Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The z M podcast Network, The Fleas, Thawn and Haley
Big Pod.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Great things are brewing at mcafe, the perfect start to
every day. Good morning, Welcome to the show, Fletch, Morn
and Haley. Three minutes past six, Happy Mondays, thorough good
morning to you both, very thorough good, very far top
to bottom, anyone left or right up to down. Have
you got a new coffee cup? This was just in
the drawer that suits you. It's cute, it's me, it's
(00:30):
hotten here, it is hot in here. Temp check, Temp check.
I reckon one feels like twenty feels just right to me. Okay,
I think you too are overdressed. You've got a long
slea lazer. You're a blazer.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
I wanted to bring a job of additionalism to our
radio session for the rest of the year.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Oh you don't have a job interview later I might.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Yeah, I'm I'm well hoping to pick up some Edmund work.
Thorough good luck to you and I thoroughly accept your luck.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Thank you. More Chance is on the show today to
see Sabrina Carpenter. Another trip to la this week. So
we've got five of these all up. We've given away
too flights, accommodation, tickets, and spending money again. You know
how this works. If you don't, you've got to be
listening for the mother trucker, either the activator or in
the song. Be the first caller through on on eight
hundred dollars at M. When you hear that, we'll give
(01:19):
you a chance before seven the top six on the way. Yeah.
Did you guys see the river run Orange? I saw
the photos. Yeah, not a hockey gorge. That's a beautiful
dry love beautiful though.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
There's some bits where there's just not a barricade and
you just go over.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
With yeah you would, and the river's like you're right below, yeah,
and then sometimes it floods and it gets right up.
It's a beautiful through When it's right up. It's quite
terrifying the amount of water that area. I want to
do some like hikes through there because it's all gold mine.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
I always want to pull over. You see people pulling
over and stopping.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
There's a track that I think you can even ride
your bikes along. Funnel. At the weekend it turned completely orange,
a puzzling shade of orange. Yeah. They've said it's an
old collapsed mind shaft that had like a blockage in it,
so that all the sentiment and everything was backing upimentment, sentiments,
(02:19):
a lot of feelings, some lovely feelings, feelings to the
river for their lost, for their loss. Yeah, at this time,
we want your sediment to really be felt. Uh, and
they're saying it's sediment. I don't believe it. Oh you don't,
You don't. Science can't be believed, can I trusted? The
top six reasons the river actually ran orange? Coming up
(02:40):
next on the show.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
There was a French actor who sadly passed away over
the weekend, but in his will he had a very
strange request for his dog and Haley.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Well.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
His name was Elaine Fabia Maurice Marcel de Land and
he was a French actor who passed away last week.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
I never heard of him. Was he anything like we'd
know of? He was like old, he's older.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
Was born in nineteen thirty five, so like you know,
he was in Jurassic Perk. He was eighty eight years old.
I mean, he's a French actor. It's and lots of
French things, you know, okay, you know, like Aussie's films.
I see, Oh he did Legend of Zorro like originally
he did some asterisk stuff, No, just weird things. He
would have been the voice of asterisks or did he
(03:28):
play Asterix?
Speaker 2 (03:30):
What was his name? A gangster films was what he
was best known for, right, yeah, right, what's he done?
And then aplatform die?
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Well he's died, right, But years before, in twenty eighteen,
he did an interview with a French magazine saying that
he's had over fifty dogs in his lifetime.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
He's a big dog lover.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
But there's one in Particula that he had that he
said he had a really special relationship with. He was
like he love is just one like a child that
was not a French accent. I've gone German anyway. So
he died last week and it was put into his
(04:13):
will that his request was that the special dog, the
one that he called his end of life dog, the
one he would remember for the rest of his days
when he died. He wanted a vet to euthanize the
dog in his arms so that they could die together
and go away together, and.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
He'd be buried with this dog. Yeah, what kind of
does he say? What kind of dog it is?
Speaker 3 (04:32):
No?
Speaker 2 (04:33):
I can't see a picture of it. But ran I
have to be a listen.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
I'm going to say it's like a Pomeranian or something
stupid it gives off that far.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Or a sausage dog. Yeah, that would be if you
were going to choose a dog to be buried with,
that would be the most economical as sausage wise, yes,
space wise, yeah, because you've got otherwise you're going to
have to buy a bigger casket. But if you're getting
buried with your Tibesian Mastiff or a Great Dane, that's
just the whole extra coffin, that's a whole Yeah. Yeah,
(05:02):
that's a double decker. Yeah, double decker coffin. So they're
gonna need to bury twice as low. Yeah. Well it
hasn't been honored by his family. They've denied it in
the world.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
Because and also like so many animal protection places came
out being like the life of an animal is not
subject to the life of its owner. No, we can
rehunt them very easily, Like don't murder a dog just
for the stupid word.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Can you put the dog in later? Like dig him
back up? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Well you do those double graves, you dig them to
eight feet. You put in the first one and you
wait for the husband and wife to.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Do it, and they put them on top, unless the
husband and wife gets another partner and they're like, I
don't want to do that. I okay.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
I think this all the time about those double graves
that you're like, say the wife dies in the hole,
she gets and she's like, I'll leave space for you
so you can go out top.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
Let's say seven. You know, there's no way if you
were married since you were twenty and your love your
life dies at seven, you might find another partner, but
they're not a burial partner like at seventy, it could
be like you know, you even know. Yeah, his stories
(06:12):
of these retirement communities. Oh my god, that's lust, that's
wild passionate sex. My granddad got a little girlfriend, did he? Yeah? Yeah,
I don't know. He got a girlfriend.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
My nana had Alzheimer's and so she went into a
home for the.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
Later part of it.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
Yeah, and he would visit her every day and they
were still married and everything, but he had a friend.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
And then once my nana passed away, they were they
were like lovers, but they were pop passed away.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
But there were lovers, they weren't Zis dog. Hello, maybe
they were So did they all get buried? They got cremated? Okay,
yeah that's your that's your tech tech. That's easy peasy
and mix all the ashes together and sort of like
keys in the bowl.
Speaker 1 (06:55):
Yeah. But yeah, So anyway, this guy has he's not
being Beard with his.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
Dog, and so the family have been like, no, we're
not putting a dog dogs at home with I want
to see a picture of the dog. I found out
what he was an asterix. Oh yeah. In two thousand
and eight's real life Asterisks, not animated Asterisks Asterisk of
the Olympic Games. He played Julius Caesar. If you're familiar
with the asterisk comics. Is always a bit of a
(07:24):
like a buffoon, wasn't it. Yeah, betrayed as a bit
of a buffoon. Okay, there was dog maddics in that.
Maybe that was the dog plays Flinchbourne and the famous
two brewery building at Mangatanoka.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
Which is so short, like when you drive past it,
you was like that small, Yeah, because it looks so
tall and all the advertising because it's so thin. Yeah yeah,
but it's actually just a really small building.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Yeah, but it is. But it also is in the Yeah,
it's in the middle of nowhere. It's quite middle, you know,
you just drive past, you're like, oh, yeah, it's a
weird building in the middle of nowhere. Yeah, eighteen eighty
nine it was built. Wow eighty nine they built a
building that big in the middle of nowhere. Yeah, that's crazy.
But made the decision. The main production plant was shifted
(08:13):
in twenty fifteen. But now it's snuck out that it
hasn't been making beer right, which I'm not at all
surprised by it, Like they don't make it be there anymore.
I'm just like, I wouldn't have thought that would have
been an economically viable decision for so close to a decade,
like good because it's a bit like in the middle
(08:36):
of nowhere.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Odd, where are they making the beer? Until we are
just at the other dB. Yeah they've got a reason.
What South Aupeland And he's one in tu yes as well.
Yeah apparently what a great place, but not at that
among the Tonoka And some people are upset by that,
someple apparently by a massive multinationals alcohol brand just doing
(09:03):
it the Chips way. They can not using a tiny
little brick building. Yeah, they should airbnb there. It was
a very famous It looks.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
A bit like the Ghostbusters building from the movie's tall
skinny brick building. It's so out of place in the
middle of rural Are they going to change the all
the imaging on the boxes to some big corporate steel
fact not the same, is it? Yeah, big steel vats
and whatnot. Yeah, they totally they could totally. Yeah. I'm
(09:33):
just looking at the building. It's so cool.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
Like I mean, I hate to sound like an Auckland,
but they really could make that into some nice apartments.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
What are you in the start heights to eighty three
twelve foot Now we're saying that it looks but it
is deceptively small. We could be talking just a two
point six You know, I don't think people are going
to live in departments here in the middle of nowhere. Yeah,
it truly is. They could to make a grand designs
it mate screen design brand designs spoiler it. They run
(10:06):
out of money and they come up against all matter
of council issues and then and then it's a bowl
and then we'll put up some apartments and then the
couple get divorced. They mysterious fire, a mysterious fire, but
they were just up in their insurance policy. It was
just nuts flits. No, there's the letter B on now
(10:34):
the top six.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
Yeah, yeah, you gotta go, bro, I haven't written it.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
Oh my god, born snack. We've been we've been chatting
and catch it up. Well you've better come up with
blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. This is the
top six. It's like improv improv and said now over
the weekend, and then jes came out of an orange river.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
I didn't see this until you mentioned it. The or
Hin Moody River.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
So it feeds in. Is that the river that runs
through the karrang Hockey Gorge. I always considered that was
the krang Hockey River, But I'm most people to treat
bright orange into it. This is the road that you
drive between yeah to and calm down? Why he and
pyor yeah around the body miles down the road. That
(11:29):
road you drive through to get all roads lead. That's
the old saying, isn't it? Well was orange? You just
stopped chatting. They have come out. They have come out
and said it's a collapsed mine shaft and all of
the like gunk sediments. That was the scientific word for it. Gunk,
(11:50):
rust rusty. I'm imagining there's some rusty rail railings or
all sorts of railroad.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Like that clay. You can see that there's a really orange.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
It was all blocked up and then just enough pressure
behind it took a lexit of blew it straight. And
love those videos with the unblocked drains and stuff. Seen this, Yeah,
came out. There was some force. But you think there's
something sinister behind this is cover I should not and
it's not a collapsed mind shaft, and it's turned the
river orange. Here are the top six things that turned
(12:23):
the river orange. Number six on the list um pollution
from the high Verse factory, the range. Yeah, they cleaned.
