Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus Lush Nights podcast from news
Talks at b.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Here's a bit of information that you might find surprising
or you might become apoplectic with rage. The way young
people sing the alphabet now has changed. It's the same tune,
but the phrasing is different. I found this surprising. Earlien this,
so he is to sing a b c d e
f g h I j k l m n O,
(00:34):
p q a s, t u v w x y
n z. Well, according to a period of a five
year old, the way they're singing at school now is
it's the same tune, A b c d e f
g h I j k l m n o p
(00:55):
q r s t u v w x y z.
L m n op is gone. There's no lm n op.
So the way it's sung now is a b c
d e f g h I j k l m
n o, p q r s t u v w
(01:20):
x y z. Whose world is blown by that? A
b c d e f g h I j k
l m n o, p q r s t u
v w x y z. I don't even know what
(01:45):
to say about that. If anyone's got any comment, I'll
be surprised. That seems to be there, and I don't
know why they would have changed it. That's the way
it is. That's the way the alphabet is sung. So
(02:07):
that's surprising, isn't it. Haven't really gotten the Yeah, haven't
only got the proof that that's the way it is.
If one could finally proof about that, I've got a
(02:28):
few Internet things. See that's the way it's sung. Now
it's changed. So I was surprised about that also, So
if anyone else has come across that, it's quite controversial.
I don't know why they would have changed it, but yeah,
(02:49):
that's the way it goes. Abe, I'll do it one
more time. So A, B, C, D, E, F, G, h, I,
j K, L, M N O, P q R S,
t U, v w x y Z. I think it's
so they can actually clarify the letters. If anyone's knows
(03:16):
the pedagogy of this, let me know about that. Yeah.
So that's the way they've got rid of the elementop
And I've got no idea why anyway. Have some more
(03:42):
information about that, because that's pretty staggering for me. It's
something to do with so that letters are easy to
discriminate or discern. It's because the elementop part is extremely
confusing for children who are learning letters by seeing the
letter and hearing its name. So it says knowing letters
(04:06):
sounds is more important than names, so elementop but was confusing.
So they've changed the way they teach the alphabet A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, q, R, S,
t U, V, W X y Z. Haven't got any
(04:29):
comments about that, because anyone know that. Is he one
surprised by that? Is he going to march on Parliament?
By the way, what I've learned in life, don't get
too outraged by anything that's small, but as surprising. I'm
surprised I haven't heard about it before I talkback. But yeah,
(04:51):
it's changed. I'm even looking at the Wikipedia page for it,
but certainly has changed. Anyway, dig in touch you on
talk about that. My name is Marcus hittl twelve. It's
called the ABC song anyway, if you've got something to
say for that. Eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nineteen
(05:12):
nine two de text Marcus till twelve.
Speaker 3 (05:16):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
By the way, something I've seen people on Facebook say,
oh my god about what happened today on Coronation Street.
When was the last time we had no my God
on Coronation Street? Could someone tell me what that was about? Also,
I'll be fascinated to know. Although I see Gail's leaving
Gail Rodwell, she's written out or she's leaving the show
(05:39):
at forty years Gail rod Well otherwise known as Gail Potter,
Gail Tilsey, Gail Platt, Gail Hillman and Gail McIntyre because
she's been married five times before. But she's on her
way out burger. But yes, but people said that today
was an absolute earth sharing episode of Coronation Street. I've
(06:00):
got no idea what that was. I'd be curious. And
the alphabet song has changed, same tune, different phrasing. Of
course I can do it backwards. I taught my kids
to do it backwards so they're equipped for the world
as edwy X W v U T S R P O,
(06:22):
N M, L k j I H G F E
D C B A, because we might need to change
the way we do it backwards. Also for phrasing. Good evening, Bob,
thanks for starting the show tonight and welcome.
Speaker 4 (06:34):
Stole my Thunder.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
What's your what's your thunder.
Speaker 4 (06:39):
Zyg W p U D S ych p O n
M l k j I S D f E D
C b A.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Do you get to use it much?
Speaker 4 (06:48):
That was how I learned it from a child.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
Did you learn it backwards?
Speaker 5 (06:53):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (06:53):
My two sisters, who are both older than me, decided
to teach me.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
That this was god That was my.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
Natural way of the alphabet, right from from when I
went to premise at school many years ago.
Speaker 6 (07:06):
Of course, I.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
Guess there's no reason ready to learn it and order,
is there? I mean, and only the only thing that's
in order is for dictionaries and phone books.
Speaker 4 (07:15):
I mean I know, of course I know the right
way around, but I mean, I mean that's what elder
sisters do here. And they said, we're going to teach
you now if you.
Speaker 2 (07:23):
Could say the alpha, if you'd say the alphabet for
do you go A, B, C.
Speaker 7 (07:26):
D E, F G, yeah, H I j K.
Speaker 5 (07:31):
S.
Speaker 4 (07:31):
I can't remember you sholl t u v.
Speaker 7 (07:38):
X y z W.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
Who knows it comes more natural to me backwards?
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Of course it does, and why wouldn't it. It's got
better cadence backwards, Bob. Thank you. Coronation Street the new
way of singing the alphabet. I don't know why they're
confused about, but feels like it's not distinct letters. I
think keep your texts coming through abe. I couldn't know
(08:10):
that how to say that without looking at the actual text.
People and Corone Street. What happened tonight? Oh, by the way,
there is some beat up story on TV one news
tonight going on about people with supermarket trolleys at supermarkets
and when they take them back to what do you
call that thing? A shoot? What would you call the
(08:31):
stuff where the supermarket trolleys are kept? You google that
for me, Dan, I can't be bothered. What would it
be called a trolley bay? It doesn't it like a
trolley bay. But anyway, I go closer than push it
with great gusto and hopefully it just slots in. That
gives you a good feeling. But people are all rageful
(08:54):
that some people won't return their trolleys. I'm not so
set and stone about that. I reckon the supermarkets are
extorting us so much with money that if they want
to pay someone to get the trolleys and make the
whole day easier for us, we're having to check out ourselves.
If they want to return the trolley, Good on them.
I've got no problem with people just leaving their trolleys
(09:15):
beside their car. I myself choose not to do that,
but I don't have a problem with people do do
that because what is that space, that liminal space, that
car park space. It is part of the supermarket and
they should manage it. They've taken all your money for
their overpriced goods. Yeah, but have kind of the shaken
out is can I take your trolley off? You would
(09:38):
be nice. They do nothing else. You beg it, you
scan it, you pay for it, you drag it to
your car. There is no customer service. So if one
small way of getting back is just leaving your trolley
akimbo by the car so they put it back, I
don't have a problem with that. I don't do that myself.
(09:59):
Creates work for people, and gosh, they're getting rid of
enough jobs at the supermarket. No, so I probably have myself.
I'm probably slightly radical on this. So straight off the bat,
we've got three topics, which is actually talk back tragy
to throw so many things at you at the beginning,
the way the alphabet has sung has changed. Are you
(10:21):
an early education. Is this a big thing? Yeah, there
you go. What's happened on Coronation Street That's got people
so move that they are posting on Facebook saying, oh
my god, did you see that? And really are we
(10:41):
that concerned about the trolleys? I reckon just kind of
honest attempt leave it anywhere? Will there I do ban
you from the supermat I don't think so, as long
as you don't leave it where someone come drive into
it because you get a lot of rage. Instance in
car parks. Don't know why, but people kind of at
(11:02):
the end of the tether in the Supermarke car park,
I've seen some car park rage. Yeah. For me. What
happens often is you go to a car park and
you think you're in a park, but then you can
drive right through, see you cars poking out you do
that the car could be coming in as well. Is
Susanne good evening, Hello Marcus.
Speaker 8 (11:25):
I'm going to take you to task on that tollege
thing a little bit?
Speaker 2 (11:29):
Good God, yea, no.
Speaker 8 (11:32):
Look from the point of view, look I live in
christ Church and ow the supermarket I use all the time,
pretty exposed to a southerly wind, northwest wind. If you
leave the trolley in the car park, they move by themselves.
They bang into cars and cause scratches and things like that.
But I've got even the worse they do. I've had
(11:57):
it on the like the bumper of my own car,
like I watched it happening that they can move with
a few rate of knots and things. I go even
further if I watch people who just leave them, I'll
actually make comments and kind of go you can actually
do with those new meat of exercise.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
How oh no, you and I have got a problem, Susanne.
How do you how do you make sizes comments about
people in that space?
Speaker 8 (12:31):
It's just laziness, Marcus, It's pure laziness.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
And like hang on the show, it's laziness. The super
marks expecting us to scan our own goods.
Speaker 8 (12:42):
No, No, you can choose to go through with a
checkout operator and shoot the time of day.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
You can choose to bring your trolley back in.
Speaker 8 (12:51):
Well, I think that that's just a social more that
like you put your trolley in a safe place. You
don't need to return it into the supermarket, but put
it somewhere where it's safe and it's not going to
as I said, blow around in the wind.
Speaker 2 (13:12):
Could they blow because they've got no area to catch
the wind because they're a grill.
Speaker 8 (13:19):
I wish I could show you something.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
No, I'd like some I'd like some videos because I
don't think my supermarket trolley even work when you're trying
to move, when you're trying to push them a lot
of the time. So if they kind of went on
their own free, Willow would be surprised.
Speaker 8 (13:32):
But you know, anyway, So anyway, that's my take on
it that. No, I'm fully into trolley shaming.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Wow, have anyone is anyone bitten back?
Speaker 8 (13:46):
Most of them are quite sheepish, actually, I think they would.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
I'd be sheep as if someone confront of me about
between the trolley.
Speaker 8 (13:53):
Probably there you go, like, that's what you get for being,
you know, grumpy middle aged woman.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
Okay, nice to hear, Susan think you there we go. Gosh,
you've got a topic, boy, And I'm becoming more I'm
digging in on this one. I'm doing, although I don't
often get a trolley load. Marcus say the alphabet to
the tune of our national length. There is a reason
why our teachers taught us that way. How could you
(14:20):
say the Alphit the tune of national lengthem. Maybe see marks.
The place to return the shopping cart is to the
Coral Corral. You so just take my girlfriend to the beach.
I took her to the trolley bay. What that means?
(14:45):
Good evening, Ben, It's Marcus welcome.
Speaker 9 (14:49):
Yeh've put them on one of these people there sort
of leave us supermarket trolley and then the next cap
back over or something and I'm done.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
And I like your voice too, by the way, But
you're like, yeah, well.
Speaker 9 (15:02):
I don't put all the time, but you know it's
it's a I don't know. Just the place where you're
put your trolley is like you know, you've got to
push away very into the car. Then you know, all
right next you're sure I'll put it in. But yeah,
if I'm a little bit further away, I can get
a bit lazier.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
Well, I'm thinking if you spend turn backs on your grocery,
the supermarket's made a hundred bucks profit and you just
wanted them to sp If someone just take your trolley back,
take it, take them ten seconds. They're there anyway, I
think they'd be wanting to make your shopping experience more streamlined,
wouldn't they.
Speaker 9 (15:40):
Yeah, but it's also keeping some of the employees, you know.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Exactly should they should have more people on the car
pack getting all those trolleys. They not to pick it all.
Speaker 9 (15:49):
Up exactly, but hey, I've got them. It's caused a
couple of arguments in the past. You really put in
the you put in the empty car pack and someone's
going to pull them and you know they're hunting in
the horn and you get in the middle finger out
the window. So yeah, that he could be cheerful it does,
you know? Does are like a few people up And
(16:10):
I try not to do it often now, but you
know the sort of things that you know, the nixt
day over or something I just won't.
Speaker 2 (16:18):
Even bother that's here for me being think you, yeah,
I wouldn't want to be yelled at for doing it.
What I would like is some little some mine, some
little chucks wheel chucks you could put under the mistake Actually,
when you put it in the park next to you
could put something under it wheels that doesn't roll away
and just stays there. Because if you're rolled a bother cat,
(16:38):
that wouldn't be good. They'd be their livelihood. Lindsey Marcus, Hello.
Speaker 10 (16:44):
Marcus. I'm a victim of a supermarket trolley. I've boycotted
the supermarket for twenty five years after it happened. Wow,
I was parked on the street and the trolley came
(17:05):
flying out off the trolley park whatever they called. However,
the footpaths traded to my vehicle and put a great
victint on the side door. The sugar market owner just
treated me like it. So I talked about all claims.
