every time I start a song, she would just look
at me and go nope, And I have to start
a different song note until I find the song that
she's happy for me to sing. It takes a minute.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Well, when you say you do requests, you're setting yourself
up exactly what's happening.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
It's a very good point. Anyway, I could feel her
little hand kind of tickling my leg while I was
holding her, you know, lying down kind away. Her head
was on my chest and he was down and I
could feel her tickling my leg, and I was like, whatever,
just as long as your eyes are shut, I don't care. Anyway,
I put her into bed with her dollies and I
walk out. And when I look at the monitor. I'm like,
(14:47):
what is that light? And I realized she has pulled
my phone out of my pockets while tickling my legs
in bed trying to get into it. So she's and
of course that I was locked out on my phone
for five minutes because she tried the pass code that
many times to get in. But I could not believe it.
(15:08):
She pulled my phone out of my pocket without me
even realizing.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Well it started. Every parent before the kid gets a
mobile phone, knows all you hear about is when am
I getting a mobile phone? Yeah, this may be a
new record, in fact, not even asking she already has
one when I'm I getting the code to this phone?
Speaker 2 (15:22):
But I just watch and Gabby versus the world before.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
We go any further. People seem to enjoy when your
Facebook memories pop up because you used Facebook. I guess
like a lot of us might use Messenger now amongst
our friends. But of course everyone gets to see your
observations thoughts, and they were conversations. You were having real
time conversations on the platform, on a public platform the
(15:49):
world could observe.
Speaker 3 (15:50):
I think everyone used to do this. I don't think
I was alone in doing this. Is kind of how
we used Facebook back there.
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Certainly in your circle of friends, yes, because I see
the response, and so your Facebook memories can can be beautiful,
they can be heartwarming, and they can be random. So
it's time for Gabby's Facebook memory of fourteen years ago today.
Speaker 3 (16:15):
So I'm assuming that my friend Jess and I had
just been out for our birthday drinks because our birthdays
are a week apart, so we always went out together
to celebrate, and the next day or maybe a couple
of days later, I've put up as my status Jess
is the luckiest be arch in the world.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
That's what a beautiful sens and what a statement. It's
the world needed to hear it, you know, and people
are going, yes, yes, Jess is, But then not everyone
would have known. I hope you go it's into.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Comment, no dot know. I didn't provide any context until
you go into the comments and someone commented phone found
and I replied, yep, a unipub had it, so lucky.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Gabby's Facebook memory from fourteen years ago tod.
Speaker 3 (17:06):
What a time, What a time to be on social media?
Speaker 1 (17:09):
What a time capsule. It's true, but really.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
But honestly, if you lose your phone in a club.
You are lucky if they've got it to hand it
back to you the next day.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
Yeah that is, but again what a time, you know,
I don't know that would happen. Okay, we're all interested
in this because we all could probably ninety nine percent
of a statistic I just made up, but probably about right,
could do a little bit better when it comes to
managing our personal health. However, the good news today, I hope,
(17:41):
is that obesity, smoking, poor diet, and a lack of
exercise are no longer the things that are most likely
to get you.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
Now there's a new thing, and the worst part about
it is you can't really control it.
Speaker 1 (17:55):
Okay, but as long as we're not doing it, we're
not doing it.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
There's nothing we can really change. Oh, there's probably some
things we can change to try to help it. But
a new study has come out to say that regular
nightmares could mean you're three times more likely to die
a decade earlier than the average pass It's that's not
funny at all.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
But as I don't have regular nightmares, as stressed about it.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
Well now that well, if you were stressing about it,
probably make the nightmares worse. But kids are adults that
have frequent nightmares, so frequent they mean like at least
once a week. They have faster biological aging, which means
that you are probably gonna die earlier. And it's because
it really increases, you know, those stress hormones and those
(18:41):
fight or flights, and those cortisols and all of those
awful adrenaline things that happen in your body when you
wake up going.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
So let me get this straight. If you are carrying
a lot of stress, are you setting yourself up for
more nightmares or are you saying genetically some people will
have more nightmares that in turn will generate more stress.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
I think it's what goes both ways, so genetically, Like
I know, for me, for example, I just have really
vivid dreams, really vivid dreams, and occasionally they will turn
a little bit scary. And I guess that is when
I am in a heightened stress situation that they get scary, right,
But because I already have such vivid dreams, I'm more
(19:22):
likely to have a vivid nightmare because I'm already doing
the format, like the dreaming of having those kind of
really lifelike reality type dreams. If you don't dream at
all you appreciate.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
All right, well that explains why I busted Gabby having
a smoke and a beer for breakfast. You've given up,
you've got it, well.
