Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
A long time ago, in a lab far far away,
a science experiment went horribly wrong. Out of that dizzy
feature rolls Zach and.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Have you ever.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Ever felt like this?
Speaker 4 (00:26):
Like extremes? This happened when kids.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
This is Zack and don welcome along to another podcast.
And I gotta say, this is the time I reckon
Zach where I start to feel really excited because while
we have some ideas of what's coming up on the show,
you just never know what's gonna play out, do you?
You never know.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
What listen in front of me? Yeah, that's it of
everything we're going to cover, yep, but who knows where
it goes?
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Yeah, that's it. Who knows where it goes a bit
of rhyming in there, but you're right, you never know
what are people going to call in with? What moments
are we going to have on the show. It's always
it's it's a bit like a Christmas eve, do you
know what I mean? You think what's tomorrow going to be? Like,
what's going to happen? What are my presents going to be?
Speaker 4 (01:05):
By the way, a bit of a Christmas update for you,
ye Peaches is of surprised tonight when we were doing
our pre tree ceremony singing to the tree.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Yeah, which you can hear if you've missed that story
that was on yesterday's podcast.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
She grabbed my hand because what I've been doing is
I've been sitting next to the tree and I reached
behind the tree and turn the switch on when the
singing gets to a certain point.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
And I didn't think she had noticed that, because I
thought she had fully convinced of the of the singing.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
Yep.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
But today she grabbed my hand to put it behind
the tree, and I'm like, what are you doing? She
like to turn the switch. I was like, oh, you've
known all along, you've been humoring me at.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
Three years old, she was doing it for you. You
thought you were doing this to be cute for her.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
Well, this is the thing. She still sung though, and
she still got us all to sing, So yeah, I
don't know, that is odd.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
It's interesting.
Speaker 4 (01:57):
I guess she still likes to do the song, but
she knows it's not magic.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Yeah, yeah, fascinating, fascinating. I mean, I feel like it's
a good things she told you now, because I reckon
if you did that every year for the next decade
and then it's like a forty year old woman. She
says to you, you know, Dad, I knew all I
always knew that would break your heart at forty I
reckon surprised though that the illusion didn't get it, because
I reckon, like you know, I probably would have believed,
(02:24):
you know, you need to get more kind of less
elaborate pranks for much longer. I think you need to
go to another level. You need to get lights that,
you know, the ones that are controlled on the phone. Oh,
you can get ones controlled on the phone, and so.
Speaker 4 (02:38):
You can be standing anting money these lights. These lights
were free off a local page, right, Well, that quite
fairy lights that I've decorated the whole room with. It's
got a good ambiance to it.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
But imagine if you're like standing at the other side
of the room. She starts singing, you turn it on
from the other side, that you.
Speaker 4 (02:55):
Like paying money to like decorate like your Christmas dey creations. Yeah,
what are you investing into that?
Speaker 3 (03:02):
Not much anymore?
Speaker 4 (03:04):
On the broadcast about a little bit historically.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Historically, like you want what the average per years, or
you want like an all time.
Speaker 4 (03:09):
Total, all time total.
Speaker 3 (03:12):
Out of my in your garage bank account exactly it
would be somewhere between fifteen and twenty.
Speaker 4 (03:19):
Excuse me dollars. I imagine you're not talking thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
Yeah, fifteen and twenty thousand dollars, like you're talking over
fifteen years here, Yeah, yeah, ten to twenty. It could
be under fifteen, but we have a ten thousand.
Speaker 4 (03:37):
And that's all in your garret.
Speaker 3 (03:40):
Some of it has broken over the years, some of
it I sold, but those at the moment, like what's
my bank account?
Speaker 4 (03:47):
Christmas decorations, Yeah, this is kind of like your investment.
You are NFTs.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
Yeah, they don't they don't appreciate well Christmas decorations or whatever.
I was just like NFTs man, I actually don't know.
I haven't done a stock take in a while, so
I needed old check. But I got really into Christmas
for a long time.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
And how you remember roughly how much you sold? Like
did you sell a lot of it?
Speaker 3 (04:10):
Yes? Half, probably a bit more than half.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
So you could still have ten grand worth of decorations.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
Possibly well ten grand at purchase price. As I said,
I don't think i'd get ten grand back from it.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
And what.
Speaker 4 (04:22):
Take us through the inventory.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
So a lot of those Lama's Villages and they give
me one hundred and fifty two hundred bucks per village.
Speaker 4 (04:27):
And how many of those did you have?
Speaker 3 (04:28):
At peak? When the village economy was booming, the town
grew to about forty forty five houses.
Speaker 4 (04:36):
Right, so it's four thousand dollars right there.
Speaker 3 (04:38):
Yeah, yep, maybe a bit more bit more, it's hard
to tell. Over many years, some were gifts, et cetera,
that sort of thing, and then there's all the Christmas
lights over the years became expensive. They can be quite expensive. Yeah,
they can be quite exy.
Speaker 4 (04:51):
So if you have a big one.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Yeah, there were a couple. I had a few big
light up reindeer for a while there, so they would
have been pretty exy. It's like a lantern that I've got,
which is really, now are you.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
Putting up the lights at all this year? Because I
know that, like, oh you still do that, mister Christmas?
Speaker 3 (05:07):
Yeah, I put up there. We've got these sort of
like white icicle lights the house. They might go up
next weekend. Actually they're currently going.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
To go with them, even though you've got a whole
heap of lights in the garage.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
Yeah, because it's classy. So you've seen my Christmas light
set up. It's pretty classy.
Speaker 4 (05:21):
No I haven't.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
It used to not be, but it is. I'll invite
your OWND you want to come around.
Speaker 4 (05:25):
I might drive past the area drive fast.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
It's a pretty classy Christmas light setup.
Speaker 4 (05:30):
So, but you just got to do icicles. Nothing else.
Speaker 3 (05:33):
You'll see. You'll get it when you see it. I
know it sounds odd when you see odd.
