Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
I Heart Podcasts. You can hear more Gold one I
four point three podcasts, playlist and listen live on the
free iHeart app Got anything good?
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Hey, this is the Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Good morning, Mario, Good morning, Good morning, Alex morning, Good morning,
Patsy morning, guys. When I was last chance here Friday,
I said I had a weekend appointment at IKEA. I
made a deal with the devil. I deferred it, thinking
that is next week's problem. Can we go Monday? That
day is now now. I just realized. I was like,
you know, when you look ahead your week, like, got
(00:48):
a couple of nice Oh god, oh no, this is
this thing when you defer. It's not gratitude, is it.
You're deferring. Hell, yes, today's now that I wish i'd
done at the weekend, then it would be done.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
You made the right decision.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
You think it'd be quieter today at midday.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
It'll definitely be quieter, and you may as well ruin
your Monday and not ruin that beautiful Saturday.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
And what I'm worried about it is the kind of
other people that go on Mondays are what I call
day drifters. Do you know what I mean, because they
haven't got the energy and the hustle to be quick
in it at the weekends, right, they're too worried that
people are, you know, too lively. You've got a lot
of the drifters, yes, yeah, yeah, where they're like they
sort of take age. You've got to go around them.
And that it's a day drift. Yes, those massive flatbed tropies.
(01:32):
Oh god, I'm dreading it.
Speaker 5 (01:34):
Good luck?
Speaker 1 (01:35):
Yes, thank you? Perhapsy rate and review your weekend? How
was it?
Speaker 5 (01:38):
You know what?
Speaker 6 (01:38):
Some would think it's mundane, but I call it a
five out of five for the simple fact that I
felt like I was really adulting. Do you know what
I did yesterday? I got the dice and stick vacuum
ount and I looked at it and I said to Chris,
this is full of crud. It was disgusting. And I
said to him, I know I have seen YouTube videos
where people very confidently pull them apart.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
Yeah I did. That hasn't worked right since? No, I
did that. Did you watch the filter?
Speaker 5 (02:05):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (02:06):
I did everything.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
That thing has not been right since. And I followed
those videos. So I'm afraid you are not adulting just yet.
See how you get on now I've tried it out
in the sun. Like someone said, it was a lovely
day yesterday. Yes it has. It's like those intimittent wipers.
It's such a bit there it goes. It didn't like me.
(02:27):
It doesn't like us going in there same light that
nothing wants us to be opening up these days. They
just want to buy a new one. Chuck it in
the anfield, chuck it in the ocean, kiddan dolphin, buy
new one. That's the way the world these days. Everything's
got built in obsolecence.
Speaker 6 (02:42):
I did look on Saturday for a new one and
I thought, wow, these are just I forgot how They're
great right, but they are a bit pricey, And I thought, no,
you know what, I'm going to look after the one
I've got. I'll give it a good damn clean. So
Chris looked at the bits on the bench and I said, yeah,
this will be your job to put stuff together again.
Don't ask me how.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Much does that. My wife is the queen of taking
stuff apart. And then I'll come in things like, oh god,
the dismans has been here against she is. I think
it's more a man's job to put how how show
me the rules that says this is for me to do.
You're just it's easy to take it apart. That's what
a kid can do. You didn't marry a scientist or
(03:24):
an engineer. I don't know how to put this together.
Those tiny, tiny tiny micro skews, tiny tiny tiny screwdriver
that fits them. They're so tiny, are they?
Speaker 7 (03:33):
If you lose one of those screws, forget Oh.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
I forget it. Yeah, they just and then the screwdriver.
It's not that when you get in the Christmas cracker set.
That's a tiny tiny screwdriver. Perhaps he is it working.
Speaker 6 (03:46):
No, it's still in bits, it's it's not quite dry.
But I'm so excited because it looks like new, so
I expect it will work even better.
Speaker 1 (03:55):
When you take something apart and you sort of clean
it up, you feel you do feel really grown up.
Speaker 6 (04:00):
Yeah, well I thought, you know, I have neglected it.
It's about five or six years old. It's the first
proper clean it's had.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
And even that when we go now, oh it's about
five or six years old, that in our time now
feels like you're saying it's five or six decades a
new one five or six years. Oh, there's covering new models.
Now you go on antiques road show. I think this
is from twenty sixteen. This ancient old stick we've got.
Speaker 6 (04:28):
Here, So give it a few days. I reckon it'll finish.
It's dry out today. It's got to be right by
Thursday because a cleaner comes and she'll need it.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Do you do the pre clean No?
Speaker 6 (04:36):
I don't, but you've got to leave everything out.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
We do a tidy.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
First, tight, no getting flush toilets, just our door.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Remember for the cleen.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
The cleaner called the show because she couldn't get hold
of Patsy. That's how terrified she was. I guess I
just called the radio show and tell leave messages. Basically,
this shows like a concierge desk for Patrina Johnson.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
Christian O'Connell show Gone Podcast Fifo Troy.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Here listening in w A bloody hell? What is it?
Coutblast four Monday morning the Fifo Troy. If you have Christian,
if you want to see peak human optimization, hang around
the ikea loading by watch people trying to fit the
oversized flat pack into their Hyundai's. Well. To be fair,
that is going to be me and missus O'Connor today
round about lunchtime. We are going we've got to buy
(05:31):
a bed, a desk, and a TV unit and a
bedside table.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
There's no way has to.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
I'm a hitchhiking on one of those from spring Vale
to Hampton today. If you see see me along the
dingle bypassing my thumb out and a large flat pack bed,
give a man a lift. Actually has to, I kept
said away as one go in the car, it's going
to be like ikea jnger. She was like, we're not
building it there. I said, no, that flat pat the
(06:02):
bed is like in about three or four living pieces.
I know what's going to happen. I will be made
to go on the passon's seat and then but you
know that we've got a wate of seat forward and
it's moved. It's moved like you shut that seat forward
and you have to like eat wins and it's like
leaving kissing the dashboard or I'm just gonna be sat
on the roof holding one of those items. But yet
(06:23):
all you normally see is middle aged people bickering at
that loading bay, all trying to work out they've got
they've got too excited, too much stuff that won't fit
in there. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Yeah, your eyes are bigger than your car.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Yes, that's it, and that's what I know. We apparently
we're going for the bed, the desk, the TV unit
in the bedside. But I know that once we get
in that windy, windy, windy labyrinth. Oh, we need some
organized two dollars for a thousand, crazy enough to get those.
