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August 20, 2024 79 mins

Pet Resentment  

Right to Disconnect  

Top 6: Lake Lucerne  

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Silly Little Poll!  

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The ziti In podcast Network, The Fletchhahn and Haley Big Pod.
Great things are brewing at mcafe, the perfect start to
every day. Welcome to the show, Fletchfawn and Hailey. Two
minutes past six. Good morning. What was that grinned for?
It's a little rye kind of smile.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
No, I'm just bringing the six appeal, Okay, Right, we've
had a discussion before the show. We consider changing roles. Flitch,
you were going to maybe be the vibe hire today.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
Because it's not feeling today. You're not feeling the vibe. No,
I know where the vibe the vibe? Hi, Yeah, so
having to the straight guy for the day. It's a
straight guy straight, not straight sexually. Oh yeah, straight sexually,
but yeah, right right, straight guy. I'm not going to
be dead serious but sleeping with dudes, right right, Okay,

(00:52):
that would be the straight You're a straight gay guy,
and I'm not going to be the you know, jovial,
happy fellow pater sexual. That would be the gay strang on. Right,
So you're just gonna be straight, straight, straight, dead pan
straight straight. Okay, that's not what behind you for. You're
not fulfilling the role. Okay, I'm going to need a redbook.

(01:15):
Then it's going to take fifteen minutes. Chances for you
to win today are one golden song at eight o'clock,
the song that could win you one thousand dollars today.
Loads of chances as well during the show and today
on zid M to go in the drawer to see
Sabrina Carpenter live in La. Just listen now for the
mother Trucker. Have you seen that video of.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Someone at a concert and they're stuck behind a screaming fan.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
Screaming the lyrics working leg you can't hear. That's my
worst nightmare. I kind of hate that. I mean, it's
okay if you're the one drunk singing, but not when
you're stuck behind that person.

Speaker 3 (01:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Next on the show, Pits, I have some, You've got
the most, and children you've got also have some. You
also have the most of anybody in this room. You
can probably see where my ViBe's not off on with
all these children and pits. Things draining you. Yeah, yeah,
tiring stuff. And they get rid of some of them

(02:14):
with the children, meaning but the dogs would be gone
to pick.

Speaker 4 (02:20):
Really, you got dogs over the kids.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
That shocks me. That I'd put my children over the dogs.
Interesting doing my head at the moment. Pits. When you
have children, they have thoughts. Let's discuss those things next. Jealousy,
play and Haley. Uh, you know when you guys don't
know because you don't have kids but you've got pets. Yeah,

(02:47):
and you're that's how I feel when I don't remember
that you are have pits, though, and you prioritize them
even though your kid's a bit skidary. Here's scy he's
a scatty cat, and your cat's spoiled and you need
to smack him. No, he doesn't need smacks. He's just cute. Yeah.

(03:07):
And then when you have kids, it's been officially recognized
by animal behavioral experts ye, that your pit has resentment
towards you one hundred percent. Oh yeah, pits have resentment,
especially cats. Cats have resentment when you are just out yeah,
oh my god. Yeah. And they were like, well, I
was outside, but then I came inside and you weren't
here with hell, will you. Yeah. We get such a

(03:29):
tued from Rollig when we're out late. He would come
home and we're a little bit late for dinner. Yeah,
he's just like, well, well, wow, brink of starvation. Yeah,
you left me with Uncle Vaughan. He came in weekend. Yeah,
and a spoon. That was very hard to work out

(03:49):
exactly how much was level because it was just the
dessert spoon and the chunks on the chunks, the cat
for chunks were big, right possible. You see you say
our level scoop when it's a scoop. This wasn't a scoop.
It was a sponge.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Do you reckon you underfed or overfeitigh? Probably overfear that's good.
Then that makes me happy. Probably overfeed that's good. So
they get jealous, Yeah, they get jealous. I can imagine
they get the ships were our cat out Anakin, he's dead.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
I don't want to talk about it. It's been like
how many years now, three would be coming.

Speaker 4 (04:21):
Out three years?

Speaker 1 (04:21):
Yeah, he he just took off when Indy was born
for like ten days, got at home because she stayed
in Negro and stuff for like a week even a
bit and or two weeks actually, so that by the
time we got her home she was full like screaming babies,
and he was just like, no, not for me that
I don't know where he went, but he was just like,

(04:42):
not for me. How long did he take? Ten days?
I reckon he was trialing some other neighbors around. Yeah,
do you want to taby cat? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (04:52):
Hi, I'm cutee.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
Now you guys want to feed me? Oh no, I
can't stay here. It's a primarily dry food diet. Hey,
there's nothing wrong with the dry biscuits. Look at my
cat's silky coat. You've got to give your cat. So
if we're comparing some yeah, it's under the ground, not anymore. Yeah,

(05:15):
he might not have lived well, he did live a
long life. He was around for a very long time.
But he was happy because his food wasn't making them cough.
So what appearance do then, Because you do prioritize your
obviously your kids more than you can, your kids become
second second rate citizens around the house. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
You just see all the time, especially like dogs as well,
people that were obsessed with their dogs.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
These are my food babies.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
And then they have a real baby and the dogs
like get out, stinky dogs just waiting for it to
die outside.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
Yeah, yeah, how are you looking at?

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Yeah, PiZZ are definitely second classes, and apparently it's important
to remember that pens responding the moment to the environment
around them, right, prioritize, So that's why we're there noise
or new stuff for like screaming baby smells for dogs,
apparently dogs. The new smells or the new smells in
the house, like the poos itself and the nappy wipes,
the ointments, the arms, the bubble baths. You guys, haven't

(06:26):
exactly sold either of you sold that parenting is even
on the radar.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
I have to baby wipe my cat's bottom. Yeah, you
might one day, and I worked happily because he's.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
My fo baby eleven past six.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Next on the show Why it is Good for young
Men to Live with women.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
Play Fledchbourne and Haley.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
This is out of the UK and Australia combined study
here okay that looked into the benefits of mix mixing
flatmates like mixed genders having with a good mix of
girls and boys. The benefits it had particularly on men.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
Yeah, no effect on women will be fine regards. I
think I've always lived and mixed. When I flattered was
always mixed. I've lived in pretty much every scenario, right,
I've lived in all guys, and that was just a
hovel yuck. There was no super like Marchown. There was
no that sort of stuff. But it was just a

(07:31):
messy like ah. But then females can be messy too,
so don't give me that whole females are always clean.
I've lived completely with girls.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
And then the only other other than Aaron was one
homosexual male.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Oh yes, so practically a girl.

Speaker 2 (07:48):
No, I never, I've never lived with straight men other
than lover. So the benefit for men was that it
absolutely decreased their level of competitiveness aka there machho noess okay,
and found that it was extremely beneficial for them and
their well being and the way that they exist in

(08:09):
the world because they're less like beating on the.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Chest softens softens, softens men. But yeah, because I lived
in a flat where it was me and one of
the other girls, four other you were the only boy,
my dad, I don't know, the king of the cause.
And we went and saw that movie Signs. Remember that
movie Sign Love Sign. It was a great movie, right

(08:35):
mel Gibson Gibson the Aliens? Have you seen it? Maybe? Yeah,
maybe one of the Colkins is in it, isn't he?
And that then we went home and they were also terrified.
Everyone slept in my room that night, and I found
other than that, what the beginning of a foreigner. But
that's what everyone That's why it softens me is because

(08:57):
you're like, it's a bit off it to have like
a full blown orgy.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
Do you think so?

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Unde hundred percent? And or when you're doing all like
the girly things, you're just like mama's her booby here.

Speaker 2 (09:10):
I would have thought it was like the positive influence
of women, and we're doing nice things. We're lighting candles,
we're putting flowers around the place.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Ah, this is the true story too. Ah, what's happened?
This is spider in here, she's in the shower.

Speaker 4 (09:26):
To get it.

Speaker 1 (09:28):
Are your life in the porner? This was wild Masters Hamilton.
It's a medical center now got torn down. So I
was the last king to live in that castle. Fall
of the condown and I went in. I was like, oh,
you've got a towel one. They're like, no, I haven't
got a towel yet. I was like, I'll bring a tower.
I don't look, I don't. I handed the tower because
I was a gentleman, but I was like, yeah, he's hope.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
We were talking about this and Shannon you think you've
lived in lots of setups as well.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
Yeah, and girls, boys.

Speaker 5 (10:01):
Boys, and like guys I knew before moving in, guys
I didn't know. And there was such a difference week
one of knowing them versus like three months in.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
So like what kind of thing, like, like how does
it soften them?

Speaker 5 (10:14):
There was lots of times where I'd be watching reality
TV week one, they'd walk past me, like like Love
Island three months and they're like how and they would
love a face mask. They'd come hang out in my room.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
You're only saying you're watching Love Island. He's hoping you're
going to get all revved up sexually by watching it,
and he's going to be the nearest penis. And you
watch some mobies that he wants to see. This is
how man function and if the guys just want homosexual
but not every guy wants to hook up with their
female flight pane. Dudes love a convenience hookup. Don't think
about how awkward it's going to be on the other

(10:55):
side of things, Jared, is I need to look behind
myself to see alarms up?

