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April 21, 2025 • 49 mins
  • Two worlds collide
  • No pot so crooked you can't find a lid
  • You don't want a MILF
  • Text from mum

@thebuckuppodcast

@katelangbroek

@nathvalvo 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Imagine, if you will, that you are in a place
of great beauty. Some teenage boys walk past you, they
yell out, they bitch tits. The world you see is
a place of paradox of beauty and cruelty. It will

(00:26):
cut you off with the knees, then gift.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
You a pair of easies.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
And that, my friends, is why you always always need
a buck up.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Bye bye ba ba ba bye bye bye bye bye.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
I beat it bad bad bad bad bye bad about
bat batter bye bad a boot boo.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
About by bye bye halla balloo.

Speaker 4 (00:57):
That was great. Oh I love Yeah, I'm boppy wawn everyone.
We're on eleven.

Speaker 2 (01:05):
Yeah, we're on eleven.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
And also my highliest esteemed the Hoe host heitherto I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Viewed with contempt, but that was the wrong attitude. Nate Valveo.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
We saw your show last week and was okay, No,
it was brilliant, actually brilliant.

Speaker 2 (01:33):
A thousand people in the.

Speaker 4 (01:36):
Huge my biggest show ever in Melbourne.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
So good, such a vibe, so fun you are. How
do you do your anyway? You're just great on stage.
I mean I was gonna you really twink it up.

Speaker 4 (01:50):
The Twelves, the two Twirls and the ham it up.

Speaker 2 (01:54):
You're very physical.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Well, because it came from back in the day when
I I was insecure about my joke writing. I used
to ham up the jazz line. It all up with
a little toil.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
It's so good because you realize nobody does that.

Speaker 4 (02:09):
Nobody does it anymore. But also play to the back
row folks. I'm want the person at the back to
know there's a punchline. So and I went with the.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
World's greatest producer. Here we go, Sasha French, thank you
great show, and I want a phrase. Then in our
eighteen years of working together in commercial Radish, she's never
once arted.

Speaker 4 (02:33):
Too many like not wow, just never heard it go
who was sitting with you? Enjoyed it, had a nice time.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Apparently looked a bit bamboozled by Anne Edmonds, great.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
Nick Cody and Edmunds and brow casts were special guests.
It was so funny because when I came and did
the project with you last the other last week on Tuesday, Wednesday,
whatever day, it was loose of course and fine, Lucy.
But over all the years of doing the project and
I go on as a guest spot or even just
do the fill in chair. What evs all those times,

(03:07):
and it's been years now. I turned to while even went,
you've never come to my live show, mister, So I
made him come and had a lovely time.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
Yeah, we had a great Sorry, I loved it. We
had so much fun.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Two things I want to talk about that live show. First,
for the first time in my career, it's never happened
to me before. And holy smokes, I hope it never
happens again because it was so big and loud and amazing.
When I walked out, this has never happened to me.
Comics have spoken about it. I went complaintly blank. Yes,

(03:41):
I didn't know my name. No, no, no, I didn't
know my name. Where we were, I didn't know what
to say. I was holding the mic, and it just
I have my stomach dropped to my feet.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
I had like someone about to do public speech.

Speaker 4 (03:56):
Like a nightmare. It was a genuine night I've never
experienced anything in my life. But when did it come
back to you? And so, I don't know if you
remember I did this, which I never do. I started
telling this story about when I was thirteen, I'd go
into the comedy first.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
Yeah, that was you didn't mean to start I was
just feeling.

Speaker 4 (04:13):
Time before to get my head to go. What's the
joke that I remembered that I started about parking? And
away we went? Well it was isn't that wild?

Speaker 2 (04:23):
So because that was such a anyway, it was great.
I had a really good time.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
Thank you for coming, guys. But this is the second
thing I wanted to talk about. So funny, what is it?
After my show on Saturday night, I.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
Mixed some worlds oh my, that I have not mixed
ever before since a wedding.

Speaker 4 (04:40):
Since a wedding, but the wedding there's it's just different
because everyone's fashing about and everyone kind of sticks to
their trick and there's a focus Saturday night and post
celebratory drinks at a bar. Here's the lineup, Here's who
we're talking about. Yeah, my mother, Lynn, my father, Giuseppe, husband, Cody,
the dabbler.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
For once was a dad Black and the dabblers, my mother.

Speaker 4 (05:01):
In law Gail down from Queensland, Cody's sister, my sister,
my cousin, then Nick Cody carry out a bit more friends.
It was crazy, funniest group of people I've ever seen.
Molding in one corner and my brain couldn't comprehend.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
My brain couldn't either.

Speaker 4 (05:23):
Actually, like, why is my mom and Sash in the
same room.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
Your mom I had a great conversation with your mom
reminded me of what my mom. Well, of course, no,
she's not a Cape fan. You know what she is?

Speaker 4 (05:39):
She said, Oh, no, what she is. The word was beautiful.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
She's a Lynn fan and my mom's an Ann fan.

Speaker 4 (05:48):
You're proving my I've never told you my friend mum theory.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
I know.

Speaker 4 (05:52):
I have a working theory that when you get along
with someone very well, very quickly, it's because your mom's
are the same.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Oh that's a really good thing, and you.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
Don't find that out to years later. It's happened at
least three or four times in my life where I've
met good friends mums.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
And that's funny. It all makes sense.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Remember Sash when we had that conversation a few years
ago about mother's being so negative that they always just
saying her mom and my mom to the point where
my dad would say to Mom, and please, do you
not if.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
You don't have something positive to say, don't say anything.

Speaker 4 (06:28):
My mom doesn't go negative, she goes dramatic, so she
won't be neg should be dramatic, like ah, lovely show
and then literally told me about a friend of hers
doing chemo. Yeah, right, as that kind.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
But Mom's always his Mum is like, look what they're
doing to this city. They're tearing down the beautiful buildings
and building ghettos. Just when you're driving along you take
into the shops.