Speaker 4 (05:38):
It sounds underbaked.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
No, no, no, it's simple. It's simple.
Speaker 4 (05:42):
And are there a lot of lights?
Speaker 3 (05:44):
Yes? Okay if I had, If I did any more,
it would ruin it. Trust me. It's four layers of
warm white icicle lights that you can sink them to
music if you want. You can sing them to any audio.
I could sink them to this podcast.
Speaker 4 (05:57):
That would be good.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
Just blast that out the front every night. You and
I could do a live podcast out the front of
my house and seek there.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
I've done that before.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
What do you mean?
Speaker 4 (06:06):
Remember the community station I worked for? That's right, I
did some live broadcast from some people's house.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
I know that'd be different because I'd be there so
that at least be another person with you.
Speaker 4 (06:19):
The lowest point of my broadcasting career, this night actually
turned out okay in the end, but I would have
been twenty three, yes, sure, twenty four maybe yeah, And
the boss wanted to do live broadcasts from people's you
know what are the Christmas display Christmas lives, So I
would be on the driveway doing a radio shape. Not
(06:39):
the worst idea in the world, but the first one
I went to it. The thing is it's in summer, yeah,
so like it doesn't go the sun doesn't go down
in Queensland where I was till like seven ishes pass
that seven and the show started at seven. So firstly
you're starting the show and the lights on even on.
So I'm on this guy's driveway. No one's there, literally
(07:01):
no one, so it's me and him. As the show
starts where it's about to start, he goes, well, I'm
gonna go inside and have some dinner. And I thought
he was going to say, do you want me to
gatey stuff? But he just goes so I'll see you later.
He didn't even stay out there for his own house.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
So you were doing the show in the garage by no,
in someone's garage, literally, not one person. You said it
it got good. What happened by the end of that night.
Speaker 4 (07:26):
Well, I was on for three hours or whatever. By
the end there were people, and I was shocked because
it was a community station that like, honestly, if there
was a thousand people listening, I would have been surprised.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
Thousand years though. That's how they used to report their listeners.
They get the numbers and double double it and say
that many years and.
Speaker 4 (07:48):
They do promos on air going like two hundred thousand
years and didn't they say it was one hundred thousand people.
You'll notice they didn't say people. I said it is.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
I was like, okay, smart, smart, no, because people were
coming in and they're like, oh I heard that it
was on and I was in the area, and I
was like, you were listening.
Speaker 4 (08:11):
It was actually shocked. So they did get a little
crowd towards the end. It was quite nice, but yeah,
so it kind of swung around. It taught me, like,
you know, to push through a little bit because I
almost pulled out when I saw that. I had a
bit of a paddic attack, and thankfully Sarah was with me,
so we must have been married, so yeah, it must
have been twenty four and she was like, no, no,
(08:33):
you know you can do it. And I called the boss.
I go this, I can't do this, and he goes, no,
it's meant to look bad. And I was like, oh really,
He's like that's the joke. And I was like, okay.
Speaker 3 (08:50):
They pulled it off successfully, but I would last a week.
Speaker 4 (08:54):
I did, like a week of them. Yeah, and yeah,
I saw you one of them.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Yeah, twenty fourteen. We're talking here.
Speaker 4 (09:02):
That was that was twenty fourteen. Yeah, I think it
would have been thirteen.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
It was thirteen, that's right, because there was a young
woman at this particular one who I was sort of
in the early courtship stage just with remember no, not really,
and I ran into her there and I remember you're
saying how do you know her dom?
Speaker 4 (09:18):
And I was like, shut up, mate, you didn't.
Speaker 3 (09:22):
No, you just jumped right in there class exactly.
Speaker 4 (09:25):
Well, thinking about it now, you wouldn't have had to
talk to you talk you into going to Christmas line.
Speaker 3 (09:31):
I'd love us to do our show life from people's
Crystmas slighting hours. Is that to be fun? I'm up
for that, So should be careful you wish.
Speaker 4 (09:37):
For it would be like a trauma or.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
Remember it anyway, We'll wait and see what Christmas is
in store for the show. But for now, let's get
to work.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
The Zack and Tom podcast.
Speaker 4 (09:50):
Massive news today maybe the news of the year, at
least the last few months. Yeahs went down. Apparently ten
million users with that Internet between somewhere like four am
and lunchtime today. I was one of them. I did.
I was lost, no podcasts in the car, no maps,
(10:10):
didn't know where I was going. I had to look
it up before I left and memorize it like I
was from two thousand and one.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
To get the refordex out, just sort of flick through
the pages and see what street you need to turn left.
Speaker 4 (10:22):
On, and you know how like it goes off one
page and continued in ten pages and you're like flicking through.
Speaker 3 (10:28):
I don't know because I'm with but you never had
to use a refidex.
Speaker 4 (10:31):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (10:31):
I was a bit young for the refidex, I think.
But I as a voter, very happy. I should mention
Vota phone customer. I wonder if they'll give me a
year's freeze plan for that. I had a lovely morning.
I was just cruising through the day. Didn't know anything
was wrong until I started hearing the news filter through.
So you give me your perspective from the battlegrounds. What
was it like as an Optus customer?
Speaker 4 (10:52):
It was quite you know, there was the inconveniences of
like not being able to check social media. Yeah, but
there was the legitimate fear of you know, because I
was out and about with my wife and baby and
I was dropping them off places and you know, my
wife was kind of saying, like, well, what happens if
you know, you can't find us when you come back,
And I'm like, no, you have to be at this spot.
If you're not at the spot we agree upon at
(11:14):
the time, we don't reconnect, like how do you get home?
Like you can't get a n uber?
Speaker 3 (11:20):
How do we do this for thousands of years humans?
Speaker 2 (11:23):
Do you know what?
Speaker 6 (11:24):
Like?
Speaker 4 (11:24):
Because they very quickly you come to rely think about it. Uber.
