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January 28, 2025 • 51 mins

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Consistency breeds results. In this episode, George and Robby dive deep into the journey of daily content creation and how one spontaneous jet ski video reached over a million views. They reflect on the importance of creating both educational and entertaining content while sharing practical tips to overcome the paralysis of perfectionism in content production.

Our chat takes a thought-provoking turn as we tackle cultural and societal shifts, scrutinizing literature focused on "the patriarchy" and discussing gender equality in sports. We share our skepticism about societal overcorrections and ponder the potential for achieving balance. Political figures like Trump and Peter Dutton come into the spotlight as we discuss the impact of political policies on personal and business lives, all while expressing a desire for a return to traditional values in the face of political correctness.

Whether you're a political junkie or someone trying to navigate societal shifts, this episode challenges you to think critically and consider the nuances often missed in mainstream conversations.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
George (00:00):
Talking to an influencer .

Robby (00:03):
Right now you are.
You are talking to aninfluencer, okay.

George (00:08):
I float in different circles.
Now, mate, oh yeah, sorry, canI get a photo?
Without a doubt?
Without a doubt, I'll give youonly because I've known you for
so long.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
Okay, I'll pay you.

George (00:18):
You're floating in different circles.
So a goal that I've puttogether for myself at the start
of the year was to create atleast one video every single day
.
I've seen that I like it, yeah,every single day, because we
were talking about it late lastyear.
And we're sitting there andwe're going look at all these
guys.
You actually brought it up Likelook at GC, look at Hormozy,

(00:39):
look at Gary Vaynerchuk They'vegot 10,000 posts, yeah, 10,000
posts, yeah, 10,000 posts.
And we're here doing two, three, four a week, yeah, and going
we're crushing it, yeah.

Robby (00:56):
And I was like dude, think about the thing I haven't
even hit a thousand posts on myprofile.
Yeah, All in total and I'm likethese guys are 10X where, like
if I did, if I kept the samepace for the next 10 years, I
still wouldn't reach where theyare now.

George (01:05):
Yeah, that's right.

Robby (01:08):
Yeah, I was like, this doesn't make sense.

George (01:10):
So what do we need to do ?
What do you have to do?
And it's like you've got toplay a bigger game.
You've got to put in the reps.
We're sitting there sayingcreating content and that was
one of my goals last year.
From where I was in theprevious year to what we did
last year in 24, big tickPodcast has been a huge
contributor to that.
Events have been a hugecontributor to that Me just

(01:33):
doing general content beingcontributed to that.
So, yes, I had a really goodyear next last year.
This year I'm like, well, cool,what does it take to do two,
three, four, five videos a day,or posts, or content creation or
whatever it might be?
And I went out with that goalto do that and I was doing that,
getting some great feedback.
People are messaging me hey,man, love your daily videos,

(01:54):
loving this, loving this, lovingthis and then I'll put up one
video in particular.
So we often say that there'stwo ways of creating content
which is engaging and that'seither through entertainment or
education.
They're the two main forms ofgetting engagement and
connecting with your audience,and the really good videos do
both.
So I put up a video.

(02:16):
It was of me jet skiing.
It had a Peter Griffin sound inthe background and whatnot.
Anyway, I posted it.
It was a funny little video.
It's like four seconds, isn't?

Robby (02:29):
it.

George (02:29):
Yeah, it goes for like four seconds, five seconds,
something like that, and forthose of you that haven't
watched it, go and watch it.
Get the algorithm going againit's pinned on the top of my
page Anyway, so I posted it.
It came back after an hour.
I looked at it and it's like7,000 views.
I said, oh, that's all right.
There you go, that's done allright.

(02:50):
I don't think.
I looked at it again for therest of the day.
I woke up the next morning128,000.
Oh shit, this one's doing allright.
I woke up the next morning,half a million Over.
I woke up the next morning,half a million.
And over the course of aboutfive days reached a million
views, one million views.

(03:11):
That's my first million-viewvideo that I've ever created.
Congratulations, thanks, thanks.
I told my wife.
I called my dad.
It was a very proud moment.
We had a party, it was greatCelebrations.
I never would have got thatvideo, I never would have got
that million view video had Inot made it a goal at the start

(03:31):
of the year to create morecontent.
Never would have got it.
It's the fact that I've gotcommitted to saying, okay, I'm
going to do something everysingle day.
And here's the funny thingright, that was a silly video.
It wasn't widely, it didn'teducate, it entertained.
And I've got other content outthere that if you watch it, it
will change your fucking life.
But they get 1,000, 2,000,5,000 views, but this one got a

(03:55):
million.
Yeah, and sometimes, as I said,as we keep saying, you've got to
create a thousand videos beforeyou get the one that pops and
that resulted in lots of newfollowers, a whole range of
things.
Even one guy said I randomlycame across your jet ski video
that was hilarious, by the way,I'm in construction, yeah, and

(04:15):
he's like.
And then we connected.
I said cool man, I've got anevent coming up, you should come
to it.
Oh yeah, that sounds great.
So he's probably going to cometo my next event.
Maybe he becomes a payingclient from that one silly video
that I made.
And that's not to say now.
What about the next video Imake tomorrow, today, the day
after?
Maybe that one is aneducational one that gets a
million views.
Maybe I go out there and put acontroversial topic out there,

(04:36):
something about I don't likeowner builders or in my industry
, or I could say somethingwhat's current relations at the
moment with something I don'tknow gender neutral toilets?
Okay, I spoke about that theother day at the Australian Open
, which I think is a ridiculousthing.
Maybe I could do a topic onthat and then that'll pop.

(04:58):
But the point is, you've got to, you've got to do the reps,
you've got to go out there andactually put yourself out there
to do the content.
It does.
You know what.
It takes effort, but it's notas hard as you think, because
I'm not there focused on howgood my hair looks, what time of
day it is, what the audio looks, what the audio sounds like,

(05:18):
what the visual looks like.
I'm just getting the content outthere.
And will we do really goodcontent from time to time, like
this production here with thepodcast?
Yes, we will.
Will I do other times whereIggy might follow me around for
a day and I go cool, let's do avideo in the life of George for
a day and it's really goodcontent?
Yes, I'll do that too.
But putting out the videos andthe content like that, I think,

(05:40):
is going to be massive.

Robby (05:43):
Okay, two things.
I think it's going to bemassive.
Okay, Two things One genderneutral toilets.

George (05:51):
Let's talk about it.