(17:26):
Court won the case and he tried to take me
to the High court.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
Oh, for goodness sake, what supermak are you talking, indie?
Speaker 10 (17:39):
And then the cargo one cheapness. He's not there anymore now,
so I've gone back there. Wow, in it's a supermarket
in the Windsor area.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
For goodness sake.
Speaker 10 (17:58):
Yeah. So so who was that?
Speaker 2 (18:01):
Who was the person that launched the trolley echo? Was
it another random punter?
Speaker 10 (18:09):
No, they put it. They had a trolley way outside
the shop by the footpath, and suddenly come along and
put the trolley in there. The gust the wind grabbed
it and backed the out straight across the foot path
under my car.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
How much damage?
Speaker 10 (18:29):
I think it was about three hundred dollars worth just
being back quite a few years ago.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
Fancy boycotting them for twenty five years though.
Speaker 10 (18:39):
Yep, as soon as they sold up, I went back.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
Wow, well, I had some bad fish there once, so
I was always never going to go there.
Speaker 11 (18:51):
Not have been the same owner, I'm sure it would
have been.
Speaker 10 (18:55):
Yeah, I'm sure.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
I'm sure it was a bad experience for me. But
I didn't. I didn't get Trollie slammed like you did.
Speaker 10 (19:02):
Yes, so I've got all still good at the paperwork here.
I often look at us because I won the coat.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Why would you? Why would you often look at it?
Speaker 10 (19:15):
Well, believe us. I've seen them and.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Do you reve do you relive them? Do you relive
the moments of it?
Speaker 10 (19:22):
Yeah? Yeah, Marcus me.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
That's priceless, Lindsay, Look imagine reliving your moment to the
small claim court with the three of bucks? Was it
just three in a bucks you got, Lindsay, Marcus, do
you just give you a three in a bucks? Or
did they did they give you costs as well?
Speaker 10 (19:46):
Just a threehundred dollars?
Speaker 2 (19:48):
It's a brilliant story. Wow, gosh, so much scope with
a topic like.
Speaker 12 (19:52):
This, And Marcus say, you have to watch out for
those supermarket trolleys because they are dangerous when they get
rammed into you, aren't they? Yes, especially the ones, those
ones that that they have at places like Bunnings and
might attend that.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
Now, what's happened to you?
Speaker 12 (20:04):
I have had my aklis d and severely.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
But wow, the cheapest creepy you. You have an exciting
life out there in the real world, don't you.
Speaker 12 (20:13):
Absolutely?
Speaker 2 (20:13):
Yeah? But would would it be high for your aclies? No?
Speaker 12 (20:17):
It came in strong, just over the top of the heel,
over the top of the shoe, bang straight in from
who like And it's just just just a person with
a very heavy trolley that they couldn't really control about
a fertilizer on it. Wow, here they can bite. So,
of course.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
You've been a fellow football player. Did you do a Hollywood?
Did you arrive on the ground?
Speaker 12 (20:37):
No, you laugh it off. Of course you know you're
just tough it out and.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
You weren't severely compromised.
Speaker 12 (20:44):
No, no, but I can imagine that people could get
really hurt by them.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
Pete Marcus welcome, Yeah, good Pete.
Speaker 13 (20:53):
I agree with that lady before called social etiquette, you know, like,
don't expect you run around for you. It's called good manners.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
On their hang on there running a business.
Speaker 13 (21:07):
I reckon, it's just good. Otherwise he does the same
thing of all these car trillege and you're driving around
til avoid the grocery trolley. It's just called tidiness.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
It's part of it's part of their businesses to actually
give you the trolley. You take it to your care
and they come and get the trolley.
Speaker 13 (21:24):
No, they're quite busy, the ladies and that they're making.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
They're making it pete, they're making you looked at the
rich list lately. Most of the people own supermarkets.
Speaker 13 (21:35):
Yeah, I know they do that. You've got to think
of the staff to the poor. Staff are short of staff.
They most of the are. And I think you got
to think of the staff.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
They're only short of stuff. They're only short of the
staff because the slave drivers are overworking them.
Speaker 14 (21:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (21:50):
I know, yeah, you are right what you're saying. But
a couple quick, I just think of the four staff
and sometimes you get some really shitty nights in that
and you know you've got the grocery. Just make your
job little more poison. Yeah, you just push their trolley.
Most supermarkets only what five or six meters maybe to
trolley bay or whatever. They won't kill you, poor man.
(22:13):
Poor mans.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Yeah, I gotta say I return my trolley, but I
respect those that don't. Well that's what they want to do.
I mean it's part of you know, they're giving you
the trolleys.
Speaker 13 (22:28):
No wrong editor, she just laziness. Put it back in
the bay. Everybody say you do have the sucking dive.
If everybody starts doing that, you'll be getting car damage
to your car. That's probably be getting your cut if
they provide them for trying a voids. So it's one
of those trolleys back road into your car. Did I
next one they get in your car? You wouldn't be
you say all that lazy piers. And so you've got
(22:48):
to have certain things in life. There's certain things you
got to do and don't get part of your supermarket
you put your trolley to sho.
Speaker 5 (22:57):
You.
Speaker 2 (22:57):
I don't necessarily know that. I'm tired and the wall
supporting you about that one. But oh, I'm sure most
people would think, although I don't know whether most people
do it or.
Speaker 13 (23:08):
Not, but most people do. I mean, you plum and
we gotta I think people when you from are pretty
well manners most people, I say ninety ninety eight ninety
I say, I say ninety seven percent of people. They
always put them with they should be because we think
maybe you would a little bit more of a uh
of a royal city where most people they got to
(23:28):
work and they have manners, and I think keep those
men are standards up. Doesn't show you put your trolleys
until they should be.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
I'm surprised you talk a lot. I'm surprised people aren't
making are making commented people that aren't putting them away?
Speaker 13 (23:44):
Well they should do. Don't know, lazy but cool?
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Would you would you? Would you get lazy? Would you
shout at someone in.
Speaker 15 (23:51):
The car park?
Speaker 9 (23:53):
No, I wouldn't do.
Speaker 13 (23:54):
But para, I don't look at them by paradig has
Then I pulled him flopped do lady put the trolley back?
Speaker 6 (23:59):
And they think that do you want to change.
Speaker 13 (24:02):
Your editor to your pain wrong attitude to head?
Speaker 2 (24:06):
What do you call them? Slops?
Speaker 13 (24:09):
Well, too late to push the trolley second to where
they should be. Wow, they don't have much respect.
Speaker 16 (24:17):
We're looking at true.
Speaker 2 (24:20):
Pretty going to town on that one twenty five to nine.
I once received a written warning for racing trolleys as
a trolley boy at Foodtown Meadow Bank mid nineties. For
goodness sake, most supermarkets in the carpet a little basy
can put the troys into. I cannot believe what I'm
hearing people say, put a trolley where it's supposed to
be safety reasons people. I bet those same people pump
(24:44):
their guests and don't put the hose back into the pump,
hoping that someone will run out from the gas station.
Put them for them, Lee, Well when did they stop
pumping their guess when the guests didn't get any cheaper?
When what happened to the four court jogies? So we
lost the four court jockeys, Then we lost the trolley boys.
(25:05):
Now I've lost the check out people. They're taking us
for a ride.
Speaker 15 (25:15):
Flip.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
I was a trolley collector at Pack and Save Gisbone
after school. The hivers were shared from the day shift
and the warm armpet smell was worse than most room soup.
They need to hug the trolley man woman day worst
job when he's in dodging cars and the armpit high
from the from the high vers fro day shift. Lindsay
has PTSD post trolley stress, what do you say? Offer
(25:41):
reads it? Oh what if I know Lindsay isn't walking through?
We remember that day, triacet the guy and take him
to the High Court. Marcus is always a caring that'll
tell you to put your trolley in line.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
These people need to question the society's structure a bit more.
They're literally making a fortune out of us. They wanted
to be doing everything possible to make it a seamless
and easy for us. I mean, I can't think of
any other profession where they take so much money from
(26:23):
they provide so little in service. You go to the hairdresser,
but yes, mister Lush, No, mister Dush, would you like
a glass of wine? All that sort of stuff. Not
the supermarket though, Marcus I got yelled at for leaving
a trolley in the space. The souperman had only been
(26:45):
to the head dresses. It wasn't my trolley. She's very nasty.
How many people need to try to get a haircut?
She was off hers. So it sounds people are just
kind of cruising around there. There's like there's like supermarket
car park vigilantes just wanting to police the wild West.
(27:05):
I take your trolley back you do with the exercise?
How dare they like what happens to McDonald's when you
get your tray and you go your meal, Then do
you put your trail away? I'm just trying to think
of the other analogies. But like the trolley by the way,
I'm not sure you're exaggerating when you see that most
of the rich list are mostly supermarket operators. If you
(27:27):
look at the new people coming into the list, yeah,
like the guy with the one at the north Shore one,
they're worth a fortune. The supermarket owners one hundred dollars
profit on turned dot trolley of food, what would the
market be? It wouldn't be much more than that, wouldn't
be much less than that. I wouldn't think. Let me know,
(27:49):
I don't think the old people growing the veggies are
getting much Marcus. Oh my god, what a topic. What
about all the people that use trippiest as a walking use?
I don't understand that. What about the people that use
trolley's is a walking frame? Just get a walker. I
(28:10):
see a lady every day in my neighborhood using a
trolley as a walker. Marcus. Not taking your trolleybackers like
not taking your rubbish to the bins on you out
of the movie there and leaving rubbish on the seats.
I don't know that it is the same. Let me
think about that. That's rubbish. No, it's not the same.
(28:35):
That's your rubbish. You put your rubbish away. It's like
the try at McDonald's. Maybe, although most people in the
car do you put the books away when you've been
to the library asking for a Liberian friend, Matt. The
library's on a commercial enterprise, so you would do that,
(28:55):
I would think, because it's something counts a run and
it's a friendly place anyway. Susan. It's Marcus, welcome, good evening.
Speaker 17 (29:02):
Whore the evening Marcus.
Speaker 18 (29:04):
How are you?
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Oh good, thank you, Susan.
Speaker 17 (29:06):
So it's good oay. Trolley's my pet. Hated them as
the people that use them going through the self cheekout.
They just should be banned. They really should, because I'm
not something going because they block up the self checkout.
Speaker 11 (29:23):
Oh yeah, you know.
Speaker 17 (29:24):
And they might be using them for two or three
items that were even doing this shopping load, but they
don't pack them up properly. Even though there's diagrams to
be on how to do it.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
Are they diagrams.
Speaker 17 (29:36):
Yeah, it's some of the supermarkets have actually got a
photograph on the self cheekouts on how you actually do it.
It's not that hard, but get the design to go
over the top of the shelf.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
So oh, so you shouldn't take a trolley through the
self checkout.
Speaker 17 (29:52):
I don't think so. No, I just think they should
be banned. Do you try going there in a public holiday,
you know, and people are just blocking up the self
cheek out. They're trolley sticking out because they can't pack them.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
That's properly because the supermakes have repaid to employ stuf.
That's what it's all about. Seems just dupping their profits
fifty profit. They might be making the supermarket selot a anyway.
Michael Marcus Helo, good evening.
Speaker 19 (30:20):
Yeah, hi Marcus. Do you remember the Georgia pie in Green.
Speaker 11 (30:25):
Lane, Auckland thirty years ago?
Speaker 3 (30:27):
Yes?
Speaker 19 (30:28):
Yeah, the shared a car park with the big car
park with the supermarket. I think it was food Town,
I don't know, but back then and on a Friday
night at midnight, it was just a it was just
a chaotic party scene of people getting one dollar Georgia pies.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
I remember well, yep.
Speaker 19 (30:52):
Yeah, some people would actually push their friends through.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
The Georgia Pie fantastic in a in a a in
the supermarket trolleys that were lying around the car park.
Speaker 19 (31:06):
But I think that, yeah, I'm pretty sure I know
that the fast food outlets McDonald's need have stopped that.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
Now, well, what it would be that sounds like that'd
be a fun thing on a Friday night. I think
you can go around on a horse. I think people
don't a horse.
Speaker 11 (31:21):
I'd love to do that. I would love to do that.
Speaker 2 (31:24):
Yeah, but they wonder they won't that you walk through.
They've always got problems with you're walking through the ways,
A big fight about that.