Speaker 3 (11:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Yeah, we don't think long term just animals were animals, Yeah,
to be fair. You can tell.

Speaker 5 (11:08):
You could tell which male flatmate was down and which
wasn't because I had to and one of the guys
his name was Shannon as well, and it was just
like obviously never going to happen.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
Yeah, there was a yah vorn happened, I said, orn.
But okay, sure there's probably a female worn out there
that I would female worn I wasn't. I don't marry Carla. Carla.

(11:47):
Oh yeah, there you go, there's a Karla. But you
knew what was happening.

Speaker 5 (11:53):
But you can tell that with this research is literally
just does this say anything about the guys?

Speaker 2 (12:01):
Basically softens them. It makes them less because they're not
around men being like competitive competitive on the King of the.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Came because they don't have the men to compete with,
so they say mixed. So you know they may be
maybe some others that the game has changed. Yeah, and
if a woman wanders into a den full of men,
she's not going to be impressed by the alpha male.
He's in the den. He's playing the softer creature. Yeah,
because he wants it softens them. I think this is good.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
If you've got a teenage son, you know, make sure
he's living with a lady and that he's respectful and
hands are the towel without.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
Looking that's me hands out hands where I can see them,
that's me. Play well. In five days, Australian workers will
have the legal right to ignore all work calls, all
emails outside of work hours. Now, so I didn't know
they've already done. This is Laura in like fifteen other
countries around the world. But yeah, it basically means if

(12:57):
you work for a company that's more than fifteen employers employees, yeah,
fifteen people, then you can you literally walk out that
office doore. They call it work.

Speaker 2 (13:06):
It's the right to disconnect, right, which means if your
boss takes you on a Saturday and says, hey, look,
I know that it's the weekend. If you're say you're
a Monday to Friday night to father, hey I know
it's the weekend, but can you please look over this?
You have you legally.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Yeah, don't have to, don't do it. Yeah, or just
do what I do and just delete emails from your phone.

Speaker 4 (13:24):
Yeah, I'm thinking about doing it.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
The app. Yeah, I haven't had the app on my
phone for years.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
I've got my personal emails, but I've also got my
work ones on my phone.

Speaker 1 (13:32):
Yeah, I'll just log on if I want to read them.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Yeah, how good was it when we were overseason Europe
and you couldn't actually log into your work?

Speaker 1 (13:42):
Was like yeah no, so yeah, a lot of problem
because I didn't go to Europe. There's one way to
solve it. I just want to say, everybody listening who
didn't go to Europe this summer, You've got one hero
on the show. It to one relatable hero, relatable hero,
relatable much bloke. So this is these to This has

(14:03):
been a thing in France since twenty seventeen. There was
one case where there was a British pest control company
that operated in France and they asked an employee to
have their phone on to respond to work requests and
they will find sixty thousand euros. Oh they were a
British company but they were based in France. Yeah, so

(14:23):
they were adhering to local deployment laws and they were
like just leave your phone on, you know, we've got
a few things over the weekend when and the employee
was like, no, complained any They were fined, but there's
some moved to like sue the company that you work
for and then just stayed awork that yeah, yeah, yeah,

(14:43):
But there are some jobs where you have to be
what's contactable right and on core. Yeah, like if you
were in chant of like a company's I don't know
it or something more and things went down, But then
that would be in your job description, right and you'd
be paid more for that.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
May yeah, yeah, it would have to be in your contract.
But you're a general office worker absolutely.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
But then some people just love you know, they just
work a totally cannot turn away. Then they can't switch off.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
Like freelance for sure, as well like you because you
never You've got to put boundaries around it, you know,
because you don't have that structure. Well, in five days,
want nothing to do with you work on the weekends,
five days, it'll be law. And sometimes I think us
as a team of sex, I think we chat too much.

Speaker 4 (15:31):
Oh really on the group chat.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
You'd like to write to you, because how does that
if you have a work group chat? Is that included
if you work stuff? But not if you were just
sometimes we can Carlin will always make an apology.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
She said, I'm sorry to message you on the weekend,
but I need to know if you want to do
this interview, and we'll be like, right to disconnect.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
You don't have that right, by the way, you don't
have that right, sorry, Carwhen she was actually out of
the room, so didn't apologize. You don't need to apologize
people if they're not in the room because she just
connected to make tires. If an apology tree falls in
the woods and no one's heard it there to hear it,
it didn't even make the Was it worth it wasn't

(16:16):
Was it worth your energy? That's not going on.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Play play so recently Chapel Rowan, who whose music I
absolutely love.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Great, Where are we going to start playing hot to
go in the mornings? It's not really up to us.
We don't get to choose. Have to go in the background. No,
I won't just because you want to wall the brothers
are fighting dead flitches and let me and my dad. No,

(16:56):
this is a song.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
This is like a great song, right, And so she was.
It's like working on music for six years, nothing was happening,
and then suddenly, now boom, everyone loves Chapel roone.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
And you know what happened. When it happened, it happened.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
Quick totally, and this happened to like Billie Eilish, right,
and Billie Eilish talked about this, and she was like,
fame slaps you in the face and it changes everything
and it's really full on, but you just got.

Speaker 1 (17:16):
To go with it.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
And Chapel Roan took to her TikTok account just a
couple of days ago basically having a little bit of
a moan about her new found fame.

Speaker 5 (17:26):
If you saw a random woman on the street, would
you yell at her from the car window?

Speaker 3 (17:30):
Would you harass her in public?

Speaker 4 (17:32):
Would you go up to a random lady and say
can I get a foto with you? And she's like no?

Speaker 3 (17:37):
And then you get mad at this random lady. This
is a lady you don't know, and she doesn't know
you at all. I'm a random, You're a random. Just
think about that.

Speaker 4 (17:45):
For a second. Yeah, I get it.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
Totally be careful what you wish for. I know, totally.
Do you want to be famous? You got it? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (17:53):
She I think She's like, this is like borderline stalking,
and I'm like, that's just gonna get worse.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
Oh yeah, And I don't.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
It's not that I agree with it, It's just that
that's just how it goes for famous people, people get
obsessed with you and then yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
They'll be breaking into your how soon. Yeah, like that's
just how you'll have some stalkers.

Speaker 2 (18:13):
Yeah, I love it, she said, would you run up
to a random lady, I'm like no, but they're not
famous and making music that I listen to.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
Yeah, and they ask for a photo and you say no,
then sure that's the end of things. But they just
assume that they can ask for a fear.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
It must be such a strange thing to hit that
kind of level of fame just suddenly you're twenty six
years old and the.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
People that like you. You know, her core audience are
like younger, more fanatical. Yeah, you know, fans maybe not
as so they come in from pretty hard.

Speaker 4 (18:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
So she was like she thinks that fans she and
this is what has got fans divided, she says, fans
who approach your asking for a photo or a hard
She's like, you're creepy, and they're like, well, no.

Speaker 4 (19:02):
I just like you like you.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
Yeah, I don't know if I've I was about to say,
I don't know if I've been for on. I literally
sat on Jason Moore's lap when photo with him, But
I thought you.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Were going to use an example from your younger life,
not like a year and a bit ago.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
That's that's probably the only famous person I've ever asked
for a photo, right, I imagine.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
I think so.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
But yeah, there are fans are a little bit like, well,
we're just trying to support you. Yeah, and she your
creepy stalkers leave me alone. But it's not going to happen.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
No, it's only going to get worth It just is
what it is.

Speaker 2 (19:42):
I mean a lot of a lot of celebrities hate
fame and they just wanted.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
To be We've seen enough celebrities coming over the years
that look dead behind the eyes.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
Oh yeah, they just like I hate all of this. Yeah,
I just wanted to be an actor. I just wanted
to be a singer or whatever. Anyway, Chapel right, less
complaining and more working on the ends of your songs.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
That was lazy. What I hate that just because it's
not just a fade out, it's also it's like she's
turning it off.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
If you like it, why don't you go? And it's
stork Chapel rotor Dish should have played Hot.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
To Go Play, Sidiums, flits worn and Hailey blah.

Speaker 4 (20:18):
Blah blah blah blah blah blah.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
This is the top six Gooden Morgan assume, yeah, is
that how you said good morning in Swiss?

Speaker 4 (20:29):
Ye?

Speaker 1 (20:31):
English to Swiss English is Swiss German? I was waiting
all that? Is it Swiss German? Is that where they speak? Yeah?
I thought they had their own thing. Can they do anything?
Can they do anything? No, it's not Swedish. That's a

(20:52):
different country borne Switzerland, Schwitzerland. Do they just speak German?
So come on side where they really are? Like, We're
all like, oh no, no, don't don't they were they
were neutral? Were they? Though? Were they? Were they? The
four national language languages of Switzerland, the German, French, Italian,
and English. Roman Romance romance romance in romance, did you

(21:19):
say French and chocolate? Yes? Well, then there's a lake
in Switzerland. I wrote even wrote Sweden in my oh
my top six notes. Ah, there's a lake in Switzerland
where munitions have just been dumped for ages. It's a

(21:40):
beautiful picturesque lake. I'll get you guys to give me
on seeing this lake. And oh but sale would be
like okay, ah would be ten out of ten. It
has a name. Lake Lucern is gonna be one of
the most beautiful places I've ever been in Switzerland's beautiful.
There a queen's Towney, So Lake's Lucern is one of them.