Speaker 4 (06:50):
Love that just it's just extraordinary for an image, Sasha,
I look over in the corner. You need to explain yourself.
Got it on camera too, you'll post it on the Insta.
I look over and you're kissing Cody's my mother in
law's hand like she's the queen.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Oh yes, well, because she kissed my hand and I
kissed her hand. And then I think, but we did
it over the top of Lynn.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
Oh curious, but she didn't.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
Proffer her hand, but I would have kissed her ragou
making hand. Also, I love parents.

Speaker 4 (07:20):
Parents are farm you get in tell, you get insight
on the person you're close with.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
It's a piece in the puzzle, right. And also they're
not your parents, so they are just the most They
can be as interesting as anyone possibly can.

Speaker 4 (07:36):
Your parents charm your friends. My dad, especially Dad, was
how annoying? Is it when your parents are in fine
form for other people? Like, excuse me, where's this for us?

Speaker 2 (07:47):
My dad was always in fine for where's this for us?
My dad was always in fine form? But my mom
has got Mom's good at fooling the world, Like she's
just really good at it, you know. She told me
story once about my grandma Kate. Right, So my Jamaican.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
This is my Jamaican grandmother who lived in New York
and my grandma who I loved. I only met her
a few times in my life, but we spent chunks
of time with her, and she had emotional issues, and
so she had a breakdown.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
So Mom had a hard life with her.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
They were on welfare in New York in the fifties
or whatever, and it meant their milk got to live
it in brown bottles, so everyone knew, like it was
just that kind of scene, right, But and so Grandma
had a breakdown and Mom was like, I don't know
what to do with her. Mum was really young, and
so Mom had to call grandma. Kate stopped getting out

(08:40):
of bed, and Mom was like, she wouldn't she wouldn't bathe,
she wouldn't eat. I didn't know what to do with her.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
So she called the doctor and the doctor came over.

Speaker 3 (08:49):
Mom said to her mom, the doctor's coming over, and
Mom said, as soon as she heard that, she got up.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
Mom said she had a shower for the first time
in weeks. She started brushing her hair, she got dressed,
she got back in bed, and Mum was like, oh, no,
when the doctor comes, it's going to seem like she's
completely normal, right. So the doctor comes over and he goes,
how are you. She goes, I'm okay. He goes, are
you feeling She goes, yeah, I'm great. I don't know why.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
I don't know why my daughter's called you right, And
he goes, tell me, missus Weissman, why are you in
bed with your clothes on but you.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Also have your shoes on? And she looked at him
and she said, because my feet are broken. And they
took her away.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
They took her, Yeah, they took her going where I
thought it.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
That's what I mean. So sometimes when I'm with time mom.
They took her to a like a sanatorium a place.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
They took her to a sanitorium, and then Mum went
into the apartment where she was living there with her
girlfriends and cleaned it up. So sometimes I have to
member with my mother that she has come.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
From a very from very strange and uncharted waters. Okay,
And but she doesn't ever tell you stuff at the start,
Like when my daughter was growing take a leak which
was taken away. Why are you in bed with your
clothes on and your shoes on because my feet are
broken off your pop and they took her away. That's like,

(10:27):
all right, kids, gat around. Homa's got a story.

Speaker 4 (10:30):
What a weird speech of my wedding mum, But dank it.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
But anyway, so you don't know what they've endured.

Speaker 4 (10:36):
I get it.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
And you know what hurt people? Hurt people?

Speaker 4 (10:39):
Oh, my mother doesn't. My mother doesn't hurt me.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
She's just telling cancer ringing.

Speaker 4 (10:47):
Yeah, they love that.

Speaker 2 (10:48):
That's just what mothers do. But some of them got
another element of darkness to them.

Speaker 4 (10:52):
You know what I won't do if I ever have kids.
My parents often do this. Why do that generation deny illness?
They deny sickness, and they fight it and they refuse it,
like they don't want to go to the doctor. Doctors
don't know anything. Oh it's fine, don't worry about it.
Listen to that. You've probably got asked me. You know,
I'm good.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
People always say about men, all right, that's more a
sort of male.

Speaker 4 (11:16):
All that older in the seventies generation.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
Deny it for you, they don't deny it for themselves.
That's why though man care bills blown out in this country.

Speaker 4 (11:30):
Bring it at all.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
They're always there maybe for other people.

Speaker 3 (11:36):
My mum would always say to us when we were
sick as well, I'm afraid you're going to live.

Speaker 4 (11:41):
It's a good one. And you know what, honestly, I
feel it Lynn. She doesn't listen. Mother Lynn. I think
she's the og cooker in my life. By the way,
Mum was very anty drugs. Really, we had to be
so sick to get a paneto one of those like
sleep it out water, you know, a six brand and
rice if you feel sick, and we'd have to be like,

(12:03):
we have to beg for panadol. She was all those
ones and you always and also teachers told her particular
things about me and she was like, no, don't medicate that.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
This explains why your childhood. That will be the name
of your memoir. By the way, speaking for that explains
why because.

Speaker 3 (12:33):
I Marriedma married Anthony fall makes sense.

Speaker 4 (12:38):
What's that in prison psychologist that said all your all
your romantic relationships are a reflection of your parents relationship?

Speaker 2 (12:45):
One who must have been? Was it that one?

Speaker 4 (12:47):
Who else? It's either your that first one you said
said the real yucky one? You want to hook up
with your parents? Didn't he?

Speaker 2 (12:56):
I don't. I never really knew what it meant. I
don't think he said that.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
I think you said that. He didn't you say that
that you want to hook up.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
With your.

Speaker 3 (13:08):
I don't think that Sigmund Freud would enjoy the status
that he does. Curringut that you want to your parents.
I don't just don't think that's a thing, do you.
I mean, maybe I'm wrong, because the world does, the
world loves.

Speaker 4 (13:23):
Some dark or something in that lane. If this room
had Internet, would look it up. But this building is
our enemy.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
Don't you always look for someone? You know? The Dutch
of God is saying, do they for everything they really do?
There's no pot so crooked, there isn't a lead somewhere
to fit it. I love your panodol begging pot found
the panodol pushing lead. That's Cody, your husband, and both

(13:53):
of you dedicated about going to renal failure but happy
as clams together?

