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July 1, 2024 26 mins
  • Austin Butler
  • The Great Neapolitan Debate 
  • Pranking Woody's Dad Yet Again
  • What Did They See On Your Phone

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
We have got Hollywood heartthrob, an absolute megastar Austin Butler,
who joins us right now. Austin, before we get into it, mate,
you should know that there are five women huddled around
a monitor outside. So if you could stay higher them,
I think you might melt some mines. Hello, oh at

(00:26):
that has passed out? Passed out?

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Can I say? Mate?

Speaker 3 (00:34):
Every time I see you on character, mate, like I,
I truly believe you are the person you in body.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
So that's great to hear that. Thank you.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
I just want to congratulate you, whether it's Elvis, whether
it's that terrifying villain in June two, and now with
your latest character, Benny. I feel like whenever there's a
fight in the film, Benny runs towards that fight. He's
quite attracted to a scrape. What would astin Austin Butler
do if a fight broke out around.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
Him, if a fight broke up broke out around me,
I don't know. I'm a lover, I'm not a fighter.

Speaker 5 (01:09):
Chicks just hit the floor outside out there.

Speaker 4 (01:12):
I try to, I try to ease the situation.

Speaker 5 (01:16):
It's just speaking of fighting.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
I know recently I read in his you with Ulson
about the fact that you ross, who's the vision you
would least like to fight in a boxing fight, and
you said, Tom Hardy, who is your coast?

Speaker 4 (01:28):
When did I say this? That's interesting?

Speaker 5 (01:30):
Isn't that amazing?

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:32):
Tom's a tough guy. We did a little bit of
jiu jitsu together and he's he's a tough guy. He's
surprising because he is he has a witten sense of humor,
almost more than I've ever met in somebody Wow. Because
he tells you a story, he'll have you in stitches laughing.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:49):
So that's what I didn't expect, is how funny he is.
And he has a really warm heart. I think I
lucked out as well because our characters. It lent itself
to the characters for us to have a bond and
to have love for each other.

Speaker 5 (02:04):
Oh that's right.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
So when he was like choking you out, just off
to the side of camera. But you you know, did
you feel the love there all?

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (02:11):
You know there's that one moment in the film where
I'm just hitting a guy over.

Speaker 5 (02:13):
And yeah, yes, yes, yes, I remember that.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, and that's what I really felt. The strength.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
Yeah, I love that And probably you know when you
get really strong people that treat you a bit rough,
and it feels kind of nice.

Speaker 5 (02:26):
Your real throwdown factory.

Speaker 4 (02:27):
Yeah, a little bit of massacres.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely absolutely, I know.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Yeah, imagine that. I asked him.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
You've You've said before an interview that aging can become
the pursuit of comfort.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
I mean, the aggressive pursuit of comfort.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
The aggressive pursuit of comfort, And I'm interested to ask you,
do you then seek out ways to get out of
your comfort zone in life?

Speaker 6 (02:51):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (02:51):
Yeah, I'd say so, yeah, because I think the idea
behind that is that you could do the same thing
every night. You can sit on the couch, watch the
same TV show and listen the same music, go to
the same restaurant, or eat the same meal and do
it all the same and at a certain point your
your life. I think that's what makes life very short,
because you're in the amount of experiences. I think as

(03:12):
a kid, you're experiencing new things all the time, and
comfort obviously feels nice. That's why as we get older
often we tend to lean to that because now suddenly
I know the meal that I like, and so am
I going to try a new one, or am I
guess going to go for the old faithful. The more
than more that I think about that, I try to
try and change it up myself out of that comfort,

(03:33):
like that aperture of awareness.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
I know you said recently, like Australian coffee. Are you
going for a wild coffee order in Australia?

Speaker 6 (03:40):
What do you like?

Speaker 5 (03:40):
Just to that's not that wid What is it?

Speaker 7 (03:42):
What do you getting?

Speaker 4 (03:42):
What are you getting?