(22:03):
Lake Thun and Lake Brian's Lucian's got like dumped all
that's like something you'd see in Wanaka a queens. It's
almost a little bit. Yeah, if we're been beautiful. So
Lake Lucian's got munitions dumped in it? Wow, they just
chuck them in there? Say it short sighted, really short sighted.

(22:29):
So there is a competition to get these old bombs tanks?
What else is in there? Just everything, everything, everything updated,
probably old planes. Yeah, right, when they were done with them,
just chuck them in lakes to get them out now
from fifty seven thousand US dollars as a price for
the idea that wins. So I've got sex okay, number

(22:50):
six on the list, a bomb disposal rowboat. It sounds
like robot. Robot a bomb disposal rowboat. And would you
lower a robot down? I'm not here for the technical
is terrible. Rolling onto the lake, yeah, in the mountain?

Speaker 4 (23:11):
Robot okay, robot.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
Jumping tools, robot the bomb dispose of robot. Number five
in the list of the top six ways to get
the munitions out of the Switzerland Blake Swiss Lake a
dragnet magnet, which actually that would work, Actually would work,
but you'd need a big magnet. Yeah, it's magnet fishing

(23:37):
on Steeri. I imagine going magnet fishing and pulling up
a spitfire like a magnet the size of this disk
and you turn it down. It's one of those ones
that you see in the movies and then they're powered
up and go make sure we're wearing any pole.

Speaker 4 (23:52):
Tintin tin tink tink tink, tink tink.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
Tinklet wrap your nipple piercing right, Yeah, do you guys
know that got a nip? You've got his nip crazym
the beginning of my midlife crisis. It could be. Yeah,
number four on the last of the top six ways
to get the munitions out of the Swiss Lake. Well,
I don't know, but whoever's going to go down there

(24:15):
is going to need an air tank. Number three on
the list. That one didn't. I don't think you're winning
with these tank is munitions. Yeah, and they're going underwater,
so that I need an air tank. Whoever's going down
there is going to need a air tank. These ideas
are not winning. So you you literally couldn't have explained
it harder and you still don't know. Yeah, so that

(24:37):
they dumped tanks in the lake, Yeah I know that. Yeah.
And then if you're going to go down diving under
a lake, you need on your back. You need a
oxygen and oxygen tank. So whoever's going to go down
there is going to need an oxygen tank. It's just
the comma and the dot dot. It's just a it's
two space bars. Number three others of the top six

(24:58):
ways to get munitions out of a Swiss lake, how
about we send down some swordfish. They're already bloody weapons,
aren't they. Number two on the less of the top
sex ways. I'm just gonna get this over the top
the ninja turtles. I reckon ninja turtles. Do you want

(25:18):
this price or not? Under the lake? It's the closest
you've had a good idea. We've got to go back
to the magnet and number one on the less of
the top.

Speaker 4 (25:30):
Hang on, hang on, you've.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Dropped a couple in here. What are the teenage mutant
ninja turtles doing all that. Turtles that can go underwater
and they yeah, they can hold their breath and trying
to give that's because they're familiar with weapons, right, more
like swords and stuff. Well, they might be bane it's
down there and number one of the less of the
toxic ways to get those munitions out of that. So

(25:52):
it's like, how about we call them the Navy Seals
because Navy seals, because Navy Seals are American terrible ideas,
terrible ideas.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
Seal Flitchborne and Haley.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
We love toasted sandwiches, Oh godgie, toasty, toasty. We love
just there's something about it, isn't there?

Speaker 4 (26:19):
It just rules.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
So this is a nationwide competition that's taken place. Yes,
happens every year, doesn't that? Yes, yep.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
And and cafes and restaurants all across New Zealand they
put them out and then and then some restaurants where
was iron they'd done one and they don't usually have
it on the menu, right, but they put one together
for this, you know, right, the toasty TAKEO McClure's Peckles sponsor.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
Oh they are the great, They're so good. They're good Peckle.
You know, they're bougie. They're a bit more expensive than
the other peckles. Taste. They are tasting top tear pickle,
top tier, top top tier pickle. You know, sweet peckle
wear peckle, crazy you wear pickle. We go show, Mum
will bring us a big jar from Costco. I'm talking

(27:03):
like this bag, like two leaders of peckles a week. Yeah, yeah,
because I just find.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
The kids with their bloody fault from the jar.

Speaker 1 (27:11):
Are they the Costco Peckles? Yeah, they're pretty good. Okay, okay,
they're a good pele. Now what who's won this year?
The winner is from Okaty Full Store, which is I
been a couple of times. We went to october Fest
once and I was like, oh, this will be fun,
and it was wild. And then at the end of
the night these people were like, do you want to
ride back to the hotel you're staying it which was

(27:32):
on the lake front jumping the boat and it turns
out it was Aunt Green's mum. And then all of
a sudden, like I would just go our place and
then we've got boat napped willingly boat napped. This is amazing,
and it was it's just that was the weekend where
I was like, I could do a lakehouse. He says,

(27:56):
the lake I could.

Speaker 4 (27:59):
I could do one of these, should we I could
do it.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
It's a beautiful spot. It's like maybe fifteen minutes out
of on the lake, on the side of the Lake
of and it's the Okeddy Falls are the highest commercially
rafted waterfalls. There's a massive at the end. Yeah, she's amazing,
seven meter drop. She's just an also place and chuck
the Toasty and on top of the Okady full store,

(28:24):
which is amazing and doesn't October. I stopped in March.
Any of the food there is just amazing.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
I'm looking at the menu because I think most places
put together a special toasty to enter into the toasty takeover.

Speaker 1 (28:35):
But in general they've just got like a cheese toast.
But you'll be able to go and get I mean
I want to go and get this. I want to
literally drive three hours.

Speaker 4 (28:45):
To get it.

Speaker 1 (28:47):
This is what's in This is an unusual one. Okay,
what's it called. It's the winner though in the middle. Wait,
what happened to the pict in place? It does great,
It'll be in there. It'll be in there because you
know the regions in the place is famous for its
toast these. Yeah, there's different regions as well. Okay, but
that's called toasty right and picked in.

Speaker 4 (29:06):
Yeah, it's just good stuff, just stuff.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
It's called Figgi in the middle in the middle, and
it has dill, pickle, cheesecake wet so you're talking a
mask a pony sort of ye element which isn't necessarily sweet, No,
you would just sugar creamy. Yeah, it's not sweety. Swiss cheese,

(29:31):
Vandy's streaky bacon, toasted walnuts, rocket pickles, blue cheese, a
drizzle of chili honey, and apparently they were like, it
needs something else, and that's where the figs came in.

Speaker 4 (29:43):
Figs.

Speaker 2 (29:43):
I like so because I was reading about this and
they call it a cheeseboard and a toasted you know
when you get those cheeseboards of the honey comb, the
chutney's and the pickles, yum yum.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
I want to try this. So then the People's Choice
Award was also Caper's Cafe.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
Listen to this one.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
This was This was created by apprentice chefs Zion and
Juicy Huge Future in my Culinary Listen to this hoisten
glazed pork belly. I'm I'm in with sweet Hilly and
chill down a rock hard. And also to clarify for
Fletcher's mum who heard her saying before, you said before
that I had got nipple piercings. That was a joke.

(30:28):
As soon than if I ever need defibulated, they're gonna
have to tear up my nipple piercings. Know that you
had to take out nipple piercings if they needed to defeat.
I suppose to conduct the vault away from the heart. Yeah,
maybe I'd clamp to the next one. I find someone
in the supermarket, I don't know, and I'm I've got
to defend them because I don't know to check that

(30:51):
they've even got nipple piercings. Or you've got to do
you have to take the or you've got to get
the the de fabulator has got to touch bear skin anyway,
I'm sorry someone else I was wearing a bra. Well,
I mean, that's life. What do you want me to
keep my modesty? You want to remain a modest lady.
I'm glad we took a break halfway through the sandwiches

(31:12):
ingredients because we're not even Okay, go back and recap
the nipples for this one. There's poison glazed pork beley
with sweet chili and garlic, mc clure's sweet and spicy pickles,
crispy fried shalottes, cut up mozzarella, tasty cheese, spring onion
and red onion miso mayonnaise on a gary buttered sesame bread.

(31:36):
Get out of that when the only thing that would
make Asian food bitter put cheese on it?

Speaker 4 (31:43):
Yeah, you know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (31:45):
Yeah that don't go huge on the cheese. And oh
my god, my god, roady this weekend? What do we do?