Robby (05:52):
Let's do it.

George (05:52):
Let's get the million dollar view.
Let's get a million views onthis podcast.

Robby (05:58):
Did you know that women tennis players get paid more
than men do?

George (06:03):
Do they really?
I didn't know that thatactually bothers me, does it
really?
Yeah, I'll tell you why I'lltell you why this is a great
topic.

Robby (06:12):
It's a fantastic topic, one that might get a million
views, maybe, but I'll tell youwhy it bothers me, please.
Only because, and only because,there is so much fuss the other
way.
Yeah, that's the only reason.
Other than that, I couldn'tgive a fuck.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
Yeah.

Robby (06:30):
Like I don't care enough to Dude.
The way I found out about itwas so indirect and I was like
why is no one talking about this?
I found out about it like fiveyears ago, six years ago, yeah,
but it's so indirect.
Is it all across the world, oris it just the Australian Open?
I think it's all across theworld.
Yeah, I think.
I'm not 100% sure.

(06:50):
I don't even care enough tohave looked into it.

Speaker 3 (06:52):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Robby (06:54):
Just heard it confirmed that it was right and that's it.
I've never, ever, looked intoit again.
Don't care that much, yeah,that much yeah.
But it just bothers me becausethere is.
I feel like you know what I'mlearning about myself.
You know what the patriarchy is, right?

Speaker 3 (07:11):
Yeah.

Robby (07:12):
Yeah, so the patriarchy, the whole thing around men, and
blah, blah, blah.
Yeah, man, civilization hasgotten us to where we are today.
Yeah, whenever and it'sgenerally women, but not always.
Sometimes it's generally women,but not always.
Sometimes it's a man as well.
Whenever they areanti-patriarchy, they lose me

(07:32):
completely.
I was reading a book once.
I was I don't know, maybe youknow 40, 50 percent of the way
through the book and she saidhashtag, fuck the patriarchy.
And I closed the book on thatpage and put it back on the
shelf because I just knew thatanything they say from here, you

(07:53):
lost your.
Yeah, you've just lost me,because what was the book called
?

George (07:57):
Name and Shame.
Do you remember the name of thebook Fuckin' Oath?

Robby (08:05):
It's something about relationships.
I can't remember the exact name.
It was a female writer.
It's called something along thelines of something about being
alone and how to not, orsomething.
Yeah, okay, I can't rememberthe exact term.
That's all right.
She's a very.
That's not all right.
I can't remember the exact term.
That's all right.
She's a very.
That's not a lie.

(08:27):
I saw her on a diary of a CEO.
That's where I found out aboutthe book.
Yeah, yeah, anyway, yeah, assoon as I read that dude, close
the book and put it on the side,because I'm like you're
brainwashed.
The patriarchy what?
The one that allows you to havethe beautiful life you have
today?
The one that's gotten the worldto the point where we almost
have world peace?
By the way, did you hear?
Trump has stopped the war inthe Middle East, did he?

George (08:50):
What a sick man, what a guy.
What a guy.
Anyway, we should get him onthe cast, call him.

Robby (08:59):
Yeah, as soon as someone says that, as soon as someone
does the whole gender neutraltowards things, you lose me.
Yeah, I'm very much the same.

George (09:06):
It's not so much as you said, it's not to the point
where I'm like going to write aletter or get a sign, a petition
.
I just don't care enough.
But if I was there with mychildren, we're like no, no,
we're not using those toilets.

Robby (09:15):
Yeah.

George (09:15):
You know what I mean.

Robby (09:20):
Yeah A.
To be completely honest, Idon't even care that women get
paid more.
Yeah, yeah, I don't care at all, but it's the fact that.
I've had my head done in aboutthe other way around, which has
been proven to be false, correct.
It's just like I almost feellike if I cared enough, I would

(09:42):
do something about it, but Idon't.
It does.
It's like an annoying chair,like it's not that annoying that
I'll stand up, but it's just,you know.
It's like, yeah, these thingsannoy me.
You remember, every now andagain.
Yeah, and you're like that's anannoying fact.

George (10:02):
Yeah, well, I mean, it happens even in other sports, I
think in this one, in thisinstance, I think this might be
the only sport that I think.
In this instance, though,you're getting the crowds to the
games as well.
Do you know what I mean?
So the revenue is there forwomen to be paid there.

Robby (10:20):
Yeah, I guarantee you.

George (10:22):
It's still entertaining to watch women's tennis.
Yeah, it's not as quick.
Fast, strong, fast-moving.

Robby (10:29):
Let me ask you a question .
Yeah, if they ran both eventsseparately.

George (10:33):
Which one makes more money?
Yeah, that's a very goodquestion.

Robby (10:35):
Okay.

George (10:36):
That's a very good question, and it's likely that
the males will do that.
I would bet anything on it.
It's just yeah, you'recompletely right.

Robby (10:47):
Tune into the, the women, the WNBA, no, no, I don't know
why.
I'm thinking of a wholedifferent idea, but tune into
the finals.
Tune into no, no tennis.
Let's talk tennis.

Speaker 3 (10:56):
Tennis Tune into the finals, yeah.

Robby (10:58):
Compare the women's finals yeah, and see, dude, even
TV ratings.
And then how many people watchthe men's finals?
Yeah, right, you know what Imean.
It's a whole different kettleof fish.

George (11:09):
Yeah, you're probably right yeah.

Robby (11:11):
But the women per minute or per game.

George (11:14):
They get paid higher.
Paid the same for less games.

Robby (11:18):
Yeah, paid the same for less games, so they're actually
getting paid higher per game.
Correct, bizarre.
But we, you know, left thisworld.

George (11:30):
Yeah, I'm glad you brought this up.
So do you feel it's going theother way, because it has been
very far left for a very longtime?

Robby (11:40):
Okay, I feel like we've overcorrected and people I think
it's starting to correct itselfnow.

George (11:45):
I really do, and I see it, and this is where I've seen
it, particularly locally as well.
So, first of all, you'regetting Trump coming into power
and doing what he's doing.
He was very clear with hismessage on a lot of these key
areas, right.
Gender neutral there won't bethat at schools, because I'm not
going to let kids mutilatethemselves, you know, to
transition to another sex.

(12:07):
We're not going to do this.
We're not going to do that.
He was very clear and verystrong on some of these topics.
This is what it is going to belike.
That's it.
And he got voted in for some ofhis very strong right views,
and I'm seeing it here too.
So you don't follow Australianpolitics much, do you?