Speaker 5 (03:43):
You're going to digcaf armond i st or what are
you going for?

Speaker 8 (03:46):
Then?

Speaker 4 (03:47):
I just go for for an oat milk flat white.

Speaker 5 (03:49):
Usually old man. I like that. I used to do
all the boundaries.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
Yeah, I get crazy on a gold coast. Have you tried?

Speaker 5 (04:01):
Yeah, it's almost.

Speaker 4 (04:03):
Too good, Like I don't know how it could be
good for us because it tastes.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
It tastesweet, doesn't it has this sweetness?

Speaker 5 (04:09):
It does good gear Hey mate.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
One of the things that well, one of the things
in the movie is that it takes Johnny ages to
cry all these horrific things happened doing throughout the movie.

Speaker 5 (04:19):
We're big on men's mental.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Health and think it's good to talk about you know,
your feelings and how you feel. Do you remember like
as a guy who's kind of pitted as a kind
of a masculine guy who's played lots of masculine roles recently.
When's the last time you cried in your personal life?

Speaker 4 (04:34):
I'm getting deep, guys, believe Yeah, no, I was just
talking about this, you know. I often feel that there
are those moments where where you just know you need
a good cry, and how life gets overwhelming and and
things build up, and we also try to protect ourselves
from that, the pain that's sort of searing pain that

(04:56):
sometimes you can feel in any which way, or frustration
or anger, any of those things, and it kind of
can bottle up. And and it is amazing how when
you have a good cry, how suddenly it snaps you
back into reality.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
So it's like it's like a decompressing, isn't it.

Speaker 4 (05:11):
Yeah, And I mean it to be very sincere right now,
Like there are I've done things like there's this therapy
where you do breath work, where where you just deep
breathing for hours. You do like two hours of this
deep breathing, And that's made me cry harder than almost anything.
It's amazing how we store things and how when you
hold your breath and you store things in your body,

(05:32):
and when you're able to just actually breathe, it helps
you to metabolize emotion that's been stored inside you.

Speaker 5 (05:39):
Yeah, it's a great have your fingers bend in?

Speaker 4 (05:42):
Did you have totally done that way?

Speaker 9 (05:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (05:44):
Isn't that crazy?

Speaker 4 (05:45):
That's such a strange That was great talking to you,
so man, thank you, it's fat a pleasure.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Yeah, good luck with the primer for the rest of
the film. Love it to make your man and hopefully
saying is try against sin.

Speaker 4 (05:59):
Absolutely.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
A quiz caller, Yasmin I believe her name was, said
something completely outrageous.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
Neopolitan is three flavors, but it comes in the same cart,
which is a flavor.

Speaker 5 (06:11):
You can get a flavor.

Speaker 10 (06:13):
You can actually get me a Polotona flavored chocolate.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
Thank you, well, miss the bid because there's there's there's strawberry,
there's chocolate, and there's vanilla. Firstly, we all know it's
not Neapolitana, so just trying to make it sound more
exhausted like one. But strike two, there's there's three. There
are three flavors, so there's now now, yes, we will,
we will get there.

Speaker 5 (06:36):
I will come to you.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
I'll put my sword down. You'll have your time.

Speaker 9 (06:39):
Now.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
We've obviously been discussing this over WhatsApp last night in
the meeting room. Today, I put the phone down, and
what we have boiled it down to is the fact
that I think that there were three. I think there
are three flavors in Neopolitan because when I was a child,
like everyone else listening right now, you knew that if
you didn't get to the Neapolitan, all the strawberry and

(07:01):
chocolate would be gone and there'd be a strip of
vanilla left, a lonely island of vanilla. That's in your family,
that in every family, and then they speak for your
family and then you when as soon as I say this,
you were like, well, I think that's the difference because
in my family we scooped. Now it makes everyone's listening

(07:25):
to this and just maybe pull over if you need to.
We scooped across the Neapolitan punnish.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
So you get a little bit of every flavor as
you scoop across your chocolate, strawberry, vanilla. Unbelievable, perfect, perfect
combination of all three. You put that in a cone,
you put that.

