Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus Lush Nights podcast from News Talks.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
I'd be.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Welcome. Good evening, Marcus Slush reporting for Guy Hop. It's
good were you have recoled down south? Like frosty ready, frosty,
like there's a frost there already, and the frost has
stayed on the land all day. I don't know how
I got but very very cold. Drove to work zero degrees.
So I think it's very much a tale of two islands.
Today when I've spoken to Walkings, it's the weather's terrible,
but down south it's clear but very cold. So I
(00:37):
mentioned it's kind of like a I don't look, I
don't know, and I don't know it's the conditions for
black frost, but I reckon you want to be careful either.
I park the car tonight. There's a very heavy frost
on the ground there also, so there you go extremely cold.
I don't know if that's still the Giant High is it?
I don't know about the Giant High. What are our
Hiccta pescuals tell you? Last week is the first time
(00:58):
we ever considered Hiccta pescals with people say it's playing
up with the pets and their behavior. Any way, get
in touch. My name as Marcus Hittl Midnight Tonight eight
hundred eighty ten eighty nine nine two detext. Every year
at the beginning of the year, we have a prediction show.
You gotta predict the is it four or five things?
Speaker 4 (01:18):
Down?
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Is it five? Now?
Speaker 5 (01:20):
Is it four?
Speaker 2 (01:20):
Five?
Speaker 3 (01:21):
We're gonna print five things that will happen. And every
time there's a world event, people ask us what did
people predict? Just as a side note, these are not
things that the people bring up and say they want
to happen or should happen. They are merely things that
people think are in the within the realm of possibilities,
So check your outrage. But anyway, he's what people are predicted.
(01:44):
Right as far as Trump goes. One person predicted to
be assassinated, one person predicted what would the predictions dan
one what they were? Two predicted assassinations. One after he
became the president. There was only one person, Lydia, who
predicted that there would be an answer and attempt on
(02:06):
Trump's life. This is Lidia's five predictions public attempt on
Trump's life. That's a tick. Are dourn pregnant? Who knows.
Its amazing how many people came up with that and
thought that was something that peop want to talk about anyway,
King Charles, major health issue, that's a tick. Major quake
(02:29):
Wellington between five and seven? Have they got a five?
Speaker 4 (02:31):
Are yet?
Speaker 6 (02:32):
Dan?
Speaker 3 (02:34):
Do you even know the website? You go five and
seven point five for that, And Jimmy Barnes another major
health scare that is lydia. They're the five. So that's
the situation. So a tick for public attempt on Trump's
life that's onnly what that was. And a tick on
Prince Charles major health scare. So two for five ad
you go and still only halfway through there? Anyway, what's happening?
(02:55):
Where are you? What have you got to say? Open
line talk, non curated talk here or midnight tonight? So
have you got anything you want to bang on about
with a show for you? Oh wait, one hundred and
eighty ten eight and nine to nine to to text.
I'm here till twelve o'clock tonight. If you've got anything
to add talk say, do be great to hear from you.
(03:16):
Oh eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine two
nine two to text. As far as I haven't listened
to the radio day. I don't know. I don't know
how much talk there has been about the attempt on
I guess we call him prisent Trump because I think
America once your present, you maintain that title on his life.
But look, I don't even know where'd go with talk
(03:37):
back on that. I argue there'd be some pretty out
there reckons. I've read enough of those on social media
platform X and the others to think, oh yeah, wow,
and probably something that there's anyone got anything incredibly smart
or clever to say. It's probably something that I'd be
inclined to stay clear of tonight. Not because I want
(03:59):
to suppress free speech, but I just don't know how
much of the stuff that people are saying is based
on fact or is helpful. So there you go. There
is that listen to me is telling you what you
can't talk about. Well, you can, but I just don't
know where you'd go with it. I guess that's what
I'm saying. So if you've got some weather updates, also
(04:21):
in the roads, if you've got any other breaking us,
let us know. Anything goes oh eight hundred eighty ten
eighty nine to nine tu to text if you've got information.
Second week of the school holidays, which tends to be
the one people struggle with more. We are back home
and bluff and that's a good thing. Only took probably
two hours to get the fires going in the house
(04:42):
hot enough, but there was free cold last night. Also,
so verty happy about that. We're up and running. But anyway,
do get in touch if you I'm talking to say, oh,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine two nine
tou to text. Interesting that it's becoming quite confusing, all
this talk about the interrol and ferry, but they're now
saying with new boats they might need to go the
long away. So fairry is going to become long because
(05:07):
of the narrowness of the canal. So I don't know
if that's more attempts to confuse the market. I sometimes
think up politically, when you see someone's losing a battle,
then you throw all sorts of misinformation around and see
what sticks. If you look at the map, the longer
(05:31):
way is much longer. It looks like it's probably be
more exposed to bad winds. I guess that's around the
other side of a Pawa island, So that anyway, Yeah,
Ben AT's Marcus welcome, good evening.
Speaker 5 (05:42):
You get Marcus Long with fairies. Could has anyone checked
to I did see that story earlier today. Has anyone
checked to just double check that's the case that those
larger furries of previous government ordered wouldn't actually get through
the current pass.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
It's a really good point. And I read that article.
I thought, you, I can't be bother having to go
and fact check everything. I imagine they probably would have
got through. But you can all find You can always
find in life someone that's going to say that they
won't make it. But you know, that's the thing, isn't it.
There's always someone that's prepared at the opposing view, not
based on fact. I don't but I'm not a Mariner.
(06:19):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
Yeah, they just put you on Trump.
Speaker 7 (06:24):
I know.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
Also, there are all sorts of people that said that
you couldn't have the fairies going through fast enough because
it'd caused too much wash that would affect the locals.
It was incredibly confusing.
Speaker 5 (06:35):
Yeah, I think they just need to get on and
get it sorted out.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Of course they should. They should have got those Faeries
and company us.
Speaker 8 (06:41):
It's greatful.
Speaker 5 (06:42):
Anything's better than nothing, isn't it? So just on the
Trump So I thought it was a very powerful moment
when did stump. And I've been reading all the stuff
online on YouTube or the comments and on Facebook, and
from what I give, this guy's going to win this
election by a landslide like this is a whole lot
(07:03):
of supporters that didn't support them before and now tuning into.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Which means what.
Speaker 5 (07:11):
Well, it just means like he had asked me six
months ago, would have said, oh, you know, all his
legal battles and he's not going to win and now, Yeah,
it's just weird how things change within six months.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
But what's the mentality of that of someone. Is it
a sympathy thing.
Speaker 5 (07:30):
Well, he's no doubt he's going to get a cue
sympathy both for this. But I think you know, getting up, mate,
you've just been shot in the years.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Oh I see, So you think that is you think
the actual act of doing the first pump shows yeah.
Speaker 5 (07:44):
And going hey, I've got strength, you know, I'm still here.
You know, I'm okay, you know, and instead of just
being missed away. I think that was probably a big moment.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
So it's the powerfulness of the gesture.
Speaker 5 (07:59):
Yeah, yeah, Yeah, it's like he didn't even have to
see anything. Just putting you know, putting his fist uff
in the airs like that just goes. You know, this
guy strong, he's regardless of politics. You know, it's a
very powerful moment.
Speaker 9 (08:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
Look, I don't know what to say. I know that
someone said that he thought that was had God on
his side because he got because he wasn't killed, but
there was the guy behind him that got killed.