Robby (12:28):
Me no, really no.

George (12:35):
So Peter Dutton, opposition leader for the
Liberal Party and look, I don'tfollow it too much either I've
always been a Liberal voterbecause it suits my agenda, my
business, my life.
So I've always been a liberalvoter and I probably will
continue to.
In saying that, if they're duds, I would be a swing voter.
It just depends on the personand the policies that the other
party has.
But in a two-party race, it'sliberal Labor.

(12:59):
What I have noticed is PeterDutton taking a Trump approach
to the next election and if yousee this, it'll be interesting
for you to actually watch andsee some of these.
He came out the other day andhe's like when I present to the
nation and when I am primeminister, I will not have an

(13:20):
Aboriginal flag behind me.
And he goes.
We are one country.
We are the only country in theworld that has two flags behind
me.
He goes.
We are one country.
We are the only country in theworld that has two flags behind
us.
He goes.
You go to any other country.
You look at any other pressconference.
It's one flag, not two.
He goes.
I'm not saying we shouldn't becelebrating our heritage, where
we're from, who we're about, theAboriginal community he goes?

(13:43):
I'm not saying that at all.
We're from who, we're about theAboriginal communities.
I'm not saying that at all.
I am saying we need to beunited as a nation, as a country
, under one flag, which is why,when I'm in power, it'll be one
flag flying behind me when I'mtalking and addressing the
nation or the world.
That's it.
I like that.
So is he liberal.

(14:03):
He's liberal, so he's pushingthe right agenda.
Now, australia day.
So there's all that talk aroundaustralia day and how it's
invasion day and all this sortof shit.
He's like no, he goes.
This is the day that we aregoing to celebrate our country.
This is the day that we're not,that we are going to celebrate
being australian.
All right, we're not going tomake it invasion day.
We're not going to make itabout this and this and this and

(14:23):
bring all the politics into it,because this is what it's going
to be.

Robby (14:26):
It's going to be that he came out.

George (14:28):
He said other things too , along the lines of the gender
neutral stuff and all that sortof stuff too.
I can't remember that one.
I didn't really see that clip,but I found it interesting
because he's the firstpolitician, not the first
politician, not the firstpolitician.
There's another guy in Adelaide, senator Antic or something

(14:48):
like that, alex Antic orsomething like that, and he's
very right, like really right.
He pulls people up on shit andit's funny.
He's got like 100,000 followerson Instagram.
The one person he follows Trump.
So I thought that was prettyfunny.
He follows one person.
He follows one person, Iactually- messaged him to come
on the podcast.
He hasn't responded.

(15:09):
I might message him again Yet.
Yet that's right.
But what I'm finding is peoplelike I was looking at the
comments.
I was looking at the likesagain, looking at the engagement
, because that's probably what Iwas more interested in at the
time, and he's got a lot ofsupport.
What he's saying makes a lot ofsense and a lot of people will
back that.
I promise you.
A lot of people are going toback that.

(15:29):
And what you might find is thenext election, it's going to
swing his way, just like it didwith Trump, because he's going
to take a more right-wingapproach and go.
This is what we're about.
This is what we need to do.
We need to go back to ourfundamentals.
We're not going to celebratethis.
We're not going to do that.
We're not going to do that.
Okay, these are stupid things.
This is not what beingAustralian is about.
And you watch the voters flockto him because of his mindset

(15:51):
and what he's saying, becausethat's what the politics lacks.

Robby (15:54):
Yeah, look, if we're going to talk about Australian
politics, let's talk about areal serious topic, and it's
when are you going to run forPremier?

George (16:04):
Good question, good question.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Hold on, guys.
Just one thing what was yoursource about the gender pay gap
on the tennis thing?

Robby (16:15):
Oh, dude, I don't know.

George (16:15):
No, it's there yeah because I checked it, it's just
one prize money for.

Robby (16:21):
The prize money is the same, if you just Google prize
money for Australian Open.

George (16:24):
it's one prize for both.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
Yeah, it is the same yeah that's right, but it became
the same just recently, or wasit just this?

Robby (16:30):
year.
Oh no, it's been like that forquite a while, quite a while.
This came up in 2019, when Ifirst that's only for Australian
Open.

George (16:36):
Is it really?
Oh, okay, and American.

Speaker 3 (16:46):
I think the American Open the average percent is
actually 20% higher for men'syeah right At the ATP and WTA
tennis top 100 players the gapis around even 33%.

George (16:55):
Yeah right, what's the prize money exactly.

Robby (16:57):
We're talking prize money not like sponsorships and stuff
like that.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Yeah, so if they win, yeah, so Australian Open 2025
is 3.5 million as the winner.

Robby (17:06):
Yeah, yeah each, but the women only have to play three
sets I don't know I don't know.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
That's what I'm telling you yeah, so yeah yeah,
I suggested australian open islike that.

George (17:20):
But only australian open yeah I reckon there'd be more
are there american one?

Robby (17:25):
yeah, maybe or the french open.

George (17:28):
There's four yeah, the us open french open and
wimbledon it'd be surprised ifthey don't.
If they're not all the same, Idon't know.
It won't go back, butregardless, uh, what I'm seeing
with those.
Oh sorry, you said when am Irunning for premier?
Well, I'm glad you brought thatup, ladies and gentlemen,
because I want to announce ithere today on the podcast that I
will be running for premier.
Um, if I was to run for premier,I would definitely be more

(17:51):
right-winged for sure, with alot of the stuff, and I'd be
very much like this it's thisway or fuck off, or don't vote
for me.
I don't care.
Uh, that's just how I am.
I'm just.
It's not about beingright-winged, I'm just logical.
Yeah, that's all it is.
Am it's not about being rightwing, I'm just logical.
Yeah, that's all it is.
I'm just logical.
Kill me with logic in anythingif you could show me that.
You know doing something leftwas the way to do it and it's

(18:14):
the best thing for people, formyself, for my family, for
whatever it is.
Yeah, let's do it.
There's no issues with that.
That's why I say I'm a swingvoter, I voter, I would vote for
Labor.
I generally never have, purelybecause of the policies always
suit my business, for Liberaland my lifestyle, so I'll always
vote for them.
But yeah, I found itinteresting that he has started

(18:35):
to do and implement that, and Ireckon they did that
strategically.

Robby (18:39):
So you reckon he only did it post-election?