Speaker 3 (19:43):
Kill me.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
Versus the world.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Darcy with the news and just a moment will reveal
the social media platform that thought they were off the
hook when it came to Australia's imminent under sixteen social
media ban back in the cross hairs and should they
be You can decide in the next five minutes. Before
we get to Darcy's news. It's obviously big news in
Texas in America. The robot cars have been rolled out
(20:09):
there and these are Elon Musk's new robot Taxis.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
Ah, so driver is Taxis.
Speaker 13 (20:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
So this this went well for about an hour until
one bet onto the wrong side of the road. Yeah,
And so now there's an investigation and it's all falling apart.
And the reason we know about that is because it
wasn't just onlookers or drivers coming toward the car. When
you're you're not doing the right thing and you're a robot.
(20:37):
The person the passenger just happened to be videoing at
the time. And if you ever have the privilege of
being in one. It's difficult. As an Australian. I was
happy to get into one of the Waimo ones in
San Francisco, but you need like a local sim for
the app to be able to send your stuff, and
I couldn't work. I couldn't come up with a workaround
(20:58):
to be able to book it. But locals just jumping there,
and they are everywhere in certainly Californian states. We have
them and they're flawless. Ah, look like anything. Why rush it?
You know, it's a very good point.
Speaker 3 (21:14):
Let's see how it goes over there first.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
Yeah, that's right. The ones in the ones that are
actually in service at the moment are fully kitted out,
these weimou ones and so that they don't just look
like a normal car.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
They look like a robot.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
I look like a robot.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
This is that could be a transformer.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
Yeah, this is from Weimo.
Speaker 10 (21:33):
What you noticed pretty quickly is that these aren't normal vehicles.
Take this Jaguar APIs for example. It's been equipped with
an elegant array of sensors and software which allows it
to move through the city on its own.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
And it's wild to see, so wild.
Speaker 3 (21:49):
Yeah, and it is driving through these busy city streets
with no driver.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
Right, So the president set and obviously you know Tesla,
they're struggling. They go, let's enter the robot taxi market.
Speaker 3 (22:01):
This millionaire Elon musks like, how hole, my br I
can do this.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
Watch this, So let's jump on board now and you
can talk us through it. Here you gave me. This
is one of the first rides in the Tesla robot
taxi game.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
We're in a turnlane, left turn lane. We're turning left.
The steer well, no we're not. We're going straight. We're turning.
No we're not.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
Where where are we going on the wrong side of
the road.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
We're meant to turn left. We didn't turn left, and
now we're going straight on the wrong side of the road.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
So thankfully there was no one coming traffic.
Speaker 3 (22:31):
How did we turn left?
Speaker 1 (22:32):
I don't know, and the indicator was on and everything.
No one knows the robot. Only the robot knows. The
robot did not make that choice. No, it's a plan.
Get wayn Bennett to go to PNG after we just
returned to the Rabbits.
Speaker 6 (22:51):
So he's coaching till the end of twenty twenty eight,
and then they want to get him involved in the
spearheading the new team.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
That it be fine if he wasn't going to be
one hundred and fifteen years old doing to this. Bog
him rest, give him a break. I think he loves it.
I think he just keeps shutting up.
Speaker 3 (23:11):
He must.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
I don't think he's that. He's just he's just he's
just an older looking guy.
Speaker 3 (23:15):
Well, he doesn't shake anyone's hands. We found that out recently.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
He is in such fear of dropping dead he won't
shake anyone else. What did Peter Blandi say the the
Austraian Rugby League Commission? What did he say yesterday? He's
claimed players and their wives will be on a quote
permanent holiday when the PNG expansion side makes its NRL
(23:39):
entrance in twenty twenty eight and promised to resort style accommodation.
Well apart from the training and playing a really hard
thing to do top holiday.