Speaker 4 (14:00):
How good did my husband look on Saturday with his
new fit body?

Speaker 2 (14:05):
A confession to me?

Speaker 4 (14:06):
Oh, gather around. He made a confession to me, and well,
he's not going to hear it. So what did he say?

Speaker 2 (14:13):
No, he might hear.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
What did he say?

Speaker 2 (14:16):
He's not really a dabbler?

Speaker 4 (14:21):
He is much news to me.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
I think he doesn't want you to know. Why have
I told you?

Speaker 3 (14:27):
Because I said something to him alluding to something from
one of our as we can surmise it to be
a secret conversation that we have here with other people,
but not him, not the dabbler.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
And he goes, I'm not really a dabbler? What what?

Speaker 3 (14:43):
And I think he said, I'm a bit more regular
than that. But he could have been talking about abolutions.
I don't know, but he certainly seemed to know what I.

Speaker 4 (14:51):
Was talking about.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Cody, if you're listening, If you're listening, what a reveal?

Speaker 4 (14:58):
A plot twist we would call this.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
But also made me feel really uncomfortable.

Speaker 4 (15:03):
You call him Fauci every week.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
I did call him big Harmer. I called him Big Harmer.
I said, how's your job going for Big hammer, so
feel free to.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
Cook me up at any points.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
I mean she's become so.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
In everyone listening. If you ever think if Kate's all
talk absolutely not to people's faces, she will call them
mister Harmer. I love it. Yeah I didn't call him.

Speaker 2 (15:25):
I don't think I called him that, but he loves
working for Big Hamma.

Speaker 4 (15:31):
I mean we've revealed so much Cody's listening. Everyone wants
to route their mum.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Yeah, it's just what a name mums they I don't know.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
I'll look into by the end of the app. We'll
get some answers there. Because now I sound like a weirdo,
but there we go. What a mold, what a mix
of people. It was great because people know this in life.
You act a certain way at work, or you act
a certain way with your girlfriend.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
I had a revelation once and I think I brought
it back to the office when we were working together, Sash.
This was my revelation because I would always go on
my work friends on my you know whatever, I'm going
to say, sport friends I.

Speaker 4 (16:09):
Call, I say normies. I call my friends that don't
work in this industry, the normies.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Anyway, I had a revelation the.

Speaker 4 (16:16):
Ones that let us talk about ourselves the whole time.

Speaker 2 (16:18):
That there, and they're interested in what we do because
they believe it's more interesting than what they.

Speaker 4 (16:23):
Just not at all.

Speaker 2 (16:24):
Well, often it's not. I mean, if they've met you,
they would quickly know that, would they not?

Speaker 4 (16:28):
Who I am living proof?

Speaker 3 (16:31):
But I had this revelation there are no work friends
or sport friends. Okay, there are only friends.

Speaker 4 (16:40):
Wow, look it up and once get on a pillow
like that. I don't want to your cushions.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
It's actually just off the dog.

Speaker 4 (16:48):
Hair and that.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
And in fact, did we not discover that the other night?
There are only friends?

Speaker 4 (16:53):
It went well because I got a little bit nervous
at the top, was like, what have I done here?
But it went well, mixing went fine.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
Not And also, this is what you've got to be
grateful for that your show went.

Speaker 4 (17:04):
Well, because.

Speaker 3 (17:07):
Imagine if you had us all assembled for a wake
like atmosphere we were just afterwards, we're all a slashes.

Speaker 4 (17:20):
You know what You know if someone doesn't love your
show because they this is what they say, this is
what they say.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
Oh what do they say.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
When they But I think it was if it's just fun,
if there's nothing else coloring in that. If it was like,
it's fun, they hated it, really, absolutely hated it.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
Come on, I don't think so. I think you're too
harsh on fun that regard.

Speaker 4 (17:41):
I work comedy show is fun, fun, and you're gonna
hang it with a knee because someone's how hard is
it to add knee on the end of it funny?
I'm asking for one more syllable.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
I actually think I sent someone a message, a comedian
friend on the weekend.

Speaker 4 (17:58):
They hated that message. Oh you ruin their day?

Speaker 2 (18:01):
Can I hate fus?

Speaker 4 (18:02):
Saw your show Saturday? It was fun. That's what you'd
say to a five year old to put on in
the lound room.

Speaker 5 (18:09):
All right.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
I think that if I went to see Angels in America,
a story about the entire cast dying from the aides,
and it goes for six and a half hours, and
then I sent a message to one of the emaciated
cast members, going that was fun, then that's inappropriate.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
But I think if you're talking.

Speaker 4 (18:28):
About a comedy, you can have fun.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Fun.

Speaker 4 (18:33):
You've got it, you really, So I'll change what I
said to this.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
Okay, how are we going to go backward?

Speaker 4 (18:39):
Yeah? Rewinding, I say to people that was fun. If
I hated it, that's what I meant.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
To say, or you're never going to be able to
do that again.

Speaker 4 (18:54):
Comics don't listen to this pod. Comics don't support comics.
So yeah, if I saw someone showing up, we're not.
When I give you a hot tip about like a
comment comedian, I like, do I ever say to you
they were fun?

Speaker 2 (19:05):
No, No, of course you don't, But I can say
they were fine. I just think you've got to I
think you've got a these a whole lot of words
that you can take the insult from the slap if
you so desire. Words that you would have heard often.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Words like lackluster, underwhelming, has even phrases like I felt
like the marrow is being leeched from my bones.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
You would have heard all of these.

Speaker 4 (19:36):
The final thing we'll say about the show Saturday that
we're moving on is at the end of the show,
I gave this pod hello and welcomed you to the crowd,
and that cheer well wee. That was so lovely. So
there was a bunch of bunch.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
There are a lot of buck There were a lot
of I was I meant A lot of people were accosted.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
No, not accosted.