George (18:41):
No, he's just coming into the election now.
No, no post-American election.
Well, that's the only time I'veseen it.
That's the only time I've seenit now just recently Him
actually like a genuine persongoing for prime minister.
This isn't a premier, this isprime, this is top dog.
We've also always said like.

Robby (18:59):
And here's the thing when I think something, I always
think I can't be the only personthinking this.
There's got to be someone elsewho's perceived the same
information in the same way.
And we've spoken about this andwe said Australia needs Trump.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
You know what I mean.
And it's like Australia needsTrump, and that's how the whole
conversation came about yourunning for premier, yeah.

(19:20):
And then it's like which is?
Going to happen, by the way,and it's one of my goals for
2025.

George (19:28):
It's one of my goals to get me to run, to get George to
run, guys, put in the commentsif you would vote.
Yes, please, and I promise youwhen I'm Premier we will still
do this podcast weekly.

Robby (19:38):
That'd be sick.

George (19:43):
I'll put policies in place that will make everyone
million dollar days.
So you're going to subscribe,but you have to be subscribed,
otherwise we'll tax you more.

Robby (19:52):
Get a tax benefit for subscribing to the podcast.
Get tax benefits.
That's it.
What was I saying?
Oh yeah, because we said youknow, australian, it's from post
.
I can't remember if it was postor around the election time or
whatever it was.
But it was like, yeah, cool,like that would be good here,
because no one everyone here istoo PC, yes, pc.

(20:15):
I was going to say rulefollowing.

George (20:18):
There was this girl I can't remember, she said it best
and I think it was on a TV showor a radio show.
She was on there and she wastalking and she goes.
What I've realised is becausewe've got a poor quality, we've
got a poor standard ofpoliticians in this country and
she goes.
What I've realised, and whatI've seen, particularly after
COVID, is we are people, that weare sheep.

(20:39):
We want to be told what to doand how to do it.

Robby (20:42):
Australia.
Yeah, yeah, definitely.

George (20:43):
Yeah, and she goes.
This is what I've noticed.
And he goes.
The reason we keep getting shitpoliticians is because we keep
wanting to be governed.
We need to remind politiciansthat they work for us, not us
for them.
And that's where and she made aripper point, and I think it
was quite a viral video alongthat line.

Robby (21:00):
Yeah, I think that is she's bang on.
Oh, she was bang on.

George (21:04):
I couldn't agree more with the words that were coming
out of her mouth.
And she's like we're sittinghere and you're bitching and
moaning about this, this, thisand this, and she goes, but
you're the ones that voted thesepeople into power and now
you're making it out as in.
You know, we work for them.
They need to be reminded thatthey work for us.
They're here to serve thecommunity, the country, not the
other way around, and they'velost their way, and that's why

(21:25):
we just love to be governed.
We want to be safe, we want tobe told what to do, how to do it
, when to do it, and I couldn'tagree more with what she said.
I personally don't, and I'msure there's lots of people that
don't as well.

Robby (21:42):
However, man COVID showed that a lot of people also do,
because they voted that fuckwitin more than once.

George (21:47):
And for those of you that don't know who I'm
referring to, it is DanielAndrews.
You are a fuckwit of thehighest accord.
Put it on record once again.

Robby (21:55):
In saying that Australia is a sick country.
Love it, Ah, so good.
You know every time I gooverseas I get reminded and I'm
like yeah fuck, we've got itgood.

George (22:06):
And how cool would it be when we go to the States to
have a look at that and compare.
I can't wait, I've heard likeLAX.
It's not LAX.
La is a fucking disaster at themoment, obviously, with all the
fires and everything that'shappening there.
But before that thehomelessness, the economic, like
it would be interesting to talkbecause we're going to speak to

(22:26):
people.
It'd be interesting to talk tothem and say, well, hey, what's
life like here?
You know how are you guystraveling?
Is it hard?
Are you killing it?

Robby (22:34):
or are you like going shit?

George (22:36):
petrol's this much a gallon.

Robby (22:39):
There's two sides to it, though, right, even if you look
at Europe as well.
Yeah, like I think Australia'sbottom line is quite high.

George (22:50):
Yeah, comparatively.
Do you get what I'm saying?

Robby (22:52):
Yeah, absolutely, in the sense of Absolutely, If you look
at.
Let's just say, if you were tobreak it up into tiers, right
and like the lowest tier inAustralia, like even if you are
Minimum wage, Minimum wage yeah.
You still have food.

George (23:09):
You still have food you still have a clean water.

Robby (23:10):
You still have a roof over your head, still safe.
Yeah, you're still safe, likeyeah, whereas I think it's hard
over there like dude people ineurope like there's.
I saw some shit in europe whenI went, man and I was like
absolutely, I was like I didn'tknow that europe was like that,
you know what I mean.
Like I was like man, like italy,places in Italy.
I went to Naples.
There's people living in waysDude I spoke to, this is going

(23:31):
to go sideways.
I got picked up when I went toBali.
I got picked up by a driver andI was talking to him Didn't
know him, but someone I knowknows him and just talking to
him, yeah, how you doing blah,blah, blah.
Thanks for sorting this out.
And I was like how much are youpaying rent?
Just curious, because I've hadpeople always say to me like man

(23:54):
, like what you do is mobile,why don't you go live in Bali?
And I'm like I don't know if Iwant to.
I've never been there beforewhen they said that to me, so
I've never been there.
I don't know.
Yeah, maybe if I like it, I'llconsider it.

George (24:08):
I would never do it.
You've got a podcast there.
Yeah, just come back weekly.

Robby (24:11):
Yeah, I just wouldn't.
That would not be the.
I'm much the same.
I'm not going to live in a.
It's a third world country.

George (24:18):
Yeah.

Robby (24:20):
Anyway, talking to him and I said, dude, curious,
what's your rent?
Like Like how much are youpaying rent?
Do you mind if I ask?
And he's like, yeah, I live in.
So he lives in Denpasar, whichis like the main part of Bali,
like a big city or like kind ofwhere the airport stuff is near
there.
And I was like how much are youpaying rent?
And he's like 1.7 million,which is $170 Australian Week.

(24:44):
Month 170 dollars, australianweek, month, yeah.
So I was like fuck, that's notbad, but how much are they?

George (24:50):
how much are they making ?
Let me finish the story.