Speaker 3 (31:53):
Why?

Speaker 1 (31:53):
Why are we sitting here? A toasty the great toasted?

Speaker 2 (31:57):
These photos if you can go on toasty takeover dot
com and there's a photos all the the finalists because
we've got some note we have a few toasties around
Auckland that we love and they're not even on the left,
so this must be inside.

Speaker 1 (32:13):
And there's different one is for different regions on that
website as well, so you can find out like what
the red the place that has a bit toasty in
your area? Oh okay, I love it when they've cut
some chops on it, some chops silly little pole is next?
How do we feel about tatos? Turn on or no?
Not as much of a turn on as these toasties
play it? Silly little pools.

Speaker 4 (32:39):
It is so silly, silly, silly, bad, silly little pool
silly silly.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Today's silly little pole? Is it is? It is?

Speaker 4 (32:57):
It is tatos? Have they turn on?

Speaker 1 (33:00):
Or are they not a turn on? Or just like
this doesn't Yeah it doesn't phase you? Six Wally, you
were not phased.

Speaker 2 (33:08):
I think when I see a grown man without them,
and I do apologize to you tube, I think, grow up.

Speaker 1 (33:13):
You can grow and get to them. Okay, are you
doing Okay? I just I always got tatoos for tough
dudes growing up, because our bus driver had one cause
they got in World War They used to be Oh
yeah those are tough tattoos. Yeah. When you see the
main they're so blown out and blurring, you're like, man, yeah,
that's that was never good.

Speaker 4 (33:31):
That's what you think when you look at that.

Speaker 1 (33:34):
Well, forty five percent of people said they're a turn on.
Oh okay, seven percent said doesn't phase me, eighteen percent
not turned on by tattoos. Okay, right, let's dive in
Courtney says, depends if that shredded or not. So they what, No,
what's the problem, Courtney. It's not the tattoo doing.

Speaker 4 (33:51):
The heavy lifting there.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
You want to you just like you just like the abs.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (33:56):
Yeah, you're like, oh, that beautiful house has some paintings
on it. That's what you're seeing. Yeah, the house has
already sold you. Well, it's landscaping, Yeah, Michelle, definitely not
when they're on the face or the neck, and bad
tattoos are horrific, but when they have nice ones kind
of hidden away that you see when you're getting to
the generally more company. And then she's done two splash emojis, Okay,

(34:19):
gosh you horned of Yeah, which weird that she's like, no,
no to the neck, but if it's under the shirt,
she's like, well if the owner said, not bothered really,
but super hot male or female on someone you'd least
expect to have tattoos ah okay, yeah, especially if our
big or not run of the mill. And then it's

(34:39):
an unexpected tattoo gets hur what's there gets her going,
gets her a little bit hot? Hot depends on the
tattoo again, another one completely dependent on location, probably not
on the side of the face. Yeah, your side of
the face is full noise. Yeah, Casey said, I'm a
og emo from the two thousands. Nat, I say more yummy, yummy,

(35:01):
yummy tattoos, smiley face looking its lips, squirt cup Why
the cup on the end, like like, do you want
to take a little drink? Yeah, maybe she's thirsty for it.
Thirsty for depends what they are. Any mythical creature like

(35:22):
a dragon is an absolute no from me, Sarah. If
it's the flag dragon, right, what if it's an imagined dragon? Yeah?
What a band? The band? Imagine the portraits, the full
portraits of the bands. Yeah, that' not a mythical technically,
not a mythical dragon. Ashley said, proper sleeves, yes, sticker

(35:45):
but looking sleeves. Definitely not vomb Okay, it's trendy. Yeah,
far more for females than males though, right a stick
of tats. Mason said, Yes, Daddy likes his princess with
some ink. Jesus, I hated there. If she can commit,
if she can commit to those she can, Daddy didday

(36:07):
princes did not like it. Also, he's found Daddy d
a d d I E with a macron O day Shay.
I told my zero tats needle foe back husband, I
pay for him to get a sleeve, but no luck
yet managed to get him to grow a beard, though,
So my vision feels partly complete. The sounds like she

(36:29):
wants him to be someone else.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
Yeah, tells he trying to change too much of who
he is on the inside by changing his outside. Yeah,
mish sleeves. You know those teams off team have sleeves
on them. Yeah, the difference maybe, hennah, And then you
can change the design.

Speaker 1 (36:49):
That's right. You just kind of trial him with a
sleeve before you he commits. What of all these renovations
you're doing, You're just creating a sexy man that everybody
else is gonna want.

Speaker 4 (36:58):
Oh yeah, and he's gonna know it too, You know
it because they.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
Keep telling him careful, careful, tread lightly.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
That's similar, little time.

Speaker 3 (37:09):
Play play.

Speaker 1 (37:13):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
So there is a woman and she believes she has
a severe allergy to the big oh reaching Oprah. She's
been on ozempic, so she's not big anymore.

Speaker 1 (37:27):
She's tired. I just meant beggars in celebrity. Yeah, yeah, No,
she's not allugitic to it's a matter of time. She
is from yoyo, from one yoyo to another yoyock oprah,
she will never be back. She can afford it. Yeah,

(37:48):
it's the people that can't afford it. Oh, I know. Yeah. Anyway, anyway,
we digress.

Speaker 2 (37:53):
So apparently, whether she is with a partner, a lover,
or with herself, if she ever is the big, the big, Oh,
she has an anaphylactic reaction.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
So has she just kind of because some people develop
allergies later and yeah, light see this hasn't always been
the case, but all of a sudden, it's like, yeah,
this is happening, and this is just happening.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
And she's gone to doctors who were like very hesitant
to give her an official diagnosis, but they believe it's
something called postal gasmic illness syndrome, which's a very rare
condition in which a person develops flu like and allergy symptoms.

Speaker 1 (38:32):
So I was reading an article as well this week.
There was a guy who plays in the Yankees, and
of course that's what baseball and they have to wear
the gloves, yes, and he's allergic to the gloves. I've
heard about people being allergic to the leather and something
in the leather and the gloves. Apparently for the last
like three years he's been dealing with the fact that
and like he's a you know, pro sportsman, you just

(38:54):
have to get some nice cotton liners, some nice soft
cotton liner. They have to but don't they have to
take the glove off and then throw Yeah, desire. I
don't know how it works, but apparently this is something
he deals with. And that's something as well that's happened
kind of later in life. Yeah, he's just all of
a sudden found out he's allergic to something has to
work with to earn his money.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
Yeah, so instead of going for a life without, she
just carries an ipipin around what you're like worth today?

Speaker 1 (39:23):
Aren't they like a hundred bucks or something? Easy and America? Yeah,
I imagine it's absolutely horrible. I mean, I mean, you know,
like it's sort of it doesn't happen every time or
it's every time. Yeah, every time. So she sort of
just what she wants to have an intimate moment where
a boyfriend or to cut it off. She's got to
cut it right, okay, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:44):
Which, oh, anyway, we would to know how did you
discover you were allergic to something, because, as you say,
sometimes it develops out of nowhere. Yeah, and you don't
know that it's happening until you try, if you try something,
or try a food or whatever.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
And then also people grow you're allergic to peanuts, won't you. Yeah,
and you grow out of that one of the ones
you can grow out of. Yeah, when you go through
your puty change. Right, I've been through there twenty five.
I didn't get all the bits they about They talk
about the beds still waiting for me. Yeah, this sort

(40:22):
of increase infantile situation going on. Well, maybe you're just
not through the whole cycle. Yeah, Well, this is what
I want to know this morning. Eight one hundred of
dars at him. Give us a call, you can take
through nine six nine six. How did you discover you're
allergic to something?

Speaker 2 (40:40):
There's got to be a moment that you, yeah, something's
wrong here, and whether it's a food or something you touch,
or something as obscure as this this pool.

Speaker 1 (40:48):
Yeah, maybe it wasn't until later and you know, your
teen years or your twenties that you find this out,
because I don't know, you just grew up not eating
a certain kind of food. Maybe this is super common.
This one.

Speaker 2 (40:58):
Someone just tacks in an allergit condoms, which is like latex, right, yes,
and then the first time you don't know, and then
the first time then you use them. And then he said,
I thought I had an STD because it was burnar.

Speaker 1 (41:09):
So what do you use instead? Like glad rap you
can get latex free law, right, Okay, I wouldn't use Okay,
our advice is not to use glad rap as a
replace was for a latex condom?

Speaker 4 (41:20):
Made a joke.

Speaker 1 (41:21):
No, he uses clad rap And that is why there's
so many little features running around, all those frozen those
frozen torpedo things that you snap in half, and having
summer flesh cuts the bottom off that, so I can't
put as well in it. And that is a condom. Hey,
we want to know how you discovered you were.

Speaker 2 (41:41):
You were allergic to something, because there is a woman
who is apparently allergic to reaching the pinnacle of sexual intimacy.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
The bag O, the Big O, and so has an EpiPen.
It happens just in case it happens. Hard thing to stop. Georgia,
what's your friend allergic too? She is allergic to giraffe
saliza giraffe saliva. I've heard of this where they let
you and it's a reaction.