Speaker 6 (07:41):
In a bowl.

Speaker 4 (07:41):
Do it?

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Everybody like it? I tried to straighten my.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
Mouth sometimes someone great one said, someone who stands for
everything stands for nothing.

Speaker 5 (07:47):
And that's what I think about that.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
It does not apply here.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
It does because you go over all flavors at the
same time, and I think that's outrageous. So I think
the real beef here is and we need to settle
this before the show can go on any further. Did
you scoop across the Neapolitan punnet it or did you
isolate the flavors?

Speaker 5 (08:02):
Lee first call? Tell me you're not a cross scooper.

Speaker 11 (08:07):
I'm a little bit of both, But can I say
still a question?

Speaker 12 (08:10):
I love it?

Speaker 3 (08:10):
Thanks, Thanks that a little bit of so you did?
So why would you Why would you cross scoop over
individual flavors?

Speaker 5 (08:19):
Like what makes you do that speed to get it
in the bottle?

Speaker 2 (08:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (08:23):
And so would you always try to get a combination
of everything? Or sometimes would you just go for vanilla,
chocolate or strawberry?

Speaker 10 (08:29):
It's so the.

Speaker 9 (08:29):
Ice cream is nice as flat.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
I like to just make it all even and out.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
So this this might be what it comes down with
all those people with slight OCD tendencies.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
I have a tiny bit of that, a little bit
I didn't.

Speaker 5 (08:46):
Just a little bit going on.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
I did like it being even Yeah.

Speaker 5 (08:51):
Yeah, so let's go to error London. I'm surprised you
didn't weigh yours.

Speaker 4 (08:56):
Mate.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
Make sure it's just fifty grams, and you put each
little scoop in a diferent bowl, three different bowls, and
you make sure that you touch the meat with your tongue.
One Erl's going on, Errol, Errol, er all look to
one side. Are you cross scooping neapolitan or you're just
straight down because you're obviously avoiding the vanilla.

Speaker 13 (09:16):
Never cross scoop.

Speaker 5 (09:17):
You know that famous scrape from the movie never cross
the streams? Yes, well cross streams as well.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
So there you go.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
Hang on, Errol, So the Ghostbusters reference not a pissing references.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Errol.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
You obviously, obviously you're scooping straight down the line because
you know that the vanilla is garbage.

Speaker 5 (09:38):
And obviously you're going strawberryor chocolate first, Yeah, that's.

Speaker 9 (09:43):
Chocolate in our house.

Speaker 5 (09:44):
Chocolate was gone.

Speaker 4 (09:44):
You had to fight for the chocolate. Eric.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
Wait, you know, just why did you just get a
chocolate flavored ice cream?

Speaker 2 (09:50):
Then why are you getting.

Speaker 6 (09:52):
Times you like a little bit of vanilla as a tree.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
And for those and for those those same beautiful normalized
people who scoop down the line.

Speaker 5 (10:03):
You've got the choice. You know, you can go seventy
percent choco, you can go thirty percent.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
Sometimes has cross doubled. Sometimes I would just take two
of them.

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Has a choice.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
It sounds hectic, it's choice, It sounds anarchy. Let's go
to Mandy on thirty one six five. Mandy, I, how
do you scoop?

Speaker 5 (10:22):
How do you ski?

Speaker 7 (10:23):
When I was younger, we had to have one scoop
from each color.

Speaker 9 (10:27):
We were not it wasn't even a.

Speaker 7 (10:30):
Thing to scoop across, and we were not allowed to
just have chocolate.

Speaker 5 (10:35):
Flavor of each Who's adjudicating that? Like your parents?

Speaker 9 (10:40):
My dad?

Speaker 7 (10:41):
My dad, so he would.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
Stand over you.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
He would stand over you and watch you scoop one
from each pretty much.

Speaker 7 (10:48):
We didn't have ice cream very often.