Take something to work, give some away.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
You do feel obligated when you're you've made such a
big trit such an effort to go to Ike.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
While we're here. While we're here, Chris, it would just
taken extra five minutes, all these five minutes, it will.
I know you're right. That was your weekend. Tell me
you've had lunch at Ike though? Yeah, so nice? It
is my wife, lewis me in with that so unfed beforehand?
(07:23):
Otherwise you don't want me trapsing around like angry in Okaya.
I mean, like Michael doug This in that movie Falling
Down Wading review your weekend, mate, how was it? I'm
going to say five out of five? Well, like so
busy beautiful weather this weekend as well, it was unbelievable. Yes,
it was stunning. It was really good.
Speaker 7 (07:40):
So Saturday I went to the footy, went to watch
the Crows beat our North Melbourne.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Of but you played really well. The King is really
really good.
Speaker 7 (07:47):
Kengars were on fire. I thought at one point they're
going to pull this off. Here young Cooper Trendbar three goals,
Paul Curtis three goals.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
They were really good. The umature against you. The same
with the D's Pies game as well. They really want
those Pies to win. I know, I know they wanted
Adelaide to win. But there's such big, massive men those Crows.
They're like the Philthorpes and Taylor Walk.
Speaker 7 (08:06):
You're right, how ring its aren't men with lots of
facial hair and instead of just.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
I was like, whoa, look at the sight of these guys.
Speaker 7 (08:15):
But that was fun. Saturday night went to the I
went to a comedy night.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
Did you see me?
Speaker 7 (08:21):
Went so Luke, Heggy, he's a great standards so so
good at the Basement Comedy Club. I highly recommend Good
Comedy Club that as well. It is good and it
was just great to see live stuff. You know, a
guy standing there just making everyone laugh a lot. So
that was working a stand up comedy.
Speaker 1 (08:36):
That's it's a new art. Form a guy standing wow. Wow,
are you a journalist? Where do they train you guys?
A guys standing there? Thank you, time traveler. I've come
from the past to see some of your start up comedy.
You humans juggal at guys standing there becking, everyone laugh.
Speaker 7 (08:55):
It was very funny, but I don't see if became lukeggy.
And then yesterday we went to portsy it was hello, you.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Take the man out of Sydney for a couple of weeks.
His kids are on oysters here and then he's says,
my great, oh, my god. A lot of money in
that car park, isn't there? What?
Speaker 7 (09:12):
Yes, there's like proper compounds there is there those homes.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Poros album definitely and you can so it's beyond money
that that millionaire's row they call it. You know, the
limb fox has got a place there. There's some huge
shoe places. All they've got is those like eighty foot
high edges. You can't see anything. We're not allowed to
pair in and see their mega cars.
Speaker 7 (09:38):
You're not going to deactively stumble into those places day
because they're surrounded by massive, massive wall.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
How many men did you see right in Thinny sold
boating shoes and gant rugby shirts. I saw a lot
of boat shoes and none of those are sailors. It's
like the official were there is a gant rugby top
just throwing over the shoulders loosely knotted around.
Speaker 7 (09:58):
The front, and five bikes drinking rose on the grass.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
Welcome to Cheers to us, Cheers to us at our
super Cheers to all the pooros back in the city.
It's from the city by the way. It's like an
hour and a half.
Speaker 7 (10:17):
Yes, it is kind of infacted that in but you
know what we did. We're very smart when my wife
was very smart. We have three small children, six year
old twins and Max is four. Anyone with small children
do not let them sleep after three pm?
Speaker 1 (10:29):
But how did you keep them awake on an hour
and a half drive They start to not off. You
know what we did.
Speaker 7 (10:33):
We packed pajamas, so we left Portsy at like six
thirty siven.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
So Portsy that isn't that, yeah, putting them in their
little pajamas it's Portsy pajamas and they slept. It was great.
Speaker 7 (10:45):
But the twins work up, of course, but Max, he
transferred to better.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
That was good. We did that with military. It sounds
like a securityinger, Maxim and security prisoners. They talk about
transferring the prisoners.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
The Christian O'Connell Show podcast.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
You can text me now O four seventy five three
one oh four three gradial weekend out of five? Do
you have a good weekend? Mediocre? Had a fantastic weekend.
The weather was great all weekend. I don't know what
it's like this week, Patsy's that can can continue in
the next couple of days.
Speaker 6 (11:16):
Yeah, pretty much. Let me have a look to be precise,
cloudy in twenty A little bit foggy around the city today,
but tomorrow though later in the day showers, windy eighteen.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
That's not so not.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
Entirely what you said earlier, Not entirely. I get the
feeling you just lie to us. No, I entirely saw
the news is the news. Let's not even going fact chat.
Where do we go with that? You so? Half an
hour on The Christian O'Connell Show Friday night. My wife
and I went out to one of the best meals
I've had since you moved to Melbourne. Oh wow, that's
a restaurant called Many Little in Redhill and it's Asian food.
(11:55):
But the CHEFFI is Shrilankan. So it's all these kind
of shrank and curry dishes. It was just incredible. And
I was I was telling a waitress at the food
he was amazing. And there she goes, my wife is
in the bathroom and she goes to me. Yeah, curt
Stone hat here a couple of weeks ago, and I
was even. I was like, bloody hell. And you know,
(12:15):
when you get some new information, I couldn't wait for
my wife to get back to the bathroom to hear
with the Kurds Stone gossip. I said, Hey, Curtis Stone
drove all the way out here. I didn't even know
where he lived. His bubs drove all the way out here,
Red Hill and ate here and so he loved it.
My wife just goes, Curtis Stones are the d's player,
the most famous chef from the selling. His bloody bready
(12:38):
makes it home, I think in his kitchen for the
love of bread. And he loves those cucumbers, doesn't. Oh
my god. He prot me delivering cucumbanies one day and
driving a coal's delivery truck although the ingredients of this
delicious food. And then when then yesterday was such a
lovely day. I took the dog for two hour walk
and there were lots of like, I know, it's a
tiny dog, I've got it's a ridiculous dog. Even he
(13:01):
was like, bloody, how much long are we going? He
kept looking at me like, is everything all right up there?