Speaker 5 (08:23):
Yeah, there's everything going around online at the moment.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
Is so you know, unfortunately most of us, fortunately most
of it. It's weird with the whole Trump thing because
most of us in New Zealand, bar about a couple
of hundred, don't vote and talkback world. People become reopinionated
and they get really invested in this and they start
taking sides. So I can't quite work out why people
get invested in a political battle that's not our democracy.
(08:46):
That's what I can't work out.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
I think it's you know, it's all over the news,
that's in your face, So it's why would why.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
Would people use it and sort of become partisan about
it as well? That's what I can't get.
Speaker 5 (09:01):
Like you said, no, I don't go out looking for it.
But you know, if it's on the news and it's
all over Facebook, it's sort of in your face. You
can't help. But YouTube, Yeah, well, because the YouTube, you've
got a lot of different videos pop up when you're
looking for stuff.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
And comments underneath.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
Oh yeah, it's not part of my part my world YouTube.
I wouldn't know what happens there, and I certainly didn't
know there was comments beneath.
Speaker 5 (09:32):
Yeah, well a lot of comments going on that, you know,
Biden said to a supporter of last week. You know,
put Trump and the bills, iron then the sevens and
you know there's a lot of conspiracy.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Ship infect you all that, Ben. But yeah, anyway, I
had an eighty nine to the text. Marcus drove from
Queenstown to Bluff and back again today. Lots of frost
at Ethel, first time, first visit to Bluff, fantastic little
spot chairs, Paul Marcus, winners, Jamie McKay, Zibe, Rural Report
(10:04):
starting up again. Didn't that was off, no idea, Marcus.
Large power outage Kaiwaka Munga Fi all over to poll
To and up north too. So anyone got any more
information about that power cut. Let us know, because that's
the same area that was affected by that, the pylon
(10:24):
that got chopped. That was a good night, the talk
on the pylon. If anyone's got any more information about that,
let me know. I didn't get up to watch the
football too cold. But a predictable result, England not being victorious.
No surprise is there seventeen past day getting touch my
name as Marcus hitdled twelve. Oh, by the way, here's
(10:46):
the great debate? Is it the great debate or the
great something? And I thought I'd better tell you this.
Where to put the bread? Okay? Where do you store
the bread? Does bread belong?
Speaker 5 (11:04):
In?
Speaker 3 (11:04):
The French debate? Finally settled? It's the question Paul Hollywood
from the Great British Bake Off. I think he's the
guy that married the bar made at the local bar.
Speaker 7 (11:16):
Is that right?
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Anyway? He settled a debate on where to store the bread.
If you put your bread in the fridge, it will
stale three times quicker because you're drawing all the moisture
out of the loaf. Paulton, He's put stores his bread
on the kitchen bench. I just put in a brown
bag and leave it on the side his shares. There
you go. Don't put your bread in the fridge. It
goes stale. But it's not in the fridge, it goes moldy.
(11:41):
Particularly the Vogels. Plenty of people making the very good
point via text that if you put your bread in
the fridge, it's in the bag. It's not going to
lose the moisture, is it oroul? It's still I wouldn't
imagine that it would. Craig Marcus welcome, good evening, Hi Craig.
Speaker 7 (11:55):
Good evening. How's going this evening?
Speaker 9 (11:57):
Good?
Speaker 3 (11:57):
Thanks Craig. Are you going to right?
Speaker 10 (11:59):
Okay?
Speaker 7 (11:59):
Not too bad?
Speaker 4 (12:00):
Hey?
Speaker 7 (12:00):
Am I remember learning in history years ago that when
Ronald Reagan had the assessination attempts to photo, he went
up in the voting poll after that.
Speaker 8 (12:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (12:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (12:12):
But what I don't understand is Trump come out and
saying that he wasn't killed because God didn't want him
to die.
Speaker 11 (12:18):
And what was it.
Speaker 7 (12:19):
With people in New Zealand such obsessiously American president's elections
and left right? I mean, I don't understand why a
lot of people in New Zealand are so fascinated about it.
For I mean, I just don't understand it myself. It's like,
would Americans be they're fascinated in our elections? I don't
think so. It's just I don't see what everyone thinks.
Everyone seems to be talking about. I just can't underste
(12:40):
what's the big exascination with it is?
Speaker 3 (12:43):
I thought. I guess. I guess these days people are
consuming a lot more overseas media because our own media
is in crisis, a lot more podcasts, Instagram, social media, YouTube, Facebook,
and some of the biggest influencers that's in that sphere
are Americans, And I guess, leaning towards it, I guess
(13:07):
Trump would be the most Trump the most well known
person world. He probably is, would that be right?
Speaker 9 (13:12):
Well?
Speaker 3 (13:14):
Who would be who would be more wowing than Trump
or infamous than the Trump problem?
Speaker 7 (13:21):
I'd say probably Persian would be because he's he was.
Speaker 10 (13:23):
Fairly I knew about him.
Speaker 7 (13:25):
And then, yeah, I don't know. There's a few. There's
a few people around the world, but it's whether they're
known for the right reasons or the wrong reasons.
Speaker 3 (13:31):
Oh no, I'm not saying it, not saying whether what
I'm saying, but who would be the most well known
person in the world.
Speaker 7 (13:38):
Yeah, it's a tough one.
Speaker 3 (13:40):
And that's pretty straightforward. Be Trump, isn't it? No One?
Speaker 7 (13:46):
Well, yeah, I suppose Trump.
Speaker 3 (13:47):
Yeah, or Ronald Ronald McDonald's. I mean that was always
big for the name recognition, Neil.
Speaker 7 (13:53):
Hamburger, all those funny litt characters.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, good on your Craig. Thanks about twenty
four past eight, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty. I'm
sure there's people around out and about having sort of
family arguments about Trump and Biden and the stuff like that,
But chips, creepers, we've had enough problems here to start
importing some sort of debates from overseas. But there you go.
(14:19):
Was it what I expect was expecting was going to
happen to me yesterday, that that was going to be
something that was announced that someone had attempted to shoot him.
No matter who you are, it would be fitty terrifying
to go back out into the public sphere knowing any
moment that someone could make an attempt on your life.
A lot of news on Sunday, well that and shennondoherity
(14:44):
from nine o two zero on Heathers Dying and Dr
Ruth if I've got that name right, Who was really
famous over the years as a phone and kind of
a person, A six therapist and talk show host doing
it for years. A beloved American Pete Marcus welcome.
Speaker 12 (15:11):
Yeah, Marcus, yeah, Pete, you're right, yeah, not too barely.
Just regarding the bread and the fridge, it works, just
just leaving the wrapper and you just put it. You
gotta put one of those you take the the thing
they had a head of bread comes in that little
clip on things that it comes in the bread on
(15:31):
the on the supermarket. Take that off and just get
one of those little well you call those plasket things,
those cump they say, those cump things. You know, it
works the same. You can get about two or three
days or four days out of an open the bridge.
You're just leaving the fridge.
Speaker 3 (15:49):
Does it come does it become too dry?
Speaker 12 (15:52):
No, that's what probably. Yeah, it's probably not like you know,
as it comes straight out of the oven sort of thing.
But I don't mind. I'm I think it's quite good.