Speaker 19 (31:32):
Yeah, safety, they say, I don't know, but surely they
just want a bit of money from the sale. But
now you mentioned you mentioned libraries just before, and it's
just something I've thought about for a while with prices
going up. And you know, back thirty years ago, even
(31:52):
longer forty years ago, if you went and put a twenty,
you'd put use the photocopy machine and a library that
costs twenty cents. And today you go and get a
photocopy from the library, it costs twenty cents.
Speaker 7 (32:06):
Point.
Speaker 11 (32:09):
Yeah, inflation is.
Speaker 19 (32:10):
To driven by business owners hiking their prices for more profit.
Speaker 20 (32:14):
I guess.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
You wouldn't really get much photo copied these days, would you.
Speaker 9 (32:20):
Ah.
Speaker 19 (32:21):
Yeah, well, I mean it's a good service.
Speaker 2 (32:24):
It's you make a good point. It's cheap. It's cheap.
It's cheaper than that it's always was.
Speaker 19 (32:29):
Yeah, that's right. That's zero inflation over forty years.
Speaker 2 (32:34):
Brilliant. It's pretty interesting, Michael, thank you text. I usually
put my trolley in the bay. Sometimes I holt the
front wheels over the raised garden edge and leave it
near my car. But if Karen fat shame me, I
pack it behind her car. Yeah, that's pretty provocative, Karen.
They're fat shaming people saying, oh you could do with
(32:54):
the walk flip. There's a lot of violences in car parks.
There's people out there looking for a bit of niggle.
It's like the real life version of your commune new
Facebook page with people at night just wanting to kick
on fancy people for shaming people, and Liberian says they don't.
(33:14):
Liberians don't want people to put back books because they
put them back wrongly. I always put provocative books back
on display. People like that get in touch Auto. Marcus welcome,
Hey Marcus, Marcus lash Yeah, it's me otto. What's that?
(33:47):
What's you're a trolley You're a trolley person, a trolley man?
Is that right?
Speaker 11 (33:52):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (33:53):
What's the answer?
Speaker 11 (33:56):
Well, if you ask, it was a friend of mine
who told me about you guys talking about trolleys, and
I just want to say that, like people who take
the trolley's out of the area should bring it back.
You know, I mean you should. I mean, one, they
shouldn't be doing that in the first place. And two,
I mean I mean it's illegal to actually take it
(34:20):
out of the area.
Speaker 16 (34:21):
I always I work.
Speaker 11 (34:23):
I work at the hen you know, I work at
the Henderson one, and I've gone out of out of
the area. I've got that Henderson Valley and I've found
at least four or five or six of our trolleys
or because there's some there's some knockcase who always takes
it out there and leaves them with the garbage. I've
even walked all the way up to to a break
(34:46):
of road and grow up them. So if people, if
you ask me, people should really bring the trolleys back.
Speaker 2 (34:54):
Or what about if they just he decided to just
taken their groceries to the car and they're in a
hurry and they just leave the trolley nearby. Is it
disrespectful to you? Like nearby where well, nearby the car,
but not back in the whole bay were it's supposed
to go.
Speaker 11 (35:15):
Well, I think they should. They should put it back
at the bay. I've seen people because if they leave it,
and if they leave it in you know where in
between cars, the cars get damaged, then people blame Master.
They will say, no, it wasn't Apple, you should blames.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
Okay, So you guys get do that. You if cars
get damaged, the trolley guys get the blame. Yes, yeah,
I mean yeah, it's a good answer. You've been doing
that years, you know. I take that from you. Yeah,
you've swung me around and I thank you. Just coming
up to the news at nine O eight hundred eighty eight.
(35:52):
The trolleys and the supermarket and always been Henderson forever. Anyway,
So there we go, get in touch our eight hundred
eighty nine to nine. It's a very good point. They
might then get the blame. Marc's used to turn us
off as we were using this trolley to take our
rubbish out to the spark store. No one can hear
(36:12):
ev so it doesn't make a difference if you're deaf. Marcus,
I always put my trolley back, but also wonder if
I'm taking a young kid's job, just like the checkout's
food for thought. By the way, Oto is really famous.
He's a big deal. I was probably about the most
famous person in Aukland. Just just just say you know, Marcus,
(36:34):
I've listened to you over the country and I'm friends
with the wonderful Otto of Hindo and Bull of Milford.
I agree with how people treat trolley shopping trolleys anywhere,
and partly because I'm my friend, I would do the
right thing and every stuper market car back, even taking
other lazy people's trolley back when I need to have
a good night.
Speaker 11 (36:49):
And Dion.
Speaker 2 (36:53):
Marcus had to buy glasses last minute because the party
high was closed on Saturday. What's that about? We had
to get to kmart and no trolley to be seen.
Poor person who in the checks at the exit was
seriously abused. So I went and pa just two of
the big check out bags and then went and put
ten boxes of glasses in them, then went back and
purchased they needed to either have a deposit for the
(37:15):
trolley and get the money back when returned. Teenagers would
bring them back in their droves to get the coin.
Where have some sort of alarm when they leave the
car park and the wheels lock. I always put my
trolley back on YouTube. I saw a video clip of
America which showed a magnetic strip thing that stops trolley's
(37:36):
going to a certain thank you when you help out.
Loves his job such a pleasure, so I've confused to
text there they've scrolled up. I always put my trolley
back on YouTube. I saw a video clip in America
which showed a magnetic strip thing that stops trolley's going
over a certain point. They can't be stolen. I live
in Hamilton. In my street at this time we have
(37:57):
seven trolleys abandoned. My street is about one cave from
the market. Often if the supermarkets just claim insurance when
the trolleys are staln because it didn't seem to be
that keen to go and collect them. Bro a trolley
cage makes a great hungry basket if you removed the
fram and wheels. Marcus, the local trolley guy on Devenport,
(38:24):
Sam always pushing trolleys and pouring Raine hard worker actually
ran for the local board. Didn't quite get it, make it,
but a lot of support should have been voted in.
And what happened on Coronation Street that seems to be
a big episode. I just kind of wouldn't mind a
plot summary of Coronation Street. None of us have watched
it for years. I just be curious to know. And
the way we say the alphabet has changed. There you go.
(38:47):
It's what we are on about tonight, eight hundred and eighty.
And your trolley stories or your car park supermarket car
park damage stories. Marcus went to Ken's recently. They have
a wheel lock when you take it too far past
the supermarket. More please, no Coronation Street spoilers. Are you
videoing it? Marcus? What is going on here with the trolleys?
(39:15):
It's the good will of the soup Marke to loan
you one to carry your purchase. How rude is it
to borrow one and discarded at will? Was still on
their land. Interestingly enough, Interestingly enough, just this weekend I
was reading about the first supermarket trolley there was invented
(39:39):
sometime and some weird state in America and it was
the Humpty Dumpty soupmarket in Oklahoma in nineteen thirty seven.
(40:05):
He thought up, they thought, sat up late and invented
this thing, and guess what, no one wanted to use it.
The men wouldn't use it because I thought it looked effeminine.
It was like you're pushing a pram. So what they
had to do was they had to employ people to
just randomly walk around the soup market look like they're
(40:27):
pushing something because no one wanted a bar of it.
Speaker 11 (40:34):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (40:35):
Men thought they were effeminate, and women reminded of pushing
baby strollers, a task that had enough of yep. So
this guy Goldman, Sylvan Goldman, who invented the shopping trolley.
He hired attractive men and women to walk around his
store pushing the shopping carts, a move that proved to
(40:58):
be a stroke of genius. Once they were eventually deemed
freshm enough, the carts took off. H there we go,
sixteen past nine Rossetts.
Speaker 16 (41:13):
Marcus welcome, Yeah, good Marcus. Just about them supermake of trolleys.
I think if they had swivel.
Speaker 6 (41:24):
Wheels all the way around on.
Speaker 16 (41:26):
Them, but make a huge difference. You're right, and even
for being in the supermat to say, if someone twice
to move the trolley, they can't move it because of
red Well the front wheels, not the front, actually the
rear because the old one and on the rear those
wheels are normally fixed. But if so a swivel, do
you just be able to move it over and so
(41:48):
on so and then if you had a bit of
a slope on the car park and someone let goes,
probably it would actually rebound back because the swivel part
of it would go. It would probably turn the wheel
to make it come back to you. If it makes.
Speaker 2 (42:04):
Anything, Yep, makes good sense.
Speaker 16 (42:06):
Yeah, because of the trolley's all my life and we're
not all my life, but twenty odd years and we
hit fix wheels on the back of our trolleys and
that were sharp. And now we've boss went to China
and got a big box for me, fitted them all
on and but all these swivels all the way around
and now it's just brilliant. Best thing we've ever done.
Speaker 2 (42:26):
Is this in a supermarket or so another what sort
of business is this?
Speaker 16 (42:31):
I'm a sheet middle way to read use tolleys.
Speaker 2 (42:34):
Yeah, because some of the other ones too. At the
airports have a deed man's break if you released and
of the break goes on and there quite good because
they won't roll away.
Speaker 16 (42:42):
Yeah, well that's right. You've got yeah, you've got your
castors with the with your brakes on them as well,
you know, but maybe they're more for stuff that you're
going to just park and then take off and in
that sort of thing. That yeah, that's right that the
airport one lightly down the year, but uh, you know
(43:06):
normally part them at a supermarket and the losses can
you go down and buy some groceries or right, okay,
and then I take the trolley, take all this stuff
out of the car and put put it into the
car and I'll just would turn a bit to the
to the bay where they are. Yeah, you know, it's
not hard to do.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
It seems to be the sensible thing. Ross. Thank you,
just so you know, because I'll probably be discussed here.
The Labor Party in the UK they have vowed to
ban under sixteens from buying injury drinks including Prime Monster
and Red Bull, saying hi kefin product are driving a
crisis in children's health. Concentration will be in sleep and
(43:53):
their mental health. There you go. I have kids to
drink those sorts of drinks. Would they? What have the money?
Would they?
Speaker 9 (44:06):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (44:10):
I brought the kids some of that prime drink. They
didn't like it much. I think that was just a
marketing nonsense. I don't think anyway actually ever likes to
drink that. I think that I don't quite know what
it was actually, full of caffeine, full of sugar. There
(44:31):
you go. I think people have them for breakfast on
the way to school. The one of the most caffeine
is rock Star turnred milligrams. How much is there's that?
More than a cup of coffee? Who knows? There you
might want to mention that also moral panic. Marcus sport
plastic peck and saved trolley from a scrap metal place.
(44:57):
Cut the legs down so it sits very load to
the ground. User to put freshly born calves in transport
them from the concrete yard when assisted with carving to
the without dragging the slippery calf over the concrete. Impossible
to carry the slippery little buggers. This day in two
thousand and two American Idol Daybude, I'm just trying to
(45:24):
think who won. Remember a big season, there was Kayak
and Rubens start. Was it the first one? Huge hype
of that. That might have been the second one. I
don't think I can remember who won the first one. Actually,
don't google. I'm curious if you know, do I How
do I know the idea? But I don't. It's now anyway.
(45:58):
So there's that some of the other stuff I can
tell you about tonight. Give me the first letter of
her first name. M kay, it'll come to me first
out of a second name. Kelly Clarkson.
Speaker 21 (46:23):
Yeah, yep, yep.
Speaker 2 (46:24):
You heard she beat the final? Oh yeah, do you
know that because you've researched it's all about that. Okay, okay, hey,
get in touch. By the way, in England they're trying
to stop Cockney rhyming slang from being lost. Oh, by
(46:47):
the way, I tell you why. I did a bit
of reading about the WEEKI which I didn't even know about,
and she kind of thanks to the Rugby League show.
But did you know that butchers they have a secret language,
(47:11):
rich tub cult. Do you want to know about that?
Prairie butchers all around the world, rich tub cult. It's
a big thing with butchers. It's a secret language. They
have when they say everything backwards. And this came a
surprise to me because I've met butchers. I love a
(47:35):
secret language or argt is that what it's called anyway,
So there is a secret language of butchers. It's a
bit like pig Latin, but not quite as good. Yep,
that's a thing. That's a thing, not quite Polari.
Speaker 7 (47:52):
But yeah.
Speaker 2 (47:55):
So it's called rich tub cult, which is butcher talk backwards,
and butchers won't talk about it's a secret language. And
if there's a group of butchers working in a shop,
they will use this language to talk abo themselves and
(48:16):
no one's any the wiser. But while we're talking about
because also rhyming slang is going to be on its
way out. That's a worry for people though I always
sort of I've always found rhyming slang slightly over celebrated.