What's going on in there? On the way on the
last half an hour, I had to carry him. Ah,
several people wanted a photo of me carrying this ridiculous
My dog is not even I wouldn't even call it
a dog. He's something called a toy poodle. It looks
(13:23):
actually like a toy right. People go, oh my god, Oh,
can I get a photo of him? I'm like, yeah,
I guess so. So I had to carry him for
the last bit of anyway, I saw this scene while
we're on the Wark crime. I saw it straight away.
I've been this mom and dad, two kids under five.
The kids are having a melt down. The walk has
gone on too long. The dad is now carrying the
(13:45):
little bicycle with the stabilized The son has just given up.
The mama's said it's the beautiful little daughter who must
have been like four, had a princess outfit and it
was getting money. She looked like she'd been crying. This boy.
I walked past them and I looked at the dad
and he just looked through me. I've been that. Yeah,
you just had that. You know what It's like, You're
like a ghost. You're there, but you're not there. They
(14:06):
probably an absence. About five am is broken already. It's
like the midday. And I saw this little lad that
he was trying to coach to walk on. He just
stopped on the track and I saw that he had
a cape. So I said hello to them, and I went, hey, Superman,
and he just said to me, was like, I'm not Superman.
A right. I carried on and then I heard him
go his dad, why that man call me superman? Right
(14:31):
then I saw the time, right, it was like half twelve.
This little superhero was just angry. You might have the cape,
but even superheroes get angry.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
The Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
Just hearing the adverts on this radio station for Sue
the Boss's big new idea, blow ten k in a day,
and perhaps you're saying, you know, what would you do
in a day with that money? I have to be honest,
I think a probably good office works and Stocker on
printer cartridges because that's start investing in gold, isn't it.
I had to order some yesterday, right? Why is the
(15:04):
price of printer inc The most expensive commodity in the world,
So it's more ex less than fuel.
Speaker 4 (15:09):
It's ludicrous and it hasn't come down over time? You
know how normally things get something, it's getting more expensive.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Why is it so expensive to make printer ink?
Speaker 3 (15:19):
How do you even make ink?
Speaker 1 (15:22):
Once more? This show does not shy away from the
big questions in life. How do they put it in
those machines? You're quite right? And why is it still
so expensive? I want to be able to like compare
the market, you know, like soos servo stations have the
price up the front. That's how it should be. How
much is a letter of ink jet replacements? Tough? It's
(15:43):
so expensive?
Speaker 5 (15:44):
All right?
Speaker 1 (15:44):
We doing this about Monday morning on the show. It's
the song title game. Basically, I give Rio, Alex and
Patsy a word. The first one to use that word
and sing it back to me in a song wins
you ready, that's now, I've gotta be honest, pats You
know normally you know you're good at the Games. This
one is tough because you're going out against two amateur dramatics.
Speaker 6 (16:06):
Do you always discount stuff, but the singing stuff is
very much These two theater camp starlets, frustrated.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
Lesbians, both of these Sydney Ciders, Patsy, they are stars
of the stage. At a young age. You were the narrator,
but these guys were on stage singing and dancing. We'll
see triple threats radio song. Does you ever heard you
jap into a good radio show? He can't, he has
limits lost.
Speaker 3 (16:36):
I'm last without you a Delta gudroom.
Speaker 6 (16:41):
I couldn't quite tell about flat now at an instant
reach to DG.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
I play a lot more. Yeah, she is very good.
I thought she was great with Robbie at the Grand Final.
They were really good. All right, lost just rain rain,
blame it on the rain, very very good, very good
life life.
Speaker 7 (17:08):
Who is that.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
Desra? Should we play it next? No, it's a good guilt.
Oh you judge me, mister. I drive around in my
Mummy's Volvo cranking up Delta good room, and you judge
me for a bit of desiree true?
Speaker 3 (17:29):
Oh, come on, span bal true true.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
There you go, Yeah, said he was doing the refrain.
I think it's you know, that's it magic.
Speaker 6 (17:44):
It's a magic.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
What show? What you doing? Really? The queen? What you're
up to? You just make up stuff for a melody
and I'm too thick. That's the christmaster here. I'm onto you.
If it's not jel to good room, you've got nothing
(18:08):
ever cheating six yes, quite right home, don't take me home?
And now you've been caught out. Rio had nothing.
Speaker 8 (18:24):
He just like this.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
And nothing else because it's not a.
Speaker 5 (18:29):
Song strong too strong, wow, wow, good, very good. Free
because I'm free. It's unstoppable on a road.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
You give him a couple of roses downing Port Sea
on a Sunday. This guy is a cheap dake, fireworks hats.
He actually found a soul whoa and the last.
Speaker 9 (19:03):
One together together together in all right, we're going to
take a break and then when we come back from
that break, we're going to crank it, crank it really loud,
those speakers rattling to the awesome sounds of DESIREE love.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
The Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Thank you very much to Martin. Have you talking about
why is printering so expensive? How to order some more
yesterday for the dreaded home printer. And one things I'm
most anxious about when we move in a couple of
months summer, wife and I is moving that printer and
then having to get on that home network again. Where
it is? What is the Willan network? Whatever? You get
(19:49):
on Wi Fi in your home so easily? Why do
those sodding printers It's a nightmare to get them hooked
up to some When friends come around with a laptop
or anything, they want to do some work, it's easy.
You give them the Wi Fi code on there. What
is it about that treaded home printer? Beasts of things?
They are Christian. I've done some research and here's the
list of the most expensive liquids. Printer ink comes in
(20:13):
at number five. You great producing, Martin. I'm looking at
the producers, don't you look round?
Speaker 10 (20:19):
Real?
Speaker 1 (20:19):
That includes you. Scorpion venom is thirty nine million per gallon?
What did you do with is that? To injected into
into victims? Its victims? You can't order it online? You
talk at the We're not playing the song title game anymore.
(20:41):
You die from a scorpion bod though, Oh yeah, can't you?
I just heard that? Why Is it so expensive though?
Who is buying it using medicine?
Speaker 3 (20:50):
Or can you imagine trying to get milking a scorpion?
Speaker 1 (20:55):
It feels like a line from Desre Life A life
milk thirty million king cobra venom. This is mainly just
snake stuff. Is a one hundred and fifty three thousand
dollars per gallon? Can go roll horseshoe crab blood? Oh,
what's that? No idea? What sixty thousand dollars per ganon?