You got your money, yep, you got you know, your directions.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
Sometimes like your driver's license might be on there as well,
your documents even if you wanted to call a cab. Yes,
it's like, well, you know, you'd have to go use
someone else's phone. I guess honestly, you should have sent
Sarah off with a flair gun, you know what I mean?
Speaker 4 (11:48):
When you're ready for me to.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
Pick your guys up. Just fire a flair and I'll
go to it.
Speaker 4 (11:52):
We see, because the issue is she is with optics
as well, which happens, like the whole family's on the
same thing, and I was thinking we might need to
change that in case this happens, you know how, like
the Royal family won't go on the same plane because
in case the plane goes down, they don't want to
wipe out the whole the whole line, the whole family.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:10):
Yeah, so maybe we need to split our allegiances to
our telcos in case one of them goes down, the
other one can still use their phone.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
So Sarah could go Votaphone, you could go Telstra, and
when Peaches is old enough to get a phone, you
could go like Aldi Mobile for Peaches. Spread them out.
But it's been a tough it's been a tough time
for Optus year system because we had the hacking last
year's I know, I know, and this is what I mean.
Like as a Votaphone customer, I feel like it's been
smooth sailing for a while now. Early days Votaphone, we
(12:38):
had some rough patches.
Speaker 4 (12:39):
Well literally yeah, there was quite a few patches didn't
have any connection, was it there?
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Yeah, that was the early days.
Speaker 4 (12:45):
But that's why I turned off votaphone.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
A yeah, yeah, so early on Votaphone had I'm talking
like eight o nine twenty ten. Votophone had some rough years,
but they grew up, they went through Telco puberty, they
did it, changed, they changed, and now that the perfect
provider for me? Or is you settled down with someone
who seemed stable and now they're having a midlife crisis.
Speaker 4 (13:06):
Well, we are hearing stories of people lining up at
Votaphone stores today. Yeah, right to change to Votaphone, I
guess from optis. Wow, I'm wondering if there's people who
did make the leap.
Speaker 3 (13:19):
Well, thirteen one o six five, we want to hear
are you making the switch? Did you make the switch
today maybe from Optus to another provider, or are you
thinking in the days ahead that's the next thing on
my list. I'm not doing it anymore. Optus, You've lost me.
We'd love to hear if today's been enough to actually
make people make the jump.
Speaker 4 (13:35):
We got Harry on thirteen one oh six five from Sydney. Harry,
you work at JB High five was it a busy
day for you?
Speaker 6 (13:42):
It was crazy, honestly, Like we are like a teltual
provider itself, so we had people like queuing up the
second we opened to switch.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
I'm talking like.
Speaker 6 (13:49):
Twenty people in the first hour. Like it was crazy.
Speaker 4 (13:52):
Wow. So people can switch at JB High Fi.
Speaker 6 (13:55):
Yeah, so, like we are a cultial network, so we
offer like plans under like JB High Fi Teltra And
we had people coming in like it was wild and
like it was like a non stop like crazy. And
I had all my friends at work too, like they're
all with optics, so I'm having to hotspot everyone while
we're doing it crazy.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
And Harry, was the mood of the people coming in?
Would you describe it as angry or what were would
you use?
Speaker 4 (14:17):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (14:17):
But yeah, some people were just sort of like sick
of op this and like wanting to switch. But at
the same time thing some people that were really mad,
like getting angry at us too, like because you know,
because we had sold on their phones or whatever, and
it's like, you know, well, our problem we aren't We're Telstra,
we don't do optic stuff.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
So yeah, yeah, that's fair. My prediction is by the way,
sort of like the stock market. There's going to be
some great deals with Optus in the next year.
Speaker 4 (14:36):
That's why I'm sick of with them. That's why I'm
not jumping shit.
Speaker 3 (14:40):
Because you think you'll get a bargain.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
I'm hoping, so yeah, I'm hoping there's some sort of like, yeah,
a good account that comes.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Yeah aboute Well that's the stores perspective. What about the
people who were with Optus thirty and one oh six five.
Has today's Optus outages been enough to make you switch?
Speaker 4 (14:56):
We have Kylie and Melbourne. How did this outage affect you? Kylie?
Speaker 5 (15:01):
This affected me. I'm an age care worker and I
go around to people's homes and I give them a
shower and they all had to missay out and this
was the last draw. I'm over it because I couldn't
use my GPS to get to their houses.
Speaker 3 (15:14):
So, Kylie, have you already made the switch? Have you
gone to another store or is that penciled in for
the next few days.
Speaker 5 (15:20):
No, they've penciled in for the next few days. I
might go to voteraphone, I think, yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
Yeah, play them off against each other dom with vouchers
for Votera phone mate, I would love to be the
face of Votaphone. There's a number of products.
Speaker 4 (15:30):
I'm happy to put my face to the face of
Votaphone at the moment.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
They had a long standing association with the Australian cricket
team for a while. Don't know who it is these days.
It's probably a vacancy.
Speaker 4 (15:39):
They're faceless.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
Yeah, they're faceless. I could be the face of Votaphone.
To be honest, I think there's a real calling for me.
Speaker 4 (15:46):
Lucy in Sydney anyway, what happened to you with the
op this outage today?
Speaker 6 (15:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (15:52):
So I work from home, so my phone on the
zone wasn't able to be working for some reason like
internet provided didn't work. So there was no way that
I was able to communicate with any of our customers
because I actually work on a web chat through a website.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
Oh no, did you just get the day off or
what happened?
Speaker 5 (16:13):
You know what?
Speaker 7 (16:14):
Pretty much? So I'm not gonna lie. Optic has done
me a bit of a day. Well, it's not enough
for me to think that, oh maybe we should stay.
Speaker 6 (16:24):
I'm actually thinking about going jumping ship.
Speaker 3 (16:27):
Maybe that's that should be how optis market this sign.
Speaker 4 (16:31):
We know that everyone's stressed out.
Speaker 3 (16:32):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we need you.
Speaker 4 (16:35):
To get a day off. You don't have any leave left.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
No, I was going to say what they should do.