An old fellow told me about an old gentleman from
he's being a neighbor from my mum and she's alive
and is there only one day and heard discussion about it,
and he just said that some of these old people
they are quite good with fair because they've got a
(16:14):
lot of these old fairies and they work. And I thought, oh,
you might just try that and not how to keep
the bread along so you can know the two or
three days and you just put that crump thing on
and he said, and he is, he is dead right now.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Verry Crip, nice pete, thank you Richard Marcus, welcome mate.
Speaker 10 (16:33):
I live in Northland and I cannot believe what a
third world hole that has the powers out just going
back for medical procedure and Auckland after years to get
a broken neckfixed and the uselessness. The roads are rooted
and then they're no power. Just that's my mate, Do something,
whoever runs this country, do something about it, and do
it properly, mate, because it's just a joke joke.
Speaker 3 (16:55):
How was the hospital care?
Speaker 10 (16:58):
The clinicians are good, mate. They can't talk to each
other between Auckland and Northland.
Speaker 4 (17:02):
Mate.
Speaker 10 (17:02):
That's just still so much for the magical, wonderful one system. Yeah, mate,
I'm just in with absolutely past and I thought it
was a good time to ring up and say New
Zealanders do something. Get our country back, mate, and get
it running properly and get these monkeys. I don't know
who's running it. That's just better. All good?
Speaker 3 (17:21):
Are you? And are you in any harm for yourself
now that you can't I mean, are you Let us
know if you have got if your health is going
to suffer because there is no power. We could send
someone around if you need someone to administer drugs or
something with a torch, but let us know if you know.
But I can hear you, I can hear your pain.
(17:41):
I know if the monkeys that run this country are listening,
Probably are I'm hearing him though, Come down to get
the operation on the dodgy roads. Haven't the roads are
fixed though, are they? Graham a good graham, good.
Speaker 13 (17:59):
Parent.
Speaker 2 (17:59):
Often I've just left the city in his parent.
Speaker 3 (18:03):
Great Graham. The power the power is this? The substations
and manga todoto have gone. So the power up north
has got Yeah it's north, it's Northland.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
I thought he was saying Auckland.
Speaker 3 (18:15):
Nor So he's had to drive down to the op
as well, and that's been dodgy too, and then he's
got back in the dark. Yeah, okay, I don't know how.
I don't know how he broke his neck.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
The Northern Roads too. I was just up. I traveled
off the way frequently and was up the primary last week,
and that the work I've done on the brim doing
is unbelievably good.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
Well, wonder what I wonder what he's complaining about. He
must have been complaining about the fact that it wasn't
good for a while.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
Maybe he's just having a bad day market. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (18:47):
Maybe he's coming off the drugs too. Maybe he's coming
off the pain killers or something that you know that
can that can cause a reaction sometimes.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
Talking about bread in the fridge and as bags by,
it'll last, but just as long as we're on a bench,
just as long as you field. And I's just struggled
to see how it will dry it out on a
bridge train. I'm just strut really understand how it would
actually dry out on the bridge. He give them the
(19:17):
amount of sort of preservatives and stuff that they haven't breathed.
The day's got to laugh forever.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
But this guy, Paul Hollywood's is the great bake off.
He might be talking about some sort of she she
sour though, like for some some special loaf. I guess Jesus.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Mate, he's probably bloody. He probably makes the loaf for
beads for the day and then yeah, that doesn't keep it.
But like our cleans have to do.
Speaker 3 (19:39):
Good on your Graham, thank you. I don't know. I
once thought Paul Hollywood had gone to the dark side
where the woman who met at the bar. But I
don't know. Maybe he needs to move if he hates
Northland that much. Bread and the freezer is the way
to go. Use it when you need it and won't
go off. We even use it for sandwiches. It's defrosted
by the time Smoko hits good. What a cold sandwich? Marcus.
(20:02):
I make polio great grain free bread which is always
too songy middle and the crust too hard, But one
night in the freeze in a plastic bag and it's perfect.
Oh Paleo, I make paleo grain free. Might be art
is that they get to art from matildrenality. He's paleo
(20:22):
Marcus thoughts on the rubbish new cardboard bred tags our
Richard Simmons died of course as well.
Speaker 9 (20:29):
Well.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
He was huge in the seventies in New Zealand. Unbelievably,
everyone was doing his aerobics or the Housewives if I
can say that, and of course he did the only
good in New Zealand video I think huge seventies or eighties.
Prad's got any Richard Simmons memories. We're not good they
(20:51):
died at seventy six, because I mean he was a
pocket rocket. Could someone explained to me? I imagine that
in the eighties, e the eighties, there would be the
young and the restless and days of our lives on TV.
In between they would be Richardson and all those at
home would get up and do the root? Does it
kind of when it was? Was it the afternoon when
(21:13):
Richard Simmons was on? And I imagine all the sort
of the there in their houses would draw the curtains
and lunge. Am I right, I'm sure you'll tell me
if I'm not. I quite would like some early copies
of the listened to go back or the tvg it
might have been before the tvg FI owner at s Marcus.
Good evening and welcome, you're hi.
Speaker 14 (21:33):
Just I'm speaking about the bread, but just a funny
memory about the eighties. The lead warmers go with aerobics,
so I would he was on in the morning before
they watched The Old and the Useless.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
Yes, so because there was aerobics OZ style as well.
Speaker 15 (21:52):
Yep.
Speaker 14 (21:53):
Yeah, it was messive like I was at high school
and that's what it was. All the time he had
to do aerobics. Would have hated I was playing footy.
I'd rather have done it any time.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
Oh yeah, it was all about daft, wasn't it really?
Speaker 14 (22:07):
Yeah? Yeah it was. It was not my thing, that's
for sure. But anyway, my brother used to work in
an effectory for bakery, and he said that there are
certain brands that they don't put preservatives in at all.
So there are certain breads that you can't put in
the fridge. It doesn't matter what you do, they're going
to go stale real quick. So I put freyers in
the fridge and I find if you take the crust
(22:28):
and the skin and the third piece out and put
them back, and after you've taken the slices out, last
about five days. Yeah, because every time that he gets
to the end of the loaf it's off of course.
Speaker 9 (22:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (22:39):
But if you cover their end up again and then
you you're either twisted the testicle wrapid underneath sweet. Yeah,
I can get about five days out of a loaf.
Speaker 3 (22:49):
How lo would it lasted? The bread bin.
Speaker 14 (22:53):
On the bench, I would say three days, mats.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
Okay, get in two more days. Eh, yep, brilliant, nice
teeth from it. Fia, Yeah, I can't. I just bread.
I ate the crusts. No one did in the crusts.
Marcus works for me as I lift by myself. I
a lot of breed money just toasted what I do.
So I keep it the freezer. It's fine, there's no waste. Dave, Hell,
(23:15):
are you God?
Speaker 16 (23:18):
Good to see you. Chuck Norris still make when movies
and hangs.
Speaker 3 (23:21):
I missed the first couple of words, and now I'm
all at sea say it again.
Speaker 16 (23:25):
Sorry but sorry about that. Look, Chuck Morris still making
movies at eighty four Agent re Recon. Just just a
quick thing on that before we get up over the Hey.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
Thank you for that. I had no idea what Chuck
was up to.
Speaker 16 (23:39):
So, yeah, he always keeps himself fit and he's always healthy.
So making the movie at eighty four Agent Recon, that's
his agest movie out. That's it's pretty pretty good, pretty good,
And he's an Honory Texas Ranger. And then Texas made
him an honorary Texas Ranger in real life in Texas.