Maybe someone sent me a razor from Timu which I'm
(48:37):
just trying to charge up. It's got one of those
USB type ports in it. I think they go into
a computer. Then it's not going to crush the system.
I don't think you know what it's like. It's one
of those stupid things that I might go on the
other side of the computer. Hi, Susan, it's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 18 (48:57):
Hello. I was just bringing up while we're on the
supermarket things the trolley, isn't it. I noticed that a
lot of people are pulling into handicapped spots. When you
pay money.
Speaker 14 (49:11):
For a handicapped card and put it on the window,
but there's a lot of people abusing this handicapped park
and I have brought it to the tension of the supermarkets, asked.
Speaker 18 (49:23):
Them and they said that they can't do nothing about it.
So I rung up. I left it for a while
and I thought about it, and then I rung up
the mobility place which you can ring up. They said,
of course supermarkets can do something about it, and nothing's
ever ever been done. And I see it so many times.
(49:49):
Pack and Save won't only road or east skate outside
the subway. They just pull in and abuse it other
people that are not handicapped. I've seen a guy the
other day in a works trp with ivers park there.
Speaker 2 (50:03):
You don't know, you don't know that he hasn't got
that he I mean, some people say handicaps not visible,
but yeah.
Speaker 18 (50:13):
Yeah, But I realized that because I do have a
friend that's handicapped and she gets abused all the time,
but she puts a sticker out. But I mean it's
not right though it says on the card that you
should show it.
Speaker 2 (50:29):
Yeah, I just wondering if any I think the supermarkets
can't be bothered and forcing it, which is bad. They should. Yes,
it's a private car park. It's not for the council
for the towyes to. They shouldn't force it, but they've
got you know, they don't want to. I guess they
don't want to have their staff involved in the confrontation.
Speaker 18 (50:51):
Yeah, okay, Well why don't they put out like a
camera there and it just takes your number plates, you know,
and sends you the ticket. Like if we're going down
Ripeton Road and get pulled up in a bus lane,
they because.
Speaker 2 (51:05):
That's probably suasan. Yeah, it's probably not illegal to pack
a handicapped cap back. I mean it's morally reprehensible, but
I don't know how enforceable it is. Maybe someone does
know about that because that's their private that's their private
(51:26):
lend the supermarkets and I don't know what law would
govern that.
Speaker 18 (51:33):
I rung up the mobility place and they told me
that it's up to the supermarkets to control it.
Speaker 2 (51:39):
Yeah, we think that's what we agree on.
Speaker 18 (51:43):
Yeah, well, so virtually you're not waste of time spending
your money a year to buy the ticket. I know
that we need it, you know, like special when we're
going to the hospital, and that it's really important to
have it there.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
Well, I think there's public places where you can do it.
There's I mean out in public, out and the big smoke,
you know, with a council car parking, they can enforce
that and they can ticket you and tell you away.
Speaker 18 (52:11):
Yeah, a lot of them don't know. It's even just
like you know east Gate or wherever you may say,
even at the beach. You know, you've got your handicap
mother and the car, and the next moment you've got
a car load of people pull up beside you and
they're all drinking alcohol and no sticker and having fun
and walking around and running you know what I mean.
(52:32):
It's quite bad actually, And I feel for the elderly
that can't get a good view because you know, they
want to sit up face looks. I was just wondering
if there's anyone else out there that.
Speaker 2 (52:44):
People people, people have people rightfully have all concerns about
their handicapped car parks. But it's yeah, it's it's because
some of those people go out shopping and they can't
get a car park and they can't get the shopping dugs.
They can't walk or it's too difficult for them. So
I think it's I think I think people are pretty
much aware of that. A lot of people, you know,
(53:08):
after COVID people the supermarket stuff got such a hard time.
The supermarket owners are just trying to partict their staff.
So well, I want to have those fights over car
parks because no one's paid enough to just get involved
with brawls with people about that.
Speaker 18 (53:21):
Yeah, just frustrates me.
Speaker 2 (53:23):
If you want to if you are you someone that
uses those car parks yourself.
Speaker 18 (53:28):
Yes, yes, will cheer and all my mother for my
mother to get her out of the car.
Speaker 2 (53:38):
Oh it's your mother, not you.
Speaker 18 (53:40):
But my mother is with me all the time.
Speaker 2 (53:42):
Do you ever use it without your mother?
Speaker 5 (53:45):
No?
Speaker 2 (53:46):
Never? No, what's your car?
Speaker 18 (53:51):
That's what I'm saying that you know, not.
Speaker 2 (53:54):
Just how much how much does it? How much does
it cost you?
Speaker 18 (53:58):
Fifty dollars a long? This one here is till twenty
twenty seven, So I don't know, you know, the people
that I just get frustrated that I see elder people.
They want their parts and they've got this sticker, but
they have they can't even get in a part because
I see other people parting there that I know that
(54:18):
you can't tell if somebody's disabled or anything by looking
at them. But if I just can you know, like
if you've seen an elder person, I've seen them a
couple of times and I've you know, really frustrated about
it all.
Speaker 7 (54:33):
Actually says, yeah, I can't.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
I can't say. I'm just curious about what the legal
rights are with the private supermarket because you can't give
them a ticket. But thank you, yeah, glean us.
Speaker 18 (54:55):
Hello, how are you good?
Speaker 2 (54:56):
Things? Clearers?
Speaker 22 (54:58):
Good?
Speaker 3 (54:58):
And I'm just bringing about the supermarket trolley. Always been
h shopper for countdown their walls, but I'm really disappointed
every time I go to the super market there. Now
you go under the entry, there's never a trolley. You
(55:19):
actually have to go into the bay outside the car
park to actually get a trolley. They don't have them
on the bay like they used to, and I find
that law that's frustrating.
Speaker 2 (55:32):
They can't work at what tapped me in there. Why
wouldn't they be there?
Speaker 22 (55:35):
They're not.
Speaker 2 (55:38):
Okay, and so.
Speaker 3 (55:41):
You go on and you think, okay, I'll grab a tolley,
but there's nothing there and every time so you have
to go back out of the tower park grab a
trolley and I just thought that's not good.
Speaker 2 (55:59):
Yeah, I don't know what you have to take it
up with you. I can't work out what that would
be about.
Speaker 3 (56:03):
Mm.
Speaker 2 (56:05):
Someone might not a thank sectliness Marcus, who doesn't like
a secret language? People have tried watching nearly that movie
with Jodi Foster three, I is a chickapee, chickapee? What
is that? Tell me more? Louise, good evening and welcome
Hi Louise.
Speaker 3 (56:23):
Ah, Hi Marcus. Our congratulations on your win.
Speaker 2 (56:28):
Thank you for that, Louise, Yes, well done.
Speaker 3 (56:32):
Yeah, this disabled parking business people have got to realize
that not everybody who uses the disabled parking as elderly.
And I've got a card, I need to use it
and I don't you know the number of dirty looks
I've had believable.
Speaker 2 (56:54):
But there's people just looking for a fight out of righteousness.
Speaker 3 (56:59):
Yes, yes, I know of someone in my support group
where in metoyed after a support group is young and
he got he got almost assaulted by some people because
he was using it the sabled park.
Speaker 20 (57:15):
This poor guy isn't.
Speaker 3 (57:18):
So much pain, you know, is these people yelling at him?
You know?
Speaker 2 (57:24):
But DoD he not have a card?
Speaker 15 (57:28):
He did?
Speaker 3 (57:31):
I know, it's just it's just, oh, gets on my goat,
and you can't Half the time, you can't say anything
out of fear or you know, if if I have
said something at times and oh, I'm only going to
be a minute, and I said in that minute, somebody
could be coming in needing that park, you know, they
(57:52):
just don't. They just don't get it.
Speaker 2 (57:55):
Basically, that's good, that's good your I'm trying to think
of some of the things, but I I guess that's
probably every appropriate, yeah thing for someone to have most abilities.
And you you wouldn't tell. You couldn't necessarily tell they've
got that from just looking at them, could you.
Speaker 3 (58:11):
No, you can with me because it's to form my hands.
But these days with the medication, you can't well know.
And it's just breaks my heart sometimes when I hear
these stories people you know, yelling at people who have
got every right to use the park, and you know,
it's hard enough having this wretched affliction. It's absolutely yeah.
Speaker 2 (58:38):
How many times do you how mary times do you
not have a car park when you want one? And
how many times you think it's because someone that's there
that shouldn't be there.
Speaker 3 (58:46):
Well, I have to say down here in Foxton are
very rare and Auckland especially for some reason in Lincoln
Road car parks. I don't know why, but it was
so bad there. Yeah, out west and how do you
know that?
Speaker 2 (59:05):
How do you know that the people shouldn't be in
those because because they've got no because they've got no stickers.
Speaker 3 (59:10):
They've got no sucker. They are running.
Speaker 2 (59:14):
Because you would be running with you would be running
with arthritis, would you No?
Speaker 7 (59:19):
No?
Speaker 2 (59:22):
And there are any disabilities that you'd be running from
the hand from the disability car.
Speaker 3 (59:27):
Okay, No, there's so many others for me. You know,
there's a multitudes of disabilities the time. You know, it's
people have got to realize, not just older people. It's
all ages reflective with these things, you know, to.
Speaker 2 (59:42):
The parking wardens police and when they're in the public area,
do you.
Speaker 3 (59:45):
Know, I don't know, I've never seen it. I have
noticed down here a few times out and not supermarket
car parks, but our car parks of tow away No, yeah, yeah,
to say, which is really good. And the supermarkets they don't, No,
(01:00:05):
they don't this thing and.
Speaker 7 (01:00:07):
Out on the road.
Speaker 16 (01:00:08):
I don't think they do it either.
Speaker 3 (01:00:10):
Quite friendly.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
Well quite one of those car parks were taken up
and given to baby young young parents things too. That
was a big thing there for a while.
Speaker 3 (01:00:18):
Well yeah, and I sort of think, well when since
when you're disabled, having a young baby, or being prepared,
I mean, yeah, what about anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:00:34):
We're taking the young parents are taking your car parks
or the old.
Speaker 3 (01:00:41):
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, there's never enough at my troupe
market was two two that's a member of the baby
and another's and that's.
Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
You said they're pretty good done fox, and aren't they?
Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
Yes, yes they are. I have to say, good old,
good old lower Norse. Yeah, okay, stay away from Lincoln, Yes, yes, definitely,
thanks Marcus.
Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
Not from you, Louise. That's a good call. That was
someone that was reasoned, weren't they. Someone sent me the
quotes from the movie now Chick Chick chickabee t and
me and T and me Chick Chick Chickene. Not a
movie I know, not a movie I probably go and
see though. Oh anyway, the wild West. That is the
(01:01:45):
car park. I've noticed that my car parking is less
perpendicular these days. I often didn't come out from my show.
I think cheapest Crepause, that's a bad park. I need
to reverse and come back and straight again, often in
a hurry. Anyway, Joy, thanks for hanging on. They've got
(01:02:08):
evening and welcome.
Speaker 23 (01:02:09):
Good evening, Marcus. I've approached our new world manager here
in my Techie we're having our mobility parks, and he
said to me that basically because of COVID and people
were only allowed to duck him when they needed to
(01:02:30):
get you know, whoever's grace is, that's why they let
the public use the car parks, the mobility ones, if
they were were available. Now I'm I've had a rather
bad accent for Christmas, and I'm permanently disabled with the
leg injury. And I go go in there and park up,
(01:02:53):
and I have to have a care with me. When
you get in there, you find out the wheelchair doesn't
even work proper. It's either got flat batteries or one
of the League book, which is the left one which
I need is not there, so I have to rely
on my careers to get around the supermarket. I've tried
(01:03:13):
to do it myself, but people just push in front
of me because I've got a walking frame and I'm
trying to keep myself up right, you know, as best
as can be. So I have approached the manager here,
but basically I'm.
Speaker 2 (01:03:28):
So that's basically what? Sorry, basically what?
Speaker 23 (01:03:33):
But basically what I've approached the manager for our new
world here and basically I've just got the impression that
it didn't really worry him. So I actually went back
to CCS who.
Speaker 3 (01:03:50):
Give our cards.