Optors should say sign up to optis you might get
a whole day off.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Yeah, right, that should be there that big poster. Yeah,
we're so unreliable that we might mean you end up
with a day off. I think that could be a
real selling point.
Speaker 4 (16:54):
Come on, not so unreliable.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
Sorry, voterfone, Ivorytail, votafone Ivory Tower.
Speaker 4 (16:59):
Over here, I hear personally offended.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
Over here, we have Alessandra in Melvin on thirteen one
A six y five. You work off your phone, Alessandra,
when are you going to make.
Speaker 7 (17:07):
The switch as soon as possible?
Speaker 3 (17:10):
Take us into your day? What was it like from
your perspective?
Speaker 7 (17:13):
I woke up and because I work off my phone,
I went on my phone straight away to try and
start recruiting people, and I just couldn't do a thing.
And I went to the office and nobody else could
do anything either.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
So what do your whole office was on optus? I
mean that feels like it's shut down. The whole company
for the day.
Speaker 7 (17:30):
So we all work off our phone sort of thing.
It's just like a small office and we were all
using our own providers. A few of us. We couldn't
do anything.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
It was a nightmare.
Speaker 7 (17:39):
We're just sat there staring at the wall. Ockon.
Speaker 4 (17:43):
That's because you think, like, I've I got some time off,
I might watch some Netflix or something. You couldn't do anything?
Do you walk on, I've got to go outside.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
What happens if there was like an apocalyptic event and
all the satellites went down and suddenly none of us
had phones at all to communicate for like weeks on end.
Do you think humans would know actually how to live
a life without this? Because what I'm hearing is from
your too.
Speaker 4 (18:05):
I mean a lot of people listening. What was the
last two thousand and five, I reckon, Yeah, probably the
last time you'd be around without a smart phone.
Speaker 3 (18:13):
But that's a fair while ago, actually.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
Even twenty ten. Yeah, the iPhone four, I reckon changed
it all.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
I think you're probably right, but that was a while ago.
I genuinely think we've become dependent. I think what today
has shown us is that we've become dependent. We don't
know how to move forward without them?
Speaker 4 (18:29):
Do you think that's sake revolutionary to say that we
on our phones a lot. Don't think we made a
point over there.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
I have got a lot of hot takes from twenty eleven. Actually,
And by the way, this Gagnum style song I reckon,
it's a big watch out for sight.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
You're listening to the Zach and Dom podcast.
Speaker 7 (18:54):
Where kind of yess where you've come from?
Speaker 4 (18:58):
This is the game for anyone. I'm currently driving home
from the airport. Give us a call on thirteen one,
I six five, and we believe we can figure out
where you've flown from by asking you just one question.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
I got the first one. We got Lexi, who was
just touched down at Melbourne Airport. Hey Lexi, how many
days were you away for?
Speaker 7 (19:18):
We were away for three days?
Speaker 4 (19:21):
Three days not international? Immediately thinking domb, Yeah that was
my first. Let's see. So what's the day to day? Wednesday?
So what you're leave it on like a Sunday?
Speaker 3 (19:30):
Or it does feel odd, doesn't it?
Speaker 4 (19:32):
Sunday to Wednesday?
Speaker 3 (19:33):
Sunday to Wednesday.
Speaker 4 (19:35):
Business could be.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
Business could be cheap, It could be a cheaper trip.
Maybe I don't know.
Speaker 4 (19:39):
I think it's business to Sydney.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Yeah, that on odds, that's most likely if you come
from Sydney. LEXI No, where.
Speaker 7 (19:49):
Was it Gold Coast?
Speaker 3 (19:52):
Gold Coast?
Speaker 4 (19:54):
What were you doing on the Gold Coast?
Speaker 7 (19:56):
We were one competition from Melbourne Cup for an event.
Speaker 4 (19:59):
Of I forgot about Melbourne Cup.
Speaker 3 (20:01):
Hang on, you want a competition for the Melbourne Cup
that was in Melbourne where you live, and the competition
sent you to the Gold Coast where the Melbourne Cup
isn't exactly right? Cool? I mean it's rare you win
a competition that sends you away from the event that
you wanted to go to. You know, that's a little
bit old imagin winning Glasspberry tickets that sent you to Tasmania.
(20:24):
Just a little bit.
Speaker 4 (20:27):
We have Ruby in Sydney. Hey, Ruby, what did you
eat on the plane? Serve and yeah? Okay, just one meal, all.
Speaker 3 (20:40):
Right, Ruby? Just one meal?
Speaker 7 (20:42):
Yeah, just one meal shutter aaron I chicken and rice
on the plane.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
Yeah, okay.
Speaker 4 (20:50):
It kind of helps. Not long haul, no, not more
than you're not going from.
Speaker 3 (20:54):
In La at this time of night though. I mean
most high little airlines would have had a dinner service,
so they could have been Brisbane could have been you know,
Melbourne to Sydney. So I don't think it helps us
a hell of a well.
Speaker 4 (21:05):
It helps a little bit because you know the big services,
do they go to the Gold Coast for example? Yeah,
so gold Coast is out. I'm just thinking you can
hear your stomach rumbling that's coming through on the mic.
Did you hear the chicken rush and get a little peckish?
Speaker 3 (21:22):
I often my indigestion doesn't come through, but on that
occasion we need to mic up my stomach.
Speaker 4 (21:27):
I've said that before Brisbane. What do you think I'll
back you in Ruby?
Speaker 3 (21:31):
You come from Brisbane?
Speaker 5 (21:33):
No, I came from Hawaii, mate, Hawaii.
Speaker 3 (21:37):
There we go.
Speaker 4 (21:37):
How was it?
Speaker 5 (21:39):
It was lit?
Speaker 7 (21:40):
It was really really good, had a formal there.
Speaker 3 (21:43):
Nice, beautiful, A good spot to go to. A YI
for that. Well, let's see how we go with this one.
We've got Josh and Janine who've just touched down in Melbourne.