(21:19):
These must be derivatives? Are something very expensive? Surely insulin
is thirteen thousand dollars per gannon chanel number five twenty
six thousand dollars per gallon.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
Number five?
Speaker 1 (21:33):
Please yes, said someone in port Sea yesterday. Printer ink
twelve thousand dollars a gallon.
Speaker 3 (21:38):
That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (21:40):
Human blood fifteen hundred dollars.
Speaker 3 (21:42):
It's more expensive than human blood.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Yes, yeah, ten times more expensive, Martin, Thank you very
much for this.
Speaker 2 (21:48):
Christian O'Connell show go on podcast.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
This week. On the show, we're looking for your stories
to do with births and birthdays. Welcome to birth and
birthday weeks, Birth.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
And Birthday Week, Dear Christian, callin.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
Tell yes, Aria you gotta still about warm of whether
or what happened at a birth or on a birthday.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
Yes, I am a miracle baby.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
Pause, come on, miracle baby.
Speaker 4 (22:22):
So my parents didn't think they could have natural born kids.
So my elder sister, Kimber, is adopted from South Korea.
My second sister, Alex, was one of the very first
IVF babies in Australia.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
This was incredible.
Speaker 4 (22:36):
And my mum was forty two, dad was forty six.
They were living in Fiji with the family. Dad was
a doctor on one of the islands there and Mum
was like, I swear I'm pregnant, and Dad goes, no,
not possible, Like not possible, No way, you're kidding. So
they went to the doctor on the mainland who had
like the scans and blah blah blah, and he did
(22:57):
the scans and he goes, you're pregnant, but unfortunately the
baby doesn't have a heartbeat. So Mum was devastated. They
went back to the island. Mom can't drink kalua anymore
because for that week she was just so depressed. You
just drank heaps and heaps of the low cocktails. Still
can't stand the smell of it, and then like a
week or two later, she's like, no, I swear I'm
(23:20):
still pregnant. So they went back to a different doctor.
This was in Australia, and the doctor's like, oh, yeah,
he's fine, Like there's.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
A little are what a remarkable story?
Speaker 3 (23:31):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (23:32):
And then well mum, because she had so many troubles
before and she's forty two and dad was forty six,
they were a bit worried about how it all turn out.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
Of course here, I am wow, that is an insane story.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
They're mental.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
So you wanted the first daughter just didn't pick up
a baby's heartbeat?
Speaker 3 (23:49):
Yeah, I do want to cast dispersions over doctors.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
The last thing we want to do is create an
international incident before eight o'clock today with the innocent island
of Fiji and the lovely medical services there.
Speaker 4 (24:02):
But maybe they didn't have quite the same technology, equipment
or something like that that made we have here in Australia.
Speaker 3 (24:09):
So he made a bit of a bit of an error.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
Your mom and dad must has just been amazed.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
Yes, well dad, I mean dad's a doctor and he
was just like you you think you think.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
He would, Yes, don't go point a finger at the
Offpha Jen. Doctors point that finger at doctor Lee Dailey.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
He was like, there's no there's absolutely no way that
you could be pregnant.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Oh my god, you are the miracle baby.
Speaker 2 (24:34):
The Christian O'Connell Show podcast.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
This week on the Show, Then Your Stories, Births and
Birthdays thirteen fifty five, twenty two. Good morning to Kirstin Christian.
I broke my mother's talbone when she was giving birth
to me. She's told me that I've been the pain
in the butt ever since her mother's beautiful words. Cameron,
(24:57):
good morning, welcome to the show.
Speaker 11 (25:00):
Good morning everyone.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
How are you? Yeah, we're good, Cameron. So, what's your
stories about a birth or a birthday? Mate?
Speaker 11 (25:07):
Oh, it's about my birthday. Eight. Every year I have
a birthday, the date adds up to the age I
am turning.
Speaker 3 (25:17):
Can you give us an example?
Speaker 12 (25:18):
Yeah, okay, If you go, I was born on tenth
of October and the year's twenty twenty five. If you
go ten plus ten plus twenty five, he's forty five.
I'm forty five.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
Wow, what are the odds? This is actually incredible?
Speaker 3 (25:34):
And what it works?
Speaker 1 (25:34):
Though?
Speaker 3 (25:35):
Does that mean it to work? For saying twenty fifty.
Speaker 11 (25:39):
Yes, I will be seventy and hopefully still listening to
goal records.
Speaker 1 (25:45):
Seventy. This is a strawberry that said, great, you figure
that out.
Speaker 13 (25:50):
Yeah, I just sat down and think, oh, dropped the
down numbers and I'm thinking, oh, mum was born seventeenth
March nineteen fifty one at the Times table. But as
you know, I am tenth of October. Actually I was
born forty five years ago.
Speaker 11 (26:05):
Something. That's see we add up to one hundred. So
basically for the numbers up the one hundred, it's just
it's not really an interesting talking point?
Speaker 1 (26:13):
Is talking point? This other phrase there? Just sat down
judging numbers. I can stand if you're doing the family
finances or stuff like that, but just randomly and it's
like a beautiful mind is this is a great one. Cavin,
thank you very much for story. Mate, have a good week.
Speaker 11 (26:30):
Thank you you to all the best.
Speaker 1 (26:31):
Buss Now, thank you, Tim Coome oning.
Speaker 10 (26:35):
Good a Christian now a mate, I'm good.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
I hope you had a lovely weekend. So Tim, a
birth or birthday story.
Speaker 10 (26:41):
It's a birth matem. My wife went into labor with
our second daughter on Melbourne Cup Day.
Speaker 11 (26:50):
So we were in the wards.
Speaker 10 (26:52):
He was getting the labor pains, and the doctor came
in to check on her and I said, mate, any
chance you could grab us a radio so I can
listen to the races. And the missus wasn't too impressed
to give me an evil look, and he goes, yeah,
I'll grab you one. And he came back and said,
have you got a kip for the cap And I said,
McKay deaver, and he pulled twenty dollars out of his
(27:12):
pocket and gave any chance you can put a bed on?
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Well, no, there isn't. Actually you can't do that because
you've got to be there for your partner.
Speaker 10 (27:21):
Well, there was a pubbet a couple hundred major stand,
so I said the ward just keep breathing, dah.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
And I'll be back. Just keep breathing.
Speaker 10 (27:30):
I ran down, put the bed on and came back
and the horse actually won.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
Wow.