Speaker 3 (23:59):
On the you know, I don't know much about Tan So,
I don't know much about Tang sou do. He's the
Korean marsh Ladini.
Speaker 16 (24:06):
Yeah, okay, he's got Brady of course called them here.
Going back to the shooting, Look, the former Secret Service
agent said they should have had someone on the roofhound
earth did he get up on the roof of that,
you know, because should have been stopped earlier on?
Speaker 3 (24:28):
Yeah, Well, I guess I won't find it much, but
I guess where where? Where was the shooting? Was a
shooting that you can carry a gun carrier far arm around?
Speaker 16 (24:40):
I think from Pennsylvania?
Speaker 3 (24:41):
But where was the shooting.
Speaker 16 (24:45):
And that all? And that uh the town was just
outside of Pennsylvania and that yes, luck lucky it was
only luckily just missed his ear and those per person
that died and the two people that injured. Yeah, so
(25:08):
not very good, but it was just made them just
at only assassination tips.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
I mean, for a place with so many firearms, are
you surprised it happened so often?
Speaker 16 (25:20):
Or so really so really well, the last one was
Reagan and a lot more Reagan when they he was
he was lucky that they and it was nineteen eighty
four while prison Ronald Reagan, they someone tried to shoot
to shoot him, and that it was the last one
that happened in the States. But yeah, the Secret Service
(25:42):
agent did apart from.
Speaker 3 (25:43):
That eighty one eighty one think clear to go at him. Yeah,
that's right, yeah, six six.
Speaker 16 (25:52):
Yeah, yeah, I think now elected them, now elected them prison.
Now more people don't like what's going on, especially with
the borders. Number one issue in the States over The staggering.
Speaker 3 (26:11):
Thing to me was it was forty three years between
attempted assassinations. It's a lot timeh because there was between Kennedy.
Kennedy was sixty three, Reagan was only one. There's eighteen
years and now there's been forty three years. So well
done to the Secret Service.
Speaker 16 (26:28):
It is pretty well secret service here. It's pretty well
pretty well here.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
But I think it's hard day for someone to bring
up a talkback station you's in and tell us what
the what the biggest issue was in the States, because
I think the biggest issue varies from time to time
and whoever's driving the narrative. But you know, good on
you if you want to follow it, but I think
there's probably I mean, I think inflation has been one
of the real big deals, and cost of living that's
(26:55):
what it's down to. That's why Trump, so that's why
Biden's all go on tariffs and things like that, and
excess charges for booking something, and they're just trying to
help when it comes to cost of living. A lot
of people vote on their pocket as they did in
New Zealand. JT. It's Marcus.
Speaker 13 (27:11):
Welcome at a Marcus. How's it going do you think of?
Speaker 3 (27:15):
JT?
Speaker 13 (27:17):
I wonder if this is going to have any effect
on Trump's attitude to gun control laws.
Speaker 3 (27:24):
I wouldn't imagine specifically.
Speaker 13 (27:29):
Specifically referring to the AR fifteen, the Armor Light Corporation
Rifle fifteen.
Speaker 3 (27:36):
Is that what it was?
Speaker 13 (27:40):
Yeah, it sounds like it was. Just the sound of
the bullets firing led me to believe that it was
at AAR fifteen. And that's a civilian version of an
M sixteen. That's a rifle that was developed before the
Vietnam War, and it's a five was a five point
(28:01):
five six millimeter caliber, and it's designed to cause huge
wound damage, but not necessarily to kill the pitson so
that in the war situation they had to be evacuated,
tied up more and more resources.
Speaker 3 (28:19):
Okay, yeah, did trumple I don't imagine that's how trouble
is that something happens and things I hopen to make
this with this world safer that that wouldn't I wouldn't
have maagine this as preoccupation. Would you think that would
be it?
Speaker 13 (28:32):
No? But if ever he's going to have an apenny
and sort of change his attitude to having bullets whistling
past his year, maybe something that does that.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
He doesn't seem to be. It doesn't seem to be.
It doesn't seem to be kept an epiphany to me?
Does he got caught you know for the af fear
on the wife? I mean, look who knows, But yeah,
I imagined probably if he got caught. Yeah, I think
he does. Does the opposite of an epiphany.
Speaker 13 (29:02):
Yeah, that you were just saying about that guy, Paul Hollywood.
Someone suggested that he should be the next James Bond.
Speaker 3 (29:09):
Really do they love him in the youth? They love
that baking show.
Speaker 13 (29:12):
A He's sort of a plain sort of person like
Roger Moore. But I used to work at a bakery
in Tamorrow, and I would say that, Yeah, never put
bread in the fridge. If you want to keep it,
put it in a bread bind.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
What's the point of the breadband just to stop the
UCU cleaning around, is it?
Speaker 17 (29:35):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (29:35):
I suppose keeps it cool, the sort of a barrier
to the heat. You know, between the maximum temperature and
minimum temperature. What's that temperature range day in and day
out of the of the temperature. But bread like that,
(29:56):
it should last five days easy.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
You would have thought five days it's been where it's cooler.
I mean, we only get trouble with bread down south
in the summer. But you think it would handle the
gender would Yeah? It was it good at the bakery.
Speaker 13 (30:09):
Yeah, it was good because we've got cheap free pies.
Speaker 3 (30:13):
Oh wow, what sort of pies.
Speaker 13 (30:14):
Sausage rolls and all that. So I ate about two
thousand when I worked there for about four or five years.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
Because that town was favoured. You no longer get the
famous pies there, do you.
Speaker 13 (30:27):
Yeah, well they were the pies that were made in
homrou Oh bakers down there. Remember you did that night
talking about that.
Speaker 3 (30:34):
Yeah, yeah, because they closed the quality bakers they closed today.
Speaker 13 (30:42):
Yeah, they've basically closed. It used to be like twenty
five bakeries nationwide and now there's about three.
Speaker 3 (30:49):
Heartbreaking Thanks Jo, too nice to talk five to nine
hit on midnight Richard Simmons. What time was it on
There We Go? Some of you will remember that. I
don't know whether he invented. I don't quite know the
history of the backs were of Richard Simmons. I guess
you'd say sort of larger than life. It is the
euphemism for someone like him. I don't know what his bexter.
(31:10):
I think he was. I think he was. I think
he was. I think he'd lost enormous about to wait,
that's I think that was a situation with him. I
think he was big then he wasn't. I think there
was a situation. Yeah, a beast. During his childhood and
adolescence eighty three Cages at fifteen even appeared in some
(31:31):
of Fellini's films as a freak show character There You Go.
Moved to l A developed an interest in fitness exercise studios.
The day favored the already fit customers to little help
was available for those who need to gain fitness for
otherwise unhealthy state he established gyms. It's interesting fitness helped
(31:55):
him as one hundred and twenty three kilograms. There you go.
I don't know how he came to TV. I don't
know who discovered him. I'm curious though, when Richard Simmons
skip me a year and give me a tie, I'm David.
Richard Simmons was on in music because seemed to be
on for a long long time. By the way, as
far as Transpower says, crews have been dispatched to look
to resolve and reliven. I never knew that was a
(32:19):
word that you could use, was reliven. That must be
getting back up and running reliven. That's good to knowing it.