Speaker 6 (42:11):
Yes, so she's anaphylactic to giraft saliza.

Speaker 1 (42:14):
So how often is she getting licked by giraftes?

Speaker 6 (42:18):
Luckily not often.

Speaker 1 (42:21):
Did you find this out at a zoo? Yes?

Speaker 4 (42:25):
Okay, wow?

Speaker 6 (42:27):
Yeah, so she could have gone her whole life and
not known that.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
Yeah, I suppose so.

Speaker 2 (42:32):
Way she went up to like one of those things
where you go stand on that platform, and the giraffe
came and licked her, and then she went and she
got sack.

Speaker 7 (42:38):
What she got to feed draft as she was feeding
the giraffe lictor and ended up in hospital.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Does she have any other allergies? Because I'm reading here
that they've got an antiseptic property the giraft saliva to
protect its throat from the spiky thorns that it eats,
because it makes little cuts on the way down. So
the saliva goes down and stops the cuts from getting
like infected. Oh, because it's amazing, isn't it evolution some
sort of allergy to that? Yeah, what it was doing? Yeah? Wow, okay.

(43:09):
I would zoos have ePIE pins. They would in case,
like I've got EPI pinguins. Don't don't let your laps
at your own, joke your laps at your own. I
don't like it, Stacey. What did you find out that
you're allergic to?

Speaker 3 (43:27):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (43:27):
I found out I'm allergic to cold water just suddenly.
So yeah, I'm a cold water I'm a vet student,
so I'm always having to help clean stuff out, and
I was trying to help clean the cows shut out
and turn on the cold water, and instantly just broke
out in the hive.

Speaker 1 (43:48):
Hell, you didn't come across cold water until you were
revered student? What about?

Speaker 3 (43:54):
No?

Speaker 7 (43:54):
I mean I've been fine, but then suddenly like just
cold water. And I I'm originally from California, so maybe
it's just the New Zealand cold winters that.

Speaker 1 (44:04):
I just can't hang whoa, but not warm water? Cold though?
Do you guys assume I'm going to see water in
California white colder than real because.

Speaker 7 (44:15):
Instantly, just yeah, my skin turns bright red, tie all
up on my neck everywhere.

Speaker 1 (44:22):
So how do you like? Can you drink it?

Speaker 7 (44:26):
I can drink cold water, It's fine, it's just on
my skin.

Speaker 4 (44:30):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (44:32):
Did you go to see like a dermatologist or adopter
about that.

Speaker 7 (44:36):
It's honestly just aren't happening this year, and I'm kind
of like, I'm just gonna pretend it's not happening.

Speaker 1 (44:42):
I re can go see someone.

Speaker 4 (44:44):
You can't avoid cold water your whole life.

Speaker 7 (44:48):
Oh if I weren't gloves, it's fine. And as long
as it's not super icy cold, then yeah.

Speaker 1 (44:55):
We're all stacey. Thank you messages. Partner's allergic to zinc oxide,
You might be thinking, how did he work that out? Well,
he used acne medication it does have it in us
and had to be rushed to the when he started
to die. Oh my god? What else is is that?
Like in zinc like that you put on your nine oxide.
Maybe maybe I'm allergic to seamen condoms for life. The

(45:19):
Navy is not for the it's a real good yep.
Maybe the Armies for them. Yeah, okay, may be allergic
to see what about pins are now free in New
Zealand under prescription.

Speaker 4 (45:35):
It should be that's great.

Speaker 1 (45:37):
I work in a pharmacy in one of our customers
is allergic to water, has to take a huge amount
of a he has means every day just to brush
your teeth. And have a shower. I've seen this. Oh my, no,
awful lame. Someone said, I am allergic to lactose, not
just intolerant, allergic, allergic anything. But I tell you what,
I love mix floury with that sometimes acause you just

(46:02):
drove past, like, let's get a look flurry. Allergic to
a eucalyptus. Washed my hair with a plant based shampoo
that's active ingredient was eucalyptus, and just had the most
insane rash on my scalp and down my back. Oh wow.
From that being I was pregnant with first child. Craving
white peaches. Ye won't be I always go yellow, but yeah,

(46:22):
pieces peaches. Have had a couple of shoutouts on the
show because the girl dinner was a tin of peaches yesterday.

Speaker 3 (46:28):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (46:28):
Yeah, have gone to the dogs.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
In the last few years, peaches, it's all gone to
the dogs. Wow, it's not like it used to be
when we were when we were kids.

Speaker 1 (46:40):
Yeah. I think you need a little roady and central
and target some roadside stools. Yeah, road side still quality.

Speaker 3 (46:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (46:50):
And so I had a white peach throat started tingling,
felt scratchy, wrung the husband to tell her. He said,
I can hear you still eating it.

Speaker 4 (47:01):
It's delicious.

Speaker 1 (47:03):
Yeah, So that that was when I was allergic to that.
I'm allergic to ip Profann. Couldn't figure it out for
ages because after a burzey night, I get up to
take an Iberprofen. Then I assumed it was the hangover
getting worse, But it was actually the iber profen that
was to it. Okay, so I had analogy to it.
I'm allergic to the glue on plasters.

Speaker 7 (47:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:24):
I've heard a few few people having that.

Speaker 4 (47:26):
It comes off and.

Speaker 1 (47:26):
It's just super scratchy. What do you do if you
can't have a pasta? Just put a pat on it? Oh? Yeah? Yeah.

Speaker 2 (47:33):
But then, oh my god, alluded to alcohol. I had
a friend that we had became allergic to alcohol, like
really would get super super sick, like just from one drink.

Speaker 1 (47:45):
Might it should be good some people? Literally, he's the
healthiest friend I have. Yeah, And then you've got those
other people who think they're allerged to alcohol, but they
drank twenty of them. So I think even allergy it
was a volume thing more than an analogy.

Speaker 3 (48:00):
Plays fledged Thorn and.

Speaker 4 (48:02):
Hayley have a little scroll.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
Do you know what I've been.

Speaker 2 (48:04):
I've been terrible because I didn't sleep much the night
before last did I And then because I was on
my phone to like eleven thirty.

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Got to put your phone down, I know.

Speaker 2 (48:14):
And then yesterday I went home, I had a two
hour nap and that sort of sorted that out. And
then I got into bed and I shold on my
phone it was ten thirty and I was like, what
am I doing? I know better, but it's like that
little I'm a dopamine ad it. I just want little
delicious things treats. And that's why I doom scroll.

Speaker 1 (48:31):
I always my brain. I always know when I wake up.
And in our group chat, you've seen us videos at
ten o'clock at night, I'm like, yeah, here's the reels pop.

Speaker 4 (48:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (48:41):
So a lot of people are jumping on their phones
when they're bored, right then they're going, I just need
something to entertain the brain.

Speaker 4 (48:46):
Get that going.

Speaker 1 (48:46):
We're all guilty of it, whether it's at night or
during the day. Apparently, according to this research out of Taranto,
the University of Tarana, it's doing the opposite. It is
dulling our brain, making it far more bored, so it's
not actually giving us the little sparkle or the energy
or the sort of entertainment that we think it is.
It's actually it's called digital switching. But we all still

(49:08):
do it. Ain't like we know that it makes us
feel bad. We know that it's like making us sleep worse.

Speaker 4 (49:14):
Yeah, but we still do it.

Speaker 6 (49:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (49:16):
Why so even though even if even they said, because
you know, like Instagram's my one and you don't get
to choose your reels, you're just flicking through and it
curates it.

Speaker 1 (49:28):
Yea, it's the algorithm.

Speaker 2 (49:28):
Y's the algorithm, they said, Even when the videos were
curated by yourself in this research, even if you'd made
your own playlist of little entertaining videos, it didn't actually
ignite that part of the brain that was entertained or
made happier by it at all. So it's actually got
nothing to do with just the like mundaneity of the content.

(49:49):
Just the action of watching endless videos doom scrolling.

Speaker 4 (49:53):
Again and again and again and again and again.

Speaker 1 (49:56):
Is actually dulling your brain and making you even more
bored and less satisfied. You were reading before, Beard, well
I do, I do, Yeah, I know, and I thought
you were journaling. The journal has remained empty for a week.
Oh no, she's off the journal. See that you were
on a good You were on a good was it bored?
So boring? You were on this good street. You were like,

(50:17):
I'm journaling, I'm reading a boat and then I'm falling.

Speaker 2 (50:19):
Asleep and I got sack, and yeah, I got sack,
and then I didn't couldn't go to the gym.

Speaker 1 (50:25):
So then you can't sleep as well.

Speaker 2 (50:26):
And then when you can't sleep as well, you're like, well,
what's the point of doing the journaling and listening to
the meditation.

Speaker 1 (50:30):
I'm gonna go on my phone. It's all you just
throw it all out the window.

Speaker 4 (50:34):
Have I made it?