Speaker 13 (10:51):
So Mandy, it was a bit of a treat.

Speaker 5 (10:53):
So Mandy, let me just put yourself in your dad's shoes.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Here, we've got the Neapolitan tube out, We've got Woody
in front of you. Right, you're the adjudicator, you're the enforcer.
Here what he gets the ice cream scoop and he
scoops straight across the punnet.

Speaker 5 (11:07):
What are you doing to him?

Speaker 7 (11:09):
Oh my god, I'd kill.

Speaker 13 (11:10):
Him so as you get a little bit of each
But I do.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
That when I crossed, I feel like we're trying to
get to the same destination.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
But you're killing me.

Speaker 5 (11:25):
Yep, you're dead. And Many.

Speaker 2 (11:31):
Had a heart attack. I shocked her so much with
my cross scooping.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
Sorry Many now, but I've got no idea what this
is about.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
No, but you do know about the extraordinary prank that
we pulled on my dad.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
So basically me and Dad went to a charity run.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
I convinced him, after he wanted photos from a professional photographer,
that this professional photographer used voice activated.

Speaker 2 (11:55):
Software to send out photos.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Yes, yes, right, yeah, I texted Dad and then basically
we got in here into the radio studio and we
made Dad believe that he was talking to a robot.

Speaker 12 (12:09):
What is your most prominent feature, broad shoulders? Okay, great,
just a few more questions. Were you eating a child's biscuits?

Speaker 13 (12:21):
Yes? I was about one stage. Yes.

Speaker 12 (12:25):
Would you say you look constipated when you smile?

Speaker 4 (12:30):
Not?

Speaker 13 (12:30):
Huh?

Speaker 12 (12:32):
Did you look like a stereotypical baby? Boomer, for example,
were you wearing jeans and runners?

Speaker 13 (12:39):
Yes?

Speaker 12 (12:39):
I was, Dad, We got you again, Steve. It's Will
and by.

Speaker 13 (12:46):
I cannot believe. I cannot believe. This is the lowest
point of our relations.

Speaker 2 (12:58):
Just extraordinary.

Speaker 3 (12:59):
Anyway, in the aftermath of that prank, I've obviously been
talking to Dad about it.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
We've been having a good laugh about it.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
And Dad said to me, I'll tell you what though, mate,
it's just such a credit to the person you got
to put on that robot voice.

Speaker 2 (13:13):
No, it's such he goes.

Speaker 3 (13:16):
It was such a convincing no robot voice.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
Oh my god.

Speaker 5 (13:22):
Obviously it was actually, my god, we.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
Were using a program where you can type in online.
It's a real robot talking.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
But Dad is of the belief that someone on a
voice at the offers does an incredible.

Speaker 12 (13:36):
Just a speech to text reader.

Speaker 3 (13:38):
Exactly, it's a speech to text reader, right, I think
any everyone knows that's what we did, except my dad. So,
oh my god, Will I've got I couldn't believe. And
then I went to go and explain it to him,
and I was like, no, this is too good. I
want him believing that Sally in sales.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
Has the most extraordinary robot voice. Ever anyway, and I
thought we could really lean into that.

Speaker 3 (14:03):
I want to call Dad again, Oh yeah, and basically say,
hey Dad, I just offer success of the prank. I
want you to meet you know, the woman who put
it on the Amazing Robot Boys. And then I say,
we try and talk to him for as long as possible,
making him think it's a real person talking.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
Oh surely he's gonna cut none.

Speaker 3 (14:25):
Well, well, this time around, like last time we did
the prank, we pre wrote all the lines so it
moved quickly. I think it's going to be too hard
to try and pull off a conversation like predicting.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
Where it's going to go.

Speaker 5 (14:36):
Okay, yeah, you.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
Need to type live. I know you need to. You're
a touch time time.

Speaker 5 (14:42):
Don't make me call him that power.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
You're a great at past life because if you make
a typo, it's all over.

Speaker 9 (14:48):
God.