I'll ask you a question, Jeanine, how long did the
flight take?
Speaker 7 (21:56):
Twenty hours?
Speaker 3 (21:58):
Twenty hours to mean non stop? Was there a stopover?
Speaker 6 (22:02):
It was?
Speaker 3 (22:03):
And how long was it stopover?
Speaker 6 (22:04):
Ten hours?
Speaker 4 (22:06):
Okay, well that's interesting, you asked that because otherwise I
was thinking other side of the planet. Now I'm thinking
medium hall.
Speaker 3 (22:14):
Yeah, medium all ten hours, So ten hours flying, ten
hours stopover. So what's a ten hour flight away from
from Melbourne?
Speaker 4 (22:21):
Are we are?
Speaker 3 (22:22):
We thinking? Could have been like a it's tiling about
ten hours away.
Speaker 4 (22:25):
But I'm a bit confused here because if you had
the stopover, that means that you had two flights each
approximately five hours maybe or one it.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
Could have been a one hour and a nine hour. Yeah,
you can get to ten many ways.
Speaker 4 (22:38):
But do you know what I mean?
Speaker 6 (22:38):
So?
Speaker 4 (22:39):
Yeah, so we think in ten hours flying time?
Speaker 3 (22:42):
Yeah, I think so, I think ten hours flying time
all up stop over time from Melbourne. And my first
thought was something like a Thailand feels about ten hours.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
I'd have to be right a bit more, a.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
Bit more to Melbourne. Japan to Melbourne.
Speaker 4 (22:57):
You could be Japan, okay, because you might do a
stop over in like cans even.
Speaker 3 (23:02):
Yeah, true, or Singapore.
Speaker 4 (23:04):
Yeah that's good.
Speaker 3 (23:06):
Have you come from Japan? No? No, where was it from? Egypt?
Speaker 2 (23:11):
Egypt?
Speaker 3 (23:13):
Egypt isn't ten hours of flying.
Speaker 7 (23:15):
No, we did twenty hours on the plane and then
ten hours over.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
Ah, that's what through us what we were like, Yeah,
thirty hours, all hours. Hang on, Josh, we've been talking
about the Pyramids a lot on this show lately. Zack's
a big fan. What did you think?
Speaker 6 (23:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (23:33):
Pretty cool? Do you reckon just out of a curiosity? Josh?
Better or worse than you think Stonehenge might have been?
Speaker 6 (23:40):
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (23:41):
I think I've think Great Wall of China and it
failed much better than that.
Speaker 4 (23:44):
But yeah, not sure about Stone hen Yeah, much better.
Stone an embarrassment, an embarrassment of an attraction.
Speaker 3 (23:55):
This is Zac's big thinking. Gave just joined a Stonehenge
much worse than the Pyramids. Apology to the agent Celts
who built it.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
This is second on them.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
We were looking into childcare for my little baby the
other day, okay, and just to make an inquiry on
the website, you had to set up an account. So
just to find out what days they do, how much
it is, you had to set up an account. And
it made me realize, as I was going through the
(24:25):
passwords in the password kind of thing on your phone,
how many accounts we have these days? And I'm done
with it. Don't mean many the things that you have
to have an account for these days, there's too much.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
We'll go through the big ones. Obviously, everyone has their
email logins. Maybe you got your social media logins and
then a bank login. What else is in there?
Speaker 4 (24:46):
Well, we've got all the free to wears so ten
play nine now ABCESBS seven. So. Used to be able
to just turn on a TV and watch it. Now
you have to have an account. Sometimes the account needs
a new password before you can watch it. It needs updating.
Speaker 3 (24:59):
Oh when the app needs updating and you're like, I
want to tune in the finales on now. Not to
mention Netflix, Binge, Stan, Disney Plus, but those I've got
literally all the fast foods. You're all the fast Yeah.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
You know my mac is Domino's all accounts. I've got
to have, gotcha goodsman, got that one, grilled, got to
get my grilled points. Got to be a part of
the Relish Club. Are you're part of the relish club dom?
Speaker 3 (25:23):
Do you want the discount? How are the discounts?
Speaker 4 (25:26):
Goody are pretty good? Actually, okay, I'm.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
Not part of I'm part of so few of those
loyalty things.
Speaker 4 (25:30):
Do get is a baker's delight? Do you join them?
Speaker 3 (25:34):
What do you get? So you buy yourself a cinnamon roll.
What are you getting?
Speaker 4 (25:37):
I don't know. They just always send you want to
sign up?
Speaker 7 (25:40):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (25:40):
Sure?
Speaker 4 (25:40):
Why not cotton On? Why do I have an account
with cotton On?
Speaker 3 (25:44):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (25:45):
Do you show me coton On occasionally a sauce and
a conda?
Speaker 3 (25:50):
You're not an outdoorsy guide to that extent, You're not
account only.
Speaker 4 (25:53):
I have an account within a conda ancestry dot com.
I've never used it. Got an account my head? I said,
do you have an account with your hairdresser?
Speaker 3 (26:01):
I don't know. I don't think I've got an account
my hairdresser.
Speaker 4 (26:04):
You have to with mine? Well, to make a booking,
it's all online. There's too many accountsgeous my TV. I
have to have an LG account to use my TV.
Then I have to log into those other apps.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Yeah. Yeah, I understand what you're saying. I mean, especially
in terms of privacy breaches this because I mean sure,
I probably trust my bank's security systems. I don't know
if I trust bakers to lights. Don't get a security systems.
Speaker 4 (26:31):
Well, I've got every hotel I've ever stayed in. The
Other night, we got tacos while I was going to
pay you know you do like QR code. Now you
don't even go up. I was doing the QR code
to pain. It's like, do you want to create an
account so it's quicker next time? No.
Speaker 3 (26:46):
No.
Speaker 4 (26:47):
At the taco place the most probably the biggest stretch though,
You're going to think I'm making this up. This is
one hundred century. I bought an umbrella the other day
that came with an app.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
Hang on, what did the app do? Did it monitor
the umbrellas use?