Speaker 23 (01:03:52):
We paid fifty five dollars for five years and it's
up to up to individual suit markets whether they police
those packs or not. And you'll be surprised what I
what I what I've witnessed since I've had this accident
with those nobility parks and my Cara has to park
(01:04:15):
so close so that I haven't got two starts a walk.
Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
So, yeah, who's whose wheelchairs got no batteries? Are the
wheelchairs of the supermarket? Is that what you're saying?
Speaker 23 (01:04:26):
Yeah, the wheelchairs at the supermarket, the ones that your
curas can you take you around the supermarket.
Speaker 2 (01:04:33):
I don't know they had I don't know they had them.
Speaker 23 (01:04:36):
They're not no, no, they're not battery operators. But the
maintenance side of that is appalling because last week I
went to go and use one and had two flat
tires and one missing left.
Speaker 2 (01:04:53):
Did you say, did you say, it's your world, White Tucky. Yes,
they've got to sort it.
Speaker 23 (01:04:59):
Out, ye were most most places, like Mighty teen in
the warehouse there there, wheelchairs are obviously serviced very well.
And I take my head off to those staff and
those two shops. But yeah, it doesn't matter what disability
(01:05:19):
you've got, you're just you know, this is how they
treat you.
Speaker 5 (01:05:23):
Not good.
Speaker 2 (01:05:27):
Look, I suspect that most supermarkets want nothing to do
with the wild West. That's the car park. They're never
out there, they're never policing it.
Speaker 11 (01:05:35):
No they're not.
Speaker 23 (01:05:37):
No, that's right. But it's it's sad that we've we've
got a society that's turned really stupid since COVID. Yeah,
and if you're and if you're slow in the aisle
like I am, people just literally push in front of
you to get whatever. It's not excuse me, could you
(01:05:59):
please move? So I can get such and such. And
I'll tell you what one wonders that I said to Macaire.
It just makes them want to cry. The way people
are treating people likes themselves and others not good enough.
Speaker 2 (01:06:13):
Although the park, the council car parks, with the disability
car parks, they are ones that you could you know,
that they could give people and they would enforce those
because that yeah, that's that's good ones.
Speaker 11 (01:06:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 23 (01:06:27):
But the super markets are their own, their own boss,
and all they're worried about is their profit and to
heck with anybody else.
Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
Yeah, I agree, I agree, and they've got to do
better because it's all about it. It's about providing a
service as well.
Speaker 15 (01:06:40):
Well.
Speaker 23 (01:06:40):
That's right.
Speaker 22 (01:06:41):
And I mean once.
Speaker 2 (01:06:43):
Online once online shopping catches on, they're going to get
left for dead. Do you want to do? Do you
want to do an online George? You like the social
aspect of been out and about I like.
Speaker 23 (01:06:52):
The fact that I want to get out and get
some money at the same time. And you can't give
you care as your card or your pin number, not
to do that.
Speaker 2 (01:07:03):
You can write the pin number on the card, could you.
Speaker 23 (01:07:07):
Yeah, they're not allowed to. It's part of their protocol.
You said, they can take you to the supermarket in that,
but you're not allowed to give them your card with
get number because they've been too many suits of things
going on there as well.
Speaker 2 (01:07:21):
Spers. You're gonna go back to cash?
Speaker 23 (01:07:25):
Yeah, well, I mean where do you put it? It's
not face in your bank no more?
Speaker 11 (01:07:29):
Now?
Speaker 22 (01:07:30):
Is it.
Speaker 18 (01:07:33):
You?
Speaker 2 (01:07:33):
Where you put a joy? But nice to talk to you,
Thank you for that eighty Could someone explain angel numbers
to me? Not you though?
Speaker 7 (01:07:41):
Enjoy?
Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
But at Marcus, welcome and Marcus.
Speaker 24 (01:07:44):
The other day I was at the lights and Monica
Auckland in the window wa washer came up cash and
called out his phone in the.
Speaker 2 (01:07:56):
Wow that's good and good on him?
Speaker 24 (01:07:58):
Yeah, I thought, wow, the times of trees. I mean
literally there's no cash, I mean cases.
Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
So the the window, the window washes. Now do payWave
do they?
Speaker 11 (01:08:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 24 (01:08:11):
Well this one does.
Speaker 2 (01:08:13):
Good on him. Do you say what the charge was?
Speaker 11 (01:08:16):
Oh?
Speaker 24 (01:08:16):
He said anything anything will do And there was even
a charge for the paywaves.
Speaker 19 (01:08:23):
They cracked me up.
Speaker 24 (01:08:25):
One of the what I what I wanted to speak
about was I was a security guard or food stuff.
So we got fifteen sixteen years in Auckland yep. And
you know throughout Auckland the kids does he make big
car pass in Saint Luke's and Sylvia Park and whatnot?
Probably the size of him a cargo. But when I
(01:08:49):
was breaking there it started to get real unsafe. That
was around the time where one of the security died
and Papa Peta, yes, sad this and I man, like
being a security guard, I knew that would happened. That
like that was just it was a given.
Speaker 9 (01:09:05):
Really.
Speaker 24 (01:09:07):
So to hear all your callers comes around and say, oh,
well it's a bit of a zoo the car park,
I totally agree.
Speaker 2 (01:09:14):
Well, what's the grief term? Are the people?
Speaker 5 (01:09:17):
Is it?
Speaker 2 (01:09:17):
Are they? Is they just a stressful place? Supermarket car packs?
Aren't they?
Speaker 23 (01:09:23):
Oh?
Speaker 24 (01:09:23):
Definitely.
Speaker 16 (01:09:25):
And what I had seen throughout the sixteen years I
was a security about at foodstuffs is that drugs became
more prevalent. I'm not saying they were in around, but
you could really see the difference in people I see
on the news there Fiji and Tonglan, so I'm all
having problems with metha well, they was a big problem
(01:09:45):
up here in Auckland in the mid two thousands and
then it just got exacerbated during COVID. So yeah, so
that's why I left, and I'm glad I left, Otherwise
I probably would have been the stabed myself.
Speaker 2 (01:09:59):
Did you have to enforce disabled cap disability car packing?
Speaker 7 (01:10:03):
Oh?
Speaker 24 (01:10:04):
How many times I had to do that? And you
know it's sometimes you've got to make a conscious decision
yourself whether it's safe for you to go out the intel,
you know, but you didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:10:15):
You didn't have powers to prosecute them. Did you issue
tickets because they're is that right?
Speaker 17 (01:10:20):
No?
Speaker 24 (01:10:20):
No, we don't have We don't even have powers to
actually put our hand in your bag. Yeah, okay, the
sign is the signs are just there just to the
tear people. So yeah, security guards are just that. They're
not really they don't have any kind of they're not
the police. Yeah, unfortunately.
Speaker 2 (01:10:41):
Okay, Well, look I appreciate you coming through, Tim, Thank
you for that. Mainly it's about the old putting your
trolley back and angel numbers and the fact that we've
changed the way we say the alphabet now. Sing it
to kids has changed because of the element op And
(01:11:07):
if you want to sing the alphabet now to children
or teach them how to do it, this is the
way it goes. People listen and weep same tune. A
B c d E f g h I h I
j k l m n O p q r s,
(01:11:28):
t u v w x y z. There is no
longer any l m n O p because it was
confusing for children. I'm not outraged by that. I'm just fascinated. Yeah,
(01:11:49):
it's different A b c d E f g h
I j k l m n O, p q r s,
t u v w x y z. I don't think
it's as good, but then again, I'm not learning the alphabet.
I've pretty much nailed it now. Yep, that's me, Nail.
(01:12:10):
The alphabet doesn't anoy me. The kids always say x
y z rather than x y z. But that's all right,
Changing world, embrace the change. And Coronation Street. What was
the Cliffhanger tonight? I've seen people posting on social media
(01:12:32):
about that. I don't even know. Now that Gail's gone,
I think that's my lot gone from when I watched it,
I presume as did Rebarlow. There she's probably gone as she.
Speaker 7 (01:12:47):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:12:47):
It's been a long long time since I've watched it,
probably thirty years. She probably thirty means forty these days,
doesn't it. So there we got one of those giant mugs.
Everyone got one of those giant mugs, the giant in
Slada cups they will drink from these days, the Stanley cup.
You haven't got one of those. The curious thing about that?
(01:13:10):
Also tonight, Glenn.
Speaker 15 (01:13:14):
Welcome, Gay Marcus, how are you good?
Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
Glenn?
Speaker 15 (01:13:19):
Good?
Speaker 20 (01:13:20):
Hey.
Speaker 15 (01:13:20):
I had to listen to that alphabet thing. I'm a
songwriter and the guy that wrote that song I don't
know who he was, but it was brilliant, brilliant writers
from Cesesame history. And do you know the reason why
they went l mn op no so that it rhymes
(01:13:43):
dummy rhyme.
Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
It doesn't written anymore, but it still works.
Speaker 15 (01:13:50):
It does not work, mate, I mean, anybody with half
a brain of songwriting would know that. The whole idea
of learning the alphabet for children is that it rhymes
to make it easy to remember.
Speaker 2 (01:14:07):
Your apparently had to rewrite it because they're confused. It
didn't actually isolate the different sounds anyway. So this went
viral a while back. I love something when it goes viral.
So for those the breaking newsers, we sing the alphabet differently.
Now now I'm just friendly reading some more information about
(01:14:34):
this angel numbers Coronation Street. The alphabet song which has changed.
It's when I changed the talk back number one to
get rid of the ten eighty. But boy I bought it.
That course some that went right up to the top.
That did, meaning of the shareholders forced to retract. Not really, Marcus,
(01:15:05):
you change the alphabet has stuck in my head, like
when the time he changed the phone number. That's right,
I did change the phone number twenty five to eleven.
So for those who just joined the show, the new
way the alphabet goes, and it's Glynn's right, it doesn't
rhyme g cold down South A b c d e
(01:15:32):
f g h I j k l m n o
p q, R s t u v w x y z.
So there is a rhyme there, the r s t
in x y z kind of rhyme that kind of
wraps the whole thing up at the end. It's like
a runaway car until it kind of rhymes at the end,
you think what's going on there? It actually resolves itself
(01:15:52):
quite nicely. A B C D E f g h
I j k l m n O p q breathe
r s t u v w x y z because
the old days the rhymes were g p v z
(01:16:16):
and now it's just T and z Yep. That's right.
The alphabet has changed. But why do you need to
know the alphabet? Because I guesse any thing things in
the alphbet clauda, don't you? Maybe This week the people
(01:16:38):
on the internet rallied to the defense of the ELEMENTOP
that's letters l M NOP of the English alphabet, which,
if you sing them in the alphabet song, tumble together
in a brisk legato that makes the letters hard to
distinguish from one another. In musical notation, legato calls for
a series of notes to be played or sung smoothly together.
(01:17:01):
That's how a lot of people sing their ABC's from
the twelfth letter through to the sixteenth with one note
change and no pause for air. But in one version
of the song that legarda was eliminated so that each
letter has space to breathe. When you hear it for
the first time, it can be jarring. The bar that
(01:17:21):
typically ends with P seems to stop short inn and
the timing and rhyming are thrown and disarray after that.
So when a comedian shared that version on Twitter on Friday,
calling it life ruining. Many people with similarly aghast. One
person said the elemento P sequence was the highlight of
(01:17:43):
the original song, and the new version led to the
same comforting place you're used to all the way through
the letter K, only to be suddenly thrown at a
rhythmical equivalent of a rollering bathroom. Says. The version of
the OFFHBET song is not new. The clip was shared
in twenty twelve by a man called Matt. Matt said
(01:18:07):
he'd been making educational songs of videos for more than
a decade. He said the idea of the older alphabet
came from a book about teaching English to children. The
book said, if you can find an ABC song with
a slow l M nop, it's very helpful for young
learners to recognize each letter. As a musician and teacher,
(01:18:30):
I had to started to make my own version. That
was ten years ago. The melody of the of the
alphabet song at least has been consistent for centuries. It's
often attributed to Mozart, but he didn't contribute. He didn't
compose the original tune, only variations on it. The songs
existed since seventeen sixty one, when the French published it.
(01:18:55):
Mozart also had nothing to do with the words. His
setting was for piano. Over the years, the melody has
been linked to lyrics about a child who wanted to
eat sweets, a woman falling in love, a twinkling star,
and a black sheet with three bags of wool. Mister
(01:19:15):
cause Of he called the Twitter debate of the off
song a tenpest and a teapot, but he also waded
on the version shared by mister Garfinkel. It violates the
rhyme created by the letter g rhyming with a letter P.