They had to clean out of the tanks in the river. No, no,
and then they don't just run.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
It's quite so bright. Yeah, if it makes sense.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
Number five on the list of the top six things
that actually turned that river orange. A giants monarch butterfly
soup got spilt, Oh my god, the butterflies and smashes
them up because there orange, which is the monon smashes.
I know it's quite because they're quite lovely. Yeah, it's
(13:06):
the same color as a monarch butterfly though yeah, actually yeah.
Number four on the list of the top six things
that made the river orange. Gingers were having a bath.
Vorn merchings are shaming. That's just born, that's just for Ellen,
(13:28):
for Ellen vourn Ellen. Number three on the list of
the top six. Number three on the list of the
top six things that made that river orange. Decomposing on plumpers.
We watched the Charlie and there we watched the original
Charlie and the Wig the choplate I've got Onember two
(13:54):
on the list of the top six things that made
the river orange.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
At the weekend, someone was really hungover and they dropped
a barrocca and to it to drink it up.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
It would have been a lot of rock. They took
a WII in the river and they were so dehydrated
that their kidneys were screaming. Yeah. Sometimes on a Sunday
you're like, I've got to have some I'm sorry, body, sorrybody.
I saw this out. And number one on the list
of the top sex things that made their river orange.
(14:25):
Not not not a sediment? Back up, you know how
at one stage and finding Nemo they store Nemo in
the blender nonells. Someone turned it on. No that's that
was easy. I might do the top six like this
every day. I reckon a little more thought a little
(14:46):
bit thought it snuck up on me, snuck up on me,
snuck up on me. That's those up sex.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
Plays play.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
I was just thinking when I was reading this little
study here that not a my friends are really very
active on the apps at the moment. Just sort of
disappointing because then I don't get to have a little
play around on the profile. Are dating apps? Sorry, yeah,
that's what I mean.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
All right, I see you, meaning like on Instagram. I
was like, I was like, I'm literally no.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
The dating apps because we know I'm not on him,
and I really want to have a little swipeity wipeery,
a little swipe.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
For a judge, little judge pass it for the judgment.
Speaker 4 (15:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Yeah, because I told you what's out there.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
I think I might have talked about this, maybe even
on radio, perhaps in private and our private conversations, just
as as free and you went auth into friends, and
I think.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
That comes across on here.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
About the time that I was on my friends dating
app and I were swiping and I was having a
little bit of fun, and we saw a guy and
we were like, oh my god, cute.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
It takes a lot of boxes.
Speaker 1 (15:45):
That's this first look for the profile was oh my god,
I love him and I swiped the wrong way and
we never found him again. And she's always like, there
was my husband and you lost him. Oh wow, brings
it up. And this is maybe three years ago. So
once you swiped right, not every month doesn't reset. I
don't know, it doesn't.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
Apps. If you accidentally swiped the wrong way, you can undo,
but you got it. That's like something you got to
pay for. So you could have a number of years
ago you should have paid for her husband and gone back.
What a story would have made at their wedding. What
a story she's still because you swiped her husband? I know. Terrible. Anyway.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
The reason I've brought up dating apps is because there's
a study in America looking at the biggest turn ons
and the biggest turn offs or X on dating profiles.
Turn ons being things like good scenes of humor, showing
interest in travel, featuring a pet in a photo, having hobbies,
interested in things, being motivated, and a good sense of style.
(16:47):
These are the things that we like.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
Here are the X and the number one.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
I was like, oh, I wouldn't have thought of this
as being the icky s one. Okay, five poor grammar
and spelling. Now we've got like yeah, no different, no apostrophes. Yeah,
I can't wait to get out there and done seeing
the world wrong.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
There's no one's perfect, No one's perfect.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
And actually, you know, it's almost an irrelevant factor when
you're with someone, but especially if there are a ten,
if they will take a thick ten, like you know
what I.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
Mean, there can be a ten and say the wrong
they're they're they're they're scene scene Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Your silly mouth. Okay, that's five. Four was just a
complete lack of effort, like crap photo, not enough information,
haven't described anything about yourself, just like.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
You're like they're.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Playing with their sexy indifference. Yeah I don't actually even
need to know that. Yeah, okay. Number three was too
much emphasis on material positions being a big turn off.
Maybe like a yacht in front of a boat, Okay,
I'm like there with my life.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Even a tea that could be a bit yuck. Yeah,
like your Hong Kore Yeah, like just flashing for a purpose,
like being all flashy and.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
You and you being like I see that you're doing
that to impress me.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Or like, but see that from the guy from a
heterosexual mass one of you and also looks like a
lot of upkeep. Ye, there's a lots of expensive like
I'm gonna have to pay for these handbags. Yeah. Then
there are some people that are into that whole flashy lifestyle,
you know, keeping up appearances thing.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Okay, here were the top two profile x The second
one overly edited or filtered photos where you're just like, oh,
you're just hiding something.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
Yeah, your whole thing. You're a manger, you're a sex
posing as a tear. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
And number one was negativity and bitterness. But I don't
know how you did even put that into your profile.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
The dating app because I'm you know, I've been cheated
on again.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
Yeah, sick of an authentic be archer's only message.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
If you're real f I know I thought of that
one either.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
I mean, you know, just try give me a go, guys,
even though I'm an ugly dog. But that was that
was the main factor. Negativity, negativity, And you know how
I feel about negativity. You can what you put out
into the world.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Yeah, you're negative about negativity. I feel quite negatively towards negativity.
Is that negative negative times negative equals positive. It does.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
But also they say two wrongs don't make it right
if I'm wrong, I'm not trying to find I'm just
trying to have some dinner with some candlelight.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
What's something, Honey, I will leave, baby, I'll just stay.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
What is that song I've got?
Speaker 1 (19:46):
There's maybe Kelly Rowland.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
I don't know. Oh if it was Kelly Roland, Flitch
would know, I wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
Huge reybe when we saw Your Life ten, which is great, Yeah, yeah,
absolute ten? Given it tight, no need for filters, there
absolutely no need what.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
Play stadiums. Flit and Haley two astronauts. They went to
the International Space Station aboard a Boeing star star Liner.
Now this was an they were supposed to be doing
an eight day mission. So you imagine you think you're
going somewhere for eight days easy in June. On the way,
there some helium leaks amongst a few other problems. And
(20:32):
they knew the helium was leaking, but did they say
did they suck it up? And anyway, they got there,
but then it was deemed to be too unsafe to
take them back so that's been attached to the International
Space Station the whole time. That's undocking. They call it docking.
They call it when you put the shuttle one goes
(20:56):
over it. Yep, docks, that's what docking yea of the
International Space Yeah, there's also an urban Dictionary docking as well,
but it's very similar.
Speaker 5 (21:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
Seven in the morning. I'm halfway through my porridge. I
don't need to know about two penises touching each other
in such a manner or right, we were.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
Talking about scout stations when you do into dictionary.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
So it's going to come back unmanned the Boeing spacecraft
that went or what they're going to undock that and
just jettison it back to Earth. Yeah. Control, that's a control,
but some problems. I think it's probably that back to
Earth and oh no, and they'll be waiting until next year.
(21:47):
They went up in June for eight days.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
Then I'll coming back to next year eight months and
assimming they had like backup supplies, right, or the International
Space Station has enough like or something. Women who were
not romantically connected, you know, there's other people up there
the space station. Yeah, the space station is always manned.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
Or woman were their own unsolicited guests. What do you
think the space stations like an airbnb? Like leave man?
The heating could have been how many people are on
the International Space Station right now? There's always at least
a couple, wasn't it. Yeah? I don't think it's any
more than three or four? Is it? There was that
(22:30):
we did fact that the day once about the last
time that all humans were on Earth about seven. Yeah,
and it was being donkeys since humans were on Earth
because sometimes they're always i mean on planes and stuff. Yeah,
but yeah, some of the mat within the atmosphere yea
literally out of space. So at the moment, the Q
(22:51):
and the teeth are boeing because they got four point
two billion US dollars to work with NASA to do
commercial space flights onto the space station, and meanwhile SpaceX
got two point six billion, But they're the ones that
are going to Bowling's rescue. Yeah, SpaceX is, Yeah, that company.
(23:13):
I doubt he's got much to do with the day
to day design of rockets and such. The right people
the right amount of money do they do like psychological testing?
Before we were talking.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
About me and Aaron were like, oh my gosh, telling
him about these astronauts, and he was like, oh my god,
but they can talk to Earth all the time. Right,
you'd have a psychologist in there being like, how are
you looking after yourself?
Speaker 2 (23:34):
How are you guys getting on?