Speaker 1 (50:35):
Have vann and I made it into the journal? Been
in the journal? Ones? What did you say about it?
You were in my appreciation post. Actually that's nice, that's
the ones you want. You're in my gratitude. It was
on a Friday, and you're like, I appreciate that I
don't have to see my gym. They've instigated a new sign.

(50:59):
Oh okay, you sign, I said instigator, because yesterday at
the gym, I watched the new Matt Damon movie The Instigators,
which you won't even know.

Speaker 4 (51:06):
You watched that.

Speaker 1 (51:07):
You watched that, did you?

Speaker 5 (51:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (51:10):
The one where he like steals, everything goes terribly wrong
and he plays like this weird straight guy. It was
quite a bizarre choice for him. Yeah, I like it.
It's weirdly flowing under the radar of I just kind
of stumbled across it on It's an Apple TV original.
Great glast Why how do you? How do you watch
a whole movie at the gym?

Speaker 3 (51:30):
Like?

Speaker 1 (51:30):
Are you actually doing anything? Yeah? I do one hours
of cardio and some other stuff while watching a movie.
I can't do it.

Speaker 2 (51:40):
I tried to get inspired by you because I need
have enough time to watch the shows I want to watch.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
And I try on the bike and then I'm like,
doesn't doesn't get me going? Are you on the steer
Master sometime? Today's steer mask? No, No, yesterday was steer mask.
I saw somebody walking sideways up the steer Master. But
you never walk up sideways, So what's the point of
training walking up the stairs sideways? Get the glooty, get

(52:04):
the booty poplar just in case you squeeze past somebody. No, well,
I never sit down and pulled something down from the
ceiling like doing at the gym. I just never randomly
pick up stuff and go point. Yeah. I don't even
bug all stuff that I do at the gym. Outside
of the gym, yeah, I never run that fast unless

(52:25):
I'm being chased.

Speaker 3 (52:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:27):
So there's a new sign at the gym and it says,
if you're on your phone, please don't also be on
the equipment, because there's been some godless, there's been some
people sit on sit on the equipment. We've all done that, though.
You gotta take your breaks. Wait, is the sign of
the equipment aimed at you because you're watching movies? No,
because I'm doing stuff while I'm on the treadmill, I'm

(52:47):
running between seats. When you sit there and you just
sit and you're like, yeah, because there was a shocker,
because when you're on the thing on the treadmill, you
get the reflection off the window. Yeah, and there was
a dirt. I reckon he would have sat there for
like he would have been on the equipment for the
like fift three minutes in total. I reckon, he's doing
something for about five of the tops and then he

(53:08):
just went. And you know that one where you we've
all been there, you know that one where you set
and you push the legs up the leg press leg
press yep. That one. Someone was like fully snoozing on that.
The other day they had their eyes shutting their head back.
Oh no, it's not a seat, and I could see
them breathing their wrist was like, well, I'm just gonna
catch a crook. It would especially at smaller gems where

(53:31):
there's only one machine. Yeah, and if there's not a
second or third machine, then you're waiting for someone.

Speaker 2 (53:36):
You're like, well then someone will come take your machine.
If you've got three seats and you've got one, what
are you supposed to get? Just sit there and read off.

Speaker 1 (53:43):
But people don't like to because that's the best thing
to say to someone is hey, do you mind if
while you're doing yours we share tag and yeah, so
when they're on their phone, they can just get up
and stand there and you can quickly use the machine.
But some people don't like to talk to people. Yeah, yeah,
they just hit phones on and there was maybe they're
intimidated by them, I don't know. The gym did a

(54:05):
video as well about the people just sitting on the
on their phone, being on your phone and definitely being
guilty of it because you have those days.

Speaker 2 (54:13):
You just say, someone said three minutes between seats is
best for muscle building.

Speaker 1 (54:17):
Three minutes three minutes long?

Speaker 3 (54:20):
Is that?

Speaker 1 (54:21):
What? Would just get up and get out of the way,
Get up and get out of the way. Maybe if
someone so, what did you say? There's a video. They've
made a video as well. They made a video of
what not to do.

Speaker 4 (54:31):
It's real.

Speaker 1 (54:32):
Yeah, it's real, like scooch off. Right. It is a
small gym, your gym. It's not massive. It's not like
I think you're you guys. Gym's massive thing. Yeah, it's big.
You go to a big gym. I don't need overcomments.
We go to a big gym, big gym, a big gym.

Speaker 2 (54:51):
But then I go into the small women's gym, which
is half the side of yeah. Wow, but there's sometimes
there's only one machine of particular you know types of machines.

Speaker 1 (55:02):
Yeah, but the women are pretty good. Would around each other.
Men seemed to be the people who are sitting, yes,
sitting on the well. Both cases that I used of
the guy on the phone and the person having both
men having a.

Speaker 2 (55:15):
Little God, okay, well right, will you will you be
keeping a vigilant eye out for sitters.

Speaker 1 (55:21):
You bet, and what are you just going not actually
doing it? Read the sign us, oh god, tap the sign? Yeah,
tap the sign. Oh no, that's where that's worse. That's
not good, plays Fable and Hayley. Now this fella, he's
fifty five years old.

Speaker 2 (55:42):
I don't know I'm saying that like it's a shocking fact,
but I sort of imagined a younger person employing this
tactic to break up with someone.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
Okay, however, fifty five.

Speaker 2 (55:50):
Years old was dating, going out looking for things, and
when you are dating, not casually, but we wore going
a number of dates of people and when come time
to being like, I don't actually want to you know,
I don't see this going any further.

Speaker 4 (56:03):
You've had it horrible to sort of have to break
up with them.

Speaker 1 (56:07):
Well, no one likes breaking up.

Speaker 2 (56:08):
It's hard, awful, no matter how long you've been together.
So he employed the powers of chat GPT. He was like,
do you know what, I just like, I decided I
didn't want to be with this person after the third day.
I just thought I wanted to word it really nicely
and make sure that they didn't feel hurt, didn't hate
me afterwards.

Speaker 1 (56:26):
And this would be acceptable over a message, right, if
you've been on three dates or something, you.

Speaker 4 (56:30):
Could do that.

Speaker 1 (56:31):
Yeah, I mean he said it, but yeah.

Speaker 2 (56:33):
He was like, I can't remember the exact words of
the message, but it was basically an expansion of it,
it's not you, it's me da da da dah, and
then sent it to her and the person it said
it was a beautifully crafted breakup later and then and
the woman.

Speaker 4 (56:48):
Received it really well.

Speaker 1 (56:49):
She was like, that's a really nice thing to say,
and I appreciate you taking the time and thank you
very much and I wish you all the best. Nice anyway,
So a relationship coach came in and was like, look,
it's not inappropriate all the time to use chet GPT
to break up people. It does depend on how long
you've been together. Yeah, you wouldn't use it. Have you
been with some of the three years?

Speaker 6 (57:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (57:06):
Yeah, yeah, And you seen them a little message being
like it's over, dear flyinch. Yeah, I'm writing this to
inform you. Anyways, I want to put this to the
test because he hasn't included his letter how good chat
GPT would be at actually personally breaking.

Speaker 1 (57:23):
Up with Oh, I like this, Okay, So Vaughn, you
had it open now, so four are we going to
pretend you to breaking up? I said, let's use Haley's
acting degree. He wishes, Oh, you Vaughn would be the
one to dump me. He wishes, he wishes. Okay, well
we'll play this silly sabariover. We'll see. Okay. I am

(57:44):
male and need a nice, friendly, short, complimentary breakup message
to see into my needy, short tempered, boozy girlfriend who
cheated on me with her female WORKMATEE cure. Wow, okay, okay,
chat GPT. I'm sorry you're going through this. Can you
tell me what time you're raiming for? More formal or casual?
Like a formal? Like, what's a concern that its casual?

(58:07):
Here's the message. Let's keep things short, respectful and straightforward. Hey, Hailey,
I think it's best to go our separate ways. I
wish you all the best, Take care.

Speaker 4 (58:18):
That's that's too short.

Speaker 2 (58:20):
Could you put into chat GPT that we've been together
for three years? Like up the stakes and more emotional,
make it more emotional.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
It's all the best. Maybe you should have gone formal. Actually,
maybe formal would bring out a bit more of that.

Speaker 2 (58:37):
I think just ask them to sort of craft it
a bit more. I would be like, loll, babes, are
you so funny? What time I picking you up?

Speaker 1 (58:43):
Yeah? Do you know what I meant, babes. Hey Hailey,
this is really tough for me to say, but after
three years, I think it's best if we part ways.
We've had a lot of good times. I always tru
cheerish those memories. However, I feel we're going in different
directions and it's important for both of us to find
happiness separately. I genuinely hope you find what you're looking
for and wish you all the best of the future.
To take care of yourself, that's quite nice. Take curiousselfs

(59:06):
quite nice. It isn't even mention that I've cheated on you.
I feel like I need to acknowledge that this is
all her fault. Yeah, there needs to be some blame
applied here.