Speaker 3 (23:49):
Join the Titans.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
SA same, that's working fantastically for them. Well, I mean,
if you want to the players, I love it. I
love it all right, I've said it before. A bunch
of the social media platforms were notified that they would
be subject to the Australian under sixteen social media ban,
but a new one looks like it's been looped in
(24:14):
after they were told they were free to play on.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
Yeah, so the e Safety Commissioner has put in another
recommendation to include YouTube in this ban that I don't
know exactly what the statement was, but I've been told
that there's lots of fight videos and eating disorder videos
on YouTube that is too dangerous for kids to be viewing,
which I think is very obvious.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
There's a lot of videos they shouldn't be viewing, that's
for sure.
Speaker 6 (24:42):
I wonder if it's even possible to just age restrict
those specific videos depending on what one. Maybe it's too hot.
Speaker 3 (24:49):
Well, there's already YouTube kids, which I've needed to switch
over to recently because we've just been using YouTube for
Wiggles and Pepper Pig and whatever else. So just a
baby Shark which is on repeat a lot, and the
ads that were coming up between different things, and you
can't skip them for a good twenty seconds because I
don't pay for YouTube, right, so those ads are way
(25:11):
too adult and extreme for my eighteen month old, So
we've had to just switch over, even though because I
was watching it with her, I didn't think it'd be
a problem, but we've had to switch over to YouTube
Kids for that reason, because the ads were not focused
at a young audience.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
Yeah, for fear of my nine and twelve year olds
rioting in the car on the way to school. Right now,
I got to support the under sixteen YouTube ban. And
it's up to YouTube. I mean, there is a way
out of this because at the moment, yes, you can
put age restrictions or recommendations when you're uploading something to YouTube,
(25:46):
but if it's user managed, then it's the wild westrob
and that is the Internet. It's user managed. And so
YouTube either invests invest in putting on thousands and thousands,
maybe tens, maybe a hundred of thousands of people worldwide
to manage and vet the content before it goes up,
and they say, right, that should be on YouTube kids,
(26:06):
and it's a bad news for you. With YouTube Kids,
you're about to find a whole stack of stuff that
shouldn't be on there too. By the way, we're not
as diabolical as what Darcy's talking about, but as far
as saving no educational value, as far as being a
lot of commercialized unboxings and stuff like that, oh yeah,
and so they just don't police their own platform stuff.
They're not prepared to invest in themselves. I think as
a nation, we shouldn't be prepared to invest our kids'
(26:29):
futures in them.
Speaker 3 (26:29):
I know though, it was like up in the areas
to whether the YouTube would be involved right at the start,
and then they were like, no, we're not going to
be involve YouTube. It's all good. But before that happened,
the Wiggles I know, and a couple of other kids
groups were campaigning hard to not have YouTube included because
a huge portion of their revenue stream comes from being
(26:51):
viewed on YouTube.
Speaker 7 (26:53):
Right.
Speaker 3 (26:54):
And there's a bunch of like I think Bounce I
don't know if they were part of it, but there's
like a huge Wi Australian group called Bounced Patrol that
their entire business is on YouTube for kids, kids videos
and whatnot. So there's a there's a massive market there
that would be very much affected if kids weren't able
to watch.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
A bit of Bounce Patrol and Ninja Kids and all
these groups are continuing to make content exclusively for YouTube.
Kids fantastic. That's fine, you know, but it's it's and
that's lucky though that they do a good job. It's
still people, and so YouTube campaigned the former Communications Minister
(27:35):
Michelle Roland directly. She was the one responsible for giving
them a pass. And now we have a new community,
a new Communications Minister, Annaka Wells, who's got advice from
the e Safety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant and she's gone,
what are you doing? No, we can't do that. And
so it appears at that advice from the e Safety Commission,
which is one of the most important jobs in Australian
(27:57):
government in twenty twenty five, we've got to listen to her.
So my kids are writing right now. They're very displayed.
He displays with all of it, shod.
Speaker 2 (28:06):
And Gabby versus the world.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
I am really sorry that I was lost for words yesterday.
I didn't say anything. If you were listening at a
certain part of the show yesterday, you had nothing because
Katie Perry dropped into Robert Irwin's zoo and they did
a little dance. And that's fine because Robert's going to be,
you know, on Deasy with the Stars of States in America.
That's right. What happened. I just couldn't explain it because
(28:32):
I didn't believe it.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
Because Katie Perry said, let's do a dip, right, and.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
So obviously before they've filmed this, Katie has gone, hey,
drop me, we need to create a viral moment. And
Robert's the nicest bloody guy and is the weakest, most
insipid drop in the world, so he places her down gently.