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Yeah, because you imagine if you took this job and
you were like, okay, eight days, Oh my god, I
really hate the guy I'm working with.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
But it doesn't matter. We're only out there for a week. Yeap.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
Get eight months later. Yeah, you're still hanging out with
the stuebe Also, would you would you start? You'd have
a little bit you saw each other out, wouldn't you.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
I like that is the first the first.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Thing I thought about. I was like, eight miles So
she's forty eight. Need to Williams, who's up there? I'm
just gonna see how whole barriers because he's sixty one,
Like that's a lot.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
Like, I know sixty one is not old old, but
this is this is astronauts in space. Right. They thought
they were up there for eight days. They're gonna be
up there for eight months. That muscle atrophy and stuff, Yeah,
declines does to come home? Yeah, I know, because he's
sixty one and your body doesn't bounce back from stuff
as quickly then. I mean, he's an astronauts. Ibrought a
cooker than me. But yeah, you.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Know, they stay pretty they stay pretty fat.
Speaker 2 (24:35):
How are your knees after the hike yesterday? About saw? Yeah,
I saw like you've been in the space station. Just
like that. I imagine fletched Vaorn.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
And Haley, you know us in particular Vaughn Smith, real
mouthpiece for the left, Yeah, real left wing.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
Enough job over there.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
Well, I want to balance that a little bit with
some something that a right wing commentator in the United States,
Liz Wheeler, has shield shared on her social media and
it's a graph that shows the most unattractive hobbies that
men can have, according to wim to Women. Okay, now
down the bottom with an attractiveness score of unattractiveness score,
(25:20):
so the more the higher score this research, No one,
it's not really a right wing Yeah, it's literally just
made up.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
Okay, Okay, so right down the bottom with.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
An unattractiveness score of fifty out of one hundred.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Bird watching. I love watching the people getting back into
the bird watching. Yeah. Yeah, I don't know anyone. I
always just thought it was like an old man. I
don't know. Yeah, stuck in a cabin in the middle
of nowhere kind of hobby.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
We've got lots of trees around around our property. Not
on our property, sadly, but the.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Toy when you see, I'm not going out of my
like if they're there when I'm there, the thrush, the
wax sizes are out. Spend a summer of no rush.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
I'm going to three Yeah, yeah, I went over to Europe.
Speaker 2 (26:09):
Third summer in a row. No thrush. Wow, that's a
really good gut house. If we can go back to birds, yep,
equally is annoying thrush equally annoying the mark everywhere they
make a bloody miss. A wax sizer in the tree
eating the oranges. At the moment you see a bird watching,
how unattractive it is, like shifty at one hundred. So
(26:30):
I'm going to jump one. Uh taxi doomies in there.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
We like text dormy that's doing it.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
Yeah, probably text or just having it in your house.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
They see a hobby, so you're doing American Okay, Building
model trains is just above there, and slightly above building
model trains with an unattractiveness A score of seventy out
of one hundred is gambling.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
Oh okay, then we've.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
Got online trolling at seventy five. Now here we are
at eighty with an unattractiveness of eighty out of a
possible one hundred.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
We've got magic tricks. As we know.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
A producers share on our show, her partner is a magician. Yeah,
it does nothing but magic tricks.
Speaker 2 (27:10):
This is his job, is an officional magician.
Speaker 6 (27:13):
To be fair, maybe I wouldn't like it as much
if it was a hobby.
Speaker 2 (27:17):
But yeah, that's true. He makes money.
Speaker 6 (27:19):
Yeah, this pays our rent. Like yeah, yeah, yeah, it's
hot stuff.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
I don't know. Yeah, he didn't make it a bit
of money. He's hot. But what's his it's his like
big number one trick? Like does he does he ever
a magician have their one big thing?
Speaker 6 (27:38):
Yeah, he has a trick with a crunchry bar and
he makes money appear in it.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
That's right. Long in the short, he.
Speaker 6 (27:46):
Gets someone from the card, He's like, who's got money,
and then he takes They come up on stage and
then he makes it disappear and then it appears in
the cruntry bar, same serial number. Magic but we do.
Speaker 2 (27:57):
Do you go home? And he's drilling holes in crunchy bars,
don't reveild the track.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
No, we can't have that drilling Okay, well let's go
a bar.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
It's drilling holes of the crunchy bars because figured.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
Okay, So there's the top three Magic tracks is number three,
number two of the unattractive hobbies that men can have,
according to this right wing American commentator. Collecting figurines, now
that's Aaron of.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Lord of the Rings. Figurines.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Now, he stopped collecting them well before.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
We got together, but we still own them. Right, So
they're there, and you haven't since you've been with him
to let him buy any figurines. No, he hasn't bought anymore.
And they're finished.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
Yeah, and he's got them all, okay, from there's a few.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
Yeah, he's missing a couple. Yeah, I think there's like
four or five.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
It doesn't have all the boy boy, he'll be excited
to get his hands on Goblin.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
I don't know if the Goblin Goblin, what Goblin, the
one with the ring? I don't know. I don't I
don't watch it. Goblin. Did you think all this time
Andy Serkis was winning awards of Goblin? You know, I'm not.
I think those movies were three hours. That's so good,
(29:14):
so good.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
Okay, the least attractive hobby with a score of ninety
out of one hundred playing videos video games. And I
was like this, this woman is so stupid.
Speaker 2 (29:24):
But also, do you think he's do you think he's
now this? So many elements of this last because you
for Christmas bought Aaron a year a PlayStation and how's
that been this year? It's kind of fine.
Speaker 1 (29:38):
He doesn't play it as often as I thought he might,
But every time he does, I'm like, how yuck, it's
your fault. Just sounds and all of it coming out
of the lounge.
Speaker 2 (29:49):
I'm like, has he not got a good seat of
gaming headphones? Well, Christmas is in four.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
Months, way gaming headphone, get the probably then you're it's
that's gonna would look at him and it's even worse
the control in his hands gaming here, he's one of
those ugly cheers.
Speaker 2 (30:07):
He only ever plays allowed, one of those not in
your house. He's got to get a big giant bean
bag like me and drag it right in front of
the television and you flop flop and that's yours. No
our lounge, lets the den, And he only ever plays
some single player. It'll be so much better if the
noise is coming out of the lounge included go go go, Yeah,
come here quick, we need out play with other people. Yeah,
(30:31):
I think show finds that very sexy. Do you want
Vaughan coming through speakers in your lamb playing with eron?
Speaker 1 (30:37):
No, it's only if I get to play with Vaughan's
wife while they play.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
Yeah, but you guys play chardonnaise and that's kind of
a different game that's way more fun.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Imagine the noise is coming out of my wardrobe when
we're in there having the wardrobe wines play it.
Speaker 7 (31:00):
It is so silly, silly, silly, bad, sill, silly, silly.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
Do you think you have a boring life? Yeah? So
they did this study in America. One in four Americans said, Yep,
they've got a boring life. That's sad. But I'll tell
you what's worse. Way higher on alpohol Are you kidding?
Sixty three percent of people said they had a boring life, which,
(31:32):
from the responses doesn't always mean that's a bad thing.
People are happy with their yeah, boring with their interpret
the word boring. Yeah, I don't think I have a
boring life. But I'm pretty sure for some people in
my life would be boring because it's not all zip zaps,
(31:53):
a little zip zap. Did you say no, fletch No? Yeah,
And I said, I don't have a boring life. Do
you have a boring life? See?
Speaker 1 (32:00):
No, Yeah, you travel a lot, fun, fun job and
you get to work with the funnest people.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
The best people. So sixty three percent of it was
a year I have a boring life. Thirty seven percent
said no, interesting, very interesting, just some feedback for us.
I live, Rochelle says, it's definitely Rachelle, not rachel Rochelle said,
I live in the UAE, United Arab Emirates. Yes, traveling
(32:29):
to Europe every summer and only work four days a
week plus get that bank money tax free or yeah,
that's not boring. I always wonder if I could get
bored living in countries in the you know, in the
Arab Emirates. Why I don't know.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
And it's pretty restrictive, like it's pretty hard.
Speaker 2 (32:49):
Like you can't just go out and get boozed in public.
Can you arrest you? I'll get you. You'd be in
jail in like a month. Nude says I drive a lot,
which must they must be British because we just say trucks. Yeah,
we say trucks. I have two horses. I try to
gym four times a week. I don't think I have
time to have a boring life. Busy, busy, busy. Yeah. Good,
(33:11):
they're keeping the keeping themselves occupadle. Rachel not Rachelle. So
we've had a Rochelle and now we're having a Rachel. Yes, boring,
but I love my drama free existence. I still do
some holidays, zero socializing, but zero drama. So I would
be boring and other other people's eyes, I guess, but
I'm having fun.
Speaker 1 (33:30):
Yeah, it's all in how you how you look at it, Jesus,
says Joel.
Speaker 2 (33:34):
I'd never understand how people can survive a boring life,
just getting crazy, Just gotta it's what you make of it, right,
Absolutely not here for long? Dorothy said, I eat, work, sleep, repeat.
Do you think she thinks she's got a boring life?
It sounds like yeah, sounds like she might have voted
for boring. Single lady forty work at HR, living my
(33:55):
own with my dog. Can't get any more boring. But
are you having fun? Single? In your foll desk. Yeah,
out there, work in hr get how all the things
you can't do at work and outside of work and
live on the room with your dog. But some people, yeah,
some people are the opposite. They're like, I don't have
a boring life because it's simple. Yes, strama for endical life.
(34:18):
Michael said, I'm a mechanical engineer who volunteers on old
steam trains, on old steam trains, that's not boring. I
don't think he's boring. I don't think he thinks he's boring.
He's a mechanical engineer, which is an exciting job. He
volunteers this time on old steam trains. That's exciting stuff. Yeah,
I mean he's stoked when he sees them puffing down
the track. Averil says, it's so boring. Not worth trying
(34:42):
to tell you, as you'll fall asleep at how boring
my life is. Thank you for protecting us.