Speaker 5 (14:49):
God, I did think about you're going to have to
live time.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Oh my god. The man for the job, Oh my god.
The pressure, yeah, high pressure. So is she.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Always talking in a robot voice? This person? Or like
like do you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (15:03):
Like, well she is, Yeah, just let's just go g
this is her voice.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Okay, I feel we are stealing candy from a baby.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
So hello dad, it's Will and woody.

Speaker 13 (15:20):
Mm hmmm yeah, Now, don't be sus.

Speaker 2 (15:23):
There's there's no there's no need for that.

Speaker 3 (15:25):
You know, it was it look was a great prank
last week, obviously, but we're just a couple of trustworthy.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
Guys at the end of the day.

Speaker 13 (15:31):
Who are you trying a kid?

Speaker 2 (15:33):
That's totally fair enough.

Speaker 3 (15:34):
We actually we're calling you because we do want to
talk about the prank last week. And I know we've
we've spoken since, and you were quite impressed by the woman.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Who put on the robot voice. Yes, I was unbelievable performance, right.

Speaker 13 (15:51):
Yeah, unbelievable performance, yep.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
So we wanted to give you the chance. So what
you don't know is that we actually found this woman
in America. Like she she's kind of well known for
this amazing robot voice that she does, so I wanted
to give you the opportunity to actually meet her and
talk to her. M right. So, her name Sarah. She

(16:16):
lives in Texas. She's actually on the phone now, Sarah,
are you there.

Speaker 12 (16:22):
Hi, Steve, So nice to meet you, Sarah.

Speaker 13 (16:26):
I wish I could say the same about you.

Speaker 12 (16:30):
It was all a bit of fun, wasn't it hilarious?

Speaker 13 (16:34):
Sarah? Hilarious?

Speaker 12 (16:38):
Do you actually look constipated when you smile?

Speaker 13 (16:42):
Well? I don't know where you've got that information from,
but that's inside information that I don't share with many people.
But you're spot on.

Speaker 12 (16:51):
And does your granddaughter wants her cookies back? And does
your granddaughter wants her cookies back?

Speaker 13 (16:57):
That is impossible because I devoured them straight away. So
unless I can regurge you to take them and use
Les's within a couple of hours, it's unlikely. Yes, Sorry, Sarah,
I digress. Hello, Sarah, I am a robot? Are you
really or are you in the studio?

Speaker 12 (17:18):
Weak?

Speaker 13 (17:19):
Who are you? Sarah? Have you thought about who you
are and what you want to do with your life?

Speaker 12 (17:24):
Who are you mean?

Speaker 13 (17:25):
Is this really what you want to do?

Speaker 3 (17:29):
I don't know what you believe right now, Dad, I
don't know who you're a.

Speaker 13 (17:34):
I don't know what I'm doing anymore.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
It's not a real person, Dad.

Speaker 13 (17:38):
Well, I don't know. I don't believe anything you say anymore.

Speaker 6 (17:41):
You two.

Speaker 13 (17:43):
I that's the concept of.

Speaker 12 (17:44):
What's real twenty first century.

Speaker 13 (17:46):
Oh shut up, Sarah, it's a text of voice generated
Dad like, it's actually Will's just typing.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
Now there's no there's no robot, it's no real person.

Speaker 13 (17:56):
This is a I okay, so this is Will typing.

Speaker 5 (18:00):
Yeah it is.

Speaker 12 (18:02):
And just to confirm Will's very very sexy.

Speaker 5 (18:07):
Just in case you're in any doubt.

Speaker 13 (18:10):
Okay, Well it has to be real letters. No one
else would say that. I'm never going to leave this
down with something with the Great Wall of China in India.
I reckon, it's.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
Pretty don't bring it back. There's a lot of it
with the don't know about that.

Speaker 5 (18:32):
I wouldn't bring that back if I were you.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
Woods thirteen one oh six y five is our number,
Please join us.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
What do you wish they didn't see on your phone?