Speaker 4 (19:59):
It's in the text said they were all fun and
it was fun.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
It was fun.

Speaker 4 (20:04):
I was great.

Speaker 2 (20:04):
Let's move on my girlfriend, Carla Seed. You needed to
explain that you do a podcast called the buck Up,
because he sounded like you were ashamed of it that
when you tossed it in at the end it was fun.

Speaker 4 (20:19):
I tossed it in quickly because.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
She was with your girlfriend.

Speaker 4 (20:21):
I was running. We were running over and I had
to get off the stage, and then I was to
plug the pod. So I said, oh, by the way,
Kate's here my podcast. And the girl she backheads.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Yeah, but the girl she was with didn't know anything
about it if it was called the buck.

Speaker 4 (20:38):
Up, didn't know what her problems. She's listening now.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
A terrible attitude. You know why, I'd like your attitude
attitude to be more fun.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
Super was rare.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
Hey, guess what my son's girlfriend, you know, beautiful Gypsy?

Speaker 4 (21:04):
Yes? Is her stage name just Gypsy? I don't think
it's gypsy, Sobrano.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
She was Gypsy Lee Rogers because her dad's Lee Rogers.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
Well, that's weird that her name is Gypsy Lee Rogers.
That would be if my name was Kate yarn Langbrook.

Speaker 4 (21:22):
Is Lee her middle name. Lee's my middle name. Oh
my god, something in common l double a. Yeah, you
know why why Lynn was pushing the Nathan Lee. Nathan
hyphen Lee is the first name.

Speaker 2 (21:35):
Nathan Lee.

Speaker 4 (21:36):
I thought she was pushing Nathan Lee. It didn't take off,
It got dropped a middle name.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
She wanted a gay son.

Speaker 4 (21:45):
Well, she definitely got what she wanted.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
How many, yeah, she wanted a fun son. I'm amazed
at how many women are very public about their desire
for the gay's arm.

Speaker 4 (21:55):
What do you think that is? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (21:57):
It's a product of our times because I think if
you lived in an era where you had to do
you know, in between your book burnings, you had to
erect a barn or you know, fix a fence, you
weren't hoping for someone who looks like they could sing
all the songs from Oklahoma but not contribute to.

Speaker 4 (22:16):
Can the plowing.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
But do you think you could?

Speaker 4 (22:18):
No, it's I also feel well, yeah, but like I
look at me and my brother and our relationship with
my mother is very different. However, it comes back to
what we spoke about weeks ago. It's the order because
he's first, Yes, mister firstborn, mister responsible.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
Actually here is a good one.

Speaker 4 (22:32):
I'm third. So it's got nothing to do with gay Australia.
It's the number.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
What percentage of let's just say sons, for instance, elder
sons are gay compared to further down the birth order,
I would think a lot of youngest would be gad.

Speaker 4 (22:50):
I think Sasha's going to google this. I think, I think,
I think, I remember, I think I remember reading that
the percentage of the second son being gay's really high,
much more.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
Than the eldest. Isn't that interesting? Based on nothing me
just mean my family. We've invented a statistic and now
it just fascinated.

Speaker 4 (23:14):
Things are very common too. I know a bunch of
gays that the brother is also gay. Yeah, they're everywhere.
Joel Creasy sisters Actually, I'm frond of them, two sisters
and him.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
Yeah, I think they all are.

Speaker 4 (23:26):
Yeah. I think that what's in the water in Perth,
it's going on over there.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
I found Sasha French hang on, please welcome. Highly esteemed.

Speaker 5 (23:35):
The fraternal birth order effects suggests that having older brothers
increases a boy's probability of being cake. We will the
effect is cumulative, meaning the more older brothers a boy has,
the higher the likelihood of same sex attraction or hang.

Speaker 4 (23:50):
But isn't that just like a stat thing if it's
one in ten, The more you have, the more you're
going to hit A gay can't.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
When you start talking maths, I can't even. I couldn't
even keep up with that. I just couldn't even. Anyway,
that's amazing.

Speaker 4 (24:04):
Hello to moms of gay sons. Hello, and sons of
gay mom and sons of gay mom. I mean, I'm sure,
Hello to sons of gay mom.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
Hey, I've got to tell you something.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
Okay, Oh, hang on, you've got a message. Oh hot
air balloon rant a couple of weeks ago.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
No, we have that bad because you can't have a
hot air balloon.

Speaker 4 (24:26):
Remember I was banging on about how it would seem
loud to be on a hot air balloon.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
And people can't talk because of the shack.

Speaker 4 (24:33):
Danielle messaged I was a bridesmaid for a wedding that
took place in a hot air balloon. The salep had
to pause every time the flames went on to keep
the air balloon. It was just she does say it
didn't land with a thud, it was fantastic. She has

(24:53):
to say that because she was bridesmaid.

Speaker 2 (24:56):
How many of them were up there?

Speaker 4 (24:57):
I don't imagine having a wedding in the bast ceremony
in a wicker basket on top of a building in
the air anyway. Good.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
I'm glad that she wasn't brought down.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
By our Danielle Brands, Danielle Dunielle, Danielle, Danielle. Can you
message us again and let us know if they're still together,
because I have a theory that the more they're.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Still together, she would have told you if they were.

Speaker 4 (25:20):
Reckon, because I was going to say them more who
the wedding is the weak of.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
The relationship's Actually I don't think that's a lot of
who ha. I actually don't think that's.

Speaker 4 (25:28):
There's a couple taking you to Antarctica for their wedding.

Speaker 2 (25:31):
I'll give it a year, okay, But I would say
a balloon to be fair to the ballooners is nice.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
Well no, no, I'm not getting that fat. But I
think that's less who hard than people are going we're.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
Getting married in Sorrento.

Speaker 4 (25:46):
True, do you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (25:48):
And I love those people, but I think there's a
lot of there's a lot more who are with a
destination wedding or even you know, someone arriving on.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
The back of a horse.