Speaker 8 (34:47):
Yeah, but get out there and live a little. It
doesn't have to be your tairs. No no, no, that
kiss a stranger, don't do that monkey pox.
Speaker 2 (34:59):
Go drive past somewhere and flash them. That's illegal. You'll
be arrested. Okay, I get another reason why you found
in the UAE, flash someone and then pash someone, Flash
and bash.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
Because when you hit out from a bit of flash and.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
Pass and then it up in jail and a dash,
that's a little pot Play play Instagram. I have added
a new feature and it's it's making people a little
bit nostalgic for MySpace. Oh my god, that was that
was me man, big emo vibes. Friends and no, it's
(35:35):
not to make friends. It is the ability to add
a music a song to your profile when someone comes
to your profile as a song plant ye, and you
can change it as often as you like. You could
change it every day if you wanted to. I think
this will annoy me. I tend to go to profiles
and I don't know if it will play, if you
(35:57):
will have to choose for plays, or if it will
just automatically start playing. So I just checked it's available.
You've got to make sure your Instagram's updated, and then
you go edit profile and where you would put in
all your profile stuff. There's a new bit that's called
add song What song are we doing? And then well
you can pick any song you just search music and
(36:17):
it'll just add it. How much of the song will
it play? If you're on the profile, it just keep
playing the song. It's like when you put a song
on a story, it will just select a little bit
fifteen seconds. Look, because if you're going to their profile
and then looking at their posts and it's got a
song attached, then that song will play too, or that
song won't play. Which song gets priority? Oh so you've
(36:40):
got to click on it. It's just under the bio
and it will just add the song. I just never
go to people's like whole profiles. I just absolute stork
for a store for a CHECKERU. But I'd say the
time I just scroll through what I'm doing. You're not
going to your friend's profiles every day or all the time,
right Nah? So yeah, it does seem I guess it's
(37:03):
just a way for you to just show a little
bit of personality your favorite artist. I'm sort of into that.
Speaker 1 (37:11):
I when I was on MySpace, it was always like
some like.
Speaker 2 (37:17):
Like the theme and everything, like the background.
Speaker 1 (37:19):
I used to do coding and stuff on my MySpace
that I could change the whole profile so that it
was like not the way that it had it set up.
You go and eat a profile and you do like
codes and stuff. You get a photo here and.
Speaker 2 (37:30):
Music here in the background, just so you could look
like an absolute emo. Yeah, but meg.
Speaker 1 (37:35):
Shrine to my boyfriend at the time, this is Benjamin.
Speaker 2 (37:37):
I loved my life. What happened to them? I was right,
it's just kicking about that's embarrassing. Do you look back
and you're like that was embarrassing or you look back,
Oh my god, No part of me washes. I had
social media in high school. Yeah. No, it was fun
when we saved, like we just escaped. Yeah. I only
(38:00):
had MySpace. That was my only one had No. I
never b bot. I was too alternative.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
Mate was bibo about FUTSI way too kute, right, I
didn't know that.
Speaker 2 (38:11):
Yeah, I was. I was my Space only exclusively my Space.
What happened to Tom from MySpace? He was rich and
then he was working for Facebook for a while. Yeah
was he? I think he's doing it right. I don't
know what he's up to now. I happy he's rich.
Tom from MySpace. Tom, he's fifty three years old now wild.
(38:33):
He founded MySpace in two thousand and three. He was
president and he sold it. He made some mulas. I
don't have anything of no updates as to what he's
been doing lately, Okay, this personal life. He's active on Instagram. Yeah.
He explained in September twenty fourteen that his personal interests
(38:53):
had always been diverse. Sounds like somebody's about to get
in trouble. That cod Mobile birthday scan. Well, that did
not take long. Oh God, already, that did not take long.
I believe we've got Anna on the line. Anna, Good
morning morning.
Speaker 5 (39:13):
How are you?
Speaker 2 (39:14):
How on earth did you take from our clue park
your car in Hagley where you conspire work and how
did you find our black Thunder and Hagley Park. She's
obviously a genius.
Speaker 4 (39:24):
I'm sorry, it's a popular morning parking spot.
Speaker 2 (39:29):
Yes, hey, congratulations, Anna, we have for you thanks to
Cogan Mobile, who is celebrating their fifth birthday. We have
a one year Cogan Mobile phone plan for you. Plus,
Oh my god, in studio, we've got a mystery prize
born if you could just unwrap.
Speaker 9 (39:45):
There, I'm so excited.
Speaker 2 (39:49):
Oh it's beg Cogan forty two inch smart TV and
oh my gods, done gonna get that. I was going
to say, why didn't we just give that to the
person as well, rather than now we're responsible for the post.
We're going to get a truck, have to get a
(40:09):
true don't leave that to Anna, leave that to us,
and don't you and all thanks to Cogan, My wile
turning five celebrate with a big discount on big Plans
and we'll give you another chance to win thanks to Cogan.
Tomorrow plays Flab and Haley.
Speaker 1 (40:28):
Sometimes on a Friday, the three of us like to
go out for a little post show brecky little brunch
hang out because we are authentic friends.
Speaker 2 (40:35):
And I think that really comes across from it. You
keep saying the more you say more. No, we do
joke about it because there are some radio shows you
that hate each other. Ye imagine anything worse.
Speaker 1 (40:47):
I know, and I really laugh that we do enjoy
hanging out. So we went out for Bricky and how
did we spot her? There was a woman She was
sitting kind of opposite us on the outside tape balls
and then the kind of party wrapped up and someone
else sat at the table, didn't they And then off
they went, and we commented on something of that group.
(41:10):
What was it the dog? No dog? Oh no, it
was this I'm going around circles. It was that little
kid that walked past him, but with his dinosaur.
Speaker 2 (41:18):
I wanted to throw my crump of water on him
and I was like, you can't you. Funny was going
along and he was like, I'm biting everything but my
arm and arm, and I thought it was hilarious. I was.
The mom didn't apologize. She was like come on. She
was just like, oh, come on. I spected the like, sorry,
(41:39):
but me thinks he's a t rex.
Speaker 1 (41:41):
Such a same he was like, I've just been bitted
by a dinosaur.
Speaker 2 (41:45):
And then the kid walked back past the dinosaur real
will tower and feel like the dinosaur is going to bite.
It was fun anyway.
Speaker 1 (41:51):
So there's this table left, and then we saw the
woman come back and what and she'd left something behind
and it was her entire bike.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
She had asked the guy that that she was there
when we got there. I thought she'd lift that there
a long time before, just as we said, just as
because then that next guy sat down and started reading
his book. Yeah, and she came back and was like,
I'm so sorry wolf page. I remember looking at the
book and like, what sort of guy set sound and
reads a book? Give me a break? The wolf wolf good.
(42:19):
I don't think it's sixy about viking.
Speaker 1 (42:23):
She had lift her entire bike, like giant, almost adult
sized bike.
Speaker 2 (42:28):
She just lifted. So she'd arrived to the cafe on bike.
Speaker 1 (42:32):
You had breakfast, gone gone to work, walked off to work,
got all the way to work and was like.
Speaker 2 (42:38):
She said, I biked here. Yeah. She got to work
and she said, oh, I got to churn up my
bike before I got sto worked here and.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
They had to come back instead to the guy, I'm
so sorry, I've left my bike and he had to move.
Speaker 2 (42:49):
So she get a bike out and we just did
to her like, how the hell did you forget that,
She's like, oh god, I have no idea. It was
a Friday, I guess, yeah, long week, and everybody else
she was with walked walked away. Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 1 (42:59):
Since she's got pulled into it, I want to know
what is like the biggest thing that you've forgotten, the
biggest item.
Speaker 2 (43:06):
Like expense wise or size wie.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Maybe yeah, it could be expense wise, but like maybe
you bought like a TV and you're there and you
put it down to load your car and then you
drive off and you've left it there, or some people
would leave a pram right it's a kidnap.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
You would you wouldn't admit there, right, frazzled you, I'm
going to call up and admit there. People have left
behind children at service stations, on roadies. It's when you
have like tens when you got you're going to lose
one or two.
Speaker 1 (43:36):
Over the It's a real home alone situation. Yeah, yeah,
this is what we want to know. What is the
biggest item that you've forgotten?
Speaker 2 (43:43):
Laptop on a plane, yep, left behind? How far did
you get before you went? Maybe a whole suitcase? Like
you you think you've just got checked baggage and you
forget that you checked a bad You know, I took
a whole entire thirty bed. Where is it? Okay? Well,
this is a question. Eight hundred dollars at M. Give
us a call. You can text her nine six nine sacks.
Speaker 1 (44:03):
Someone else's husband forgot their bike. It's before from a bike,
you just walk away from it.
Speaker 2 (44:09):
Goodness me, this is what we want to know. What
is the biggest item that you've forgotten you've left behind?
Give us a call.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
We want to know what is the biggest item you've
left behind? Because when we went to breakfast the other
day a woman just left her entire bike behind and
walked back to it, then returned to be like I
biked here.
Speaker 2 (44:24):
And in this scheme of things, and we are hearing
from a lot of people that is a bike is nothing. Yeah,
a bike is nothing. Molly, what a grand leave behind?
Speaker 9 (44:33):
Well, grandmother went to the big grocery shopping and she
obviously took the car, but normally she would walk, so
she did huge walked all the way home. I didn't
realize until my granddad was like, where's the car.
Speaker 2 (44:48):
Supermarket? Oh no, that's not good. Grand's losing a whole car.