This is the video.
Speaker 3 (28:51):
I heard that Robert.
Speaker 5 (28:52):
Irwin was going to be on Dancing with the Stars,
so I thought maybe we should do a practice round.
Speaker 3 (28:57):
You're at the Australia.
Speaker 8 (28:58):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (28:58):
I'm ready, okay, I'm ready.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
I love both these guys. I love Katie and Robert,
and they're doing their their little waltz. He's terrible, he's
got two left feet, he's got the big still facing
it right, and then he does the dip and he
places it down so carefully, and we're meant to believe
that as well. Was I was. I didn't have any words.
I still not sure I do. I still love them,
(29:22):
but he's too nice. Drop me, mate, It's going to
be a great viral moment, and he placed it and
so gently.
Speaker 3 (29:28):
Just think though he's dance partner who is going to
be partnered with for Dancing with the Stars. She's watching
this and she's like, Oh, thank God, he's never gonna
he's never gonna do anything to hurt me.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
She just quit. She just thought, I'm not I'm not
even subjecting myself to any of that. So Katie, I mean,
and I am a huge fan through all this stuff
that she's been subjected to lately, I've stood by Katie,
but she's a controversy magnet once again tonight, Chelsea.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (29:54):
So there's been a TikTok that's gone viral from the
Perth concert that was a Coverlin Nights ago, and it's
of Katy Perry slapping a laboo boo out of a
fan's hand as they try to give.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
It to her.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
She's on stage, she's getting gifts from people, and there's
the oh no, and she smashed that wasn't an.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
Accident, wasn't an accident and it was still in the box.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
They're really hard to get, Katie.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
Really like they're expensive these days.
Speaker 8 (30:30):
It actually turns out Katie Erry, it's an underlying joke
within her fan base that she hates laboo boos, and
she ended up commenting on this fans video with the
Devil smiley face emoji.
Speaker 3 (30:42):
So it was a joke between the two because you're
not front row at a Katy Perry concert if you
don't know. This jokes for the fandoma but people on
the outer circle would be like, that's so rude. Give
it to me.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Okay, con to here we are again. You need context
with Katie. We yet to have an explanation as to
why she carried on with the thing into space. But
I still stand by you with that there was a
monumental moment in history her trip into space.
Speaker 13 (31:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (31:06):
Yeah, when we'll get into that again.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
When people, we don't When people go to the wrestling
it's the same thing. So you think that they're upset
if they hold a sign up and one of the
bad guys grabs the sign out of the crowd and
tears it in half. They'll hold the sign up to
the camera because it's usually bad mouthing them because they're
a bad guy, they tear it in half. It's a
tremendous honor as a fan for that to happen.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
This is the same. So you've got to spend one
thousand dollars in our La boo boo to get whacked
out of your hand and that's a massive honor.
Speaker 1 (31:36):
Well, what a small price to pay. However, if you
are worried that your car is haunted, what are the
things we should be looking out for.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
I'm pretty sure mine is because over the last couple
of weeks I've noticed that when I've been driving into
work of the morning, it's dark, there's no one else
on the road for kilometers, it's just me and the
straight bitchamen, And every now and then the little sensor
on my mirror lights up as if there's something next
(32:12):
to me.
Speaker 2 (32:13):
Oh so, you know.
Speaker 3 (32:15):
Like you're driving along and you put your indicator on
in your mirror. If you're in a newer car, your
mirror will warn you that there's someone potentially in your
blind spot. That sensor is lighting up like there's something
something traveling next to me in the dark. It's happened
a few times, and I thought it was just a malfunction. However,
(32:36):
this morning, I'm driving along and the sensor starts going
off that someone's sitting in the passenger seat without their
seat belt on, and my bag wasn't on the seat.
It was really annoying because it was just beep, beep,
beepen and it wouldn't stop because I thought someone was
there unsafely and I had to when I pulled up
(32:58):
at the lights, I had to get the seat belt
and plug it in despite no one sitting there. But
at least the ghost was secured.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
Ghosts, there is a fine line between annoying and terrifying. Yeah,
I'm glad you don't feel terrorized. Well, I feel a.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
Bit terrorized by the outdoor sensor more than the indoor one.