Speaker 10 (27:35):
So he came in shook me hand like a proud parent,
and she's just giving me Dagger's mate. I was looking
around to make sure there wasn't a scalpe, because she
would have given me.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
You'd have been a patient there as well.
Speaker 10 (27:49):
And then the nurse came in and goes. Have you
decided on names? I said, I'm thinking of m.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
Sure only in Australia. Tim, thank you very much the story.
Thanks guys, there were good one and you okay, keep
the coming thirteen fifty five twenty two if you want
to call you context as well well. Birth's or Birthday
Stories four seven, five three one O four three News
and Sport in the way and I'm just going to
jop down some figures during.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
That the Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
Looking on stories this week Births or Birthdays Christian. Back
in the eighties, my wife fell pregnant with our second child.
My wife came home shortly afterwards from the first scan.
She said the doctor had given him an envelope with
the baby sex. Do we want to open it and
find out? We undernar and we decided why not. We
(28:41):
already had one daughter. We just want to know who
is coming. And it said that we were having a
little boy. We now named him Jarrett for four months
before he was born, and then we had a baby daughter, Ashley.
Now participate. Then you were saying this also, this this
happened to you? Yeah, so my parents, what happened in
(29:02):
the change mind, or do babies go? Actually, do you
know what? I don't know? Fuck it back in yeah,
excuse me.
Speaker 2 (29:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (29:11):
So for a long time my parents thought I was
going to be a boy. I was going to be
called Cameron. And then I was born and my dad said,
oh wow, it's a boy and the doctor said no,
look again. It was my billical course, and I even
thought that I had a being but I didn't.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
And yeah as well, that is awesome, Christian. I had
a What are the odds? Happened to me? Over the weekend?
I flew to Queenstown and at Melbourne or Airport I
had McDonald's. My order number was one six y one.
Then I go to my gate. The number is sixteen
A A is the first letter of the alphabet aka one.
(29:49):
And in Queenstown I get hungry late at night, I
go to McDonald's. I order again one six What are
the odds? Huge? All right, so we've got some more
stories about births and birthdays now, Kelly, welcome to the show. Hi,
how are you hello, Kelly? Oh you had a lovely weekend,
so tell us just sorry mate.
Speaker 14 (30:09):
Okay, So my friendly Anne's birthdays on the thirty first
of March. She had her daughter naturally on the thirty
first of March, and her daughter had her daughter naturally
on the thirty first of March. Wow, are on the
thirty first of March.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
It is a significant date for the family, isn't it?
Speaker 11 (30:29):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (30:30):
Wow, that is incredible. Hell.
Speaker 14 (30:34):
Sorry, it was all natural, no no induction or anything.
They all just come naturally.
Speaker 1 (30:39):
Wow, Katy, Thank you very much the story mate. Have
a good day. Thank you. Let's get to Marie. Hello, Amerie, Hello,
how are you? I'm good. Do you have a good weekend?
Speaker 15 (30:49):
I did, thank you. Was celebrating my daughter's birthday party.
So it's been a pretty busy one, but it.
Speaker 14 (30:53):
Was a good one. So that good.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
And how old are or she?
Speaker 15 (30:57):
Oh, she's turning eleven. But my story is not about
that actually.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Okay, yeah, yeah, that's enough about her. She's had a
moment over the weekend.
Speaker 13 (31:07):
This is.
Speaker 15 (31:11):
My story is to do with her. So it's when
I was pregnant and I was giving birth to her,
so she was actually premature. So i'd gone to the
hospital at thirty two weeks and I was in the
hospital room, which had their own private bathroom, and I'd
felt a bit funny. So I'd gone to the toilet
and then I suddenly felt that her head was right there,
(31:34):
so called for help the nurses. The midwife station was
right outside the room, thankfully, and then literally just my
body just pushed. She shut out of me like a rocket.
And then as she did that, then midwife came skiddying
in across the bathroom floor, unknees and caught my baby.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Yah. Flo, This is incredible that Greece, Greece lightning.
Speaker 15 (31:58):
I know they were calling it the mark of the century.
Speaker 1 (32:07):
Marie, that is an incredible story.
Speaker 15 (32:11):
Yeah, it was pretty pretty wild, and needless to say,
I've only got the one child, so kind of set the.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
I can't do that yet. Amy, great story, very well told.
Thank you very much. Have a good week and thank you.
Thank you. All Right, we're moving on, but would be
come back to these tomorrow. So if you've got a
story and you want to share it today about birth
or birthdays, email me Christian at Christian O'Connell dot com
dot au.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
Christian O'Connell Show go on podcast.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
All right, So, over the last couple of years, there's
been an amazing charity one of you told us about
called Backpacks of It Kids, he says, a tiny charity
that was originally set up an amazing woman called Sally
in her own kitchen. It's a beautiful, simple idea. It's basically,
there are our children, and I'm sad to say there
are actually thousands of these children in this city in
(33:02):
this situation that sundy have to be rescued from a
home environment that is no longer safe for them. I
want to mean rescue that normally take in the middle
of the night, which is the clothes they're wearing. This charity,
Backpacks of It Kids, gives these children in need a
backpack because they don't have anything that literally has got
their clothes. And in that backpack it breaks your heart.
It's stuff like a blanky, it's coloring pains, there's a notepad,
(33:26):
just to say to these tiny, scared kids that you
do matter and someone is thinking of you. Now. This charity,
I think we've raised together over the last couple of
years just under half a million dollars, which is amazing.
But the charity approached me last week sadly because the
cost of living crisis, they're laying off their staff and
(33:47):
not many people these days are donating to charities, and
I totally understand why. You know, when you do your
weekly shop. Now, I get it, it's increasingly expensive. If
you've got families. Of course you'd love to give and
support loads of charities, but people just can't at the moment.
But the facts are there are around ten to twelve
thousand children that will be in that situation over the
(34:07):
next couple of weeks and couple of months, and the
charity are on the verge of collapsing if they don't
receive donations, which is why Sally Kanes was last week
and said, Christian, is there anything we can do on
the show to please help my charity? And she's not
really talking about the charity, she's talking about the thousands
of children that are going to be rescued from home
to get them a backpack. Now, when we started to
(34:28):
help this charity a company years ago, the backpacks. Each
backpack costs seventy five dollars. It's now one hundred dollars
just to put one together. I'm not asking you to
all give one hundred dollars. I'd love that, but I
know a lot of you can't. Whatever you can give,
whether that's five dollars, ten dollars twenty five. Please know
that that money goes it all goes to creating these backpacks.