Speaker 2 (59:22):
Yeah, Like I'm taking control of my emotions because you
didn't respect man.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
Hey Hailey. It's really hard for me to say this,
but after everything that's happened, I think it's best if
we end things. That's a bit nice, that's a bit better.
The trust has been broken and it's in clearer, and
it's clearer in different places now. I value the time
we spend together and I need to but I need
to move forward. I hope you take curious olf and
find what you need. Wishing you the best. More blame,
like bloody, good job. More blame though, more anger? Maybe

(59:51):
make angrier I had more anger? Or passive aggressive? Yeah,
maybe make this more passive aggressive.

Speaker 4 (01:00:03):
It's okay.

Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
I thought that was quite a good yes, you know,
I mean, even if you used that to kind of
give you some ideas what to say, A bit of
a frame work, a bit of a framework.

Speaker 4 (01:00:13):
Yeah, okay, Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:00:16):
Hey, Hailey, after everything that has happened, I've realized that
we need to go our separate ways. It's clear that
the trust and respect we had is no longer there,
and I can't ignore the impact of your choices. More
passive aggressive enough for my life? What you're looking for,
I want it to be, but it's clear we're not
on the same path anymore. You want it to be
more bitchy? Okay, can it be? We've completely changed the

(01:00:39):
original We wanted to be respectful. You can it be
more bitchy? And also inform her that I'm keeping every
big TV GAT. So he's a message. Hey, Haley, given

(01:01:01):
everything that's happened, it's pretty clear that we're better off apart.
The trust has gone and I can't ignore the choices
you're made. I'm going to keep the big TV as
a reminder of the times you've had doubt me.

Speaker 4 (01:01:08):
Move on, you can.

Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
I hope you can figure things out. Goodbye. That's that.
I hope you can figure things out. I hope it's good.
It's a nice part. Yeah, you can figure things out.

Speaker 3 (01:01:21):
This is you.

Speaker 1 (01:01:22):
Ye, you've done and actually, you know what, I'm taking
the TV as a reminder of the times I've had together. Yeah,
this message is direct and also includes the details about
the television you asked for. It's not bad. It's not bad.
I've used it for quite a few things, have you. Yeah,
I've never never used it. And you can just be
like I feel like it needs to be longer and

(01:01:43):
you don't even have to give a ship what is?
It fills up the gap. It's like I work that
out for you.

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
Wait, so when you're like talking to us in our
group chatting stuff and you see all those really like
lovely long messages to us.

Speaker 4 (01:01:54):
I don't even know what said. I just copy past.

Speaker 1 (01:01:56):
This is really personal stuff about how you. I don't
even do it. I just get my children to do it.
I'm like read it out to me. They read it.
I'm like, here are the instructions. Yes, that's fine coffee
paste and wow. Yeah the future right, it's the future, right,
plays Fletchborne and Hailey.

Speaker 4 (01:02:14):
Fact of the Day, day day day day do do
do do do doo doo dooo doo.

Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
This we expected the day themeous national dishes that aren't
that didn't originate in the country that you associate them with. Yeah,
and today we're talking hot dogs.

Speaker 4 (01:02:42):
What the German?

Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
Aren't they? They are German, but they are the national
dish of America. They are American hot dogs, I suppose.
So when you buy them at the carnival, they call
them American hot dogs. Nearly do Are we talking hot dogs?
Isn't in the bun and the bun corn dogs is
what You're all them hot dogs. And that's why we
call American hot dogs American hot dogs because we call

(01:03:06):
the sausage on the stick in the batter. We call
them hot dogs as well. Though they're supposed to be
corn dogs. You don't rather have one of our hot
dogs and the Carnie sauce over an American hot dog.

Speaker 2 (01:03:16):
If someone said to me right now, I'll bring you
I'll get you a corn dog dipped in Carnie sauce.

Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
I'll put one hundred bucks. I love them because someone
said right now, Oh my god, I just want one
so bad. Yum. It's like I'm just right now. But
what if someone shows up in five minutes with one?
Please don't, please don't. I won't expect hundred probably spark
up the deep fryer and everything. I would give anything

(01:03:46):
to have one in my hand like that right now.
Have you ever had the one where they.

Speaker 4 (01:03:52):
What do they call them?

Speaker 1 (01:03:53):
And they smash all the other stuff into the batter,
But have you ever had that corn dog with their
chips like hot chips are chopped up into little bits
and they put them in the batter, and so they
put the batter on and then they like smash it
like sprinkles on an ice tram. And they call them
like ugly dogs or something. And they've got a whole
lot of different ones rights and it can be like

(01:04:13):
bacon bits and stuff, and then they batter again, and yeah,
my heart was like, you konds me, you take it.
So hot dogs are German, of course, the sausages and
the hot dogs called frankfurtersas traditionally Zavena. Exactly, all right,

(01:04:34):
so this is the the hot dog is not American,
it's German. But also adding to this hot dogs, because
I've never known what they're called hot dogs stand by
stand by dog, don't get stand by, stand by stand by.
Guess they've bastardized from three separate German names. Frankfurt A
sausages were a bit formal, so when they first got
to America they called them hot dushounds like the dogs.

(01:04:54):
The dogs, Yeah, except Americans could neither spell nor pronounce dushound.
So then they were just like, let's just go the
hot dogs. Oh yeah, right, what about it? I know
I've never called a thought why they were called hot dogs,
but now, but now we call the dusholls sausage dogs
hot You probably get was a wiener in a bun,
from the English word wiener, which is a loanword from

(01:05:15):
German meaning from Vienna, referring to smith. You're a wiener
more of a sad boy. I'm more of a sad
boy boy in myself. You're a wiener people, Wieners, what
a strange thing, weird times it's trucker. So if you

(01:05:38):
are hot dog, you aready is a whinner in a bun, which,
of course whenna is a loanword from German meaning a
little set. So that's a loanword from German meaning from Vienna.
We've talked about this before. Weena Nitzel is Vienna's schnitzel
from Vienna and German. It's Vienna's snitzel. So we say

(01:05:59):
Weena Snitzel referring to Vienna sausages or Weena sausages, and
they will go full circle because dash Honds are now
often called sausage dogs, sausage dogs or Wiena dogs. So
when they are so, I mean you're getting you're getting
a too for here. Yeah, the hot dog is an American,
it's German. And when they first went to America, the

(01:06:20):
hot dog in the barn with mustard worth sauce worth onions. Yes,
if you're not getting onions, grub grub and gets was
originally called a hot dush Hond. Fact of the day,
day day day Dayah.

Speaker 4 (01:06:41):
Did do do do do do do do doo doo.

Speaker 1 (01:06:50):
Play play well ancestry dot com. There's what, there's twenty
three and me this heap of DNA ancestry tests you
can do all over the world and like we've got
the ancestry ones. They're fascinating all the time I did,
I didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:07:09):
I didn't discover anything fun or spicy other than my
one percent Hawaiian that was quite fun.

Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
Yep. I'm a few what am I A little bit Swedish,
a little bit a little bit North. Always updating always,
I think I think a lot of that were your
people are from. Its bullshit. I just think it's just changes.
But it's always changing because the more people do it,
you know, and update their family trees. It's fascinating. But

(01:07:35):
since Brick sat and this is a story out of
the UK, since Brick said, because you know that passport's
become a bit dud now the UK part because you
used to with bricks that be able to travel all
over Europe. Used to live you live in Spain, you
could retire in the south of France. But now they
now British citizens can't like they have like like us.
Basically I think what your parents are there five months

(01:07:57):
a year? Yeah, they can live there. I think six
you can, and then you've got to go. Well, people
are turning to DNA tests to see if they can
get a bit of passport, particularly the Irish passport, because
Irish passports can still or still part of the EU.
I would happily get an Irish passport in an Irish
Ireland right the south part, not the Protestants Catholic to

(01:08:21):
get this passport come out. Well, and you've also got
to have some ancestry as well. I've got seventeen percent
it's right here. But in the past, like you've had
to have like birth certificates, like your grandfather's or the relative.
Every country is different to how you can get a passport.
But people are now using ancestry tests, these DNA tests

(01:08:41):
to back up their applications. Really yeah, to say, look
here's what's happened. Well, I mean, what is the what's
the quota? Do you know what I mean? I don't
know what. Then but then the scottiship removed, do you
know what I mean? That doesn't give you an EU passport,
does it?

Speaker 3 (01:08:58):
Nah?

Speaker 1 (01:08:59):
But you know Scotland's nice, it's nice, just gives you
another past, something, another place to live. Yeah, you know
it would be because there was no surprises in mine
or any of ours really, right, there was no big
surprise if you were adopted, Oh you would that would
be that would be like this would be such a
key opening a door of who you are. Yeah, totally,

(01:09:23):
And that's what I wanted to ask this morning. Have
you done a DNA TIS and did you find something out?
Like was there a surprise? Well maybe you've got surprise surprise.
Maybe you're like your uncle is your cousin's mum?