Speaker 1 (44:53):
I just text and said his dad does this all
the time, goes to the supermarket, goes inside and then
just walks home.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
And it's like, where's the car? Car, especially when you've
got all the groceries. Wouldn't you be likes Morley? Thanks
you call Emma. What's the biggest thing you've left behind?
Speaker 9 (45:15):
My engagement and wedding rings when we went to the
zoo with the kids and I took them off and
put them on the picnic table so I could sunscreen
them and not get all the creams through my ring,
and went and pushed them on the playground on the swings.
Lovely Lovely off for a coffee. Twenty minutes later, I
suddenly felt my finger and I was my heart dropped.
(45:35):
I've never run so fast in my life. I think
I'm an asthma attack. And they were still sitting there
on the ta Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
Wow.
Speaker 9 (45:45):
Well my brother in law said, well, maybe they weren't
nice enough to steal out.
Speaker 2 (45:52):
Imagine if something to chuck them to the monkeys, and
they were getting married a monkey weeding. I wanted to
let them go. Yeah, monkey, that's so cute. Thanks you called, James,
are the biggest thing you've left behind? My son? At
what age was your son when you left them behind?
Speaker 5 (46:14):
Who'd have been about three hours old?
Speaker 2 (46:18):
I mean, in your defense, you weren't used to having
a baby. Yeah, you were new to it, definitely. Where
did you leave him? Uh? And baby in the city,
baby city, and we were getting some extra stuff a
friendly place. Wait, so you had this baby's three hours old.
You're like, this is most unexpected. This baby is going
(46:40):
to require things we might need a cost. So you
go to buy the things and then you leave the
baby in the store where you went to buy the
things for the baby.
Speaker 6 (46:48):
Yeah, pretty much.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
Fair enough by.
Speaker 1 (46:53):
You knew to having the responsibility of this thing.
Speaker 2 (46:56):
Was your partner with you as well or was it
just you? Okay, so she can't blame you.
Speaker 1 (47:04):
What a good place to shop for Why were we
there again?
Speaker 2 (47:09):
No, that's too good. Thanks James. Are some messages in.
I forgot my car. I drove to get the kids
from school, and when I got to school, there's a
bit of drama. We walked home chatting about the drama,
and then we got home. I was like, damn it.
My whole handbag under a table at a restaurant. Didn't
realize for a few days because I only really use
(47:31):
it on workdays. Lovely lady is the sushi restaurants still
had a waiting behind the counter medic collect who had
attached to mine. It's deadly. Would keep your texts coming
in nine six nine, six hundred dollars at him the
biggest thing you've left behind?
Speaker 1 (47:48):
Forgetful for people leaving things everywhere. It's this is like
giving me anxiety. Handbags, important things.
Speaker 2 (47:55):
We were at. Yeah, I have it at a restaurant
and someone had left the whole bike there. Yeah, I
just forgot.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
We want to know the biggest thing or the most
important thing that you left behind.
Speaker 2 (48:05):
Yeaha, what was the biggest thing you left behind?
Speaker 3 (48:08):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (48:08):
Hi, how's it going? Okay? So I forgot my wedding dress.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
Oh my god, on your wedding day.
Speaker 5 (48:17):
Yes, literally on the wedding day.
Speaker 2 (48:19):
Okay?
Speaker 6 (48:20):
Where were you?
Speaker 2 (48:21):
Why? Why?
Speaker 4 (48:23):
Okay?
Speaker 5 (48:23):
So I lived in christ Church at the time, at
the wedding ceremony was actually in Dunedin for the day
before we'd traveled to the Naden, and then the morning
of the wedding woke up. Mom's like, cool, we's your
dream watching it up?
Speaker 1 (48:37):
Get it ready?
Speaker 5 (48:38):
And I was like what. She's like, you know your
dream and it was still in my wardrobe at home.
Speaker 2 (48:44):
Oh my god? So what did you have to send
someone down with it? Or you got it on a plane?
What did you do?
Speaker 5 (48:51):
I was so lucky. I still hear geests traveling from
christ Church that day and I was like, come on, like,
who can go home and grab it?
Speaker 4 (48:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (48:59):
So someone was able to. But it was the worst
worst feeling either on your wedding day when you woke up,
you're feeling really good.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
Yeah, so stressful, yeah a fine? Free when and got it?
Speaker 5 (49:13):
Yeah yeah, No, problems. It was actually like no problem
at all. Was hilarious. Like I told my husband at
the end of the day in the morning, off.
Speaker 2 (49:23):
Yeah, no, you mentioned like we should steam it. Imagine
if you did put it in the bathroom, get it ready.
Speaker 1 (49:30):
If you were like an hour before, like, oh, I
should probably put my dress on.
Speaker 5 (49:33):
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, I have to get.
Speaker 2 (49:36):
Married in a track suit or something. What do I do?
Speaker 5 (49:39):
Like do I just they go down to the shop
and grab something from.
Speaker 2 (49:42):
Like the rank amazing, thank you, some messages and put
my baby in the car seat and already jumped in
the car, drove to drop the aforementioned child off a daycare,
got there and was like where is that child and
the capsule and left it inside the house, drove back
(50:04):
and got it. At least it wasn't in the driveway
like half an hour or something. I forgot so many
people forgetting their driving places. I drove to work completely
forgot about it. Caught the bus home because normally and
I was like, oh my god, my car's been stolen,
but it hadn't. And I guess what, you just stay
at home and then bust a week the next morning. Yeah. Yeah,
someone that went a step further. Their friend went to
the supermarket, parked their car, did the shop, and walked
(50:26):
home and then was like, oh my god, my car's
been stolen. Rings the place my car'sman stolen goes through
the start of the insurance claim and everything. Two weeks
later the police contact them, so we found your car.
It's at your local supermarket. And they knew what had happened. Right,
do you reckon? They clicked at some stime and you
saying I reckon, It had happened all the time. Somebody said,
I can't wait to get old, listened to these what
(50:46):
of these people aren't even old? No, I know, some
of these people are just tired. And they said, backpacked
all through Europe between us. We had two backpacks and
two big suitcases. Were taking our final train journey to
go to the airport to fly home and got off
the got off the train one and forgot our backpack. One,
I forgot our suitcase, never got the back That is
(51:08):
that is my worst nightmare is getting off public transport
and forgetting a suitcase, because yeah, you're not seeing that again.
Of goes and it goes down the line another hour
and you're just like you're going to get back my
mom forgot when I was a baby. My mum forgot
my baby bag at Queenstown Airport because it was just
right in the middle of the airport at airport when
it's the lockdown, because apparently it looked like a very
suspicious base. Oh yeah, I left a cello on a
(51:33):
bus there bag from school. An old lady spotted my
school uniform and took it back to the school and
said someone with this, Oh my god, there the ones
as tall as a person. That's a double bas cellos
like you set down to playing that. I'm sorry, but
that's getting into You should buy another ticket for that,
because that's taking up a whole Actually, sorry, I'm sorry.
(51:55):
Remember he actually bought a ticket for it on the plant.
Haley's were on that flight.
Speaker 1 (52:02):
Yeah, because some of them are very expensive. Yeah, I
didn't want to check it in cello. That's me saying
cello as if it was hello. You know, if you're
a CELLI sets.
Speaker 2 (52:12):
What you you don't say hello to people?
Speaker 1 (52:14):
Helly speaking, Yeah, that's what I say.
Speaker 2 (52:16):
I have a conversation not towards the tail end as
we are.
Speaker 1 (52:21):
I was just sort of just felt appropriate to bringing
the name as an idea that was something we could say.
Speaker 2 (52:26):
I agreed appropriate and Appropriatelyello Cello j Lo, but in
a very inappropriate accident. It was not on their to me.
He was just saying Cello like hello, No, you're only
digging the whole deepen.
Speaker 7 (52:42):
Play.
Speaker 2 (52:46):
I'm going to I just had early breakfastivals. I'm going
to the airports. Then you're going to hit the croud
with a vengeance. Okay. Those eggs better be out when
I get there. They are the powder is we speak
to be ready because I today I'm flying to Queenstown. God,
it must be no. I say, don't worry, we'll stay here.
(53:09):
And then I'm driving, Well, stay here. Sorry, they're not
finish wallowing in their own petty so I just let them.
Speaker 1 (53:16):
Oh, we'll do the bloody top six. In fact of
the day, I've got a fact that day fame for
you guys.
Speaker 2 (53:22):
Okay, because a special gift and every fact sorted out. Nope,
this is the kind of you can do that. You
could You could say I've put it, okay, put the
word put it in minimal effort is okay. So then
I drive to Tiano this afternoon. What do you like
visiting New.
Speaker 1 (53:41):
Zealand where I will sounds.
Speaker 2 (53:43):
W you're down there so close. I'm going to dusky sound,
the bottom sound a few days on Anchor Island, which
is the super remote Anchor Iland in ZI.
Speaker 1 (53:58):
Dusky sound, beful free and a cockapoo?
Speaker 2 (54:05):
Is that what they're putting you in just to see
if I'm more of a pist than Yeah, I'm less
of a elizaber Stoke, more of a introduced bird, a
little bit of a pier. It's quite a big island.
That's a big island. It's pist free and you're gonna
be hanging out the other week with the recovery program. Yeah,
(54:30):
is this some kind of charity? What is this? Just
a mile? It's obviously obviously that bought my boat. Vote
for a bod of the Year which kicks off again.
They're fun, So how do you get from Tan to
Anchor Island? And a whirly bird? And us too? But
(54:53):
then I looked at helmet. The window is blowing down
there and it's a windy day for a wally wiped.