That's just annoying, But the outside one because it's so dark.
When the mirror lights up, I'm just like, who's there.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
At one hundred kilometers an hour on the outskirts of
the coming in from New South Wales.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
Just flying along beside me?
Speaker 1 (33:31):
Right, Well, it's it's it's I tell you right now.
Masder I put this to MASDA earlier this morning as
the manufacturer of the vehicle. Yeah, because it's a concern.
If there's a manufacturing fault, they need to know about
this and that it could could be a mass recall
across the nation.
Speaker 3 (33:48):
That's good point. But if it's a ghost, this.
Speaker 1 (33:51):
Is their response. It's absolutely a ghost.
Speaker 2 (33:54):
It's nothing Gay versus the world.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
Darcy the Act Treasurer Chris Steele has gone listen. I
know I gave you a lot of good leaks over
the last week or two, but I ought to mention
one point one million dollar deficit. But otherwise everything's fine.
And we all said, what did you just mumble? And
he said, I said on one point one million dollar
deficit and what does that actually mean?
Speaker 6 (34:21):
So yeah, okay, there we go. So the one point
one billion dollar deficit is the record that the Act
has ever had.
Speaker 1 (34:29):
The record. Everybody, well, one hundred and fifty.
Speaker 6 (34:31):
Million more than they thought it would be in January.
It doesn't really mean anything right now. It's just more
a shocking figure for the Act's fiscal policies.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
Does it mean that we're going to try and claw
it back by raising.
Speaker 3 (34:49):
Rates and not building a stadium?
Speaker 1 (34:52):
Not building a stadium?
Speaker 6 (34:53):
Yeah, no stadium, but there is the entertainment precinct on
Commonwealth Park. There's funding for that.
Speaker 1 (34:58):
Don't try and soften the blow.
Speaker 6 (34:59):
Darcy rates have been going up dramatically, the biggest in Forest,
which is up to eighteen people.
Speaker 1 (35:06):
Horrist appealing and eighteen percent.
Speaker 3 (35:10):
That's a big jump.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
They'll tell you that it's crazy. I think Griffith and
Reider in the in the same boat there.
Speaker 6 (35:17):
Exactly, we'll all get a two hundred and fifty dollars
health levee for any property owner per property. So that's
a new little thing that will come on the rates
bill as well.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
And so to clarify when Darcy says we'll get that,
we'll get a bill for it. What yeah, what?
Speaker 3 (35:35):
Yeah, you bet we got it, as in.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Like we got no, No, you're getting it. You're getting
your competent you So, but you'll be healthier, will ya.
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (35:49):
You won't make you car't afford healthy food anymore.
Speaker 1 (35:51):
That's a great point. That's why we need to invest
in the health. Because we can't afford healthy food. They're
gonna have to help fix us up. That's what we're paying.
We're paying an advance for us getting sick good thinking.
Speaker 6 (36:00):
Well exactly, So those that two hundred and fifty dollars
per property that everyone will be paying is going to
a record one point one to nine billion dollar investment
into our health sector. Also, local businesses who earn more
than one point seventy five million dollars per year will
now be required to pay payroll tax.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
What about parking. What about if I'm just trying to
park my.
Speaker 6 (36:25):
Car exactly well, Parking fees, everyday expenses, registration, driver's license
fees are all going up by around six to seven percent.
Speaker 3 (36:34):
So they did all these leaks as the lead up
to the budget of like positive things. Yeah, and those
positive things would have gone really well to counteract the
negative things. When now hearing.
Speaker 1 (36:45):
Yeah, yeah, here's and here's some advice.
Speaker 3 (36:47):
You just like wasted them all. And then they were like, oh,
here's the Downsideeah.
Speaker 1 (36:51):
I'm not going to tell Chris Steele how to run
you know, this whole operation, but give us finish on
a good note.
Speaker 3 (36:58):
You got to do a compliment, sand we you got
to do good news, bad news, good news.
Speaker 1 (37:02):
All right, he's the last little bit of good news. Electricity,
gas and water rebate penalty sorry, permanently going up by
fifty dollars, So we did. Now that's a rebate, so
we did.
Speaker 3 (37:15):
I'm getting so confused between levies and rebates.
Speaker 6 (37:17):
So the eight hundred dollars rebates will go to forty
thousand households now.