(34:51):
In fact, Sally Toddy last week, for every one dollar
you donate, they turn it into four dollars worth of
investment getting the materials to put inside these backpacks. So
the backpacks are one hundred dollars each. But if you're
giving twenty dollars ten dollars, whether you're going to forego
your coffee this week, please don't apologize that you can't
give more. Whatever you can to support these children in
(35:14):
need is amazing, and thank you very much, not just
on the charity but on behalf of those children that
don't actually have a voice. But thank you. You can
imagine the impact a simple backpack with all those things
in there, even just a blanky in there, you know,
basic things like that. It means a really big deal
in someone's very scared world right now. So if you
go to the Christian O'Connell's show dot com dot au,
(35:36):
you can go and find out there how you donate money.
If there's one favor I could ask you to do
so that we can say thank you today and this
week while we're urging you to donate whatever you can,
is you can leave a message, please put your name
on there where you are and if it's a business,
happy to plug them just so we can read out
your names on air to say thank you. So, whether
you donating five dollars, ten dollars, twenty, whether you want
(35:59):
to cover as a family one of these backpacks for
one hundred dollars, thank you very very much. Head to
the Christian o'connells show dot com dot au. Thank you
very much.
Speaker 2 (36:09):
The Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
So iring ask you to please support whatever you can.
Whatever you can donate amazing tiny charity backpacks for vic kids.
Tiny charity, but big hearts. They're helping the thousands of
children who have to be rescued from their homes from
a dangerous home situation and they give them a tiny
backpack and it's got essentials in there. These kids don't
(36:33):
have anything. It costs one hundred dollars too are put
together on these backpacks and the charity sadly are on
the verge of collapse and they urgently need donation. So
whatever you can give really does go a long way.
One dollars they turn into four. So if you're giving ten,
that's forty. If you can give twenty five, that's one hundred,
which is amazing. The place you go to to find
(36:54):
out more about the charity more importantly donate is head
to the Christian O'Connell's show dot com dot au. I
know you're already doing that. Thank you very much. Just
Sarah who's just donated, you can leave a message there.
I'm really hoping that you do leave us a message there.
I know where you are so that we can say
and your name so we can thank you as well.
So Sarah's has donated, Thank you very much that every
(37:16):
single dollar will go a long way to doing something
special for a young child in need right here in Melbourne.
The Christian o'connells Show dot com dot au.
Speaker 2 (37:25):
The Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (37:28):
Thank you very much to Steve from Steve's Car Alarms
who have donated one thousand dollars. Thank you very much
to Robert who has donated, Ash, Kelly and Nett. There
are so many of you donating right now. We're up
to at the moment as I'm talking to you, four
and a half thousand dollars just been donated by you
guys in the last ten minutes, thank you, thank you,
thank you. If you just tuned in, and I know
(37:51):
some of you are messaging me saying, what's the link?
Where can we donate? We're talking about this amazing charity.
It's a very small charity, but they do something so special.
They're called Backpacks for vic Kids. They help children who
are taken from a dangerous home situation into care or
foster care. They give them a backpack. It breaks my
hearts to just tell you the truth of the situation
(38:11):
is these kids. These kids often are taken where they
haven't got time to get to an gather any belongings.
Sometimes they don't have any they're literally just in the
clothes they're wearing, so they give them a backpack. This
charity does backpacks of it kids. Over the last couple
of years, You've raised a lot of money, but they
really need urgent funds right now. Due to the cost
of living crisis, we're not donating so much and I'm
(38:32):
not judging, I totally understand, but it does mean this
charity is in the verge of collapsing. It won't be
able to meet the need, and there are thousands of
children in this situation. If you want to know what
the front line is really like while we're asking for money. Christian,
my name is Elouise. I'm a former Chart Protection emergency
officer after Cares worker. I've given those backpacks to so
(38:53):
many children in trust me, the worst moments of their life.
I've seen children so excited over a blanket, even it
just a toruthbrush or a toy. It breaks your heart.
So please go to the Christian i'connell show dot com
dot au. That's where we're asking to go. We're obviously
not taking your credit card details, nor should we. It's
a third party you're dealing with all of that. It's
(39:14):
the Christian O'Connell Show dot com dot au. You'll be
showing a link there and then you go on there
and you put your details in and please just let
us know your name. You can leave a message, just
tell us where you are. If it's a business, happy
to give you business a plug, but more importantly to
so we can say thank you The Christian O'Connell show
dot com dot au. Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Christian O'Connell show, go on podcast.
Speaker 1 (39:38):
Thank you so much. Sure your beautiful messages and your
donations and your generosity some of the people to thank
We're up to over five thousand dollars at the moment. Kelly,
thank you very much, Sue, thank you, Anonymous. Thank you
for donating two hundred dollars. That's two backpacks. Leanne, thank
you very much. Andrea bridget Yeah, a lot of people
(40:01):
saying their hearts say is broke hearing about the charity
and that important message from Eloise who's been on the
front line on and knows what it's when these kids
are given these backpacks. Annette, Maureen Beck, Craig, Elizabeth Cody, Kaylor, Mike, Debbie.
Thank you to everyone who's donating for this charity. They
are on the verguy collapse if we don't donate to
(40:23):
them to keep them going. Keep them going means helping
the thousands of children in Melbourne who are in vulnerable situations,
who are taken into care from a dangerous home situation.
This charity, Backpacks for It Kids, gives them a backpack
with bear essentials and cost them aboute hundred dollars a
book each backpack together. If you can give a hundred,
that's one backpack that's actually a kid. But even if
(40:44):
you're given ten twenty. It all gets turned around. Each
one dollar you donate is converted to four by this charity.
They are so creative, they work so hard. Thank you
very much. So where you go to find out more
donate is the Christian o'connells Show dot com dot au.
Leave your name, leave a message so we can keep
saying thank you. All right, let's get into this week's
mishard lyrics. It's just another mishurd man Christian O'Connell's miss
(41:10):
Herd lyrics. Nowry Monday on the Christian O'Connell Show, we
play back your miss herd lyrics as we're playing them back,
whether we agree what you think you're mishearing if we
can't hear it. But for the really great ones in
favor Christina last week had Arman van Buren. We all
(41:30):
know he is. He was this close, this close to
doing the Grand Final, but they went with Snoop Dogg
in the end. It was only going to be avb
as we called him on the show, Arman vam Buren,
and to probably had this bang a Computers takeover the
World beat Clap. Patty John had this great song by
(41:51):
Prince most Beautiful girl in the world and Phiel proud
that ben Laden was found.