So then I started making heaps jokes in my family
about how they better appreciate me before I plunge into
the dusky sound, and I've set it out loud again.
It's a little head, it's a little grimmer. But yeah,
that's where I'm gonna be for the week, and I'm
really looking forward to it. I've got this is like
(55:14):
so intense to get. I had to get my sleeping
bag dry clean. Now. I don't know what they think
I've been doing on that sleeping bag. I haven't used
it that much. But every time someone brings a sleeping
bag into the dry clean and they're like, oh, here
we got so yeah, get the gloves on before and
when you jump in here with someone else. Yeah, so
you know, I had to give that dry clean. I
have to wash all my clothes and like a special
(55:37):
thing because I've got birds at home, chickens, so I
aren't risk taking anything. And then tomorrow I go like
full quarantine. Those clothes have to be in like a
sealed bag after washing, and know it will drive them
outside in case seeds from weeds and stuff blind to
them because this island has like no invasive pests be
than weeds or like I'm taking a bag of gorse
(55:58):
seeds with you.
Speaker 1 (55:59):
You usually what's in your pocket right now.
Speaker 2 (56:05):
All of this so that they don't get anything introduced.
Oh that's a lot of pressure born.
Speaker 1 (56:09):
It's really good though, that they do this. Yeah, it's
a lot, it's a lot. And you know I've been
ten more pork for years.
Speaker 2 (56:16):
Yeah, they had lots of them down there. I got
lots of more porks. No, no, but that's always been my.
Speaker 1 (56:28):
What I thought yesterday when I was bushwalking more on
that zone stay churned.
Speaker 2 (56:32):
You want to have you laugh at ladder?
Speaker 1 (56:34):
Was you never see baby like I've never seen a
baby kiddy do or a baby tooy.
Speaker 2 (56:42):
Because that tree birds. Yeah, you have to go up
onto the nest to find them. You see a kid
doing this so fat? Yeah, a little baby, a little kid.
But you've seen baby cuck pol right, No, you've seen
the purchase of them. They're like gray and fluffy, ray
and fluff.
Speaker 1 (57:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (57:00):
I can see the money net because I'm googling them now.
So what are you going to be doing on this
island all week? I get to help with the health
chicks and then I get to use one of those
TV aerials that you walk around and you're listening and go.
Then you like that down here because the track just
show people how it's done. Basically right, fun, I mean
(57:21):
you could have done this on a weekend. Y, So
just like kind of feel plans on my weekends. Those
are weekends and leaving else to do something you could
easily do on a weekend. Yeah, remember you. I don't
think you miss I think you missed the point. The
weekends and my time okay doesn't belong to a big
(57:42):
flush away. I didn't realize we were allowed to just
flush off.
Speaker 4 (57:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (57:47):
I don't know if you're there yet. Yeah, I work
towards possession.
Speaker 1 (57:55):
Okay, have fun pictures please and text us when lands?
Speaker 2 (58:00):
When are you safe?
Speaker 10 (58:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (58:01):
Well they heaven You guys have both got yeah they
head they've got Starlin the same. Do you know what
you find my on? It's on? Yeah, you can see
me because he's lateful of things. He's still at home.
I can see you, I can see you.
Speaker 1 (58:16):
Okay, will follow you say?
Speaker 2 (58:19):
Please? Yeah? Well play and Haley.
Speaker 1 (58:25):
We're just saying that Vaughan's going away this week and
someone text and saying have you checked that they've got
WhatsApp where you're going?
Speaker 2 (58:30):
Vorn Very funny. I knew it was WhatsApp in Europe.
When these guys are enabled to run their phone. You
don't know.
Speaker 1 (58:39):
When Fletch and I were in Europe and Form was
at home, he did messages on Facebook saying, do you
guys have WhatsApp where you are?
Speaker 2 (58:48):
I wanted to know if you're enabled it, mom, because
I knew you were ons and sometimes you have to
enable it. Literally, so global global in the country touch
each other. Now that I didn't know. They all had
motes around them at the very least, motes or islands.
Great texts, great text now. We mentioned it. On Friday,
(59:11):
we went for a little brunch of the three of us.
It's when the lady forgot to bike and went to work.
Speaker 1 (59:16):
But another thing that happened there was where we go,
they've got those codes, you know.
Speaker 2 (59:22):
Like on your table. It is my preferred no ordering,
smile and talk to me. And the staff are great there,
but sometimes like it's so busy, they don't come to
your table for like ten minutes.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
But with the cure when we sit outside as well,
so you can sometimes be a bit out of sight,
out of mind.
Speaker 2 (59:37):
The QR code you scan an order, It's done in
like thirty seconds. I love it. We have cheky banter
with the yeah, but you love interaction.
Speaker 1 (59:45):
I do love interacting with people, but it kind of
allowed you to sort of do an embarrassing thing, which
I don't think this is as embarrassing, which is when
you get to the checkout, but you select your foods,
you to the check out point to pay, and there
was a box that was like discount code. Now everyone
would have seen these when you go like online shopping. Yeah,
(01:00:07):
I just bought something with it, like with a discount code.
You're like, yeah, great, you put it in. It's welcome
t in or I thought.
Speaker 2 (01:00:12):
You had a shopping band. It's interesting how bands work.
The band is in the eye of the beholder, right, Okay,
so if Aaron doesn't know if it gets delivered to work,
he doesn't know. It's not in the eye of some
new pants. Okay, I bought hands, yeah, or pants, pans, pans,
(01:00:35):
pans Okay, yeah, no, I'm not my pants era pants.
Do me wrong. Now we are saying pans, frying frying pans,
pots and pans. Yeah. Anyway, but there was a cheap
now in your kitchen, and these are used in your kitchen,
the ornamental hangars, but they're both used.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
I think they're very esthetically attractive and was so great.
Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
But you're on a bundred, you're on a buying band.
But she's not on a pan band. I'm not on
a pan Band's man.
Speaker 1 (01:01:09):
I bought a pack of non stick frying pans and
they are the devil's work. They stick, they are awful,
the stuff comes off. I'm eating the poison.
Speaker 2 (01:01:17):
It's so bad.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
So I knew I needed to get a new kit
of pots and pans. Besides the point, let's not turn
this around right anyway. So at the discount code for
a cafe that definitely doesn't have a discount code.
Speaker 2 (01:01:31):
Discount box. I think they are for when you buy
someone a voucher to eat there, and you order online
and you use.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
The just the app that they use just has it online. Yeah,
Flitch starts putting in Welcome Tin Winter fifteen.
Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
He put in Flitch Tin at one point, like discount.
I was like spring tins. Yeah, yeah, none of these
will work. Twinty off. I tried L Brown because Al
Brown an ol Brown restaurant.
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
L set up his own discount code so that when
Al Brown goes to Al Brown's restaurant, he can put
an L Brown twenty.
Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
Food in his own restaurant. I tried maybe twenty codes
because and then we started talking about this, all those
web sites aren't there, yeh. I always use those buying something.
Speaker 1 (01:02:28):
Especially if you're shopping on like quite a common website
or like a really popular thing. What do you mean
in websites that have that tell you the codes for
different shops you even go, how can you trust them?
Speaker 2 (01:02:38):
Because I've discout codes before and they never worked that
un he's annoying for pop ups, but a lot of
them do. But then the girlies you were saying that,
like you will try this, and this is a really
good tap with discount codes, I'll use.
Speaker 6 (01:02:51):
Like Britney Tins fifteen, all the like basic influencer girl name,
yeah fifteen.
Speaker 2 (01:02:58):
We're getting it. Like it's good for them as well
because they'll get some money back. You're welcome, Brittany, but like, yeah,
then I get five. Yeah, it definitely works at some places.
Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
I just thought it was so funny that Fletch's delaying
paying for his breakfast and therefore receiving his breakfast, and
we were hungry.
Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
By putting in what.
Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
You would have like tried like ten different cos to
save a couple of bucks.
Speaker 2 (01:03:22):
I mean, it's worth it. If it worked, you would
have jumped on it. But it didn't, so then I.
Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
I mean I was also waiting being like, well, I'll
laugh at you, but also what do we got?
Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
You would have been you would have loved a discount.
Speaker 1 (01:03:33):
Cos someone mentioned We've talked about this before, the Honey
plugin on Chrome. That's the one that if you go
on a website, it'll ding you and be like there's
a cos yeah, okay, if you've got the honey plugin.
Speaker 2 (01:03:43):
If you've got the honey plug and honey plug, you've
got plug in and right now, okay, we'll search for it.
Then what works? Honey just literally said how are you
going to survive without fletch this week? No, well, there's
not gonna be any bloody honey plugins in the middle
of nowhere. There's a mobile app. Yeah, all right, you
(01:04:05):
guys that honey money here. Look regardless Honey money, Pan Band,
Flampan Band, lam Bam, Think, Flitchborne and Hailey. Fact of
the Day, Day day day day.
Speaker 6 (01:04:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:04:25):
Do do do do do do do do do do
do do do do do do do do do do
do doo dooo doo. This week's back to the day
theme is cat celebrations, and I thought i'd leave this
in your capable hands because you guys like cats. We
love cats, cat people, cat people. Cats smell so good
(01:04:48):
at the moment, smell just like, yeah, clean cat. I've
got a great smelling cat. Yeah. Your cat never goes outside.
It never goes outside. It just always smells delicious. Wh
rolly cleans himselfing, cleansed himself. Whatever, you share ice cream
with your dog?
Speaker 3 (01:05:07):
I do you do.