Speaker 1 (37:22):
So it's pretty good. That's a thing. Gabby's Noise Sunday,
Gabby's nise. That was the noise from Gabby's face. Play
School live in concert Once Upon a Time twenty twenty five,
Live from the Canberra High School. I remember taking my
then baby daughter ten years ago and the great Alex
(37:46):
Paps was was presenting it then and has been on
our TV screens for the last twenty years, part of
Australian TV Royalty. Alex Paps, You're happy being described as
Australian TV Royalty at this stage of your career.
Speaker 11 (38:00):
Well, I think you're being Look, I'm flattered, but I
think you're being overly generous Frode.
Speaker 13 (38:05):
But you know I'll take it. I'll take it for today,
aod way to start the morning.
Speaker 1 (38:09):
Yeah, I tell you this is going to back me up.
I've actually got a little bit of footagechief from an
old VHS recording of you in nineteen eighty seven with
other Australian TV Royalty. This is a TV show called
The Factory with Andrew Datto. See if you remember any
of this, Alex.
Speaker 3 (38:29):
Good morning, this is a factory.
Speaker 13 (38:31):
I'm Alex, and I'm are now Alex.
Speaker 1 (38:32):
You've been in sunny.
Speaker 13 (38:34):
Sydney, Yeah, holiday, haven't you not a hot?
Speaker 3 (38:37):
I have just started working on a new television.
Speaker 13 (38:38):
Series in Sydney. Is it where you got your head gout? Yeah?
Looks wonderful and new?
Speaker 1 (38:43):
Look do you remember?
Speaker 13 (38:45):
I mean yeah, yeah, Look, well it's two things to
raise there.
Speaker 11 (38:50):
As soon as I heard that little, the little sting
of the theme, I instantly had butterflies and a rush
adrenaline because that was all that always told me that
we were mos for going live to air and then
hearing my such an awkward adolescent that's all like it's
and I'm not talking about Andrew he was. I always
(39:11):
thought Andrew was rereally cool. I kind of aspired to
Andrew Daddow's level of cool.
Speaker 1 (39:15):
Andrew's hair, that head astromena that said, Alex, you've kept
or yours, but you had a tremendous amount as a
young bloke. What was it like? I mean live TV?
We've just seen so much live TV, even as recently
as last night with the backpage. I was sorry to
see that go as well. Live TV is so rare
now for you as a young bloke, you're right with
(39:37):
all those teenage insecurities. What was it like? I imagine
exciting and terrifying at once.
Speaker 13 (39:43):
Look, it was wonderful. I look. Certainly, in those very
early days of learning.
Speaker 11 (39:48):
The ropes, it was yeah, it was quite you know,
quite a bit of adrenaline going on there, massive learning curve,
but ultimately it was very very exciting.
Speaker 13 (39:59):
The Factory unique.
Speaker 11 (40:01):
In that any of the musical acts that we had
had to play live, and it became a bit of
a badge of honor.
Speaker 13 (40:08):
Anyone who came on.
Speaker 11 (40:08):
The Factory actually played live, as opposed to you know,
mining and lip syncing. So it was quite a it
was quite a production, and there was a great atmosphere
on set, you know, particularly when we had you know,
live bands come in and play.
Speaker 3 (40:24):
Like real entry level kind of job like this. Anymore,
fourteens who want to be in TV or radio or media,
they seem to have all kind of disappeared over the
last ten years. It's pretty sucky, hey, that we don't
have those kind of opportunities unless you're creating your own
YouTube channel.
Speaker 11 (40:41):
Well, I think, yeah, I think I think that's what's
happened now, is that the entry level is now breaking
through on you know.
Speaker 13 (40:48):
Social media or YouTube or whatever.
Speaker 11 (40:51):
And certainly, you know, there are many examples of people
who who do that, but yeah, Well, we think about.
Speaker 1 (40:58):
You know, all the things that you've been on the
Flying Doctors and of course you know, winning Low Years
on Home and Away and those sorts of things. I
wonder where Play School sits for you. As far as
the honor of hosting a show that brought all of us,
yourself included up back in the day.
Speaker 13 (41:17):
Well, it continues to be a huge honor.
Speaker 11 (41:19):
I think I can confidently speak for all of us
who are current presenters and former presenters.
Speaker 13 (41:25):
It's an enormous privilege and it's.