I've learned something. May's Pies was the pie is thinking
about in tim And I don't know if they're around anymore. Marcus,
I remember os aerobics Oz, I remember aerobics OD style
been on around ten am. I think it was about midday.
(32:44):
Marcus were at Fung and the heads and we have
power when they said bolto that's right on the top
of the other side, right north head to the harbor Potu.
So yeah, I don't know where is out, but seems
they're all around there so sort it out, transpower. We'll
(33:06):
keep you updated with that eight hundred and eighty. If
you've got breaking news, were you or anything I was
trying to bang on about, be good to hear from you.
I'll try and keep you updated with news throughout the
next four hours three hours, and be a part of it.
Storing bread. Richard Simmons. Anyone lose a lot of weight
during that show during the lunchtime. I don't even know
(33:29):
if it was the lunchtime, but whenever it was on.
We're trying to ascertain that, and no one to help
me with that yet. Someone will know. Someone will have
gone around the neighbors every day and done the aerobics
with them. I'm sure they would have done it. Was
it aerobics. I'm pretty sure it was aerobics. I don't
think there were weights, and it was before step.
Speaker 10 (33:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (33:52):
I think in those days, in the early aerobics, you
just you just whizzed yourself around. That doesn't sound right,
but I don't think you used weight or anything. I
guess you just did lunches and star jumps. Well, I
don't know what you did, so you might need to
(34:15):
talk about that. I'm very keen for a discussion on that, obviously,
because that's nostalgia. He was beloved by the way. Speaking
of divisive I see the listeners doing an article Marmite
versus VIGI might choose your side. God, Why would you
(34:39):
just try and get divided by what you have on
your toast? They're both pretty much identical celebrate, but I
wouldn't have an opinion on either. I've often said that
I'm not going to get kind of triggered by tiny
differences between two goods. That's crazy, but yes he will
(35:02):
twelve o'clock if you want to talk. Some people have
been asking how many people in the Adiction show predicted
the assassination attempt on Trump. One person, lydiad predicted that,
and she also predicted King Charles to have health problems.
(35:28):
Get in touch by name's Marcus Hudl twelve o'clock tonight.
There's something different you want to talk about. I mentioned God,
but very cold, down South, free, wed up North. If
you've got a roading update or a weather update, that'd
be good to hear from you also tonight. But mainly
it's about where to store your bread so it doesn't
go stale. And Richard Simmons When did he rule the
(35:53):
afternoon TV slot? What time of day was it? I
can't find I can't find a record of that anywhere.
By the way, the British football team have left Germany
(36:14):
to fly home, and these questions as to whether Gareth
Southgate will lead England to the World Cup done better
than most coaches. Gary Lineker said, maybe it's time for
someone else being Marcus welcome, Hey Marcus God being yourself?
(36:37):
All good?
Speaker 6 (36:38):
Ye're not bad. Just just drove up from all cool,
up to kuy Waterer and back. Yeah, play big storm.
The tower is definitely out.
Speaker 3 (36:50):
Yeah, okay, so it's good. What is it water? Is
it windy?
Speaker 11 (36:54):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (36:55):
It was wet, it was just solid. Were not much ones.
Speaker 2 (36:59):
Okay, that's crazy.
Speaker 6 (37:01):
The uh. I just want to my grandma, So she's
and Walkworth and the there was a power surge two
weeks ago blew out most of the the street, every
house basically block waller appliances. So we just drove up
and my partner to give her a new fridge because
(37:23):
the insurance company's old state insurance been waiting two weeks
fixture appliances.
Speaker 3 (37:30):
It is shocking. Yeah, do the power companies because they
must be fuses to stop a suage going through out there.
Do they have any responsibility for that?
Speaker 6 (37:42):
Do you think?
Speaker 10 (37:42):
So?
Speaker 6 (37:43):
We paid We paid them enough. It's victor should have
been the victor should have been looking after it. But
it happened to my friend now and and Chaweringer. It
was her house was quite close to the transformer, the
green box, and from from what I heard is the
closer you are to it, the worst damage could happened.
(38:05):
But they did good. They did good to her about
a couple of years ago. They even placed full of stuff.
Speaker 3 (38:12):
But yeah, Grandma's well, grand lose the fridge, lose anything else.
Speaker 6 (38:20):
Garrett's doors don't open, the like Awave stereo, Yeah, pretty
much everything. I only think it was the TV was
on the power surge. But yeah, there was a lady
that across the roads. There's you know a bunch of
old birds that lived there. And she had a stainless
(38:40):
steel bench top and she wrung the sparky once the
power surch happened, and the the whole once the search happened,
the stainless steel the kitchen was like the bench Wow, yeah,
it's pretty crazy.
Speaker 3 (39:02):
Hey, so that the insurance company aren't doubting it there.
The claims legitimate. They're just not doing it very quickly,
is that right?
Speaker 6 (39:11):
Yeah, it's pretty pretty slack origon.
Speaker 3 (39:13):
They should really slick. How old's grandma eighty eighty one?
I should be worried about the stuff and the fridge
and the freezer. She'll lose that.
Speaker 6 (39:23):
Ah, she's already lost all that. Yeah, and she's she
just come out of surgery, so she's you know, she's
not she's not in a great state. They should be
bloody looking after her.
Speaker 3 (39:33):
But yeah, sort of outstating, Sure, it's been tremendous call
felt us right there in the whole scenario with that one. Wow, Sandra, Marcus, good.
Speaker 9 (39:42):
Evening, Oh, good evening, Marcus. Richard Simmons from my memory,
and I was saying to Dan, it might be shot,
but from.
Speaker 18 (39:54):
What oh god, I've got a heapit of doing that, Marcus. Oh,
heab's in the morning, like eleven o'clock.
Speaker 9 (40:10):
Oh, I thought he was about ten o'clock.
Speaker 3 (40:13):
But there was aerobics star style.
Speaker 9 (40:19):
Right right, No, Richard Simmons ready stood out because of
his style.
Speaker 4 (40:24):
Yeah, and he was.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
It was it was just him, did he It was
it was just he didn't have weights or anything, did he.
Speaker 9 (40:33):
No, I don't think so.
Speaker 7 (40:35):
No, No he didn't.
Speaker 18 (40:37):
Did you get off the couch, Adam?
Speaker 3 (40:41):
Did you get off the couch and do it?
Speaker 9 (40:44):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (40:45):
Success successfully.
Speaker 9 (40:49):
Years years old? Was very very from wow. And so
we're in the afternoon, and I just couldn't be bothered
with them. They were pretty sick.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
Probably probably after you've done your Richard Simmons and Aerobics hostarle,
you probably deserved it.
Speaker 17 (41:09):
But a couch time, No, I had little one, so
oh yeah, yeah, I was active.
Speaker 9 (41:21):
I was on the on the ball.
Speaker 3 (41:23):
Yeah, okay, Sandra. So here you are ten o'clock.
Speaker 9 (41:28):
Ye o'clock, around ten o'clock.
Speaker 3 (41:33):
Ten o'clock, play school, ten twenty five you and your child? Oh,
ten thirty Richard Simmons show.
Speaker 9 (41:45):
Oh, Marcus, I was up and there out.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
Ten fifty six Yoga with Sandra Riddle. Only went for
three minutes.
Speaker 9 (41:55):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (41:56):
Then was the Young and the Restless Beauty of a
Beauty in the Beast Days of Our Lives.