Speaker 4 (26:00):
Yeah, that I love. Actually, yeah, I mean our good friend.
My good friend arrived on Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
Yeah, that's riding and she's still together, going strong. All right.
I've got to tell you I went to a friend's
barbecue the other week.

Speaker 4 (26:18):
Cool.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
And you know, sometimes other people's misery.

Speaker 4 (26:25):
Is just a source of Oh you've been speaking to
my mum ly and just joy.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
Yes, but this was something and this is what you
have to derive a buck up in this world. Now,
people like to lean into other people's misery. They think
that makes them impaths, but it doesn't.

Speaker 4 (26:41):
It just means that.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
They're people who were just they have they're greedy, they're
greedy for trauma. Yeah, people love that. We've been we're
trained towards it.

Speaker 4 (26:52):
Look at the podcast charts.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
Yeah, that's right. What do people love? Dead woman in
Ditch correct solving the crime.

Speaker 4 (26:59):
Jimmy ran about that. Yeah, of course.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
Do you're a truth sayer? You truth.

Speaker 4 (27:06):
You little bit? Yeah, all right, truth?

Speaker 2 (27:12):
It was.

Speaker 4 (27:15):
You looking at me going you're a truth sayer? Was legit. Yeah, okay.

Speaker 3 (27:20):
Anyway, so we arrived some friends of ours were having
a barbecue, and they live part of the time in
America where they have to run a factory.

Speaker 2 (27:30):
It's a factory for their business. So don't be feeling
sorry for them. That made that sound like they're doing
it under jury.

Speaker 4 (27:35):
I want to know what factory glass.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
This is so old school, it's really incredible. They make glass.

Speaker 4 (27:41):
How the Tariff's going, Well, this is the thing.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
Now, what are they going to do?

Speaker 4 (27:46):
Wait they send it out?

Speaker 3 (27:48):
No, well, they get it shipped to the factory. But
now I think they're going to have to Look. I
haven't discussed this with them, but they're going to have
to work out making stuff anyway. Whatever, I just them
the whole thing of making glass.

Speaker 4 (28:00):
The world needs glass.

Speaker 2 (28:02):
World needs glass, especially action movies.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
When the two guys are carrying it across the road
and the motorbike goes through.

Speaker 2 (28:07):
It, we're correct, and or the two men with the
pane of glass carrying it precariously.

Speaker 4 (28:12):
And what are we going to live in?

Speaker 3 (28:13):
What are we going to make our houses out of?
If we want to throw stones, we must have glass.

Speaker 4 (28:19):
We are pro glass. We don't get political often.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
And also, this is what I'm going to say. You've
just reminded me of something.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
Every time I get a jar of mayonnaise out of
my fridge, I'm reminded of how companies pretend that they
care about the environment, but they don't.

Speaker 4 (28:38):
And us included, everyone pretends.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
Yeah, but we're not in the business of manufacturing mayonnaise
that until eight or nine years ago came in a
glass jar. Now it comes in a plastic jar. I've
never felt the same way about it since. And it's
my favorite mayonnaise. But why would you full full at
the same time, No, I'm not fully would be Sometimes

(29:04):
it depends I believe in I believe in a different
mayonnaise for different things.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (29:10):
Sometimes you want that sour.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
Yes, exactly, you want that European tang, the tang your
pattini fretty, you want that you're creamy, yeah, fully. Other
times you want a lot of sweetness for a stunning
American style potato salad with sour cream, which I make,
which is such permission to say one delicious. That's enough.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
That's what I had to say to her when I
saw it going for seconds at Anyway, that's just a
reminder of the importance of glass.

Speaker 4 (29:46):
Oh yeah, such as a pig. It all makes sense.
It's all any connected, it's a weave.

Speaker 3 (29:51):
So these friends have come back to Australia and they've
actually got an apartment here so they can spend more
time here, and they decided to have barbecue for a
bunch of friends.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
And so we were going there on a sadafna. I
didn't know who was going to be there. We were
all very last minute.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
We're just it's great, but we're going to see friends.
So when we get there, and I think we were
supposed to get there at two thirty or whatever, we
were surprisingly punctual. When we arrived that our mate answered
the door.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
And he just looked.

Speaker 4 (30:22):
He was shook.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
He was sweating, he was his top was all, his
T shirt was all like grimy.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
He was.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
He was just rattled. And he said, oh, I'm really
I've got to have a shower.

Speaker 3 (30:34):
We're like, mate, you've invinted people for over for a
barbecue at two o'clock.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
We're here at half two. You think you'd be ready
by now.

Speaker 3 (30:42):
He goes anyway, and then his girlfriend, Nids comes out,
his wife and she's similarly. They just the pair of
them absolutely devastated.

Speaker 4 (30:49):
And were you thinking about their better food? Oh?

Speaker 2 (30:53):
No, the food was already laid out. Sister and niece
were there, and there was a stunning array on the
table already. They know how to do a snack platter.

Speaker 4 (31:03):
Was that?

Speaker 2 (31:03):
But they were just not in the you know, they
were not hullabaloo. They were a bit fad.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
They were a bit she dogs.

Speaker 3 (31:11):
They were a bit yeah, they were she dog and
a bit they weren't he dog anyway. And that was like, oh,
this really terrible thing happened. Now in the scale of
terrible things, this is actually so horrendous, but horrenders.

Speaker 4 (31:25):
On a not on a coming over horrendous.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
Okay, So what had happened was the day before he
had called a mate of his, and he's a beachy
sort of guy, so he got a he'd got a
borrowed a barbecue from a maid of his that was
big enough to cook for, as it turned out, thirty
or forty people who were coming to this barbecue.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
So he borrowed a big barbecue.

Speaker 3 (31:45):
He'd put it in the back of his van, and
that morning, just before we arrived, they had carried it
upstairs to prepare.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
The barbecue for barbecuing.

Speaker 3 (31:57):
And when they opened the lid of the barbecue which
they had borrowed.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
It was full of me yeal of old It was
full of old meat, no raw meat.