Without that, it's much more difficult to remember the words.
Pretty much. Rock Glynn said, I'll give it to you
again now A B C, D E, F g h
(01:19:39):
I j K L M n O, P q R S,
t u v w x y Z storm in a teaker.
There you go, eighteen tweleven. All the lines are free.
(01:19:59):
My name as Marcus Headl twelve tonight Walter from Tonga
has texted English is a second language. We have no
problem singing the old ABC's, even at schools on the
outer Islands that don't have electricity. Coronation Streets spoiler. I
(01:20:22):
think Leanna is talking to a dead son Oliver on
the computer.
Speaker 5 (01:20:34):
Here you go.
Speaker 2 (01:20:36):
I wonder how I wonder how long Coronation Streets got left?
Are they talking about that coming to the end of
its run like Shortland Street. I don't know if that
has happened yet, but I guess they're under financial pressures.
I don't know how many people watch Corry are you?
I don't know how many people watch some of the
(01:20:56):
other quizzes. Other soap operas had always come up on
the quizzes. There's one called Holy Holly anyway, looking forward
to hearing from your people. Marcus till twelve get in touch, Hello,
Craig gets Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 21 (01:21:16):
Hey you get knew?
Speaker 9 (01:21:17):
How's a game?
Speaker 7 (01:21:17):
Good?
Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
Thank you, Craig.
Speaker 21 (01:21:19):
I never thought I actually hear a discussion about changing
the way people say the alphabet. I mean, it's like,
that's a little bit crazy, I think. But I'm sort
of a little bit worried if they think that the
Elmo pier is one letter, how they're going to get
on and classing, learning the differences between the two theirs
and the two witches. It makes me think people are
(01:21:41):
just a lot of stuff now there seems to be
over PC and just WAKE type stuff really more than
actually the fundamentals of linear how to spell and write
and stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (01:21:54):
So this is a way for people with English as
a second language to learn the alphabet more clearly because
they've struggled with the lmno P. But so it's for
Clara to But you think that's politically correct and woke,
tell me how it's woke.
Speaker 21 (01:22:13):
Well, it seems to be a lot of things nowadays
where it seems to be in society. If anything's too
hard or too complicated, they just put it down to
it's the PC. People will get involved, you know, like
stupid things like you can't build treehouses in your back
card now without building consent and all the sort of
stuff and that. And I've noticed over the years that
(01:22:36):
I think a lot of the problems you have on
building sites and stuff. When my experiences, a lot of
the young people come through school, they're on the tablets.
They don't actually get to experience life, playing the dirt
with a stick and things like that, and then they
go to building sites and get hurt and it's up
to work. So they all that to basically cover them
in coffin wall because they're not very specially aware.
Speaker 2 (01:22:55):
Treehouses can be built without consent.
Speaker 21 (01:22:59):
Non center places in Auckland.
Speaker 2 (01:23:01):
No, yes they can well not the article I read
and a hero But when was when was that?
Speaker 21 (01:23:10):
It's got three years ago?
Speaker 2 (01:23:15):
I mean, all these people are trying to do is
make it easy to learn the alphabet. The job as
teaches us to teach people. Right, yeah, but yeah, I
mean I know, I know. Were you guys? You guys
get real. You guys love to see PC say PC
gone mad? Oh hi, Dennis, it's Marcus.
Speaker 5 (01:23:33):
Welcome, Oh good evening. Just a little joke, A quick
way to say the alphabet, Marcus. If you want to
hear us defy klem and the rest of you. W
x Z.
Speaker 2 (01:23:49):
It's good. It's really good.
Speaker 5 (01:23:51):
It is good, isn't it?
Speaker 2 (01:23:52):
Can you give it to me again?
Speaker 5 (01:23:55):
You say it in syllables, you see ABC DEFFI gyf
d I F k elim and the qrst V w
x Z.
Speaker 2 (01:24:06):
You'reself taught? Was it something that you were taught?
Speaker 5 (01:24:09):
My father he made it up himself.
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
It's very good.
Speaker 5 (01:24:13):
There's another old song. I don't know whether you know
it or not. Are you're adorable. B you're so beautiful.
D A, you're so beautiful. So beautiful? Are you are?
You're adorable? B you're so beautiful. See you're so kettles
of jam. D you're a darling. E. You're exciting. If
(01:24:36):
you're like a feather in my arms. Gee, you're so
good to me. Hell, you're so H you're so heavenly.
H you're so heavenly. I am here, I are. You're
the one idolized J You're like Jacob but Jack and jewel. K.
(01:25:00):
You're so kissable if you're like a feather in my arms.
Speaker 2 (01:25:06):
Oh, it's good. I'd like the whole version, Dennis, But
I think we're gonna get tonight. But thank you. So
it seems like Coronation Streets all into AI.
Speaker 25 (01:25:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:25:23):
Leanne is saying I love you to an AI generated
version of her dead son Oliver at the age he
would be now, so she can converse with him. Credit
by Rowan, the cult leader. Pretty interesting, Marcus, you don't
(01:25:45):
need to qualification. She's a skill sew nail gun, drill, lawnmower,
sed eater. Marcus ken Barlow is posting the deep fake videos.
Got something excited, guess what I'm gonna do when I
get home tonight. I'm going to replace the gasket on
a wood burner. The gasket is that rope that goes
(01:26:11):
around the door that you glue in and that when
then when you shut the door, it seals it. It's
just come out the rope. It was kind of scungy
because I've burnt bad things and I've learnt my lesson.
I have sinned. So that's tonight's task. I'm looking forward
(01:26:34):
to that, although I might wait till the morning. I'll
see how cold the houses when I get home. We've
done a gasket rope before.
Speaker 20 (01:26:45):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (01:26:46):
Pretty exciting. Been away for a few days. I came
home to the house was like seven degrees. Wasn't quite
that cold, but it wasn't warm. It's taking a long
time to heat because of the gasket. So that's been rectified.
And about that and just getting ready for the hour
(01:27:11):
of power people. And the alphabet song has changed. You
wouldn't have known that. Listened to me. M No, it's
not an old rope. It's only about five years old.
It's not an asbestos one. I think it's some sort
of glass these days. It wasn't the wedding bom. But
(01:27:36):
I got out of the weady wind to color for
a length to make sure it was the right width.
From Mite ten for a good service at might attend
today by the way, Very good service, extremely good service,
very happy shopping experience all round at the gasket department.
Will the gas get rope? I presume it'll be long enough.
(01:27:59):
Love a gasket rope one of those words. I've never
really known what it meant. Gasket. It's like cam. I
never for a long time. You want a cam? Was oscar?
Good evening?
Speaker 19 (01:28:13):
Gooday?
Speaker 15 (01:28:13):
Mark?
Speaker 19 (01:28:13):
Is there again?
Speaker 11 (01:28:14):
Good o?
Speaker 2 (01:28:14):
Score's happening?
Speaker 10 (01:28:16):
Well?
Speaker 26 (01:28:16):
No lot, just on the way home from darts. Actually,
I know you've got a couple of calls that ring
up about some darts updates.
Speaker 19 (01:28:22):
So I thought i'd give you.
Speaker 2 (01:28:23):
One great thank you. Which city.
Speaker 19 (01:28:26):
North Canterbury?
Speaker 2 (01:28:27):
Mate up and coy boy, yep, how'd you go?
Speaker 19 (01:28:31):
Yep?
Speaker 26 (01:28:32):
Well, So it was a tennel drawer COI Poy versus
Ashley Eshley Hotel and we had a young fellow playing
for Eshley, or we're playing against him actually, and he
cleaned us up pretty well. He had a couple of
one eighties he was he was unbelievable, mate, he's won
to watch.
Speaker 2 (01:28:51):
How old Oscar?
Speaker 19 (01:28:53):
I think he's thirteen? Oh he mate?
Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
Is he is here a Luke littler guy? Or has
he been in for a while because you couldn't he
couldn't have got that good in just six months. God,
he's been playing for a while, is he?
Speaker 11 (01:29:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 19 (01:29:09):
I think he's been playing for all. He's pretty sharp
with the scoring and that so but no, no, it's
pretty impressive.
Speaker 26 (01:29:14):
I think if you wanted to watch, I think his
name was Liam in place for the Yeah, I know
he was bloody good mate?
Speaker 2 (01:29:20):
And was he quite humble? Because the thing about Luke,
he's not too arrogant. Was he a right with his
one eighties? Or was the air punching? He was all right?
Speaker 5 (01:29:27):
Mate?
Speaker 19 (01:29:27):
You wouldn't even know. And he wasn't that smoking fapes.
Speaker 2 (01:29:38):
That's a good that's a good father son thing to
go around the pub circuit.
Speaker 26 (01:29:41):
That's great here we looking at Yeah, I think dad
quite in Jordan he was having a couple of scoops.
Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
So and when you say when you say that's ten games,
that's ten games, is that where how the scoring goes?
Speaker 21 (01:29:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 19 (01:29:56):
It was it was ten al So you play, you
play eight? What do you do you play?
Speaker 26 (01:30:01):
Everyone plays? So it's four in a team for four games,
four games, three to but yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah
that's the one.
Speaker 21 (01:30:12):
And do you not have it?
Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
Do you have a decider at the end.
Speaker 1 (01:30:16):
No, we didn't know.
Speaker 21 (01:30:17):
We just called it a draw.
Speaker 19 (01:30:18):
Shake hands and well, to be fair, our team is
pretty happy with the draw.
Speaker 23 (01:30:21):
So you know.
Speaker 2 (01:30:24):
Who's the who's the North Canterbury? Who are the heavy
hitters in North canterb.
Speaker 19 (01:30:31):
Well, I mean everyone's a bloody heavy hitter compared to
our team. But uh, you're looking. I think the player
quite heavy up and ring ear.
Speaker 27 (01:30:40):
There of course they would be yep, yeah and the
mac bar and yeah know they're all pretty damn good actually,
but no, no, we enjoy it. We have a couple
of beers and we try and try and compete, but no, no, no, good,
good Tuesday night.
Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
You stay't touch this. Give it. Give us a Liam
update next time we see him around. It's good to know,
Chris Marcus. Welcome, Marca.
Speaker 11 (01:31:05):
I wanted to talk.
Speaker 20 (01:31:06):
I'm a former trolley worker. Yes, when I was younger,
I was working at a supermarket when I was sixteen
and what we did like say on the peak night,
you know, you sort of your Wednesday.
Speaker 9 (01:31:20):
Through your Friday.
Speaker 20 (01:31:22):
Was we'd go out the two of us, rouse them
up and then bring them in and then once there
wasn't any trolleys out there for another little have a
look around. We would report back to the duty manager
and they put us into a department like produce or
(01:31:43):
grocery and would stack shelves or help the produce guys
rotate stock and put things in for the next day.
So for us, it was you do the trolleys, but
then you've got another job. So when people were putting
the trolleys at the far end or taking them away,
(01:32:03):
it was a distraction from us actually restocking the supermarket show.
So like this was a really interesting thing that would
I would learn more when I was actually in those
other departments. And then you go to that department.
Speaker 9 (01:32:18):
You're in there, that's where you work.
Speaker 20 (01:32:20):
And then they hired new trolley boys and they put
you in that department. So there's like a progression things
that you go through. So for people who just leave
trolley lying around within cars, it's actually just put them
back in the base because the guys to go in
(01:32:41):
and do other things, learn new things and then progress
from their.
Speaker 5 (01:32:45):
That that that's that. That was.
Speaker 20 (01:32:47):
That was my personal growth in that particular industry when
I was a kid, and it was quite rewarding at
the time.
Speaker 2 (01:32:57):
Did ye yeah, you have a rouge?
Speaker 11 (01:33:01):
Oh yeah I did.
Speaker 20 (01:33:02):
I got a record at the time that then got
beaten by a friend. So my record was thirty seven
trolleys at one stage. Wow, And I got beaten by
by older man who then saw me do that.
Speaker 16 (01:33:20):
He got fifty one?
Speaker 20 (01:33:22):
How many he got fifty one trolleys?
Speaker 2 (01:33:26):
Or he wrote he could push fifty one?
Speaker 20 (01:33:30):
Yes, like he He was a strong fellow. I can't
remember his name now.
Speaker 2 (01:33:36):
You don't remember the guy was putting fifty one trolleys.