Speaker 4 (27:07):
It was really just like a weather thing.
Speaker 3 (27:10):
Okay, so they trying to take on the bureau, but.
Speaker 4 (27:13):
It was like it was marketed as if it was
like a smarter ubere.
Speaker 3 (27:16):
You've got an account for the people you bought the
umbrella from.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
That's I mean, that's imagine if you got your identity
stolen because someone hacked the umbrella app. There's been a league.
Speaker 3 (27:30):
It's outrageous. Do you know anything you need to do?
You need to just go fully off the grid.
Speaker 4 (27:35):
It's too late.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
I can't now what do you mean start a new identity?
Speaker 4 (27:38):
Fruits are too deep, They're everywhere across the net.
Speaker 3 (27:40):
And it's time to become a ghost. Go amish off
the grid. Think about it, Zach.
Speaker 4 (27:44):
Once you're on the umbrella, no, no, there's no backing out.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
You could go to Baker's Delight?
Speaker 4 (27:50):
Could I do if I was off the grid and
it started raining, I couldn't use my umbrella?
Speaker 2 (27:59):
The Zack and on podcast.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
We want to know on thirteen and one a six ' five,
what's the common food that you've never tried before? I
didn't know that. Apparently I've been missing out on life.
But I made a revelation earlier today, Zach. We're having
a phone called me, you and producer Maddie and as
we're getting closer to summer, and you know, the stone
fruits returning, the summer fruits returning. I sort of said
to you guys, well, I've actually never had a nectarine.
Speaker 4 (28:23):
Never had a nectarine.
Speaker 3 (28:25):
The response that I got from these two it was
honestly like I told you I'd killed somebody. The shock
you had in me that I've never had a nectarene.
Is it that common to have a nectarine?
Speaker 4 (28:35):
Yeah? Like I say, very commonly eaten and available fruit.
I mean any fruit that's in a supermarket. Yeah, you
should have tried by.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
Really thirty years old, any fruit in a supermarket that
highlights to me that well, like how I can answer
that question.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
Actually, I'm concerned about your fruit intake.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
No, a lot of fruit. The thing is what do
you haven't So if you're like a banana and apple guy, no,
I don't like either of them. I'm a blueberry guys
that all you eat?
Speaker 4 (29:06):
Yeah, yeah, blueberry And what happens when they're not in season?
Speaker 3 (29:09):
A kiwi fruits?
Speaker 4 (29:12):
The kiwi fruit and blueberries.
Speaker 3 (29:14):
And then I go to so you don't have like pineapple,
So sometimes you're not looking forward to summer at all?
Or No, this is what I was going to get to.
Growing up, I grew up in a family of mango addicts.
We would get mangoes.
Speaker 4 (29:26):
By the trays ripped your family apart.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
It kind of was a bit like that. We would
just have trays on trays of mango. I once built
a fort out of empty mango trays.
Speaker 4 (29:36):
Now you're just flexing your wealth.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
Now they or cann't grow up like that, mate, No,
but we loved mangoes. So when summer arrived, there was
no other fruit but mangoes. Mangoes ruled the roost.
Speaker 4 (29:48):
I've always said for you for a long time that
like you wear the same colored shirt every day. I
went over your house once and you had a whole
clothesline of navy shirts. You just find one thing, yeah,
I do, and then that's the thing. Wow, So what like,
you're not even You just find one fruit and you
just have that as your fruit intake.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
In summer in summer. And I'll say on that, by
the way, I like if you nail down the fundamentals,
if you find what you like and stick to it
for the fundamentals, it leaves for you to be creative
in other areas. What are they, I don't know yet,
but it will get to them. But I think when
you had a teach, I had a peach for the
first time at twenty twenty. Was my first peach. It's
pretty crazy. I turned to my friend Timo I was
(30:27):
having it with, and I said, peachas aren't bad.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
And what you've never had another one since?
Speaker 3 (30:31):
I've had a few since then. Couple plums twenty five
was my first plum. I'm having art and thinking they're
not bad plumps.
Speaker 4 (30:37):
If you've just tuned in, this is dumb faith going
through at what age she had each fruit.
Speaker 3 (30:44):
I think that's interesting, isn't it look that in one
I six ' five. What fruit have you never had before?
What food have you never had?
Speaker 4 (30:50):
I think you have those in childhood.
Speaker 3 (30:53):
I don't know, And that's a question for my parents.
That's for Richard and Judy Faye to ask them. I mean,
I honestly can't tell you. I know that clearly they
found the fruits they liked and stuck with it as well.
We didn't mix the fruits up a lot.
Speaker 4 (31:05):
But you're not getting to plumb at a friend's house.
No one in the school yard's throwing you a nectarine.
Speaker 3 (31:10):
Hey, mate? Check out this evidently not evidently not. I
mean I was probably pretty at school at the tuck shop.
I was running to like the you know, the chip packets.
Speaker 4 (31:18):
And I don't expect you to buy a nectarine a
touch shop, but I thought you might come across one somewhere.
Speaker 3 (31:24):
Describe this taste of a nectarin.
Speaker 4 (31:26):
Meanly identical to a peach, okay, a non fuzzy peach.
I think actually biologically they're like pretty similar.
Speaker 3 (31:33):
And do you want a soft skin? Do you want
to be squishy?
Speaker 7 (31:36):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (31:36):
You Well that's the gift of it, isn't it. The timing? Yeah,
to buy soft but not squishy.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
Interesting, Okay, sop, and do I refrigerate it or to
keep it on the bench.
Speaker 4 (31:46):
I'd keep it on the bench, let it ripen up.
Speaker 3 (31:49):
Well, that's any information to have.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
I had one yesterday, pretty good, little bit tart.
Speaker 3 (31:54):
Okay, I'm going to go. I have my first nectarine tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (31:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (31:56):
We should have brought one in nectarine in the studiomatic.