Speaker 3 (32:18):
From the last they were He said it was the
most horrendous. So what had happened was the guy that
they were just so properly traumatized. They were so traumatized
throughout the barble they threw out the whole barbecue. They
had to throw out the meat. I said, I want
to go down and look at it in the beach.

(32:40):
Am I wanted to say, they want, I know how
horrendous sush even I, who you know, has an iron gut.
I was just like we were nearly all. So what
happened was he had to trace. So we called his
mate and he goes mate the barbecue that you lent me,
and he told him what had happened. That was full
of this, as it turned out, six week old meat,

(33:04):
six weeks talk meat.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
They had lent it.

Speaker 3 (33:07):
This mate had lent it to a surf club for
a fundraiser, and whoever was running the fundraiser, which that
tried to tell me was mothers and that there is
no way mothers are not cooking it.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
A surf raising that is men. That is totally men.

Speaker 3 (33:28):
Even Zeena Warrior Woman and the lesbian island she lives on,
they would have found some men to cook a barbecue
for a surf fundraiser. Anyway, apparently they had obviously just
put had some meat left over, had put it there,
of many to get it out for later.

Speaker 4 (33:46):
No one took it out.

Speaker 2 (33:48):
No one took it out.

Speaker 4 (33:49):
I'm also thinking, like, what did they eat at this
other event?

Speaker 2 (33:52):
Okay, well they were I think it was sausages. And
I didn't ask that would me. They didn't want to.
They didn't want to give the details, which I was
desperate for. Could desperate. No. We said to him, why
couldn't you smell it when it was in the car?

Speaker 3 (34:07):
And he goes, I don't know. Nids goes, I don't
know either. Well, there wasn't a whiff of it until
they got it upstairs. Then they thought and it was
a new apartment, so they're like, maybe it was something
in the apartment. And when they pulled back the roller.

Speaker 4 (34:20):
Door, possums, by the way, how is that possums in pools?
Uncooked meat and barbecue?

Speaker 3 (34:28):
So then they had to race out to Bunnings and
buy a new barbecue, and then they proceeded to make
the most spectacular barbecue.

Speaker 4 (34:34):
What time commitment?

Speaker 2 (34:36):
Yes, I'm sorry, sat amazing if.

Speaker 4 (34:38):
I'm opening a barbecue and there's dead animals uncooked in
the barbecue that are six weeks old. Hi, everyone, we're
getting macas uber.

Speaker 2 (34:45):
However, right, you're not going to look at Sash. He's
just dry. It was horrendous, wasn't it, Sash?

Speaker 3 (34:51):
And even it took me like three rounds of barber
stuff coming off the barbecue because before I could really
get stuck.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
But you got there, Oh, I got there.

Speaker 2 (35:01):
In fact, I pretty well snapped into it with the
garlic prawns.

Speaker 4 (35:04):
Okay, that's brave.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
There was garlic prawn.

Speaker 4 (35:07):
That's pretty brave. Jumping jumping into the seafood.

Speaker 2 (35:11):
Bran brand news sparkling clay.

Speaker 4 (35:16):
That's a leap from going from six week old dead
meat in a party to seafood a couple of hours later. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:22):
Well, you know, I'm a very stoic person. Faith was Sash.
And I always said if we ever ended up in
a concentration camp, toget so.

Speaker 4 (35:30):
Here we go.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
You've always got to be prepared.

Speaker 4 (35:32):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
So basically, look what happened during the pandemic. Thank you.

Speaker 3 (35:38):
Anyway, The fact is I always said I would be
the one working in the kitchen and smuggling food out
for us. Actually, well, yes, and then I'd find marsh
would be even though she'd be a little wisp, just
a desiccated little wisp.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
I'd say, take this pork fat from my mouth. I
had to smuggle, and she'd be like, I can't hear it. Yeah, yeah,
and I just.

Speaker 4 (36:00):
Be like, you have to. Actually, I'm going to do
the second ever uh of the wood.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
I think you're hot in you'rever heating.

Speaker 4 (36:14):
But it's a good jacket.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
I want to keep it a great jacket. But people
have had a glimpse of it. It's shieling and it's
really warm in heat. You're overheating.

Speaker 4 (36:20):
I am over what's it called? When you're talking.

Speaker 2 (36:26):
Which we often don't have proceeds about food? Yeah, go on.

Speaker 4 (36:31):
I have thought of an incredible business for lunch that
I think everyone would be on board. And you would
think this is readily available in Melbourne or any major city,
but it's not. And I crave it often, so it
does Cody and we discuss it. You cannot get regional

(36:52):
country town sandwiches anywhere.

Speaker 2 (36:57):
In any bakery.

Speaker 4 (37:00):
And I don't want you for caches. No, I don't
want your No, I don't want you. Don't want to
ban me. You don't want your Vietnamese. I want white bread,
wheread supermarket ingredients made by a woman called.

Speaker 2 (37:14):
At the back who calls you love, calls me love. Yeah,
I want beetroot, beetroot. I want slash cheese.

Speaker 4 (37:21):
Shredded carrot, shredded carrot. People think they're too good for
shredded carrot. I do that think that when it comes
to like sandwiches in Melbourne, sandwich the fancy who harness
of it all? Yes, yes, I want chicken or turkey
is the option, or if you want to cranberry. I
want the cheese in there to be the size of
like six centimeters thick. I want it tightly wrapped in

(37:43):
glad wrap. It was made that morning.

Speaker 2 (37:45):
Yeah, so you can just and just eat it that way.

Speaker 4 (37:48):
That's what I want.

Speaker 2 (37:49):
Okay, I'm going to say something to you.

Speaker 4 (37:51):
They don't exist, Kate, all right, you need to yes,
they do.

Speaker 2 (37:55):
You need to go to a shopping center and a
suburban shopping scene.

Speaker 4 (38:00):
You don't think the one to talk. They're the ones
who have got those don't taste the same.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
Okay, here's my other thing. Here's my other thing with you.

Speaker 4 (38:09):
Those those food caught ones. They're so big.

Speaker 2 (38:13):
What the sandwich is?