Speaker 11 (41:27):
Not lost on any of us of how beloved the
show is and of how valued it is as an
important tool in the landscape of you know, early childhood
development as far as you.
Speaker 13 (41:39):
Know TV goes.
Speaker 11 (41:41):
So it features very highly for me, and I still
kind of pinch myself that I'm a part of it.
I feel very, very fortunate.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
It's such a phenomenal show that's gone on for such
a long time. I was taught by Benita at Well
when I was doing a TV presenting course a fair
few years ago. Benita was one of our teachers, which
is amazing, and she was telling us some behind the
scenes things about Play School because back in the day.
It was one take and that was it.
Speaker 1 (42:07):
That's all you got.
Speaker 3 (42:08):
And to entertain themselves. They had some little in jokes,
especially John, he was.
Speaker 13 (42:13):
John Handlers School.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
Do you still have like little in jokes just to
make the set a little bit more fun?
Speaker 13 (42:20):
Look, the set is always fun, like it really is.
And there's on the more serious side.
Speaker 11 (42:26):
There's a lot for the presenters to juggle in their
head as far as you know props and you know
song lyrics and whilst maintaining a very personable, serene presence,
you know, you know, on camera looking down the barrel.
But it's yeah, it's it's great fun. It's always always
great fun.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
I love the greatest part of Australian history trivia or
one of in my opinion, your characters, your character Frank
from Home and Away, Your girlfriend Rue is Justine Clark.
Justin was on the show with us a few weeks
ago and Justine. You and Justine from time to time
will actually co host episodes of play School. When you
talk about having chemistry and I guess a really unique
(43:07):
relationship behind the scenes, can you believe I mean, I'm
not going to add all the years up, but can
you believe that you're still working together.
Speaker 11 (43:14):
Well, I can tell you how many years it is.
It's in sorry, twenty twenty seven.
Speaker 13 (43:21):
We will have known each other and been friends for
forty years.
Speaker 6 (43:24):
There you go.
Speaker 13 (43:26):
And so when we I did.
Speaker 11 (43:29):
My first episode of play School, we're Justine back in
We've filmed it in two thousand and five. That was
such a lovely moment in our friendship, a very sort
of full circle moment.
Speaker 13 (43:41):
And yeah, we feel.
Speaker 11 (43:44):
Very lucky to still be friends and to get these
opportunities to work together. But yeah, we're very much looking
forward to coming to Canberra. I haven't been to Canberra
for a while to work, so it'll be lovely to
come and visit.
Speaker 13 (43:57):
I even enjoy how chillly it is. I feel like
I'm in Europe.
Speaker 1 (44:00):
That's the spirit. You're a gentleman for giving us so
much of your time. I travel safe. I know you've
got Queensland later on today or coming this week, and
then you'll do a loop the loop and land back
down here. We can't wait to see you again. Congratulations
on what's one of the great Australian TV careers. And
we'll catch up when you land in the capitol.
Speaker 13 (44:20):
That's very kind of you and thanks, thanks for your time.
It's a pleasure to be on and.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
Gabby versus the world, great bod if you're joined us
for the first time, particularly if you've been waiting since
the last time. Choice did the research into which supermarket
basket is going to get us the best deal? And
Darcy after the controversy around the sun cream thing last week,
it's a bloody disaster. We can't get this one wrong.
(44:45):
The winner is a.
Speaker 6 (44:49):
Aldi, which isn't really a shock to anyone. I don't
think if you walk into an Aldi, it's just shocking
how much lower the prices are for almost everything.
Speaker 3 (44:58):
And they admit that they don't have everything that you
might need, but what they do have it's a deal. Yeah,
I guess, but it's also a lot of effort to
go to multiple places to get everything.
Speaker 1 (45:09):
Yes, and they I don't know the fly by us.
Speaker 3 (45:13):
No.
Speaker 1 (45:13):
No, But can you can you add up the savings
from each shopping in up your head? That's a question.
Speaker 3 (45:19):
But would you?
Speaker 1 (45:20):
No, reck can you? No? I wouldn't.