Speaker 2 (01:05:10):
With the dog? Yeah? The dog having human food? It's
a scum ever, I wouldn't do that. We're talking cat
festivals this week, and I hope you struggle to find
more examples of cat festivals. Oh my god, it is
a link in my email with a few different cat festivals. Okay,
but then from Coachella but for cats. Well, it's also
(01:05:31):
so you could find cat cellar if you wanted to.
I don't think cats would enjoy music festivals. It would
be too loud, unless all of a sudden they're like
wow and then scatter, unless like the headliner was jelly meat.
Jelly meat. So today's cat festival is Cotton Stood, the
Festival of the Cats in Belgium. Cotton Stood Okay, it's
(01:05:52):
devoted to the cat been running regularly. It happened this
year May twelfth, but won't be happy again until May
and twenty twenty seven. A lot of festivals doing that.
A lot of festivals are pulling back from being annual
to less regular. There's a parade and a giant cat
gets marched through. Each time is a new giant cat.
I'll just load up this picture of this giant cat.
The children dressed as cats and giant two stories tall. Yeah,
(01:06:16):
a giant cat float gets dragged through and they celebrate
the cats of the town. The background of this cat
festival is that it marches through town. One story is
that it's connected to witchcraft and the killing of the
evil spirits, and so basically the cats were throwing were
(01:06:39):
thrown out of a bell tower and to the town
square below to kill them. That's terrible, but they always
land on their feet on their feet, but yeah, you
can lean on your feet from a huge height and
just do yourself a reversible damage. So they thought that
they were associated because cats. Of course, black cats are
associated with witchcraft. And another story suggests a celebration of
the cats and the throwing of them from the Bowtower,
because that's an undisputed fact cats were thrown through the
(01:07:00):
Bell tower, is that before the they could make these
buildings rodent proof over winter, they'd let cats live in there.
So the cats would parade around these storage areas of
the hall where they stored grains and such and town
reserves to eat the rats. Right, Yeah, and then there
(01:07:21):
was wool in there as well, and so the cats
would go in and keep the rats out of the
wall because the rats would go in there to be
warm and also be fed. And and then when springtime came,
they're like, what are we to do with all these cats?
We can't afford to feed these cats for no in
the bell tower. So obviously they feel bad about it now,
oh dear, So they started that. They started in the
celebration of the cats. They will be like little cat
(01:07:42):
outfits and stuff. Yeah, they prode through town. Yeah, that'd
be fun, kind of drawing attention to it, to the
fact that they were throwing cats out of the bell tower. Yeah,
but why didn't they just take the cats somewhere and
bring them back in winter? Where would you take them
on some vacation? It's rich with rats catalonia, Yeah, Hello,
(01:08:03):
great name for.
Speaker 1 (01:08:03):
It, cat stellar Zo, too flesh, too flesh, cat Catalonia,
I've heard of.
Speaker 2 (01:08:11):
What about Catgonia? Catgonias? If you if that's a Patagonia,
play that South America. That's a long answer into hiking, Hayley,
What about.
Speaker 1 (01:08:20):
Catland instead of Thailand. That's really good, but it's not
even close. You could go there on a cat. You
could take them to Puris.
Speaker 2 (01:08:31):
From Belgium. Yeah, you take them to Puris, beautiful gay porists. Yes,
So today's spect the days. There is a cat celebration
that happens in Belgium where they celebrate cats because they
used to throw them out of a clock tower.
Speaker 3 (01:08:46):
Fact of the day, Day day, day, day, dud dude, play.
Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Play you remember.
Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
You may remember two weeks ago I went on a
bush hike and I got lost and ended up walking
for hours across the main road. Yesterday we went back
and took the right turn and it was amazing.
Speaker 2 (01:09:22):
Oh wow, you didn't get lost.
Speaker 1 (01:09:23):
We reached a dam like beautiful scenery. It was incredible.
Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
Congratulations, Thank you finally got it right. I also had
to on Friday Show Hailey that on that watch you
can actually back trace your steps. I know that blew
my mind on the compass thing. I just used the
compass thing.
Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
I had that tucked away in my head in case
we got lost again, but we didn't know it was
good anyway. Towards the end of the hike, there were
some beautiful cascading sort of water.
Speaker 2 (01:09:52):
Streams coming down. Gorgeous, absolutely beautiful, the white tuckety rangers.
I think you're almost describing a waterfall, not a stream.
Water stream coming down, coming down off rocks, windows, cascating
stream become a waterfall. They call it a cascade because
a waterfall would be vertical. Yeah, this was more like
(01:10:14):
flat and going. Yeah, that's not a waterfall. That's it
was a cascating river or stream or stream stream running
water always erodes rocks, but some rocks are more resistant
than those waterfall. That's the cause of a water Four.
What's the difference in a waterfall and a cascade? Here
we go, Here we go. Here's the question. Waterfall descends
from a wide stream. A cascade is a waterfall that
(01:10:36):
descends over a series of rocks. Steps.
Speaker 1 (01:10:38):
Yes, describe these as rocks cascates.
Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
I think you're pink and white terraces. R O. P.
I've been. I think you're pink and white. We've been back.
Speaker 1 (01:10:46):
Eighteen eighteen, Aaron's sister remembers going to the white, pink
and white terraces from from previous life.
Speaker 2 (01:10:54):
She thinks she's back. She has a memory where she's like,
I have been. We went. Dad took us and we
were all like he did not in his time machine.
So before the huge eruption that destroyed the pinker thinking
of going to I then she's thinking of coconut ice.
Would she saw once she had a coconut ice in
front of a waterfall. That's what happened.
Speaker 1 (01:11:15):
Anyway, So beautiful cascades and there's this bridge there, and
so we stopped to really soak in the serenity. It
was beautiful, and on the bridge there was another couple
and they kind of like joined us and we said
hello as you do. Also, so many grumpy people on
a track. It's so weird to me when you're on
a track and people don't.
Speaker 2 (01:11:31):
They're out there walking beside water, presumably they've had their
banana and they're still depressed outside body of water, banana
on board depressed. It's so bizarre. I love saying hi
to people. I just make it a game of it.
Speaker 1 (01:11:45):
We passed what would have been a woman's walking group,
where I would say there was twenty, and I was like, Hi, Hi, Hi,
who what what a group go lady were I was
commenting everyone everyone got a high and they were so friendly.
But every now and then you passed someone and you're like,
cheer up, Charlie.
Speaker 2 (01:11:59):
Anyway, So we get to the ste You're going to
say this group a woman were all grunk, and I said,
maybe this sincd.
Speaker 1 (01:12:04):
They would have sinked no older they'd been to give
it older, I would say minnopausal.
Speaker 2 (01:12:08):
I like a minopausal walking group, right, yeah, walking off
the hot switch, through the hot switch.
Speaker 1 (01:12:13):
Anyway, So this couple joins us on the bridge and
I see them awkwardly trying to take a selfie to
get the cascades. Yeah, in with them, and so, as
I always do, I offered to take a photo. I said,
you want me to take a photo of you guys,
and they said yes. She hands me her phone and
I could not believe it. This is not to shame her.
I just have not seen this for such a long time.
It was an iPhone four. It was an iPhone four
(01:12:34):
and we've got one the station iPhone four Shannon just
brought in for refront.
Speaker 4 (01:12:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:12:39):
They found this like in a cupboard somewhere and a drawer. Yeah,
away still works. Yeah, so I googled. June twenty four,
twenty ten, was when the iPhone four was really roger
that they were a square of flatter iPhone. The three
was a roundy, roundy, little fatty. Yeah. We had one
of these. Ah, yeah, I have one. I had one
of these. The iPhone four I think was my first.
(01:13:00):
I didn't have an iPhone three still has a headphone
jack has.
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
It has the big flat wide thing a headphone jack.
It's got the button you know.
Speaker 2 (01:13:07):
She handed to me.
Speaker 1 (01:13:08):
She said, oh, it's just an old phone. So it's
and it was all like blurry, like the camera was craped.
I almost felt like, I'll take a photo. She should
have Emil, you know we could have done.
Speaker 2 (01:13:15):
That wouldrop it to her. I'm pretty sure the I
I would have put her email address, and but I
just you know, anyway, I took it. Yeah, I couldn't
believe it.
Speaker 1 (01:13:23):
iPhone four she was and she was still using it.
It was her main phone. It was all fine, that's
but but this is. My parents lived by the mantra.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Yeah, if something's working,
why are you going to spend money replacing it?
Speaker 2 (01:13:38):
But that's the generation they grew up in because their
parents or their parents' parents would have gone through the
wars and and you used to be made of quality. Yeah,
they lasted careful, quite really old. As I put together
my flat pack furniture last weekend. But then so we
were talking. I was telling you guys about this this morning,
(01:13:59):
and Flich, you meant that your mum. I saw it
last week in when I was back home. She's got
this crop pod and it used to be white, but
it's so it's so yeah, it's so old that it's
kind of gone like an orangey cream color. External part
of the crop pot sits at yes, cambro.
Speaker 1 (01:14:18):
Yeah, that'suring the exact one, but I switched down the
bottom of the low metals.
Speaker 2 (01:14:23):
They are always going to turn off the wall. It's
a classic, the cameras classic. But it just it's gone
so kind of old and orange. It just looks it
looks like it wants to spontaneously combust. But it still works.
It still workspace. That's what mum said was like, why
would I get a new one? It works perfectly fine.
Speaker 1 (01:14:40):
Well, this is what we want to know this morning. Now,
what is the thing that your parents are still using?
Be it an item of technology that they're like, well,
it still works fine, it was great having this cam
quarter they have on their shoulders holidays.