Robby (24:53):
I didn't even ask him how much he was making but, for
context, the thing from thething to the airport was a three
hour drive and it cost me 50bucks or 500,000.
So he made 30% of his rent justfrom my trip.
And I was like, okay, I said,do you mind if I ask like, how

(25:14):
do you live?
Like what's it?
Cause he guy's married threekids oldest son is 18 years old
and I was like, do you mind if Iask how do you live?
Is it a house?
Is it a apartment?
He's like oh, no, no, it's asmall house.
And I was like, okay, cool,like you know one bedroom, like
how does it work?
He's like, oh, there's just tworooms.

(25:34):
And I was like, what do youmean?

George (25:41):
And then he's like yeah one room.

Robby (25:42):
we sleep in the same room and he's like, yeah, and I just
looked at him and I thoughtthere's not many people in
Australia who would accept that.
Yeah an 18-year-old kid Dudethree kids.
How did you have the second twokids?
Do you know what I mean?
I just couldn't fathom it I waslike man.

(26:05):
It's like we take this shit sofor granted, man.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
Do you?

George (26:09):
know what I mean.
Yeah, get upset when eachbedroom doesn't have an ensuite.

Robby (26:12):
Yeah, you're like you don't eat, and it's like and
then these people are like allsharing a room, and it's not
just Bali or just this person,it's lots of countries around
the world.
Yeah, for sure.

George (26:28):
That's what I'm saying.
You've got to go out there andsee the world and travel and
actually have experiences thatwill make you, will give you
some gratitude with where you'reat in your life, but also go
okay, need to make some moves.
Make sure that we're never in aposition like this as well.

Robby (26:40):
Yeah, I think that's one of the greatest things about
Australia.
It's a bit of a safety net.

George (26:49):
Yeah, yeah, but, as I said, people get sucked into
that too, you know, yeah, yeah,people get sucked in and they
just accept.
But they even go like you, evengo from the other avenue of it,
like look at the Dole right,literally opposite our office,
you've got commissioned homes,uninterrupted bay views in
Albert Park, you know what Imean people that have been given
homes and, yes, I completelyunderstand there's a lot of

(27:10):
people in there that probably doneed the assistance.
Alright, and that's great.

Robby (27:14):
I think you're always going to have that though.
Yeah, yeah, and I think that'sbetter, but there's also.

George (27:17):
I guarantee you in that building there's also a lot of
people brought in the system.
I had my brother-in-law.
My sister-in-law'sbrother-in-law has a cafe and he
had a worker in there mysister-in-law's brother-in-law?

Robby (27:30):
Yeah, okay.

George (27:31):
He has a cafe in Port Melbourne.

Robby (27:33):
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I just worked out whoyou're talking about.

George (27:37):
He had a chef working for him.
It doesn't work there now, buthe had a chef there working for
him.
Listen, interesting.

Robby (27:44):
I was about to mention the cafe.

George (27:46):
Had a chef working for him.
Not there anymore, but he goeslike they're busy.
He goes to the guy, he goeslisten, I need you to.
He was a really good chef, likereally good at his job.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Yeah.

George (28:00):
He goes listen, I want you to come work for me.
Like, come and work full timebecause he only wanted to work
two, three days a week for me,come and work full-time, because
he only wanted to work two,three days a week.
He's like no, no, come and workfull-time, I'll give you this
much money.
Blah, blah, blah.
I can give you what you want,good wicket.
Do you know what his answer was?
He goes, oh, and he goes.
I want he also.

(28:20):
He goes to him, he goes.
You need to pay me cash.
So the two, three days I canpay you a bit of cash here and
there he goes, but I can'tsustain that.
As the business grows, I'mgoing to have to put you on the
books.
That's probably why he stoppedworking.
Do you know the reason why?
He wanted A, cash and B, not towork more.
He's on the dole.
He's on the dole.
He goes.

(28:40):
I don't want to lose mybenefits, your benefits.
He's living at home with his mumand he was probably in his mid
to late 40s.
He goes.
I don't want to lose my money.
I can't be shown to be gettingan income.
And he was skillful.
He was very good.
Apparently he made some goodfood.

Robby (28:57):
Yeah, okay, he goes.

George (28:58):
I don't want to lose my.

Robby (29:01):
That's just a closed mindset.
Dude, Dude, I just wanted toslap this guy.

George (29:06):
Yeah, that's just like a you don't want to make 100
grand a year because you'regoing to lose your $25,000
benefit from the governmentevery year.

Robby (29:19):
Yeah.
Yeah, do you know what I mean.
Yes, and there would be Ibelieve that guy's a leech on
society.

Speaker 3 (29:27):
That guy is a leech, the.

Robby (29:27):
That guy is a leech Society is going to have leeches
.

George (29:29):
Yeah, it rewards it, though this is what we're saying
.
The way our society is set up,it does reward people like that
and sometimes punishes thehardworking people.

Robby (29:44):
Yeah, I don't know I don't know if I agree with you.
Yeah, well, look I.

George (29:49):
I get what you're saying .
It doesn't reward them.

Robby (29:52):
It creates a better space .
Would it be better if we walkeddown the street and there was
100 homeless people pulled up intents?
Have you seen some of the tentsand shit set up in the US Like
have?

George (30:01):
you seen the homeless people set up tents?
Yeah, it's like a wholecommunity of tents.
It's horrible, yeah it's likeyou walk down the street and
there's all tents pulled up andit's like I've heard somewhere
else, like someone was saying ityou literally walked out our
building and just smelt likepiss and shit because people
were just yeah.

Robby (30:17):
Just a bunch of homeless people.

George (30:18):
Because they were just going at it on the street, on
the sidewalk.

Robby (30:21):
Yeah, the sidewalk, yeah, I would prefer to have.
And, for the record, australia,yes, we do have high tax, but
we don't have the highest tax inthe world.
Have you seen, like the tax inSweden and Germany?
They've got a higher tax rate.
In general, we're still top 10,but there's some countries that
are topping us slightly andcountries that also have, like

(30:44):
Germany would be a great countryto live in I know you've lived
in Germany, iggy, but Swedenwould be another great country
to live in.
I feel like we are acombination of a little bit of
that in Australia and a littlebit of US and a little bit of UK
.
You know what I mean, and it'slike we've got some factors and

(31:06):
there's some things that we dothat aren't great, like the
followingness, sheepness,whatever you want to call it.
The need to be governed, yeah,but I think, all in all, great?

George (31:19):
Yeah, absolutely Absolutely.
But I still think there's a lotof I don't want to rest on that
.
Do you know what I mean?
You don't have to.
No, but even as a society, weshouldn't.
We shouldn't be like oh yeah,but what a great country we live
in.
It can get fucking better, butyou've got to want that change.
You've got to put the pressureon these politicians and all
these guys to say no, no, no,hang on, mate.