Speaker 9 (42:01):
Yeah, nine terrible, terrible programs. But rich Simmons, Yeah, he
was he was cool.
Speaker 8 (42:10):
No.
Speaker 9 (42:11):
In the afternoon, I played my LPs and ran round
after children.
Speaker 3 (42:19):
Just that we could picture the whole scenario, which which
part of the country were you.
Speaker 9 (42:24):
I was in Auckland.
Speaker 3 (42:26):
Wow, they were okay? And you and you so five
days a week when Richard Simmons was on, you do
the twenty five minutes, you do the workout? Yeah wow,
not meed to be not mean to be creepy, but
just do it. Would you dress up for or just
doing what you're wearing at the time, or you get
(42:47):
dressed up into that fitness gear.
Speaker 9 (42:51):
No. I was pretty relaxed in my in what I wore,
so I was able to I didn't ever dress put
it that way.
Speaker 3 (43:03):
Okay, fitness gear this was this is this was different
in those days, wasn't it.
Speaker 9 (43:11):
Yeah? Well it was long tights. Really, I had long
tights and and in well there was the full body
(43:35):
body suiting that you could wear over your tights or
a middy top.
Speaker 3 (43:42):
I was like tights and then a lea tad over there,
and then you had your league warmers.
Speaker 14 (43:45):
Right.
Speaker 3 (43:47):
Yeah, don't see those so much anymore, do you.
Speaker 9 (43:52):
No, No, it's more casual what you wear at the gym.
Speaker 3 (43:58):
Now, nice to talk. I found it for a good sounder.
Appreciate it. Peter Marcus welcome.
Speaker 19 (44:05):
I talk about bread storage, tie bread, fast bread. That
you can hear me.
Speaker 3 (44:16):
Do you say ry bread, a rye breed or a
dry bread?
Speaker 20 (44:21):
Don't?
Speaker 19 (44:22):
Don't throw your stale bread out?
Speaker 3 (44:26):
Copy that, copy that. Ye, what do you do? What
do you do that?
Speaker 19 (44:32):
Take you take your stale slice? I played the milk
just inside of it into the milk pan. Yeah, just
fry one side of it the other side, take it
out and just sprinkle salt on Its bloody beautiful.
Speaker 3 (44:50):
It's all coming back, the dripping and stuff and tellow.
People are made for Tello again.
Speaker 19 (44:55):
Oh, I don't know about tell We've always well.
Speaker 3 (44:58):
I think dripping and tell might be the same thing,
aren't they.
Speaker 6 (45:02):
I think as I think they have.
Speaker 19 (45:04):
You can't you.
Speaker 21 (45:05):
Can't use.
Speaker 3 (45:09):
Yeah, no, no you want that's a hearing. Appreciate you,
but no. It's interesting about Tello, the old Simon Tello.
I think that all is beckon. Was it summer in
the weekend we had something cooked in Tello? Oh no,
we were into tallow, so of course you are, yeah,
using the whole. I don't know what they're doing in
the hold. It seemed taste fine, funny kind of sounding word,
(45:32):
isn't it tallow the way there we go. Don't know
what Tello is the same as dripping. A butcher will
tell me Tello the same as dripping. I'm not asking
Chad Ai, I'm asking them. Anything is tellow the same
as dripping. Tello is a generic term for any sort
of rendered fat.
Speaker 2 (45:51):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (45:53):
Tello is the swet fat, the hard fat, struggle around
the kidneys. Dripping comes from the entire cow goodness. If
you're doing Richard Simmons yourself. If there's too much tallow
names Marcus hddled twelve Thanks that person that sent the
TV listening in Marcus. Richard Simmons didn't have any weight
(46:13):
to her stuff, just one hundred percent enthusiasm and a
big fro reese and the coup or the yeah, that's try.
He was LEO say, I look like he's a pocket.
I mean, I say, I mean, you don't often say
people are short. But it's hard to tell with the
TV show that's such a big character. But you imagine
he'd be like five two or something. I never got
(46:34):
alongside him. He showed you who I can text well
like he she hasn't rung. Actually I'll text someone that
has recently been at his dance classes, his aerobics classes.
Hold your horses, people, how tall was Richard Simmons? Just text,
(47:05):
don't call the radio station. Exclamation Marte, she starts, she
won't stop. We'll find out how tall he was because yeah,
he looked like a pocket rocket. Oh wait one hundred
and eighty nine two nine two text transpower. This is
off their Facebook page. Our crews have isolated the cause
of the outrage outage and are now working to reconfigure that.
(47:29):
This may take some time to expect to have the
power back on later this evening. So there you are,
Manga Phi Polto tenor Pie Welsford. Everywhere you are, we're
there for you, but you've got no power. Well you
never know, you like in the big city. They're on
to it and we've known for hours where it was.
Are We're talking Richard Simmons and Tallow anyone back into Tallow.
(47:52):
All these things go around, don't they? Brown rice righte, rice,
white rice, brown, race, no tello, A lot of tellow,
no eggs, a lot of eggs. I can't keep up.
I think what you got to do with all surveys
about food and diet and what you should should you
got a lot who's paid for the science because more
(48:13):
often than not though with the alcohol group. Or here
we go go text back five five five four five
five Richard Simmonds. There you go. So he's still actively
doing classes talk quite recently in Los Angeles and every
good class apparently. My name is Marcus Hittle Midnight eight
(48:35):
hundred and eighty tady A nineteen ninety two. To text
anything goes Hittle twelve. If you've got something different, you
want to mention. We had a couple of calls about Trump,
But what do you say. I don't know what the
talkback's like in the United States of America. Imagine that's
probably pretty full on. I have asked the boss to
go to a talkback conference.
Speaker 14 (48:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (48:56):
I was quite keen for that, but he doesn't seem
that keen. I mean, it's probably be probably good to
have sort of extreme people over there. Hello, No, Marcus,
welcome you mate. No while here, no l notice hear
from you.
Speaker 15 (49:13):
I live off grid, of course, so I put my bread.
I've got a food safe made out of an old
filing cabinet.
Speaker 17 (49:21):
Great.
Speaker 3 (49:21):
Great, I can just visualize that you're not a wall
out and put them of gaze on there. That does that, right,
But a.
Speaker 15 (49:26):
Gauze, no, no, no, nothing can get into it anyway.
I put my bread in there, and I've lived in
houses fridges. It does dry it out. The fridge, by
the way, and I'll try.
Speaker 3 (49:38):
Even if even if it's in the bag.
Speaker 15 (49:43):
I leave it in the bag with the bag open.
Never close the bag. It gets mildew and then you
get bloody, you know, not yea in my food safe
just out here in the corner. It's in a kitchen
sort of outdoor area. Days fresh for ages, so bridges
(50:03):
dry it out. The best thing is a dark, cool
place to put your bread.
Speaker 3 (50:09):
Are you off the grid by choice? You're close to
the grid? Oh yeah, okay.
Speaker 4 (50:15):
But I live in a camp van with a little
pitching alex out the front, and I live off solar
and gash and generator.
Speaker 3 (50:29):
So when you say you've got a convined fighting cabinet,
can the year get through it?
Speaker 15 (50:34):
Oh? Yeah, plenty, it's great, Mike, mice can't get them nothing,
get them there.
Speaker 4 (50:41):
They can't climb it. It's great.
Speaker 15 (50:44):
And keep it all and you know it's winter of course.