You can't remember his name, No, no, but he was.
Speaker 20 (01:33:43):
He was considered the legend after that. And then I
got moved out of trolleys into product, but he stayed
on even at.
Speaker 7 (01:33:49):
Tank so I was.
Speaker 20 (01:33:52):
I was quite happy that that competition sort of happened.
I can't remember how it happened, but originally when I
got hired by this job, it was you're just a
trolley boy and you and you just walk around, pick
up one or two and bring them back in and
then I, I, there's no trolleys, Can I go in
and do something else? And then they would encourage us
(01:34:14):
to go, right, go clean up the car park and
then come in and then and then stop the shelves.
So it was a thing that happened, which was would
work fifteen minutes in the growthery or whatever department product
would been sent to, and then right, you've got parked
car park one, you've got car park two. Be out
(01:34:34):
there for five ten minutes, and then you come back
in and then you get back onto that and you
were busy.
Speaker 7 (01:34:40):
So it was a yeah, if everyone just puts.
Speaker 20 (01:34:43):
Them back in the bay, the people that are working
there are learning and doing other things.
Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
How long do you reckon the fifty one trolleys would be?
Would that be like twenty meters long?
Speaker 14 (01:34:57):
Oh?
Speaker 20 (01:34:57):
Yeah, it was big.
Speaker 2 (01:35:00):
Yeah, you should get that on video. That could have
gone viral these days here they're on YouTube or TikTok.
You'd be a name your pride, Oh.
Speaker 20 (01:35:07):
You can name your price, you might. Yeah, it was
a it was significant. It was it was a good watch.
Speaker 16 (01:35:16):
And he did count them, and you.
Speaker 20 (01:35:18):
Know, like we didn't lie amongst ourselves like my thirty
eight I thought that was good, but he.
Speaker 2 (01:35:23):
There'd be an honor amongst you. If you're doing thirty eight,
you say you're doing thirty eight, you wouldn't lie about
it because you get found out.
Speaker 9 (01:35:29):
Yeah, that's right. So I was just I was well pleased.
Speaker 20 (01:35:32):
And and he he had worked there for years, and
he was like, right, I'm doing this just to beat me.
And then I got moved on to a different department.
And God bless the man.
Speaker 16 (01:35:44):
He took the record.
Speaker 2 (01:35:46):
What was the name of what was it? What hang on?
What was the name of the supermarket?
Speaker 20 (01:35:53):
A Fresh Choice Barrington?
Speaker 19 (01:35:56):
Wow?
Speaker 9 (01:35:58):
Yeah, And he had to spin it and move it
and there was glass doors that would open up.
Speaker 20 (01:36:04):
You couldn't do it there these days because of the
way the mall has been redeveloped. But back in my day,
if I can say that, at the ripe old age
of forty odds, it was we'd do our trolley boy work,
but we'd go inside and then search extra work to
not be seen to be loitering. Yeah, and you know,
(01:36:27):
the manager there, he appreciated us going and was like,
what can I do now? And then he'd go, oh,
we'll go to produce and see what you can do,
so you might you might chuck on sex of potatoes
on your shoulders and then rotate some stock, and you
learned how it all worked, and then you grew as
a worker. And they bring someone as trolley and then
(01:36:49):
they bring them through as well. So that supermarket there,
they really have done the growth for workers from a
trolley boy right through produce, et cetera. And it was
a really good learning point for me. When I left
school and you know, I couldn't do well, it was
still and they they gave really good education around what
(01:37:15):
you can and can't do. So I do appreciate the
supermarkets because you just grow from there and then.
Speaker 5 (01:37:25):
The world.
Speaker 2 (01:37:25):
Did you ever think of buying a Superman? Did you
ever think of getting into a supermarket game? Chris?
Speaker 20 (01:37:31):
If I could afford it, I guess this is a
supermarket game, specially the prices in Australasia these days.
Speaker 11 (01:37:39):
But that was it.
Speaker 2 (01:37:40):
That wasn't something you thought of.
Speaker 20 (01:37:43):
I wouldn't be able to afford it.
Speaker 2 (01:37:45):
No, But I mean when you you know, when you're
in the wh when you just pushed thirty eight right,
you're thinking this could be my career. This is something
I could get into.
Speaker 20 (01:37:58):
I've done other things, but in saying that working on
a supermarket isn't it's not a bad thing. No, yeah,
I think it's a really a good place to grow
from and then chase other careers because you do learn
a lot, especially about health and safety, food quality, et
(01:38:21):
cetera like that. So I think it's got its place
in the worlds as a growth mechanism.
Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
Okay, evening, Terry, it's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 6 (01:38:34):
Yeah, good out there, Marcus. Okay, so I'd like everybody
to pay careful attention to me right now, because you know,
I've spent a bit on Timeline, Facebook, and now there's
an AI platform using Nikola Willis using her face and
(01:38:55):
a statement that the government has now released a platform
where people can invest four hundred dollars and that you
can make money off the the stock market. Okay, Now,
stupid me fell.
Speaker 2 (01:39:09):
Into this, oh SERI.
Speaker 6 (01:39:13):
Yeah, well I had to learn the hard way, and
I want everybody out there to understand right now.
Speaker 2 (01:39:20):
People get scammed.
Speaker 6 (01:39:22):
Well, I've contacted the am Z and they said there
is no policy released by the government that you can
invest money into a platform, a stock market platform. Now,
this guy's name is Thomas Patrick, and he's still still
in contact with me, and they're going to play everybody
(01:39:44):
to invest more and more money.
Speaker 2 (01:39:47):
Hang on, and what was the scam?
Speaker 6 (01:39:50):
Well, the scammers that they're going to invest money for
you into the stock market.
Speaker 2 (01:39:58):
So you hadn't add an ad that faced up on
popped up on Facebook with Nicola Willers saying the government's
taking for her buck investments and you sent them four
hundred bucks.
Speaker 5 (01:40:06):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:40:10):
Now this is a very realistic. If people go on Facebook,
you're going to come across it, She says, I.
Speaker 2 (01:40:17):
Why would you give Nichola Willison It should be the
last person you want to near your money.
Speaker 6 (01:40:23):
Well, actually, I've got a great deal of respect for
Nicola Willis.
Speaker 2 (01:40:27):
Oh well that's all.
Speaker 9 (01:40:30):
I think.
Speaker 2 (01:40:30):
That's everything we need to hear. Okay, so.
Speaker 6 (01:40:35):
Your opinion of mine really is irrelevant. I just would
like a whole lot of people out there that are
listening to this channel right now to be very weary.
It's AI. It's AI that have hijacked her name and
film footage, and they give a link. They give a
link where you can go through to and put your
(01:40:56):
email in and your phone number, and they're going to
get a hold of you, and they'll put you through
to an investor and he's going to steal your money
off you.
Speaker 11 (01:41:06):
Don't.
Speaker 6 (01:41:07):
It doesn't matter if it was whose name. She's got
good credibility, you know. And they're stealing money off people.
And I've been duped and I'd rather a lot of
other people because it's very realistic. You'll find it on Facebook.
The one I found today was that you would double
your money, So it's actually getting even more entire.
Speaker 2 (01:41:30):
Hang on Terry, So this Z came up for you
and you sent the money away. When did you find
out it was a scam?
Speaker 6 (01:41:37):
Well, it's it's well when when I paid through PayPal,
so they can't get into my accounts, you know. The
a m Z confirmed to me that there's no way
that the government's released.
Speaker 2 (01:41:49):
A sou because you used PayPal, you didn't lose four
hundred bucks.
Speaker 8 (01:41:54):
Yeah, I know.
Speaker 6 (01:41:55):
Well my son's saying you can get the money back,
but that PayPal. But this is the thing. I've got
a separate account.
Speaker 2 (01:42:04):
Who's Thomas Petrick.
Speaker 6 (01:42:07):
Here's name's Thomas Patrick. Who's that's that's the that's the
fella that's pretending to be the investor. I'm letting everybody
know his name. There's probably a number of them.
Speaker 3 (01:42:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 11 (01:42:31):
Is this a bit over your head?
Speaker 7 (01:42:35):
Mate?
Speaker 2 (01:42:38):
No, it's not, it's not over my head. You just
scant with your details, Karen, You're scant with your details?
Speaker 5 (01:42:50):
What what more.
Speaker 6 (01:42:51):
Details would you like that you look on Facebook?
Speaker 2 (01:42:53):
You come across Well, for a start, why would you
why would you invest four hundred bucks with?
Speaker 5 (01:42:58):
So?
Speaker 2 (01:42:58):
What was the return they were promising?
Speaker 6 (01:43:00):
Well, well, the last one was fifty percent?
Speaker 2 (01:43:06):
What do you mean what do you mean the last one?
The last time you got scammed?
Speaker 22 (01:43:10):
No?
Speaker 6 (01:43:10):
No, the last the last advert that I've seen on
Facebook tonight was that Nicholas Willis you know.
Speaker 2 (01:43:19):
When you got scammed first? And when you when you're
part of with your four hundi? How much returned were
they offering you?
Speaker 6 (01:43:25):
Oh, this one was fifty percent?
Speaker 2 (01:43:30):
So you've seen you four hundred dollars away through PayPal?
Speaker 25 (01:43:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:43:35):
And then what happened?
Speaker 6 (01:43:37):
Well, so I'm getting I'm getting an ongoing phone calls
from this Thomas Patrick. What am I mean to say?
What am I mean to say is that I'm never
going to see my money again?
Speaker 21 (01:43:51):
Am I? So?
Speaker 2 (01:43:53):
What would Thomas Patrick by? The would Thomas Patrick by
the calling you if he's already got your money, well,
because they.
Speaker 6 (01:44:00):
Want more money. You see, they look into how much
like I've got a bit of debt on motorcycles. So
they capitalize on the fact that you've got some debt
and that they would like to help you raise the
thirty thousand dollars worth of debt that I have on motorcycles,
and they use that as ammunition to concern you that
(01:44:22):
you should invest more money into their platform, which you'll
never see. That's understandable, isn't it. The lady at New
World Okay was saying that she was watching a woman
buying a whole lot of gift cards. Since she went
up to that woman and said to.
Speaker 2 (01:44:41):
Her the screenshot, Adam, those screenshots.
Speaker 6 (01:44:50):
Oh, screenshots. I don't know if I could send a screenshot.
Speaker 20 (01:44:54):
I'm not all that bright.
Speaker 11 (01:44:55):
This is why I've been doing.
Speaker 2 (01:44:58):
I don't believe you.
Speaker 6 (01:45:00):
You don't believe me. No, that's fascinating. The main thing
is is that there's a lot of people that are
listening right now, and that I'm being completely rational and honest.
Whether you believe me or hot buddy, I've tried to
get a message out there.
Speaker 2 (01:45:17):
Oh no, I appreciate it. I appreciate your message, but
I can't quite work out the scam.
Speaker 6 (01:45:22):
Well, I have a look on Facebook and you scroll
through enough and you'll come across an advert at that.
Nikola Willis's claiming that the New Zealand government has released
a platform where you can invest money. You will come
across it. I came across it twice tonight. What's so
(01:45:44):
difficult about that? You know I'm actually been genuine. You
don't believe me. It's berserved that you don't believe me.
Why were to ring up and make something up?
Speaker 14 (01:45:55):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:45:55):
I think you've come across the scam, but I don't
know if you're seeing the four hundred bucks away from
Have you been in touch with the police.
Speaker 6 (01:46:03):
I don't think the police would give two hoots about
something like this. Vigor issues to deal with an an
idiot like me that us Paypalm to invest in a
platform that seems so realistic, and and then my eyes
are opened that it's not real.
Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
But why would someone send money to invest With the
Minister of Finance.
Speaker 6 (01:46:25):
She's saying, there's a platform that you go through, you
go through a link, you go through a link. It's
not got anything to do with Nickeler. There's a link
that you go to and you send your details and
then that company ab investors will get back to you okay,
and then they will put you onto a stockbroker and
(01:46:49):
they will invest your money into the stock market for
you with great returns, which is not a reality.
Speaker 2 (01:46:58):
Why would you be investing money if you got dead
on your motorbibe?
Speaker 6 (01:47:04):
Well, the idea is that you would like to get
out of debt. When you know, why do people invest
money into the stock market in the first place to
make money?
Speaker 2 (01:47:14):
Why would they?