Speaker 2 (41:57):
Can do that?
Speaker 1 (42:01):
All right, that's last week. Let's see what you got
this week for us. Daniel Christian, I've got an obscure
mishurd It's from the Little Norman second verse of the
Australian National Anthem. Daniel, big question is what do you
do to listen to the national anthem? Okay, so the
original line we're toil with hearts and hands, or is
(42:27):
it we're toil with pots and pants. Yes, that's gonna
be our first national anthem ever to make it into
the mishurds. I'm looking forward to now that we're going
to get more from countries all over the world and
the national anthems and the mishurgs. Dina's got this by
(42:50):
the police. So this song is actually called Canary in
a coal mine, But Dinna is hearing Canary in a coma.
I mean, that's why I sent them down there. Get
back up to daylight, those flying flyout miners over there
in wa the canary he's out, Get out there, guys,
(43:12):
it is is Canary's in a coma. Poor little fellow.
Adam's got animal neon trees say goodbye to my heart tonight,
or is someone feeling peckish take a bite of my
heart tonight. Oh yeah, it sounds crisper than the apparent
(43:36):
original one. Well spotted at him, Dennis Kutris, Christian, I've
only just found out that Peter Gabriel was singing in
French for games without Frontiers. That's right, he does singers
frontier French for games without frontiers. Or is it she's
(43:57):
so funky? Yeah, it's there, not in French very much
in English, she's so funky.
Speaker 3 (44:07):
Yeah, your breakfas very good.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
Yeah, Dennis Kutris is not actually Laura, but of course
in this country, just say it with the accident, you guys,
go god? Is he the mayor of Paris?
Speaker 3 (44:23):
Easily impressed?
Speaker 1 (44:24):
Steve's doing a breakfast show now. Will has got this
big old noisy song Metallica one tied to Machines that
make Me be you body guess will we go with
this one? Or tattoo machines that make me pee? I'm
(44:47):
not sure about the tattoo machines, but the ping yes.
Speaker 5 (44:53):
Yes, all right?
Speaker 1 (44:54):
As always whenever you miss here a lyric, email me
Christian at Christian O'Connell dot com dot a U team,
what are the scores on the doors right now? How
much of our big hearted, very generous listeners donated so
far for this amazing charity back for VIC Kids.
Speaker 3 (45:10):
We're at seven three hundred and forty three dollars.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
Incredible, that is amazing just in the last twenty minutes.
Thank you so much. Where we're reading out some thank yous.
Next head to the Christian o'connellshow dot com dot au
to find out more and donate.
Speaker 2 (45:23):
The Christian O'Connell Show podcast.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
Just broken through ten thousand dollars in the last half
an hour. Four hundred and fifty eight dollars have been
raised in the last thirty minutes thanks to your big
hearted generations for vulnerable children in Melbourne, raising much needed funds.
They really are much needs otherwise this charity is going
to go under. They call Backpacks for VIC Kids. We've
(45:50):
raised over the last couple of years in the show
thanks to your generosity, just under half a million dollars
and they put together these backpacks and they give them
to children who really are in need. They've been rescued
often in the middle of night from a dangerous situation
at home. They have nothing, and they give them a
backpack and it's got stuff like a blank in pens papers.
Twenty minutes ago, I read out a heartbreaking message from Eloise,
(46:14):
who is a former child protection officer, who has seen
what those kids are like they're taken in the middle
of the night into safety in foster care. She's seen
the reaction, the joy when these little kids just get
the basic things, she said, even they get excited when
they've just seen a toothbrush. I know it sounds we
shouldn't be in this situation, but sadly we are, and
so you raising over ten thousand dollars at the moment,
(46:36):
the last half an hour. That's one hundred children who
right now, just in the last half an hour, you've
managed to put a backpack in there, and there has
There's nothing better you can do today, all this week
than think about that.
Speaker 2 (46:46):
Now.
Speaker 1 (46:47):
The cost of putting together one of these backpacks, sadly
now has gone up from a couple of years ago
when it was seventy five dollars to one hundred dollars.
Please don't donate because you feel bad. You can't give
one hundred dollars ten five fifteen. Please, every single one dollar,
this charity turn into four dollars. They really do get
the maximum bang for buck for this chart. The place
(47:09):
you go to is the Christian O'Connell show dot com
dot au. That's where you donate your head to the
Christian O'Connell show dot com dot au. If you are donating,
leave a message when you donate, probably create card details
and you can leave a message. Please do that because
we're reading these out, me and the team, every single
one of us right now is it's like a charity pokey.
(47:31):
We're constantly hitting refresh to see what the money is
going up to and reading your lovely messages. Thank you
very much to Cody who just put on there just
heard this on the radio, all these messages, Thank you
very much. If it's a business as well, I'm happy
to plug your business. You donate our plug. Thank you
very much. To Steve who's a regular to the show,
Steve's Car Alarms who donated generously one thousand dollars ash,
(47:55):
Thank you very much. Robert Kelly, Kimberly, Maureen Beck, Elizabeth
happy to donate to as charity even though I'm living
on the Gold Coast. Listen to you guys, because it's
a beautiful cause. Mike, thank you, Sue, thank you very
much as well. Rio, You've got some thank yous as well.
Speaker 4 (48:12):
I've got Bridget who's written sitting here having breakfast with
my two year old and my heart breaks for the
children who did not get to enjoy the same safety
instability in their home. I hope the Backpack for VIC
Kids continue doing this great work well into the future.
Thanks Christian Sally and team for making this visible. Also
huge thanks to Sasha, Rachel, Heather, Kimberly, Anonymous, Harrison Ray
(48:33):
all giving so much money.
Speaker 1 (48:34):
Thank you so much. Please keep the donations going. We're
now at just under eleven thousand dollars. Everyone hundred dollars
raised is another backpack for a child in need. Head
to the Christian o'connorshow dot com dot a.
Speaker 2 (48:47):
The Christian O'Connell Show podcast.