(31:40):
This, this, this and this,because at the moment, it's the
other way around.
It's the other way around.
They are dictating to us howeverything is going to be.

Robby (31:48):
Yeah, so you only put the pressure on them by playing
their game?

George (31:52):
Which most people don't.
They can't be bothered, they'renot.
Oh, I can't make a change.
Oh, I can't do this, I can't dothis and I don't think it's
going to.

Robby (32:00):
In all honesty, I really don't.
I have no issue with the wholeCommission Homes.

George (32:10):
Oh no, no, I'm not picking on them.
Yeah, I'm not saying that atall.

Robby (32:13):
I'm just saying a whole range of things.

George (32:14):
I think there's a lot Like there's this guy On.
He got decents following on.

Robby (32:19):
I think we do that well.
The Commission Homes thing.

George (32:21):
And I think, the punters .

Robby (32:24):
Have you heard of him?
The punters politics.

George (32:26):
Yeah, whatever it is You've told me about.

Robby (32:28):
And I think the punters have you heard of?
Him.

Speaker 3 (32:30):
The punters politics?
Yeah, whatever it is.
You've told me about him.
Yeah, I'm going to hey, ifyou're listening, bro, he does
some good content.
What's his name?
I don't remember.

George (32:35):
He's got great content, punters politics, punters
politics or something like that.
We're giving a away.
They make billions and billionsof dollars profit a year and
they pay 0.0002% tax Shit likethat.

(32:59):
I'd say there's a lot ofrefinement that needs to happen,
I think, in our country to makeit great to have all these
money, to get money that can beinvested here.
There's just idiots that aresellouts.
I believe, from what I've seenand what I've read and what I've
heard, there's a lot of peoplethat are pocketing personally
and profiting personally asopposed to doing what's best for

(33:20):
the country in that politicalspace.
So I think there's a level ofthat that needs to be cleaned up
.

Robby (33:27):
I think there is a level of that that needs to be cleaned
up.
I think there is a level ofcorruption wherever you go?

George (33:29):
Yeah, I agree.
Have you guys read the bookcalled?

Speaker 3 (33:33):
Stolen Focus no, it's actually quite good book.
So on Stolen Focus, the authorwrites about why we can't keep
politicians accountable isbecause we have a way too short
of an attention spam because ofsocial media and everything.

(33:53):
So to create like any change toget them like accountable, yeah
, people have to have longattention spams to see and focus
on things that are not workingand take action to it.
But nowadays it's so bad it'sit's just not working anymore.
If you compare, uh, who's thepresident?

(34:17):
Lincoln, american president.
That was like lincoln lincoln,yeah so his speech was three
hours long and people couldwatch that.
That was before TV and thecompetitor, whoever it was, he
also had a three-hour speech andpeople could watch that, but

(34:39):
after the TV generation itdropped to one hour, so the
whole debate went for one hour.
Nowadays it's like seconds.
Yeah, people are losing theirattention spans and they can't
uh be, they can't even give theuh, the politicians to be
accountable yeah it's a problemI don't know if I completely buy

(35:03):
into the whole short attentionspan thing.

George (35:07):
You'll watch if you're interested.

Robby (35:09):
Yeah, people binge Game of.

George (35:13):
Thrones for eight hours.

Speaker 3 (35:13):
But, that's entertainment.
Yeah, so what Politics is notentertainment?

Robby (35:18):
Yeah, but so do you think they had the same measuring
capabilities when PresidentLincoln was around that they do
now?
It's like when people say, oh,oh, people are more autistic now
than ever and it's like you,you get that we got better at
working it out too yeah yeah,there's probably people that
never got diagnosed I thinkthere's people today that don't

(35:39):
get diagnosed, do you know?
I mean?
I think there's people walkingaround right now living life and
they're on some level on thespectrum that aren't diagnosed.
Do you know what I mean?
I think I yeah, this shouldlike if someone's got such a
short attention span, dude.

(35:59):
I watched a four hour video onsales the other day because I
was trying to put together asales strategy and and I
sometimes can't watch a30-second reel.
So is it a short attention spanor is it Shit's boring?
Did you watch my jet ski reel?
Not the whole thing, it wasfour seconds, not the whole
thing.
Oh yeah, but do you know what Imean?
Like that's why I don't.

(36:20):
It could be true, but I justdon't buy into it.
As much as everyone seems tolike, we try and demonize
screens and social media.

George (36:29):
Oh, without a doubt, I couldn't agree more.
We do demonize that a lot.

Robby (36:32):
We demonize the hell out of it, dude.
Yeah, I was watching MarkZuckerberg on Joe Rogan's
podcast.
He just came on.

George (36:41):
Just recently.
Yeah, I didn't see it.
No, I haven't seen it at all,but did you see?

Robby (36:44):
the announcement he made on Instagram.
Yes, About how they're notsoliciting content I don't know
what the term is anymore, butthey're not blocking out content
anymore.
They're not filtering out asmuch content, so they're
allowing things that wouldnormally get banned are now
going to get through.
They're turning more into likeX, x, yeah, yeah, and, by the

(37:05):
way, and things that wouldnormally get banned are now
going to get through.
They're turning more into likeX, x, yeah, yeah, and, by the
way, have you noticed people?

George (37:11):
start calling it X now and Twitter's starting to fall
off.
Yeah, yeah, I did thatyesterday, funny enough.

Robby (37:15):
Called it Twitter.

George (37:16):
The first time.
No, I called it X.

Robby (37:17):
Yeah, and so he was talking about that.
And then Joe Rogan was talkingto him about you know, do you do
anything with your kids andscreen time and that, and he's
like I don't want my kids tolive on the iPad.
He's like I think that's justbad habits.
You know what I mean.
He's like but he goes.
If my daughter's he talks aboutone of his daughters he's like
my youngest daughter is verycreative, he goes.