Speaker 3 (45:22):
The fact that not like counting up the savings and
putting them in a count for Christmas or.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
People do stuff like that. I'm not doing that, so
Aldi came in. And so this was the winter groceries,
and the staples were full cream, milk, sanitarium, wheat picks,
the Royal Gala apples, the carrots, the Cavendish bananas, strawberries, chicken, breastpilets,
bolk pack and then the winter staples the vegetables stocks,
(45:49):
our cream, drinking chocolates, need that, but I'm not pumpkin quick,
oat sashets, garlic brown onions, fifty five thirty five cheer.
Speaker 3 (45:59):
The strawberry sort of been about twenty dollars of that.
Speaker 1 (46:01):
That explains where the fifty five thirty five come came from.
Woolworths were just over three bucks fifty more at fifty
eight ninety two. Coles were another full buck on top
of Woolies.
Speaker 3 (46:16):
And you just changed to Carls.
Speaker 1 (46:19):
I changed back the other day, did you. Yeah, Coles
stopped carrying my cereal, my breakfast cereal. And when you
wake up three.
Speaker 3 (46:28):
In the morning, such a flip flop and fish.
Speaker 1 (46:30):
I'm a flip flop and fish, mate, and proud and IgA,
goodness gracious, we give it to IgA. So let's remember
IgA convenient. That's what they're there for. But the price
of convenience is on top of col's an extra ten
bucks sixty nine sixty four. But they're convenient.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
So I ever go into an IgA and I see
someone with a full trolley stacked up, my first thought is.
Speaker 10 (46:57):
You're rich.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
Yeah, it's weird. It's like or you I so disorganized
in life even do a full shop. Anyway, we love
the IgA. This is something that I think all of
usill be playing. Paying very close attention to the number
one way to make sure you never get asked to
help with the washing again. How do we get out
(47:21):
of this?
Speaker 3 (47:22):
Well, there was a person on the Gold Coast who
decided to put a cycle, a fifty five second, sorry,
fifty five minute cleaning cycle on their washing machine. There's
a front loader, and I don't know if you're like me,
but with a front loader, you normally leave the door
open after a wash cycle because you need that rim
to dry out. Otherwise it can get pretty gross and
(47:43):
baldy and grow it's just foul, like all the black
build up, so you leave it to dry out. And
that's what they had done, and then they went in
there they're like, actually, I could do a drum clean,
so they shut it up, put it on, and off
they went. Fifty five minutes later, they go and open
up the washing machine and they're hat had been having
a nap in the washing machine because they had left
(48:05):
the door open, and he went through the fifty five
minute cycle in the machine.
Speaker 1 (48:13):
What I was hoping that was, Oh my god.
Speaker 3 (48:15):
Yeah, I was gonna tell this story if he didn't survive.
So one of his nine lives is definitely gone. And
he did lose a couple of toes.
Speaker 1 (48:22):
He lost toes well because you know, the.
Speaker 3 (48:24):
Holes in the drum and being around. The poor little
guy did survive it. And yeah, it's definitely a warning
to anyone out there to check the washing machine before
starting to loader us.
Speaker 1 (48:38):
Yes and no, what do you mean you said no?
Speaker 3 (48:41):
Anything could be in there. Listen cat like literally, but
not just cats. If you had, like a possum that
had entered.
Speaker 1 (48:47):
The house or a rat problem solved, no.
Speaker 2 (48:51):
Versus the world.
Speaker 1 (48:52):
I was kidding about the washing machine. It's kidding about it.
Check inside there. That's you know, when you say something,
you out the best of me and the worst.
Speaker 3 (49:03):
Yeah, I'm the little devil on your shoes.
Speaker 1 (49:05):
You're the angel and the devil on my shoulder. There's
two of you and you're on each shoulder, and I'll
say something to get a reaction, and then I regret it,
but it's too late because the ads have started. Have
you just joined us? Everything's fine. I didn't say anything
insane before, and if you're with us before, as always,
I am sorry.
Speaker 3 (49:22):
Check your watch, your machine before, if you put anything
in it or start it.
Speaker 1 (49:25):
That's a good point. And my point stands cat ow
as you know your cat's climbing in things. True, But
Gabby's point is smart if other things climbing there, I
don't think about that.
Speaker 3 (49:35):
Every time I leave the door of the washing machine open,
I'm like, some rat family is going to make this home.
Speaker 1 (49:42):
Sounds like an insult. Some rat family, no family of race.
It's a good point. When you live in bung and door,
some rat family is always a concern. Which one is
you talking about doesn't matter. He's done it again, and
I'm sorry to bug and door.