Speaker 1 (48:51):
What a time to be alive. But you, Sirio just
said to me, hey for this, We've got some circus music.
We've just I've just had a message from a professor
of radio ah on LinkedIn who's listened to the show
and advises her students to take that advice back. I'm
about to play circus music. I have no shame. You can't.
(49:15):
You can't have shame to do this job. You can't.
You wouldn't survive. You can look at yourself from the face,
so I can't. I'll count belly can sometimes. But anyway,
they're bill skirt professional radio. Get your note pad out.
This is how you do it, kids, textbook stuff. Now
for the best of them showing the time wasted a day, chickens,
go and see an amazing musical beatle Juice to Musical
(49:37):
must close in two weeks time. Do not miss this
five star premiere production. Today's World Clown Day. So every
day working with past you listening to triple m something
they do circus movies, is the time wastter. Now, this
is devastating news. The World Clown Association is bemoaning. Whoa
(50:02):
bemoaning clo? Do the clowns bemoan? Do they the lack
of gen z clowns coming through the ranks? Oh God,
those entitled kids go and having a pie in the
face and our hard days work. That's you're right clowning around.
You get your own company car. It's tiny, but you
(50:23):
can fit those of mates in membership rates. I don't
know what the healthcare is like or even what your
super's like. I don't know. Membership rates have to come
by fifty young clouds. I want to go on to
Luke today. Are they recruiting for clowns on their clowns needed?
Speaker 7 (50:41):
Roll up?
Speaker 2 (50:42):
Roll up?
Speaker 1 (50:42):
Circus is coming?
Speaker 3 (50:46):
They yes, you're just read by it.
Speaker 5 (50:49):
I just read the next line.
Speaker 1 (50:52):
The concern that the art form might die out. It
isn't it. It has been going for a very long
time unless it can get more tea interested in clowning. Listen,
you can't even get your teens just and cleaning their bedroom.
Putting the head in the line's mouth. Wrong with this generation.
I didn't get why I am today without sticking my
(51:12):
head in the line's mouth. Let's try a campaign. Know
what Alex is going tomorrow. We're gonna we're going to
recruit the next generation of clowns clown school, all right,
So to do our bit. Circus movies? You know what
they when they're not in the big top. Do you
know what they love to watch? Those little caravans contortionist
(51:34):
there still like this Cage, Trapezi Rider, Gold, Life of
Pine in the Faces. Peter Rossen was in a great
clown moviet's see. That's right, the Thomas clown told you
no real? What else the clowns watching in that little caravan?
Speaker 3 (51:54):
Dude, there's ten clowns in my car.
Speaker 1 (51:57):
Oh, come on, that's good.
Speaker 2 (51:59):
I like that.
Speaker 1 (52:00):
God glass any involving cramming clowns in the car, even
how bad it is, automatic gold today.
Speaker 3 (52:07):
Hula hoop dreams. Remember who not one?
Speaker 1 (52:13):
You have a little bit of shame, professor of radio.
Speaker 3 (52:16):
Right now listening to the show Acrobatman.
Speaker 1 (52:19):
That's good, that's good.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
That's more like its silver and big juggle in Little China.
Speaker 1 (52:24):
Ax. I'll give you a go. Oh my god, what
about the joke? Nothing about that? But he loved the
movie all right. Clowning Around Part two coming up next.
Text your clown movies in four seven five three one
O four three The.
Speaker 2 (52:41):
Christian O'Connell show podcast.
Speaker 1 (52:45):
For the last hour we've been asking you to please
give whatever you can to the Port an amazing charity,
very small charity to in really important, much needed work
for the vulnerable children in Melbourne. They are called Backpacks
for vic Kids. Children who are rescued from a dangerous
home situation are given a Backpack. They put the back
pats together sounded the charity due to lack of donations
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this year cost of living crisis. We all understand why
are struggling to actually survive. They could go under this
important charity. They urgently need donations. You've read donated almost
about fifteen thousand just in the last hour, which is incredible.
You go to the Christian O'Connell show dot com dot au, Alex,
we've got some thank you, Sue say here.
Speaker 7 (53:25):
Amazing so five hundred dollars from Clyde and Marie. They say,
great job and huge thanks to all the folks at
Backpack for Kids and Goal one A four point three.
Lisa donated five hundred dollars as well. I hope you
can keep getting as much as it's such an amazing service.
Two hundred dollars from David Sonya, Mick and Kurston two
hundred dollars each from them. So well do under you guys.
Thank you so much. Angelo, one hundred dollars. With hope
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in your heart, every challenge becomes a stepping stone to
brighter days.
Speaker 1 (53:51):
Isn't that beautiful? So thank you so much to all
those wonderful people.
Speaker 6 (53:54):
Pouts you've got some of there of us, well, sure
have Andrew, Frank Scheff, Cory, Darren Craig, Julie, Tracy, Rob
Laura Hayley has donated ten dollars. She says, I'm sorry
I can't afford much, but I wanted to be a
tiny part of hew this deserving Jerry.
Speaker 1 (54:10):
That's a big pot. Payley.
Speaker 6 (54:11):
That is fantastic. Ten dollars is amazing. Thank you so much,
and anonymous ten dollars. Every bit counts. Thank you all.
Speaker 1 (54:19):
Yeah, every dollar you give they turn into four dollars.
Please do not apologize for what you're giving. Anything you
give is amazing. It genuinely does all help. Christ I
want to donate five hundred dollars. If you read out
what I've written here, I've double that to one thousand.
Issues me, Nick and the team at DC Partners are
accountants that work with you for you. Call them now
(54:42):
on three nine double zero eight five eight one seven
for accountants that work for you, and not the tax office.
That's DC Partners, accountants that work with you for you.
They go cough up your money, now, Nick, All right,
then clown movies, White House clown. I mean that's a headline,
isn't it Yeah? Gold twelve angry clowns in a car,
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Gold Juggler on the roof, Clowney with a chance of
beach bolls, Thelma and Trapezi. Oh wow, God, Weekend at Carnies,
Silver up and clowner, Silver Carnie and me. Mary popping
out of a cannon? Should we just stop it?
Speaker 2 (55:26):
There?
Speaker 1 (55:27):
The search is dark and we found the winner. You're
off to beat with juice. Mary popping out of a
cannon is genius. We're about tomorrow. Hit to the Christian
o'conda show dot com dot au. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (55:37):
The Christian o'connall Show Podcast