Speaker 3 (32:01):
There is there's a twenty four hour fruit shop not
far from here. I can get one on the way home.
That doesn't help the radio show, but it does help me.
Thirty one six five. I hope I'm not alone in this.
Is there a popular food of common food or drink
that everyone else seems to have and you've never had it,
You've never given it a go. I don't know if
maybe other people have ticked off all the big foods
and drinks by the time they become an adult. Maybe
(32:22):
I'm by myself here as someone who's got a big
fruit blind spot. I don't know. It's possible.
Speaker 4 (32:27):
Sandy in Melbourne, what's the food that you've never had?
Speaker 7 (32:31):
Mushrooms?
Speaker 4 (32:32):
Never had mushrooms?
Speaker 6 (32:34):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (32:34):
I never Sandy. I mean, I don't know how to
ask this delicately, So I'm not going to try. How
old are you fifty seven fifty seven?
Speaker 4 (32:42):
And do you actively avoid mushrooms or you've just never
come across them.
Speaker 7 (32:47):
I just to look at them.
Speaker 4 (32:49):
Yeah, don't trust them. What are they up to? Yeah,
we'll look for them. We get it.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
You don't trust them. And you know what, I kind
of get where Sandy is coming from, because they do
sort of. They're a fungus that grows in the ground.
Speaker 4 (33:06):
Yeah, they can be a bit slimy, Yeah, but they're great.
Speaker 3 (33:09):
I was a mushroom convert. Didn't like him till like
probably I was twenty. Now love them, put them in everything.
I don't mushrooms in anything. How old were you before
your first mushroom you seem to have am I had
mushrooms when I was young. Yeah, we're a mushrooms.
Speaker 4 (33:22):
So your family were okay with mushrooms? Yeah, not nectarine,
And we didn't have a problem with nectarines.
Speaker 3 (33:27):
We just loved the mangoes. Speaking of mangoes, this is
crazy to me. Thirty one o six fiber asking what
food you've never had before? Hannah is in Melbourne. Am
I right in saying you've never had a mango, Hannah,
what is going on?
Speaker 7 (33:41):
Yeah, that's right. I've never had a mango before.
Speaker 2 (33:44):
I don't know why.
Speaker 7 (33:45):
My mum's just never bought them, like growing up, so
I haven't bought them since.
Speaker 4 (33:49):
Well, how about coming into this summer, Hannah, you're going
to see mangoes around a little bit. You think you
might go get one?
Speaker 7 (33:57):
Yeah, I'll I'll hust you. But say something us fruit
that you guys have probably never tried because I don't
sell them in supermarkets. Have you guys put of mulberries?
Speaker 3 (34:09):
We've heard of mulberry's, Hannah, we have a.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
Lot of.
Speaker 7 (34:14):
I thought I like discovered there.
Speaker 3 (34:21):
Thought they discovered mulberry's.
Speaker 7 (34:24):
Yes, because our house had a mulberry tree too, and
I've never seen them anywhere else. I thought it was
like my discovery.
Speaker 4 (34:33):
And he's got a magical berry tree in the backyard.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
Hannah. Did you just start eating the berries from this
tree without knowing what they were? Because that probably wasn't.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
A good idea.
Speaker 7 (34:42):
Yeah, no, I was pretty lucky. I feel like a
lot of kids do that.
Speaker 3 (34:47):
Yes, I don't believe I thought she invented molbs.
Speaker 4 (34:52):
I'm going to blow your minds. Guys have you guys
had of strawberries. They're really gonna l that you're ice
cream game.
Speaker 2 (35:02):
You're listening to the Zach and Dom podcast.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
You're up late with Zach and Dom.
Speaker 4 (35:08):
Hippopotamus?
Speaker 3 (35:10):
What's going on? Why did you just say hippopotamus and
then stopped talking? Okay? I am very confused. Welcome to
the radio show. Normally he's that co hosts with me
and enjoins in the conversation, but in this instance, he's
(35:31):
decided to just say the word hippopotamus, and now he's
staring at me blankly.
Speaker 4 (35:36):
Oh have you not seen? I was doing that thing
where you have to incorporate a weird word into the
show and see if anyone notices?
Speaker 7 (35:43):
Right?
Speaker 4 (35:44):
Did you notice it was hippopotamus?
Speaker 3 (35:52):
Howmemby? Honest?
Speaker 2 (35:53):
I did not?
Speaker 4 (35:53):
You did not it?
Speaker 6 (35:54):
I did?
Speaker 3 (35:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (35:55):
Okay, I stuffed that off, I think, But nice.
Speaker 3 (36:00):
Try mate, and you know what I reckon with a
little bit more work next time. You know what I'd do,
I'd say other words after it.
Speaker 4 (36:09):
This is second Tom Cook's conversations. Man, some we think
that we are doing a radio show, but it's been
pointed out to us that we're not actually turns out.
If you slow down the things we say on air,
it goes from being a radio show to a conversation
that happens very late night.
Speaker 3 (36:30):
At a party two am. Out on the back patio,
in the outdoor furniture, you might find two guys chatting,
having the sort of conversations that we have here on
the show.
Speaker 4 (36:38):
We'll give you some examples. The first one Dom. You know,
it wouldn't be a two am conversation without some snack talk.
Like we were talking the other day about the chips
in my bag. They're a Smiths garlic bread Flavid cook
cut chips in my bag right now that are feeling
(36:59):
very vulnerable. They're not going to make it through the
night and they know that.
Speaker 3 (37:12):
Yeah, that conversation I'm amazed that happened in real time
on the show.
Speaker 4 (37:15):
Actually, look outside the studio. What do you see there
on the seat?
Speaker 3 (37:19):
Oh, they made it through.
Speaker 4 (37:20):
Then they made it through the night, and tonight here
you go. You know why though, because they're my backup
chips in case the chip bowl was empty, and the
chip bowl hasn't been empty, the communal chip bowl in
the stell.