Speaker 3 (50:49):
Yeah, okay, Julian, that's Marcus good even welcome.
Speaker 20 (50:53):
Yeah, I just wanted if you had a chance to
listen to the Darlene interview with Mikey Sherman.
Speaker 3 (51:01):
No, I didn't see that. What did you take from it?
Speaker 20 (51:05):
I don't honestly know what she was hoping to achieve.
She she was, I think she was being honest, but
she went went backwards and forwards between a Maori heritage
and her Paquiha heritage when she went in. I wasn't
quite sure what she was talking about when she was
(51:26):
going into a Maori heritage. I don't understand Tireo that much,
but I just I don't know what she was hoping
to achieve. To me, all she achieved with me was
just somebody that had made of new fakes, few mistakes,
hasn't been honest enough to fess up to it, and
(51:46):
really just wants to stay on and draw the money
from us for her status as an independent. When who's
going to bother to listen to anything she says.
Speaker 3 (51:57):
I think the critical thing is she's a list in
p also, so she's there out of the grace of
the party anyway, and she's not part of the party.
She doesn't seem to be on the list.
Speaker 20 (52:05):
Yeah, Well, and she's not even none of the grace
of the party, the party who wants her to go.
She's there for the grace of her that decides that
people might might want to listen to what I've got
to say. But you know, maybe she should go back
to the people of the area that she comes from
and ask them and see what see what they think,
because but when you're.
Speaker 3 (52:26):
A s MP, you're not representing people from an area,
are you really on the list?
Speaker 20 (52:32):
But you know, she kept going on about who she
who she was representing, who she's spoken to, people that
want her to carry on and do you know carry
on and be in parliament? Well, then who are those people?
Speaker 11 (52:43):
Then?
Speaker 3 (52:44):
I don't know, you know, I think most people and
those people haven't really voted for her. They voted for
a party. Well, I guess she is on the list
of that party.
Speaker 20 (52:51):
But Mikey Sherman did a great job. She she obviously
totally disagrees with what this woman's.
Speaker 3 (53:03):
Don't know why you wonder why you'd want to stay
on as well? I'm I mean, surely it can't just
be about the salary. Surely these people have got something
else they want to I mean, it was pretty clear cut.
It seemed to be. She did seemed to cooperate that
well with the investigation anywhere. It took so damn long.
(53:23):
Wouldn't you just think, oh, well, like she it's not
for me, obviously, I've got my own business. Was sort
of the family bike business. That's go back to that
or something.
Speaker 20 (53:31):
Yeah, But you know, when you when you listen to
the interview, I mean, she wasn't at home that much.
She when her and her husband were together and talked,
they didn't want to talk about business. They just wanted
to talk about their family life. So it seemed it
seemed a very odd arrangement husband and wife side of things.
Also that you know, they you know, he didn't want
(53:55):
to tell her what was going on in his business.
She didn't really want to know. She just wanted to
know how how the kids were. They spent a few
hours together every couple of weeks, and then she bugged
off up to Wellington's. So it seems really odd. I
think people should actually tune into it and listen to
it and get some idea it was. It was really
quite odd.
Speaker 3 (54:15):
Whereabouts and the bulletin was the story was it Pride
of Place was the top of the bulletin.
Speaker 20 (54:20):
Well, they did a week bit of an on it
on the TV one News tonight, but if you go
on to TV one plus one, okay, you know on
demand it is. The whole interview is live.
Speaker 3 (54:30):
Okay, because I think people have no I think it's
one of those comic stories that people have no interest
and they just want them gone. I think, yeah, don't.
I don't think anyone's I don't think anyone's since its
sense is that she's been hard done by Uness. They
are people that are opposed to the Greens and have
some sort of political mischief to make. I think most
people realize that every parties have some bad eggs, and
we'll bare the eggs people that probably have not been
(54:54):
vetted well enough and probably shouldn't be there.
Speaker 20 (54:58):
Do you want to know what I do with stale bread?
Speaker 3 (55:01):
Yes? Yes, I wouldn't mind knowing butter putting.
Speaker 20 (55:07):
Wow, you just get your bread, you line a bowl
with it, you spread butter on, and you build the
layers up with that, and then you beat up six
eggs and about half a pint of milk, tip it
all together so it soaks all the way through the
stale bread I put some fruit in it as well,
(55:31):
take it in the oven for about half an hour
and one hundred and fifty degrees and the egg and
the milk sets. And that's a very old English bread
and butter pudding.
Speaker 3 (55:41):
Would you go anyway to make it if you didn't
have spear breading? But is it something that's that's a
good thing to use old bread or would you get
out because the name sounds so bad.
Speaker 7 (55:55):
It?
Speaker 20 (55:56):
Look, you know we used to give our babies from
the young egg custard and that was made the same
way without the bread. So and look, I have made
it with just buying fresh bread, and I've made it
with you know, the spiced fruit loafs that you can get,
and you look, you can be pretty creative with it.
You can put all put chocolate in it, sometimes nuts. Yeah,
(56:19):
you can let your imagination go wide with bread and
butter pudding and it lasts really well. You know, you
can have it hot. I actually quite like it cold
as well, so that you go steale bread and butter.
Speaker 3 (56:31):
Julian, I don't think in this country we've ever made
enough of that tip top fruit lofe, because that's one
of the great loafs I mean, everyone likes it. It's
you could just you can eat so much of it?
Speaker 20 (56:42):
Yeah, yeah, I agree with you.
Speaker 3 (56:46):
Oh just to die for.
Speaker 20 (56:49):
Far better than you know, easter buns?
Speaker 3 (56:54):
What do you much better? Much better? Terrible? Was they
chuck chocolate?
Speaker 10 (56:58):
No?
Speaker 3 (56:58):
Look and even Copeland's do a fairly good copy of
it as well.
Speaker 16 (57:03):
Look.
Speaker 3 (57:03):
I got McKinnon to it and he's liking, which I'm
happy about because I mean some of the house. But
I've got to limit myself because I just tumed away
through a whole pair, gets delicious home from work it
out of it. It's not too long in the toaster
like that stupid Vogels takes about three weeks that you're
in and out your Oh no, don't get me. I
love that cheapest lop. That's right, that needs to be
in Tipapa, that needs to be a that would be,
(57:26):
without a doubt, New Zealand's greatest, greatest loaf. I don't
know if I do a bread and butter pudding with it.
Godness me, what a great loaf there. We don't talk
about that enough. The original spicy fruit loaf. It sort
of ring me up and tell me they've stopped making
it soon you know, as far as the old hot
Cross barns, you can take a hike, get out the car,
(57:46):
especially as they started putting chocolate in there and stuff.
But that fruit loaf tremendous, just tremendous. Have we seen
what these uniforms are like?
Speaker 9 (57:57):
Then?
Speaker 3 (57:57):
I can't. I've clicked on stupid articles.
Speaker 10 (58:00):
Do not.
Speaker 3 (58:00):
Have we not seen them yet? Because normally they reveal
the team uniform and everyone has a moan, right, it's
not wall or it's not it's not and it's not
flexible enough, it's not Ki Olympians have tain your social
media reveal their uniforms and I'm looking through I can't
(58:21):
even see anything about it. I think that's Kiwi athletes.
Now I can't even see what it's like. It's on TikTok.
It might be Nike. Is it New Zealand's Olympic uniforms?