Speaker 3 (18:45):
I'm talking about that situation where you open up your
phone and for whatever reason, someone's looking over your shoulder
or you're going to show them something, and then something
pops up that you just did not want them to see.
Not exactly what happened to the Spice Girls, but their
group texts have been leaked where Melby basically said when
someone suggested that to a charity gig, Melby said, charity
doesn't pay the bills.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Ooh, not good for the bron One more from me, Will,
I mean.

Speaker 5 (19:12):
I think the thing is with Melby. You know what
you're gonna get?

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Sure it doesn't.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
Yeah, it doesn't surprise me, you know sure, Yeah, it
does seems like something she's saying she doubles down to
She's not ashamed to say it.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
She does double down on it. She said, I have
no issues with saying that. When they said that.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
I can't see babies. By saying that, you know.

Speaker 3 (19:32):
She wasn't in the chat. They forgot about it. There's
one more from me, Will, But a plumber came over
to my house. He was doing some work which probably
didn't need work at all.

Speaker 5 (19:40):
Oh, that's right.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
But when you thought you had a drip, but it
was just the splashback from your sink, yeah that one.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Anyway, as we were leaving, he went to go and
you could pay on his phone. He has the system
setup where you can pay through his phone and get tech. Anyway,
he whipped up his phone when we were doing the payment,
and he opened up his phone and he had googled Will.

Speaker 5 (20:00):
Woody so quickly, just like.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
Mate. So that'll be.

Speaker 3 (20:07):
Let's go to Tenaya. Here have I said that right, Tenaya, Yes, bugger,
I always get it wrong. That's okay, this happened to
your friend?

Speaker 2 (20:16):
What happened to.

Speaker 7 (20:18):
Yeah, so my friend from Case we were talking about
it not too long ago.

Speaker 9 (20:21):
Actually she had a partner at.

Speaker 7 (20:23):
The time, and she was going through his phone and
came across a photo of an engagement ring.

Speaker 9 (20:28):
And when she actually spoke to him about it, she
found out.

Speaker 7 (20:31):
That it wasn't for her, but it was actually for
his side chips.

Speaker 6 (20:34):
Oh no, yes, no love actually, yes, yeah, not really,
it's love.

Speaker 5 (20:46):
Actually it's the phone. Will give it to me, Amanda's girl, Amanda, say.

Speaker 2 (20:55):
On your phone, Amanda.

Speaker 7 (20:57):
Ah.

Speaker 9 (20:57):
Well, I was at UNI studying nutrition and we had
a lecture on breastfeeding and we learned about a condition
that can happen to the nipple with breastfeeding, and I
happened to google it just to find out what it
was and what it looked like.

Speaker 10 (21:16):
Later that day, I went to my shift at Woolworth
and a customer stopped me in the aisle and asked me,
can you help me find this product? I was like, yeah, sure,
let me just google what it is and I pulled
out my Safari on my phone, and he saw my
page of nipples on my phone screen.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
So you sorry, what was what didn't you want to
page of nipples?

Speaker 2 (21:52):
What didn't you want them to see? Sophia.

Speaker 7 (21:55):
Yeah, this one was pretty bad. It's still a running
joke between me and my friends. My first job out
of school, so I was fresh eighteen, and I got
my first ever explicit photo from a boy. And the
trip was because I wanted to show my friend. You
can't screenshot it because then.

Speaker 8 (22:08):
They see it.

Speaker 7 (22:09):
So I took a photo on my laptop on photo booths,
off the photos and then I showed my friends. Deleted
the photo from photo booths, but I didn't realize it
went to my bin in my laptop. So then rock
up to work. A couple of days later, I needed
help with some software. They said, oh, let me help.
I'll just delete it and re download it. So the
leite that opens my bin to delete it and full

(22:32):
frontal takes up almost the entire screen is an explicit
photo that my boss has now just caught me with.

Speaker 6 (22:39):
Oh no, personally, he went right in there.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
Why was it so big in the like not the.