Speaker 4 (38:14):
Yeah, they're like and they're like twenty three bucks? Yeah, okay,
no on an eight buck rural sanger. Yeah, made by
a Lorena out the back.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
I'm gonna saying to you, he's a truth bomb.

Speaker 4 (38:25):
Okay, men.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
Love sandwiches. Do you think men love sandwiches? Men love sandwiches.
I don't have I'm not anti a sandwich, but I would.

Speaker 4 (38:40):
Never go oh what right?

Speaker 2 (38:43):
Yeah, I'm gonna say my husband nothing make well. One
thing makes him happier.

Speaker 4 (38:48):
Than when another sandwich, and I bring him.

Speaker 2 (38:50):
A sandwich, loves it, loves it. Come on, my boys
love sandwiches.

Speaker 4 (38:57):
You have a sanger?

Speaker 2 (38:58):
You know what?

Speaker 4 (38:58):
You're not hungry for hours? Any other lunch? I'm picking again?

Speaker 2 (39:02):
Anywhow don't you think that's mean love sandwiches?

Speaker 4 (39:05):
Well, if you're listening to me, food and beverage industry
make readily available regional sayers. Yeah, available for everyone.

Speaker 2 (39:13):
Call it. We call it you can take the sandwich
out of the country.

Speaker 4 (39:17):
Uh huh, that's too long.

Speaker 2 (39:21):
How would you abbreviate it? You can take the sandwich
out of that. How would you like to abbreviate it?
It's too long, business, it's too long.

Speaker 4 (39:29):
Sandwich out of roast beef. That's another op.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
Roast beef is stunning.

Speaker 4 (39:34):
And don't come up and we come up with your subway.
No oh no, subway is that made of No?

Speaker 2 (39:39):
Don't even have you.

Speaker 4 (39:41):
Know when there's like a fast food joint that has
just never been in your life and you don't know why.
I have just never been a subway done touch subway.

Speaker 3 (39:50):
So my husband, of course loves subway. It smells and
he used to go with his mate when he worked
in the city and they would go once a week.
They had two favorites.

Speaker 4 (40:00):
I guess the meatball foot long.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
Yeah, that was subway and what was there rather fast food?

Speaker 4 (40:06):
Jack No, no red router, no Mars, but related to
red ruder, related to red ruder.

Speaker 2 (40:13):
Come on Portuguese, oh nando. Yes, they loved it and
they would go and they would have subway and I
would always be like, who eats subway? Sash? Have you
ever eaten a subway. I love a subway. Do you
or she's a bloke, a tiny little man. What do
you get from I.

Speaker 4 (40:34):
Look like a subway eater.

Speaker 5 (40:35):
I have the same one every time, chicken with klipinos, olives, lettuce.

Speaker 2 (40:39):
What sort of bread do you get? Because they give
you a choice of the breed?

Speaker 4 (40:42):
I reckon you're a whole meal. I am a whole meal.
She's a whole meal.

Speaker 2 (40:47):
What a monster?

Speaker 4 (40:49):
Sang a chat? But sang a chat?

Speaker 2 (40:53):
Subway smells great.

Speaker 4 (40:55):
I think it smells disgusting.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
I love the smell of it. I love the fresh
baked smell of it.

Speaker 4 (41:00):
I think it's smells, but I still I'm not like
baking and cleaning product mixed together. It's a weird smell.

Speaker 2 (41:05):
That so Sasha's kitchen smells because, as you know, she's
a germophobic, because I welcome the germsy.

Speaker 4 (41:13):
Right, we're moving off sideway for a minute. It's called
the odio purse complex in psychology. There you go, I
can't read. That's the thing about the boy, some sexual
attitude towards his mother who came up with it. I
because you know, there's half right on this pod.

Speaker 2 (41:36):
So there's a line. I think it's from a Woody
Allen movie where he says boy loves his mother.

Speaker 4 (41:42):
Wow wee.

Speaker 2 (41:44):
And I like to say it to Lewis. I don't
think he knows what it means. I haven't tried it
on my other sons because it's still a bit young
for me to be doing the bitty invitation to it.

Speaker 4 (41:55):
Sounds shocking to hear you say that to you. I
happened to know quite a lot about this little thing.
I just happened to comment on Play. I didn't realize
how much play dumb over there yelled out to your son, it's.

Speaker 3 (42:11):
A funny thing because remember Hughes, he was always trying
to make out like I would be attracted not to
Lewis but to Lewis's friends, okay, And he would always
say that when and our boys are similar ages.

Speaker 4 (42:22):
Oh, and I'm just like, he's not, that's inappropriate?

Speaker 2 (42:27):
Are you talking about? You know? What?

Speaker 4 (42:28):
Was one of the core memories of why all boys
schools are so intense, which is where I went, or
boys school.

Speaker 2 (42:35):
Which I can't even imagine all the words.

Speaker 4 (42:38):
It's so intense. Would go after school, big school one
hundreds and hundreds of students and look out for students
that had mills and would scan the car, scan the
pickup zone, just look at it.

Speaker 2 (42:57):
Just really bucked up.

Speaker 4 (43:00):
She was like me, the big roundabout where all the
cars will lined up to mostly get ye ye oh my,
all the lads would pay attention to all the moms
in the cars and the ones getting out, and if
your mother was remotely in the lane of yeah, Milstone,
that was you were done for years.

Speaker 2 (43:19):
Yeah what do you mean done?

Speaker 4 (43:21):
As in that people yelling out things, bullying you, saying
that your mum's this.

Speaker 2 (43:27):
Mother?

Speaker 4 (43:27):
Yeah? You know what you don't if you go to
an all boys school, the last thing you want is
a hot mum.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
Really, I thought that would be some sort of cash shame.

Speaker 3 (43:35):
But my entire education about this is from American Pie,
a movie I haven't even seen, right, but I know
about the scene with the couple pie.

Speaker 4 (43:45):
Yeah, and then Stiffler's mum and she was she from
White Light.