(37:38):
Now he goes.
She does like Legos and that hegoes.
And she also plays Minecraft,he goes.
Minecraft is a greatvisualization, creative.
I don't even know whatMinecraft is, by the way, it
sounds sick, but he's like it'sa great visualization, creative
game.
He goes.
Now if I want to enhance mydaughter's creativity skills, he
goes.
She's going to learn more fromMinecraft than she is from

(38:00):
building Legos he goes.
So when she wants to playMinecraft, I don't stop her.
He goes, but he goes.
So when she wants to playminecraft, I don't stop her, he
goes, but he goes.
When she was waking up early tostart playing minecraft and not
sleeping properly, I stoppedher and said, hey, no, ipad
before x, he goes.
But do I say, hey, don't playthe ipad, go play with the legos
.
No, he goes if she wants toplay minecraft for three hours I
completely, I completely agreewith that yeah, and I was like

(38:21):
that's a really logicalexplanation.
You know what I mean?
And yeah, I don't know.
I just I don't like how wedemonize everything that we're
doing as humans.
Do you know what?
I mean yeah, we got people offthe streets.
There's people living in houseslike, oh no, they're taking our
tax money.
You know, people can't watchstuff.

(38:43):
Our social media is ruiningeveryone.
Uh, uh, we got more autisticpeople.
Oh, it's the fucking vaccines.
Do you know what I mean?
Like everything, dude, we'realways so quick, very quick, to
like trying no, no, no, it's.
You know we're doing this wrong, we're doing that wrong
we're're doing, and it's like,dude, life has only gotten
better continuously.

(39:05):
It's not like we lived better50 years ago.
We didn't.
We live better today than we'veever lived in our whole fucking
However long you think humanshave been alive for.

Speaker 3 (39:17):
It's actually a little bit degrading at the
moment, in 2024 and 2025.

Robby (39:23):
Why.

Speaker 3 (39:23):
Because there's more wars compared to 10 years ago Is
it 10 years ago.

Robby (39:28):
So you're thinking you have short-term attention span.
You're thinking Don't youremember Trump stopped all the
wars?
You're thinking in a short span.
Dude, you're thinking in ashort-term span.
You know what else happened?
No, you're thinking in ashort-term span.

Speaker 3 (39:38):
You know what else happened?
No, it's not just the MiddleEast.
There's a lot of wars that wedon't even care about in our
media.

Robby (39:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (39:46):
There's a whole video about how many wars happened
compared to 10 years ago.
That's happening today.

Robby (39:53):
Okay, but what about comparing?
Wars are fought not in monthsor years, they're fought over
like it's a big decade, yes, yes.
So why don't you look at itover a longer time horizon?

Speaker 3 (40:04):
yeah, yeah, that that's the whole video essay
about.
If you watch it, you'llunderstand.
There is more wars.

Robby (40:12):
There's civil wars and wars between countries so do you
think the world is in a worseplace now than it was 10 years
ago?

Speaker 3 (40:23):
Compared to on death tolls, on wars.
Yes, it is a little bitFinancial crisis wise.
I wouldn't know because I'venever checked it out, but just
overall that's kind of better, Iguess.

Robby (40:41):
Yeah, and that's what I'm saying.
Like, I think we continuallymake advancements.
You can see anything as bad ifyou pick a certain time horizon.
Do you know what I mean?
If you look at the stock marketin a certain window, you can
see a cliff fall off and saywe're fucked.

(41:02):
Or you can look at Bitcoin forthe last three months and say
crypto is going to take over theworld.
You know what I mean.
Or you can zoom out a littlebit and say, okay, cool, let's
look at this over a bigger timehorizon.
You know there's everythingruns in cycles.
Is this happening now for aparticular reason, because of
what was happening 10 years ago?

(41:23):
Is this happening now If welook at it in a 25 year time
span or a hundred year time span?
Are we still worse?
I would doubt it.
I don't know because I don'tknow the numbers that you're
talking about, but I would justsay it's highly unlikely that
more people are dying now fromthose things than they were.
And and here's another thingthere's more people on the

(41:46):
planet.
Like, we have bigger armies.
We have.
You know what I mean.
Factor that in and talkpercentages.
Are more percentages dying?
Like?
You know what I mean?

George (41:55):
You can there's a lot of factors that come in.

Robby (41:56):
You can manipulate data to make anything look good or
bad.
You very much like heavily.
You know what I mean, and Ijust think we're so hardwired to
focus on the fuck shit.

George (42:16):
Yeah, well, people are inherently negative people.

Robby (42:20):
Yeah, it's survival behavior.

George (42:22):
Yeah, exactly it are inherently negative people.
Yeah, it's survival behavior,that's right.
Yeah, exactly, it's to protectthemselves For sure.

Speaker 3 (42:29):
I actually have an interesting topic for you guys.
So testosterone levels havebeen dropping in the last 40, 50
years.
Are we less of a man nowcompared to our previous
generation?

Robby (42:46):
Me or the average man.
Good rebuttal.

George (42:52):
Well, I mean, if it's dropping, what are the reasons?
When you say less of a man,what does?

Robby (42:56):
that mean.
I'm just throwing it out.
Yeah, like lower testosteronelevels.

George (43:01):
I did hear a podcast on this in part, not in full, so I
don't have enough understandingon the topic, but it is
definitely a topic you can talkabout.

Robby (43:10):
I'm sure there's factors.
I reckon yes.

Speaker 3 (43:11):
Might that be also a cause of all the gender problems
.
Whatever it is, I reckon yes.

Robby (43:17):
Potentially.
I reckon, yes, we are less, butwhy is so what?
I reckon, yes, we are less.

George (43:23):
A level of comfort, though, like it probably comes
from, that it could be.

Robby (43:32):
Dude, hey, look at fucking, go take a bunch of what
was the okay, take a bunch ofbaby boomers in their prime and
put them in war against a bunchof Gen Zs.
Who's winning?

George (43:40):
Yeah, but it's also which Gen Zs?

Robby (43:45):
Hey.

George (43:45):
How do you the Gen Zs, the stereotypical ones?
Yeah, the stereotypical ones.
Yeah, yeah, okay.

Robby (43:48):
Do you know what I mean?
And who's going to win?
Take them both same amount ofpeople, take all the attributes
and make them standard, like youknow what I mean.
So a here, 100 people there,all the same age, same height,
same strengths, whatever.
Who's going to win?
They grew up in a harderenvironment, dude.
You know what I mean.
They are tougher by default dueto natural adversity.

(44:12):
That's right, right, yeah.
So, yes, do I think that menare becoming less manly?
But there's also the whole waron masculinity.

George (44:22):
Yes.
Yeah, and no toxic masculinity,no, that's only Do you feel
that I don't feel that's beengoing for that long, do you?

Robby (44:31):
feel it's really been going for that long, Dude.
The whole feminist movement'sbeen happening since like the
80s, 90s.