Speaker 2 (01:14:52):
This is why they can afford to go on overseas
holidays because they're not all the time. And the fact
that they bought houses of very low prices them and
could sell them with absolute zero capital gain, there's probably
another reason they can afford to go on over the strip.
Screwed it for the rest of us. But you know
it all contributes and it all help. Equal part, equal part,
no cabal game, equal part. They didn't buy a new
(01:15:14):
crop pot or thirty dollars, yeah, of course, both equal parts. Okay,
so this is what we want to ask. I'll wait
one hundred dollars at m nine six nine six. What
are your parents still using? They had for ages. Maybe
it's the old TV. They turn it off at the
wall every night. Oh yeah, and it makes that big
sound when you turn it on. Years what about your parents?
(01:15:36):
Heaps everything, heaps of things they've got like plastic containers
that I can remember. Oh my god, yes, yeah, stuff
out of orange contains with the little peel off lids. Yeah, Mom,
there's this. There's this, like I can picture of this
teal blue thing. And every time mum makes a crispan
noodle coulst law, it's always she puts all the ingredients
in there, put the lids on the thing that you
(01:15:58):
put a ten of beetroot in and then you pull
it up out. The juice stays in the bottom, but
you can put it up the beach y. That thing's
been around since the seventies, whereas I'm like, all everything
must be matching. My mom still does phone banking by
calling oh eight hundred, what to do that? And then
your money between account This is my account number. Now
I would like to transfer from this thing. Oh my god, no,
(01:16:20):
do it on an app. It will change your life.
Why you ran into a lady at the weekend with
an iPhone?
Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
Four?
Speaker 1 (01:16:26):
Yeah, your mum's got a crop pop from the bloody
seventies or eight is she's still using.
Speaker 2 (01:16:31):
The Rachel's called through Rachel. My parents have this as well,
an old dryer, but I don't think my parents dryer
is as old as yours. How old is your parents dryer?
Speaker 10 (01:16:43):
Seventy nine?
Speaker 2 (01:16:44):
Oh, brand is forty five years old. Do they use it?
Speaker 10 (01:16:49):
They do, like you know, not not off an electricity bills,
et cetera. Sun will do its thing.
Speaker 2 (01:16:55):
But you don't.
Speaker 10 (01:16:56):
They religiously. I know they get the lincount because I've
harassed them about the danger of house fives. I don't
know how many times. But all I get from is
or they don't make things like they used to, you know,
just or blah blah blah.
Speaker 2 (01:17:10):
So yeah, got the energy the energy rating sticker on
that would it would be negative? Actually negative five stars?
What what do you know? What Brandon is? I just
want to sort of looks like I want to have
a little Google image search.
Speaker 10 (01:17:22):
It is something with lux on the end. I was
trying to remember what.
Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
Because my parents have got a nineties dryer and it's
but they never use it. They were use of fire,
just put washing in front of the fire. Yeah, my
parents like that. I think that's why they've hung on
to it. Mum hates using it. I'm always just like
that looks like it's one cycle away from a house fire.
Like you to be careful boom a badge of honor.
(01:17:49):
I think absolutely amazing. Rachel, thank you, Lisa. What are
your parents still holding on to?
Speaker 4 (01:17:57):
So my parents they had a microwave that decided to
catch fire, and my mom sent my dad into the
back of the garage to the store of all the
things that they may use one day that never do,
and pulled out an original microwave from the eighties.
Speaker 1 (01:18:15):
Like one of the first ever microwaves, one of.
Speaker 4 (01:18:18):
The first ever microwaves that were released.
Speaker 2 (01:18:22):
Heart element on top.
Speaker 4 (01:18:25):
I don't know how it still works today. It kind
of scares me with all the you know, radiation and whatever.
I put it on and leave the kitchen, so I don't,
you know, with your kids in the X ray exactly exactly,
But yeah, still using it today.
Speaker 2 (01:18:47):
The last one that caught fire, that was an eighties
microwave as well.
Speaker 4 (01:18:50):
No, that was a newer version like the chription down.
But yeah, what I say of it, This is why
I have all these random things in the best of
the garage that I don't use.
Speaker 2 (01:19:04):
And yeh, God, that's incredible, Lisa. Thank you. Victoria. What
are your parents still holding on to?
Speaker 1 (01:19:11):
The old orange tuful judge of the East and mixed
the cordiala and.
Speaker 2 (01:19:16):
I know you pushed up, yes, of course, yeah, yeah,
you know underneath the fins, you know, a similar vintage.
How many parents still have the Pyrex mugs? Oh yeah,
yeah mugs, yeah yeah, staff room mugs.
Speaker 6 (01:19:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
Trading trading coffee. You go red ribbon or something out
of it, can have a nice one, Victoria. Thank you
some techsans. And I said, I see you are nineteen
seventy nine dryer, and raise you my nineteen seventy three
Fisher and Pikel dryer. We're still going strong. That must
cost like one hundred dollars to run a minute. Yeah,
it's all go, somebody said. My ex mother in law
(01:19:56):
used an Agitator washing machine. Oh my god, the wash
She didn't have a lid. And you just turn them
on and they go a ringer on the top. You'd
feed your closer and ring them and then you check
them and hang them get most of the water out.
I couldn't believe it when I first met her, and
it was still going. Funny thing was the ringer had
stopped working, but she didn't want to get it fixed,
so she'd wring the clothes out by hand. Oh my god,
(01:20:18):
just get it like new wash cheap. You can talking
about the things your parents are still holding on to
and still using so many that I don't make things
like they used to. My mother is still has a
stick mixer that must be older than thirty five because
that's how old I am, and she got it before
I was born and we lived in the UK at
(01:20:40):
that stage. So it still has the UK plug. So
she goes a UK plug into a converter into the
New Zealand wall socket. Still uses it. How many delicious
cakes and biscuits that's made? I know, the treats it's seen.
We've got a nineteen sixty three hot water cylinder still
going there. It can't be economical though, right, I don't know.
You can wrap them, you can get those. Yeah, that's
(01:21:00):
the only thing that's really changed, right, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:21:05):
Someone said at my nana still use it a E
literal lux backing cleaner. Aaron's parents had one of those,
like the standing up sort of brutish ones of like.
Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
The are you the standing one with the bag on
the ba the bag on the back. My grandmother had
an electroluxe because you always sang going to do the
luxe and yeah, but it was a long, skinny one
with two wheels on the back and the hose out
the fire those they were a real key with classic
the wonder they're so heavy. Every year we still get
out the fake Christmas tree that was at least nineteen
(01:21:34):
ninety last half of its trunks and its branches. But
it still it's a simple. It's got that charm though, Yeah,
the memories. Someone said, what about the Spue bowl.
Speaker 1 (01:21:44):
Because isn't it well, yeah, the bowl that was serious pirates. Yeah,
houses the family pirates. It's got some melted bits fades.
Speaker 2 (01:21:55):
Do you know?
Speaker 1 (01:21:55):
Someone else tixs and saying they're still using an iPhone
for and it works fine, and Reduce a carm and
called them to get them on the phone, but they
were busy, and she said they sounded absolutely clear, crystal clear.
Speaker 2 (01:22:05):
We'll see why I get a new phone? Why I
get a new phone? It's still working. Although I did
google that lady that you were taking a picture of. Yeah,
that's a five megapixel photo. Yeah, what are they now? Though?
Blue ray I want to edit out it's blue. It
wasn't it.
Speaker 1 (01:22:20):
You know you're not going to print it out and
blow it up and put it on a canvas.
Speaker 2 (01:22:22):
No lovely bad phone background though I still use in
my grandmother's waffle eye that she bought with her from
Norway in the nineteen sixties, her kin would cake mix
that she treated herself to in the seventies, and her
washing machine from the eighties. Why still all going I
love this.
Speaker 1 (01:22:37):
My dad absolutely refuses to replace his toaster. Bought it
from the warehouse one hundred years ago, probably not and
only works on one side. So you pop the toast,
you're going to turn it out, flip it round, and
pop it again.
Speaker 2 (01:22:50):
Like literally, they're like thirty bucks for chead.
Speaker 1 (01:22:52):
It goes feral and you tell him you can go
back to the wearehouse and get a fourteen dollar one
now that will work on both sides.
Speaker 2 (01:22:57):
He's like, this one's fine. This is how I do it.
So I'll make toast. How long would it over? One
side's working, it's double time and not dou w power?
Is it because one side's not working? Oh maybe I
don't know if it will work out quite as much.
My dad worked for the Consumers Institute in the eighties,
soh knew all the good brands for everything. Yeah, and
was handy with electronics, so I could fix everything. We
(01:23:18):
had all old stuff growing up, but he said this
will last forever. Yeah, he still has our first microwave.
We had a dial phone until around nineteen ninety four,
like a and when we went a cordless push button
telephone and we finally got to upgrade, he did not
like it though. He didn't didn't like it because he
didn't know the brand. Oh God, washing machines.
Speaker 1 (01:23:39):
Oh someone saying my parents will have the same cutlery
they got for their winning celebrated their fortieth winning anniversary
a few years ago.
Speaker 2 (01:23:45):
There's no serration left on them. They're so blank. You
can't even cut cooked vegetables. You couldn't stab someone if
you wanted to. That's cover or last River. That's just
a stork, isn't it. That's just a stick? Okay? If
you had to rate review or marry Fletch, Vaughan or Hailey,
what one would it be? Okay? I would marry Haley.
(01:24:07):
I would have six? Wait which one?
Speaker 5 (01:24:12):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
No, no, no, it's only rate review Mary, Okay, no
comment six it's a podcast and give us a sixty
little review though Zi ms Fletch Vaughn and Hailey