Speaker 6 (01:47:16):
Yeah, I mean people invest money in the stock market
to make money. So they start asking you some questions
about what your what your hopes are, what your dreams are.
You know, you've got any debt. You've got any debt
like a lot of people have got debt on credit cards.
I like to create clear a credit card and such like.
So they use that if you've got any psychological understanding
(01:47:39):
at all, is a way to lure you in to say, yeah,
look we.
Speaker 11 (01:47:44):
Can help you with that.
Speaker 6 (01:47:45):
We've got no intention of helping you. It's called impulse.
Speaker 2 (01:47:51):
How long ago was it? How long ago was this
that you've gave the new fourty dollars on PayPal.
Speaker 6 (01:47:56):
Two days ago, and I'm really regretting it because I'm
never going to see that money. I just would like
to get who.
Speaker 2 (01:48:04):
Made you aware that? So when did you come on
where it was a scam?
Speaker 6 (01:48:08):
I was talking to A and Z tonight. I stated
that speaking with the.
Speaker 25 (01:48:18):
Yeah, yeah, look, you might not be able to cope
with this, but there's probably a lot of people out
there in this country right now that I know exactly
what I'm talking about, and it didn't do themselves.
Speaker 6 (01:48:31):
Like I said to you, there's a lady.
Speaker 2 (01:48:34):
So what did an Z say about PayPal? Did they
say they can get your money back because it was
paid through PayPal?
Speaker 6 (01:48:40):
No, they can't get my money back.
Speaker 2 (01:48:41):
But you said, you said, this guy's wrung you a
number of times, but it was only two days ago.
Speaker 5 (01:48:47):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:48:47):
Yeah, he's had two phone calls with me and another
phone call tonight, and he's going to call me tomorrow
it as well. So the whole plan is to keep
getting money out of here. You're not aware of how
Samma's work, buddy.
Speaker 2 (01:49:04):
Well, clearly more aware than you are, because you set
them four hundred dollars.
Speaker 6 (01:49:10):
Yeah, Well, I've learned a very i'mother guy.
Speaker 2 (01:49:14):
You're hasting me for non understanding scams. You're the guy
that's just been scammed.
Speaker 6 (01:49:20):
Well, when you fall victim to it, and one's thereb
is a platform for me to get the message out there.
So a whole lot of people out there that are
just as clueless as me.
Speaker 2 (01:49:30):
You did you give them the phone number?
Speaker 6 (01:49:35):
Yeah, of course you do. Of course you give them
a phone number.
Speaker 2 (01:49:39):
And it was on Facebook.
Speaker 6 (01:49:42):
Well, you go through a link and then and then
obviously there's an exchange system in there somewhere that then
has a word to here, and then they then they
say that Patrick's gonna contact you and let's establish a password,
and then and then it develops from there.
Speaker 2 (01:50:07):
Okay, thanks Terry. So there we go. This is a
Nicol Willer scam. Guys. I mean, watch you real question
that guy's been scammed. But yeah, no one likes anyone
to be scammed. Be vigilant, and it's Marcus good evening.
Speaker 18 (01:50:25):
Hi.
Speaker 22 (01:50:26):
I just wanted to let you know that that poor chap,
that is true, that there is a what they've done.
I had a something come up on Facebook and that
showed Clark Gayford and it said about how Clark Gayford
had told everybody on the Herald and put the article
in the paper that he'd show on everybody this link,
et cetera, et cetera. The link comes up and you
(01:50:48):
see Mike hosting, and you see Peter what you know,
the movie man. You know that was all the money,
and they show anyway, So you know, you link on
the link because you think of it genuine, and you
put your name a number and anyway, then somebody wrings
you up, and of course they bring you up and
they don't rush you, and they you know, they tell
(01:51:10):
you that they're going to invest the money, and they've
got all these people that have if you go further
down the site, you know all these people that they've
doubled their money. And then they've done. And it is
really convincing. I must have, Mane and that's all done
with AI, you.
Speaker 7 (01:51:25):
Know, I must have I'm really bright, cocky.
Speaker 22 (01:51:28):
I nearly got stuck and I didn't, but you know,
the woman rang and then I just sort of, I
don't know, I'm parting with money. You know, I wasn't
going to part with my money. But it was really
really convincing, So you know it's out there. And this
man wanted to let you know.
Speaker 2 (01:51:46):
And so, oh, no, I've always fear about people. I mean,
you know, I don't doubt there's a scam out there,
but this can't quite work out how that guy's happened
to have lost two days ago and spoken so many
times that the guy's spoken to him since.
Speaker 22 (01:52:00):
But yeah, well what this woman rang me and you know,
she's chatting at about you know, and it wasn't sort
of rush, it wasn't not all the things that they
tell you that to be suspicious of, you know. And
then she rang me one evening obviously because she was overseas.
It was sort of about half bus ten and she
actually woke me up, and you know, I think you've
(01:52:23):
woken me up. And anyway that sort of stopped the
phone cause then I got emails. But it is, it
is convincing, and I think that that's why that check
bring you up.
Speaker 2 (01:52:33):
So what's the what's the psychology of it? Why would
you suddenly just well, because it's because that they ai well.
Speaker 22 (01:52:42):
I mean I wouldn't have you know, immediately would realize
with Nicola Wallas and my one wasn't Nikola Wallas, but
it was it just goes, it's got all this convincing
information about people, how how how it works, you know,
how they've got this AI that can get the you know,
work through domain and all these convincing all these responses,
(01:53:05):
you know, all further down how they've oh look, I've
just I put it and I can see now that
it's you know, I started off four hundred and out
it's gone to P fifty, you know, and and it
just it just seems to it's just a very clever one. Okay,
I mean I didn't get sucked into it, but I
can see how people could in this particular. So there's
(01:53:26):
no rushing, there's no pressure, you know, there's no foreign
language exit into anything. There's all that the people that
you know, the people on that website. Look at you
know that my costume was there, you know, all these
people that you know. And yeah, and so they've obviously
done it also again with someone else, Makla Wallace. You
(01:53:48):
know that I wouldn't have got sucked into that one.
But but you know, it's just convincing. So it's just
and I think that I just.
Speaker 2 (01:53:56):
Wanted to let people, as I say, it's always good
to hear from people that are scamming and other different
visions to scare it out there. I just I wasn't sure,
necessarily sure that the way he spoke or his phrasing
that he had been scammed. But you know, I don't
doubt that there's scams out there involving well known people.
(01:54:17):
But it's amazing how quickly people give their money, Marcus.
There are definitely scams discussed on involving a PayPal payment.
And I know a woman whose X had just got
a liquidation with a motorbike business. So given the benefits said,
because this position, an individual be feeling desperate and fall
for these scams. Yeah, yeah, a lot of these people
(01:54:44):
shouldn't have Facebook. Ah, Peter ats Marcus, good evening and welcome.
Speaker 7 (01:54:50):
Oh hi Marcus. Hi, Look now I just want to
what's going what you're talking about right now?
Speaker 5 (01:54:57):
Again?
Speaker 7 (01:54:57):
The scam I got caught with it and it was
from Facebook and it was.
Speaker 6 (01:55:05):
Just Sima's hus and.
Speaker 7 (01:55:08):
On the Facebook it was Park Gayford and I did
phone up and they said, yere right, oh we'll phone
you back. Come back from Australia. This woman says about it,
and she says, there's a two hundred and fifty dollars
American buy in, and she says you'll make some really
(01:55:34):
big money. So the i'ld read that gets into us.
She said, you'll be phoned out by a financial advisor.
There's a call from the United Kingdom of the four
to four number. Financial advisor said, yeah, finally says, but
to make real money, you really have to put big
money in. He said, oh, look, you're two hunred and
(01:55:55):
fifty dollars buy and has already gone to gone up
by seven dollars. He said, I'll bring you back tonight
and we'll be just more agent. So I left that.
He I said, no, two nights.
Speaker 9 (01:56:09):
This only two weeks ago.
Speaker 7 (01:56:11):
I ignored his call. It next night. I ignored all
his calls. Now. He kept saying that was the organized.
His organization was trading two one two. If you have
a look on the net, trading two one two pardy
ig is an international company investment company. He kept saying that.
(01:56:39):
When he said a copy of the statement it had
trade to one two. I spoke to him later on.
He was gripping, said in trading to one two, the
the their their dashboard. I went into it. It didn't work.
(01:57:00):
I contact this guy, he said, it's to stand. When
he put a dashboard up and then not link of
course links week nowhere. I said, look, I want my
maid back. He says it's the court and hard I
will walk you through tomorrow night, sady. Last week I
(01:57:21):
then got a I got a call from a lady
seemed like perse and how to get out of this
piso currency totally impossible. So what I'm saying as a scam,
you can get it out there. They're using your zealing personalities.
Speaker 11 (01:57:38):
Now.
Speaker 7 (01:57:38):
Furthermore, last night I'm just going to write off that mate.
Last night I got six calls by phone and my
phone turned off. I went through some of those calls
this morning. Most of them went nowhere, but the lady
rang me back and she got she got called up
as well in that. So they're still trying to make contacts,
(01:58:02):
but they're not using overseas numbers. If you don't accept
these number, you don't answer it, they'll come back with
a New Zealand number.
Speaker 19 (01:58:11):
So get it out there that there is a.
Speaker 7 (01:58:15):
Scam going on you using New Zealand person. The other
piece they're using its using it a investment company called
Trading to carry d I G two and two but
they're going out of trading trade two and two.
Speaker 2 (01:58:31):
So you gave them to fifty Did you give them
two hundred and fifty dollars undo their life?
Speaker 22 (01:58:35):
Yep?
Speaker 7 (01:58:35):
Which work? They have four hundred and seven year zillions.
All right, they're off now, but they're off there going there.
You know from me, it's not so bad.
Speaker 11 (01:58:45):
But that's the figure.
Speaker 7 (01:58:47):
By two fifty, they are closing the earth to crypt
their currency. Look, within a week that has gone. I'm
more than double that. But you'll never get any You're
not get tom Oh they haven't open.
Speaker 2 (01:59:03):
Yeah, okay, I doubt they've invested that. That's what you're
saying they want.
Speaker 11 (01:59:06):
No, they haven't.
Speaker 7 (01:59:07):
No, that's got to nowhere. And you have a look
at their deathboard. They sent me contact me, links goes
to nowhere, goes to go with I'm not so what so.
Speaker 2 (01:59:16):
Why did you agree to invest in it so easily?
Speaker 16 (01:59:20):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (01:59:21):
Yes, it's all great, isn't it.
Speaker 2 (01:59:23):
I don't know because there's been a lot of publiciers.
There's been a lot of publicity about all these scams
with Clark Gayford and Ginny may Coffin and all that
sort of stuff. In my costing, I mean, yeah, I.
Speaker 6 (01:59:35):
Hadn't.
Speaker 2 (01:59:36):
Look, you clearly hadn't seen that stuff.
Speaker 6 (01:59:39):
No, I had it.
Speaker 7 (01:59:40):
I had it, but I see him at the time.
I said, hey, look, this is a scheme. This is
a scheme.
Speaker 11 (01:59:47):
This is now.
Speaker 7 (01:59:47):
It stops trade into our two. It's a big world
visits company.
Speaker 14 (01:59:53):
I see.
Speaker 7 (01:59:54):
We are millions of that.
Speaker 2 (01:59:56):
And sure enough, guess it was you should have beforehand. Yeah,
that's how they comes from, now, is it.
Speaker 3 (02:00:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 7 (02:00:03):
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:00:06):
I'm sorry to hear that, Peter, because and well explained,
but that sounds terrible. Yeah, yeah, so, but it sounds
to me like it sounds to me like you still
partly believe them, You're still sort of entertain their phone
calls and stuff. You just have nothing to do with them,
you know that.
Speaker 7 (02:00:23):
I know the calls, IM the calls. I'm not any
more to do with them, but I have also probably
are up. So if you actually go back and to
the and to the the stame site is Gill. It's
to be weary of trade to want to and trade
(02:00:44):
one hundreds.
Speaker 2 (02:00:45):
Yeah, thank you, sorry to hear that that's happened to you.
But you gotta be nothing on true. Yeah, if you
want to invest money just find a way to invest it.
But don't just think, oh I should do that because
of this anyway. Oh that's it for me, Tim Beverage
(02:01:08):
along next. I'll catch you tomorrow night. Enjoy your Wednesday goodnight.
Speaker 1 (02:01:13):
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