George (44:35):
Yeah, I get that, but it hasn't Me Too was the early
2000s, when I was in high school.
There was never thisconversation.
Yeah, but you just weren'taware of it.

Robby (44:41):
No, it wasn't happening, man.
So you don't reckon.
In the 2000s that was happening, that was happening.

George (44:46):
I'm sure it was happening, but not to the extent
where it is now.
Like I never, ever once in mylife ever heard of someone.
Gender-neutral toilets, like wesaid before, there was never a
conversation about that, ever.

Robby (45:00):
Oh that's just the it's gotten more and more and more.

George (45:04):
That's what I mean.
I think it's just becomeextreme in the last few years.
Like when I say last few yearsfive I don't think it's been as
prominent in society or in lifeor anything like that.
And then also social mediaprobably has had that effect on
it, because now it's so mucheasier to communicate something,
an opinion, which then gets letlike.

(45:26):
You know got a video that had amillion views.
I go out there and say, hey,everyone, it's okay to be a boy
if you're a girl and then ifyou're the first person to say
that but if you're the firstperson to say that, do you know
what I mean?
you're, You're the first personto say that.
Do you know what I mean?
You're going to go viral.
Oh, this person said this andthis person said this, and then
they get on TV shows, and thenthey get on this, and then they
do this.

(45:47):
It blows out and then itprobably seems bigger than what
it is.
The vast majority of peoplestill think the way we think.
But yeah, you're probably right.
It's the natural adversity thatthey had to deal with which
will make them even let's assumethey're physically the same
strength.

Robby (46:03):
Okay, that's what I'm saying.

George (46:04):
Make sure that, yeah, physical attributes are exactly
the same.
The mental attributes of thebaby boomers, yeah, I think,
will definitely surpass that ofthe Gen Z or Y or whatever the
hell they are.

Robby (46:15):
Yeah, taking into account , like if you try and even out
the playing field as much aspossible, you'd think.

George (46:23):
Yeah, if you're a betting man.

Speaker 3 (46:25):
Yeah.

Robby (46:26):
I'd be paying like $1.40.

George (46:29):
I'd be paying a million dollars the Gen Z.
I'm playing small.

Robby (46:32):
Oh, the Gen Z, okay, yeah , interesting.

George (46:38):
It is, it is, it is, it is.
But do you know what each ofthose groups would be doing?
So the gen z's, so the babyboomers, and the gen z's before
they actually went to war?
What?

Robby (46:48):
would they do?

George (46:48):
they'd subscribe, they'd stop what they're doing.
Hey guys, before we get out ofhand and, you know, potentially
kill ourselves, we need to makesure that we're subscribed to
this podcast and you guys can dothe same.
You can do the same before yougo to war today, whether it's
with a baby boomer, or whetherit's just your war at work, in
business, in life, whatever itis.

(47:09):
Subscribe to this channelbecause it's going to help you
in your journey to achievegreatness and to achieve all the
things that you want to do, andit helps us grow the channel
and helps us bring new people,more people, and create more
positive change in this world.

Robby (47:25):
And vote one for George.

George (47:28):
Premier 2025 or whenever that next election is.
I don't even know who thepremier is.
It's some lady at the moment, Idon't know.
I'll probably know her name ifshe said it Julia Gillard.
That's the one.
Is it the only politician?
The female politician you know?

Robby (47:46):
And what's the racist lady's name?

George (47:50):
Oh, pauline Hanson, yeah , that's it, yeah.

Robby (47:52):
Good on her.
Is she racist?
I've never even looked into it.
She appears through the mediato be.

George (47:58):
That could be the perception.
That could be the perception.
Yeah, but she was on somereality TV show a few years back
.
I think it was I'm a Celebrity,get Me Out of here, something
like that.
I remember seeing it, Iremember watching it and she was
actually quite a nice person.
I think, like when you got tosee what she was like, and then
it's not until you see theperception of her going through,

(48:19):
but she's also a person.
Yeah, but she's also a personthat has a very strong view on
certain topics.

Robby (48:25):
Yeah.

George (48:25):
So then when you come out like you say with Trump,
everyone demonises him forsomething that he says, but then
that 30-second clip is whatgets played, but it gets taken
out of context.
So you like her, I don'tdislike her.
I don't dislike her, I like her.
Uh, I don't dislike her, Idon't dislike I think.
She has said things in the pastthat aren't great.

(48:45):
So is trump.
Yeah, exactly, but yeah, Ithink, overall, like good on her
for having a crack and stickingto her guns and what she
believes.
I think she's getting out ofpolitics.
Actually is she, I think so, Ithink she's retiring, but, um,
yeah, she's very, she's very,yeah, but she also.
She's very patriotic too, she'svery all yeah, but she also.
She's very patriotic too.
She's very all about Australiaand Australians, but I do think

(49:08):
she's said stuff against ethnicpeople and immigrants in the
past as well.

Robby (49:13):
Yeah, I'm pretty sure she has.
And like yeah, she's talkingabout, you know Chinese and
Indians.
Yeah, what's it called whenpeople come here?
Immigration, yeah, immigration.

George (49:24):
That's why I think she's got a strong point.
Iggy would definitely not havegot in Me and you, none of us.
We'd all be fucked.
Yeah, if she was in power, thiswould be million-dollar days
Lebanon, and that's why, hey,can we do an episode in French?
Can we do an episode in… French?
Can we do an episode inMongolia?
We come to Mongolia and we'lldo an episode.

Robby (49:46):
Yeah, you can.
You have to weatherproof themics.

George (49:50):
Do they have mics in Mongolia?
Do you reckon you can organizesome for us?
We'll ship them over to you.
We'll ship them over to you.
We'll do.
A million-dollar days, mongolia.
When are you leaving?
Iggy May May, so still got alittle bit of time.

Robby (50:04):
So if you don't want anything bad to happen to the
country, make sure you vote one.
George passes.

George (50:10):
Or to Iggy Premier in Victoria, If you don't want
anything bad to happen to Iggyvote one because I will keep him
here.
He will keep.
I'll keep him here.
Make sure he's creating sickcontent for us for a really long
time and for you and for you.

(50:31):
Thanks for tuning in, guys,Appreciate it as always.

Robby (50:33):
Tune in next week where we're going to talk about some
pretty amazing stuff.

George (50:35):
We are Boom.

Robby (50:36):
Bye everybody.

George (50:37):
See you.
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