Speaker 5 (22:56):
Hey, you can go this room. You get your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (22:58):
Basically a chance for us to sit down with people
and actually ask how they are. I mean really, in
Australia we probably get asked that a dozen times a
day and we tend to dismiss it a double a
dozen times a day.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
Good yep, good.

Speaker 5 (23:10):
Y'll We just ask him straight back, there you go,
and you there you go. He's going to keep walking.
It's very strange.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
So we got some really good guests on and we
get a chance to actually sit down with them and
us and what their mood is. And obviously this leads
to so much. If you ask someone genuinely how they are,
you sort of start diving down deeper through the layers
of what makes that up, and you give them space
to talk about it. You went up in some fascinating areas,
So you can hear that with Will Anderson. Just search
share my mood wherever you get your podcasts. And the

(23:38):
next guest this week is Kate lane Brook, who shared
with us something that I certainly didn't know about her
and I certainly didn't expect to get there from a compliment. Yes,
so I'd been sitting on a compliment that I was
actually going to direct message her on Instagram after an
interaction that I had with her.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
And yeah. Her answer to my implement was, yeah, it
was pretty interesting.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
And you is that I feel like you have the
freedom of not caring too much what people think of
you whilst not losing any of your matins without losing
any of your warmth. Well, and I feel like that
is a really really rare trait, and I think you
have it in spades.

Speaker 8 (24:21):
I think it's because I grew up already. Other so
because I was raised to Jehovah's witness and there were
never any other Jehovah's witnesses.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
At my school.

Speaker 8 (24:30):
And we lived in New Guinea and with the only
Jehovah's witness family and the whole you know, in Bogainville,
and then on Sahana, this in Ireland whatever. So, and
then when I went to high school, there were like
two other Jehovah's witnesses and then they left in year
teen and I was there.

Speaker 5 (24:46):
So I've always been the outside.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
So you've always had to put up with people questioning
your stance on things, or your viewpoint or where you
come from.

Speaker 8 (24:56):
Maybe and maybe also.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
And I learned that if you burn them back, then
you're just going to screw that thing, rather than maybe
kind of just being with it.

Speaker 8 (25:04):
I think also it so the concept of like most
of us don't want to be cast out. Yeah, so
the concept of being cast out is not as scary
for me as because when I left the Jehivah's Witnesses,
I was cast out. I was already cast out from
normal Australian society because I was a Jehvah's witness. Then

(25:25):
when I left the Witnesses, I was cast out by them.

Speaker 5 (25:27):
So it's like, how did they go?

Speaker 1 (25:29):
When you say you cast out of the Jehovah's Witnesses,
does that mean like excommunicated in the old Yeah, were
Catholic sort of terminology here.

Speaker 8 (25:37):
Well, I wasn't formally, which was really lucky, So I
meant my parents could still talk.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
That was the next question I was going to ask
your mum and dad, how did that affect your relationship
with them?

Speaker 8 (25:47):
Well? I had five blissful years where they didn't talk.

Speaker 5 (25:50):
Oh my god, it's really.

Speaker 8 (25:54):
Exactually great because when they were eighteen, when they were
talking to me, it was like my mum saying things
like your father lies in the dark with tears streaming
down his face.

Speaker 11 (26:06):
Okay, so so you're eighteen, and then you're like, no,
not for me, because I always knew yah yeah, but you.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
Had to wait till you were an adult and inverted
commas to be able to say that and have all
your rights so you could actually nick off in your
own terms.

Speaker 5 (26:25):
And then they were like.

Speaker 8 (26:26):
I wanted it to be right for me.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
It wasn't that.

Speaker 8 (26:28):
I was like the ironies. I used to pray to
Jehovah to make me a good Jehovah's witness, and guess what,
he didn't do it.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
He didn't.

Speaker 6 (26:39):
So you know, it's a great trap, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Great conversation with Kate Langbrook on ship My Mood, the
second guest following Will Anderson. Go and check it out
wherever you get your podcasts to ship my Mood, you'll
find it there
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