Speaker 4 (01:09:37):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (01:09:37):
Like yeah, yeah, yeah, those weird family tree stuff that
get that gets that gets exposed by this because the
TV show that's on at the mid Yeah, Vaughan's father
that one. No, okay, well what are you talk about about?
The one that sonyr Gray is doing. The like, we've

(01:09:58):
got this weird mystery in our family and there's always
a DNA aspect to it, right, A who lot of
investigations and quite often in those sorts of shows, they
find out that someone they thought was and it was
the same with wasn't Steve Beshemi that was the big
celebrity that had it. He growing up, he thought he
had an older sister, but it was it was his mum.
Oh okay, his parents were actually his grandparents. You could

(01:10:22):
get away with that back in the day because DNA
wasn't a thing, or it was, and it wasn't like
so accessible to the public. You can pay one hundred
dollars and find out who you related to.

Speaker 4 (01:10:32):
Yeah, totally.

Speaker 1 (01:10:33):
We want to know this morning what you found out
from a DNA test, because people are using DNA tests
to get extra passports. Yeah, because you know, maybe they
can heritage. Yeah, maybe they can live somewhere I don't know, exotic, fun, spicy.
Now we are hearing from people with plenty of surprises
through DNA test. Taran, you found a half sister and

(01:10:54):
you had half the top half of the bottom heart
and you had no idea she even existed.

Speaker 6 (01:11:05):
No, but it sort of doesn't surprise me because my
father was married before my mother and had three daughters
which I've never met but they're in England. And then yes,
I had three girls, and then married my mum and
had four kids, two boys, two girls, and then my yeah,
and two good and then my my daughter decided to

(01:11:28):
get her DNA tested and it flagged up. There was
some kind of match that we couldn't figure out what.
So I got mind tested and then it showed that
I've got this half blood sister, which sort of doesn't
surprise me because obviously he's, you know, quite romantic.

Speaker 1 (01:11:42):
Is a breeder. Yeah, so is this in New Zealand
or in England?

Speaker 6 (01:11:47):
She's in England?

Speaker 1 (01:11:48):
Yeah? So she one of the three from the previous marriage,
or she's not, she's a.

Speaker 6 (01:11:53):
New one, she's in between the two marriages. It was
understandable for me the fact that she thought she was
an only child and I told her that she had
five sisters and two brothers.

Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
Oh my god, they must have rocked a world. You
just like, yeah, did you because I've had those messages
on ancestry dot com. I was like, so and so
wants to you know, as a distant cousin, and just
one of those what did you just get? Did you
just message her and say, hey, by the way, you've
got all these half sisters and brothers.

Speaker 3 (01:12:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:12:23):
I sort of messaged her and said would you like
to you know, chat and sort of know about the
family and everything. And then after a few emails, I
rang her and yeah, I'm going to go see her
and hopefully junior next year.

Speaker 1 (01:12:35):
Oh my god, wild god, yeah, Tarin, think of sharing, Rebecca,
you found a whole bunch of sisters on a DNA test.

Speaker 8 (01:12:48):
Yeah, I found six sisters.

Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
Whack no, wait, half sisters or actual sisters.

Speaker 8 (01:12:54):
I've got one actual sister and the rest the half sisters.

Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
Are you adopted when I was?

Speaker 3 (01:13:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:13:01):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
Wow, so forces and a bunch of And then so
did you reach out to them and connect.

Speaker 8 (01:13:07):
With them and be like, hi, So I don't know
who they are unfortunately because they haven't done the DNA testing,
but one yes, since she lives not so I went
to school with Oh my.

Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
God, So were you all adopted out? Yeah?

Speaker 8 (01:13:27):
I think so, right.

Speaker 1 (01:13:28):
And so there's just like a couple of blank like
squeeze on your ancestory dot and there's like two people
out there that don't know they have all these Wow,
that's so fascinating.

Speaker 8 (01:13:38):
Oh yeah, it's a bit it's a bit different.

Speaker 4 (01:13:42):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
And so do you keep in touch with the ones
that you've spoken to?

Speaker 3 (01:13:46):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
I do. Yeah, Oh my god, it's so cool.

Speaker 4 (01:13:49):
Thank you for sharing family.

Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
Family later in life. We want to know this morning
what surprises you got from a DNA test? Realized. I
didn't realize there's a message system ancestry dot com. Yeah.
A couple of people reach out being like, I think
that we share a great great grandfather. I know I
had those, and I was just like, I don't care.
You're not welcome at Christmas. You think about how many

(01:14:12):
relatives you're going back great great grandfather, so you're going
back four lots. You think of back in the day grandfather. Yeah,
you think about how many cousins you'd have at that level.
I know you're not coming to the wedding. It makes
it sound like I'm trying to legitimately justify sleeping with
my cousin there. I just caught the tone of the yeah, like,

(01:14:32):
it's not even that freakish. Well, so your your mothers
were sisters who cares some wild stories, so it's still close. DNA.
I found out my husband is my third cousin, and
that's going back to a great great grandparent. You're right,
but you don't text the radio station and tell people
about that. They do have a shocked face. It hasn't

(01:14:56):
ended their marriage anything that's made them closer. I found
out through a dnaties I had an eighteen year old daughter.
What that would be freaky right, So someone just was like,
I'm pregnant and they're like, well, I'm going to tell them,
not gonna tell him? Well more, maybe I don't know
who he is because if it way back in the
day and out of town or somewhere different and didn't

(01:15:16):
get a name. Yeah, so I wonder, wait, do you message?
Did you message them and be like hey, I'm oh yeah,
But what if he doesn't especially message him like now
because it's Father's Day in like a couple of weeks,
get a prison. So I thought I was one called

(01:15:36):
a Mexican for my whole life. Okay, I thirty seven.
I did an ancestry test. What I'm a boring old
white European. Turns out my biological father is just a
big fat liar tanned. Well what I found dad? My
dad doing a DNA tis so I found in my

(01:15:57):
mind she walked into the kitchen and Dad's like sitting
in it. I found my father using a DNA test.
Oh wow, I don't even know I was looking for him.
My mum had been wrong. My entire life was incredible.
I have two brothers and two sisters and thirty three nieces.

Speaker 4 (01:16:10):
And nephews.

Speaker 1 (01:16:10):
Now, hold on, whoa wow, Wait, you've got four siblings
and thirty three children between them. Even that, what are
we looking at there? Six seven? No, I'd like cancel
my ship because that's a lot of Christmas prison. I
don't want to say, all of a sudden, I have
to buy that many prisons. Yeah, you do one of
those men two dollars shop pick and Max. Yeah, even

(01:16:31):
grab a wrapped up thing. My real father of thirty
two years, all of a sudden we did as well,
and forced me to take a DNA test to find
out is actually his real daughter? Who would have thought
summed up with a one hundred dollars Farmers voucher as
a sorry and a thank you to myself and mom
because she is his daughter. No, I took that as
not one hundred dollars voucher. What was that the makeup

(01:16:52):
make good?

Speaker 3 (01:16:52):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:16:52):
I like, sorry, I accuse you of not being mine. Right,
here's a one hundred Farmers You wait till jockeys are
on special piston. Yeah, wait for a ale for sure.
There's so many of these, And think like, how long
has DNA testing been open to the general public for funding?
Soueven crimes like ten years. We started here and they
gave us a free one. That's my only reason we
did it.

Speaker 2 (01:17:13):
A lot of people this is an interesting message a
lot of not me directly, but I've been proving to
many young people in their late teens who have just
found out that they're Mardy because their grandmothers were sent
away when they had illegitimate pregnancies.

Speaker 1 (01:17:23):
With Mardy men.

Speaker 2 (01:17:25):
Right, and then that's been a kept, a big secret.
Come back tanned baby Tan's well, Marty yeah, Italian, Italian. Yeah,
I don't get way, that's I mean, that was a
different time time then, this poor woman being sent away.
My dad's massively into DNA testing and family trees. He

(01:17:45):
has found a sister that his father had. He only
found her in his fifties and his father had passed on,
so they didn't even know if his father knew.

Speaker 4 (01:17:53):
He had an illegitimate daughter.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
Oh okay. He also found out that my mum's grandparents
lied about where they were from so they could move
to New Zealand. So the false pretense of our nationality
I matched with the dute on Tinder. That's not the
start of this const where's this going? I matched the
dude on tender and things were going so well, so
I added them on Snapchat and then the snapchat had
my last name in it, so it wasn't even a

(01:18:17):
DNA test. It was a Snapchat test. Okay, the last
name was like, that's interesting ass around cousin. Oh okay
that it was a bit of a bit of a
ty hoe. Yeah, wow, I love this.

Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
My son had to get genetic testing done a NIKU
and when the results came back, it had some irregularities
and the doctor had to ask if my husband and
I could be related. We had to get tested, but
thankfully we're not. But god, I had a good old
giggle about cousin people.

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
Another one in the bag, and it's a a Sanci
bag as well. If you enjoyed that, give us a
writing and review and be sure to tell your mates
you don't sound sincere there, but I'm just reading what's
written here. Sid AM's Fletch born in Highley,
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