Speaker 2 (43:51):
I love her, but that do him damn Elie for college.
I always forget her now.

Speaker 4 (43:58):
I met her once. It's very funny, did you yeh?
I've got a photo, very weird. AnyWho, what we're talking
about still Milks mills. I don't want to You don't
want to milk milk. You want to just blend in.

Speaker 2 (44:11):
It's too late for me.

Speaker 4 (44:15):
Co coedscar for your kids. Yeah, different or boys school.
You just want to blend in. You don't want to
be different, you don't want to pop it in anyway.
The hottest mum like I wasn't interested. I wasn't listening,
but you still clock. I can't remember.

Speaker 2 (44:28):
You see who's the hotness?

Speaker 4 (44:31):
Thank you for I know I look a bit young
sometimes the right lighting. But it was over twenty it
was twenty five years ago. I was in high school. Yeah,
so I can't remember.

Speaker 2 (44:40):
It's a hot mum like then spiral perm.

Speaker 4 (44:45):
You think cats from cap and kN.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
Knitted jumpers with pancake ars.

Speaker 4 (44:54):
I feel like it was always from a distance. So
if your mum was remotely blonde, yes, yes, in that.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
Full drive, I didn't wear active wear then.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
No active wear back then?

Speaker 2 (45:03):
Did we wear?

Speaker 4 (45:04):
I don't know you were That's more your answer than mine.
I remember what we wore, them wearing what were wearing?
Two thousand and one, two thousand and two.

Speaker 2 (45:13):
Were asking me, oh, I was wearing leggings.

Speaker 4 (45:17):
How funny that I just said that to you, like
I've just aged you so much more, what all the
seven is like when you were fifty?

Speaker 2 (45:24):
But it's true, I can't remember the same way that
I can't.

Speaker 4 (45:26):
Remember faces, how we face people, or how we used.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
To find stuff out. Really, I'm just.

Speaker 4 (45:33):
Like, how did we no libraries?

Speaker 2 (45:35):
Anything?

Speaker 4 (45:36):
No one did, No, they knew a lot more than
they didn't know.

Speaker 3 (45:39):
Now, come on, I'll see an old cock on one
of those quiz shows. They are so well educated, completed
to the compared to the dummies that I'm raising in
my house.

Speaker 4 (45:49):
I'm dumb ASTs. I fully admit that I have no
concentration span anymore. I can't read sentences, I can't spell.
Have you grabbed a pen recently and tried to dispel
a word? It is hard, It's really hard.

Speaker 3 (46:01):
And you know, there's a thing that they say that
this is the generation that should know more than any
other because they have access to every single bit of
information available, but no one uses it.

Speaker 4 (46:13):
This is good. We turned into an ABC podcast What
did we? What led us to that? Hot mums sandwiches
rural sanguiges me like a game hot air balloons. People
who have the same mums get along.

Speaker 2 (46:34):
The boy loves his mother.

Speaker 4 (46:38):
Speaking hope there's not a nude.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
Hang on. That is so interesting My mom theory you
know it's in Hamlet.

Speaker 4 (46:50):
Actually this theory about mums, which one Hamlet and sons
Hamlet and Son. I'm saying, you're saying theory that we're
taught company the name of the sandwich company.

Speaker 2 (47:01):
That oh love it, and also that when they have
an egg subsidiary Omelet.

Speaker 4 (47:06):
And some I'm not interested in an examinage by the wise,
but in Japan they're mad about it. You get them
in seven eleven.

Speaker 2 (47:12):
Yeah, and people go there. I bought peter one just
because you had to try.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
I went viral ones to an examwich Japanese examwich y
they still are and when.

Speaker 2 (47:20):
You pair it with the fried chicken that they have,
this is so good text from mum.

Speaker 4 (47:27):
It's a text from.

Speaker 3 (47:30):
Had to ask to have my bins emptied and wet
towels changed. I actually washed my hair this morning with
one eye closed. It's not allowed to get water in it.
I only brought my brush and no comb. Then I
saw my breakfast tray was still there, so I took
out the fork from the bag and used that while

(47:51):
my hair was wet.

Speaker 2 (47:53):
It is called bush camping skills hospital. I would hundred percent,
one hundred percent.

Speaker 4 (48:04):
He's flying in hospital, brushing heir with a fork one
eye class.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
You know who did that?

Speaker 4 (48:15):
Ael and the little Mermaid? You didn't know what a
hawk was.

Speaker 2 (48:19):
I know that. I love We're so close to that.

Speaker 3 (48:23):
But obviously I like that slightly passive aggressive mother tone
in hospital, her life being saved, her eye being saved.
Had to ask to have my bins emptied and wet
towels changed the sheraton.

Speaker 4 (48:39):
Still delation.

Speaker 3 (48:42):
To see the manager, but resourceful combing her hair with
a fork.

Speaker 4 (48:48):
Bar what a bar?

Speaker 2 (48:52):
Life is full of sunshine? It sure is full of darkness.
And you know what we do on the buck up?

Speaker 4 (48:59):
What do we do?

Speaker 2 (49:00):
We walk you through all of that and we pop
you out at the end. And how are you feeling
at the end?

Speaker 4 (49:08):
I'd say this episode was fun.

Speaker 2 (49:10):
Better, better than you were at the start.

Speaker 4 (49:15):
So your next week, Kate Lanebrook, love you love.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
Your Sasha French secret Sandwigeta. Just when I think I
know everything about.

Speaker 4 (49:24):
The six inch and she loves it, I think she
fall long.

Speaker 2 (49:27):
She gets a seven inch six inch six inch, She's
only little.

Speaker 4 (49:31):
She has to shove it.

Speaker 3 (49:38):
The Buckup podcast is hosted by me, Kate Langbrook and
him Nath Valvo.

Speaker 2 (49:42):
It's produced by.

Speaker 3 (49:44):
The brilliant Sasha French Audio and sound by the magnificent.

Speaker 2 (49:50):
Yack Lawrence you might call him Jack. And Dom Evans,
Oh we're lucky.
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