Speaker 3 (37:32):
This has been one of the great miracles. Actually, Chip
bowls back after all year, and we've occasionally touched at
the radio station. Chip Bowl the best thing about working
at this particular radio station. And for months there was
a drought, the Chip Bowl drought, and it's returned.
Speaker 4 (37:46):
Living thing.
Speaker 3 (37:47):
Yeah, surely you can afford a fun pack, guys, but
the Chip Bowl's back. And whoever did that, thank you,
you're an angel.
Speaker 4 (37:56):
The big news dom from the last seven days is yeah,
Mary Fowler. Oh yes, Nathan Cleary, super couple Massive.
Speaker 3 (38:05):
The Matilda's Star and the Panthers Star. They're they're partnered up.
It's wonderful.
Speaker 4 (38:09):
I thought I came up with a good name for
their couple name on the show Dumb and Classic two
am talk. When someone thinks they've come up with a
good idea, here's my suggestion for the couple. Name sure,
Marinate and they from marriage Nate and Nathan Nate.
Speaker 3 (38:30):
That's good. That good And do you know what I
was just really reading earlier. I think on the Daily
Mail they're calling them Mary many a y Marinate. Those
two guys at two am have done a much better job.
Marinate is so much better.
Speaker 4 (38:48):
I actually realized afterwards too, it should just be Mary
Nate squished together, right.
Speaker 3 (38:54):
Because the why could be there? Mary Nate, Mary Nate, that's.
Speaker 4 (38:59):
So much better anyway, I mean Daily Mail, you had
your chance?
Speaker 3 (39:04):
Did you missed out?
Speaker 6 (39:05):
Dom?
Speaker 4 (39:05):
This is classic early morning party talk, especially with guys.
I think guys get onto this a lot. Yeah. Dinosaurs, well,
also dinosaurs and Antarctica and how they.
Speaker 3 (39:17):
May already And I was thinking, do you think there's
a t rex out there, fully intact, underground somewhere in
the ice the eyes?
Speaker 4 (39:35):
Is it possible? Mind's blown? Two of the smallest mines around.
Can't comprehend the Second Tomb podcast. We're breaking a radio record,
I think, at least a record in your own life,
because you confessed just forty minutes ago that you had
never had a nectarine. Yeah, stone fruit of summer.
Speaker 3 (40:00):
I reckon. I was a bit late with all the
stone fruits. First peach at twenty, first plummet twenty five,
and first nectarine at thirty. Actually, that's kind of nice.
It's a been a symmetry there. Every five years I
try a new stone fruit.
Speaker 4 (40:10):
And also that is displaying the most boring life that's
ever been.
Speaker 3 (40:17):
No, that's not fair. Maybe I was doing exciting other things.
That's why I couldn't have stone fruits.
Speaker 4 (40:23):
Do they stop you from doing? It's like, hey, hey
on the bungee jumping waiver, Like, do you have any
medical conditions? Have you had a stone fruit in the
last six months? Well you can't bungee jumping?
Speaker 3 (40:34):
Do you like peaches? Shut up? Anyway, Well you thought
we had to before the show wrapped up, you thought
we had to correct this role.
Speaker 4 (40:42):
Now, producer Matty's popped out to the twenty four hour
Fruit Shop, which apparently exists. This nectarine. Now pick it
up and smell it. What do you think? I think
they could be a little softer, but I think it
will be edible.
Speaker 3 (40:55):
To be honest, it does look and smell a lot
like a piece.
Speaker 4 (41:00):
Pretty confident they're basically the exact same thing, just one
spurry once thin.
Speaker 3 (41:06):
Yeah, right, so one's move like one's got a coat on.
Kind of that's the way to think about it. I
guess if you didn't know these two fruits, I'm starting
to think looking at it and smelling it, I'm starting
to think this isn't going to be the revolutionary new
experience that I was expecting, because I think it's just
going to feel like I've eaten a peach a little.
Speaker 4 (41:23):
Bit, you'll be peach like.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
Yeah, I thought it might have been like a whole
new you know, the first time we have light cheese,
that's like weird.
Speaker 4 (41:30):
It's like having an eyeball.
Speaker 3 (41:32):
Yeah, it is a bit. But the texture, the flavor.
Speaker 4 (41:36):
It's not nice at first, and then you're like, maybe
it was nice.
Speaker 3 (41:40):
Everything about light cheese in hindsight, you love.
Speaker 4 (41:42):
And I also don't like any food that you have
to work for.
Speaker 3 (41:45):
Yeah, that's why you hate pistar ship.
Speaker 4 (41:47):
Yeah, prawns are out. I don't want to peel anything,
you know, I hear you.
Speaker 3 (41:51):
My point is if they told you light cheese came
from another planet, like someone had come back from Satin
and they had light cheese, you yeah, it feels a
bit alien that that fruit. It's a whole new I
don't think this is going to be a whole new experience.
Speaker 4 (42:02):
Let's let's have the nectarines.
Speaker 3 (42:03):
Go for the nectarine.
Speaker 4 (42:06):
That sounded to be hard. Let me have a bite
of mine. Oh no, that's quite good.
Speaker 3 (42:15):
That's pretty good. I mean as expected, kind of just
tastes like a peach. I mean, I have another bit.
Speaker 4 (42:27):
It was this a bit of as mr. He signed
up to Dom's only fans. He eats nectaries. He'll eat
any stone fruit you want, Nectarine, virgin eats nectarine for
the first time, nectary went down wrong.
Speaker 3 (42:56):
That's I quite like it.
Speaker 4 (42:59):
I'm fan.
Speaker 3 (43:00):
That's the last time that you get to hear me
in an nectar in for free.
Speaker 2 (43:10):
Ah.
Speaker 3 (43:10):
That is who we got for on the show. You
can get the podcast that each time you'd like, search
for Zak and Dom on your preferred podcasting gap and
you'll find it there and we'll catch you next time.
Speaker 2 (43:20):
By that's all for this episode of the Zack and
Dom podcast. Subscribe to catch the boys next time and
follow them on socials at Zack and Dom