Twenty twenty four TikTok wants to show notificate. Do I
allow a block? Dan? Draw on notifications, block on notifications.
(58:42):
According to Dan, check out the terrible unfettering pants. They
just look like they're just like they're all blacks off
on a bad day. Looks terrible while they're wearing face masks.
Maybe that por don't like it at all. Terrible, terrible, terrible, Okay,
(59:12):
there might be budget restraints. They were off going on
to bark his track, So that seems to be what
most people wear these days. Sixteen to ten Bull of
an Arka from Hot Fiji. Marcus did a bit a
nutmeg two for the bread and butter pudding. Mosty Marmalade's
marmalade spread on that bread. Yum. Powers just come back
(59:37):
on a munga fi Teina you better tell them on
that Facebook page, Dan to tell them it's back on.
Hold you, Dan's telling transpower what's going on? Marcus. Richard
Simmons discovered a lump under his eye, which turned to
be skin cans. He always loved to be free tanned
because he thought it made him look healthy. He was
(59:58):
always tanned. Could have been tenorexic because people get obsessed
to ten, don't they? Power? Back on munga Phi? Thanks
Ruby a lot of text for what about the texts?
Someone says, I think Richard Simmons did Jesus size. It'd
be the jazz though, wouldn't it. Cruise have isolated the
fault and now redirecting load through a single transformer. Don't
(01:00:20):
turn everything on at once. Fruit Life with peanut butter, delicious,
toasted cheese with fruit Life. I've tried that. That's very good.
You know that fruit Life good. We need to do
a whole show on that. One night could be tonight.
If clant your blessings the best things with a tip
top fruit Life, I'd say the start would be cheese.
(01:00:42):
What about banana? Anything goes with it. It's just you
can eat too much of it. Marcus Richard Simmons had
a number plate on his big American car, why are
you fat? There you go? It's originally from New Orleans, Louisiana,
but lost a significant amount of weight, and that was this.
I don't know if he invented like I do, evern
(01:01:03):
know what you'd call it, Jesus size aerobics, but he
kind of did all he can to popularize it. So
oh the all Blacks too, Yeah, I was right about
the choir thing in the answer. Well, I don't think
it was that good. I mean, the English one's so short,
and I don't know, I just thought the choir, I
don't know, I just I mean, been good on them
doing it. But I was speaking something about punchier. I
(01:01:27):
was watching on a big screen, not like I'm kind
of watching on my phone or anything weird. But yeah,
I just thought it was a little underwhelming. It might
have been me, Paul. It's Marcus. Good evening.
Speaker 11 (01:01:36):
Hey Marcus, here, are you going good?
Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
Thank you?
Speaker 11 (01:01:39):
I know you cold.
Speaker 3 (01:01:40):
I'm not two degrees in the studio. Yep.
Speaker 11 (01:01:46):
I wouldn't have thought you'd be doing it from the outside.
But okay, yeah, this thing with Donald Trump doesn't sound
right to me. And the reason I'm saying this is
that you've got a twenty year old shared on a
roof and everyone is just one shot, right, because he
didn't he didn't go ballistic at the crowd at all.
(01:02:10):
So it's one shot and a couple of people or
three that are injured. And the police shoot this guy
on the roof for they gut there and get him
and shoot him, which is the evidence. And he's twenty
years old. And if you were shot, Marcus, would you
(01:02:32):
stand up and pump your fist? No, you wouldn't. You
would be huddled and you'd be terrified. This doesn't bring
true to me. I don't know about anyone else, but
(01:02:55):
I'm just like, I don't trust American politics and I
don't trust anything that comes out of it. But I'm
just like, why would those events and then kill the
evidence of a twenty year old.
Speaker 3 (01:03:11):
I think, I think, do you think, Well, I'm not
fascinated by active shooter situation, so I don't. I don't
go and study them at length because I'm I mean.
Speaker 9 (01:03:22):
I.
Speaker 11 (01:03:24):
Don't either.
Speaker 3 (01:03:25):
I spent I spent too long. I spent too long.
I spent too long on a course with a guy
that's seen that movie. Because you know how people are
always obsessed with that sniper movie. What was that one
about the guy that had the most kills? Could be
that one in the Iraq war? That sniper movie.
Speaker 11 (01:03:37):
Ye, No, I don't think I'll watched.
Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
That, No, I but but you know, but look, I
do know that that the way with the caliber of
the American firearms, right, M that I imagine the right What
is the most effective form of policing when you've got
what they call an active shooter is to shoot? Is
(01:04:01):
to shoot to kill M. So, so I think I
think there's no surprises they did that, right, But unfortunately,
whenever it is whenever we're not unfortunate because the whole
thing's horrible. But whenever there is a shooter that is killed,
right then one of the criticisms could be it's a
conspiracy and they were just doing that because that's the
(01:04:24):
one witness to shoot them. It's not surprised. It's not
surprising they shot that guy.
Speaker 11 (01:04:32):
I'm not saying it it isn't or not. But he's
twenty years of age on a roof by himself, and
there's a whole lot of information, isn't was anyone? You know,
there's a whole of things that you could be asking
this kid.
Speaker 3 (01:04:49):
So you're the age is of interest to you?
Speaker 11 (01:04:53):
I think that maybe the whole things of interest because.
Speaker 3 (01:05:02):
I'll tell you about the whole age thing. Right after
the Alvaradi shoots, there was a lawyer in the States
is quite a credible lawyer who is taking Instagram to
court and also one of the video games. I think
it's call of Duty to court because Instagram and Call
of Duty are marketing the firearms and increasing the young people.
(01:05:27):
And the guy the Vardi shooting, he already had his firearm,
the AK fifteen whatever, He had it in his shopping
trolley before he had turned eighteen ready to purchase, and
the moment he turned eighteen, he bought it. So it
seems as though the young people that are playing video
games or whatever and they see these these terur of
(01:05:48):
duty type games are obsessed with the firearms and they're
buying the firearms featured on Instagram and these video games.
So to me, the age wasn't a surprise.
Speaker 11 (01:05:59):
Okay, all right.
Speaker 3 (01:06:02):
Two, as far as as far is Trump clenching his
fist and doing that, oh my goodness, doing that. I
mean that's classic Trump, isn't it.
Speaker 11 (01:06:18):
Yeah. I mean I don't anything that's coming out of
that place at the moment.
Speaker 3 (01:06:25):
No, and I know, and I haven't gone to social
but but all sorts of groups have claimed my whole
actor has been politicized. People have said, oh, well.
Speaker 11 (01:06:36):
Yeah, I don't any of that stuff. I'm just I
just looked at it myself and just thought wow and
and horrified. You shouldn't be shooting anyone. But then I thought, yeah,
this doesn't add up to me. I don't know why,
but that's all right, called you and tell you.
Speaker 3 (01:06:57):
But but but what's what's fascinating about me?
Speaker 10 (01:07:00):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
What's fascinating about not me? But It's fascinating about this
time in history, is that we can also you know,
you can see where the conspiracy start just after nine
to eleven. It took a long time for the conspiracies
to start. It wasn't until people put out that movie
Could Loose Change that people really start talking about that.
And then of course there was the JFK one, and
(01:07:24):
people started talking about that quite quickly, because of course
there was Lee Harvey Oswald and he got shot quite
quickly after it, remember that, And because because Earl Ray
or whatever, that guy's shot and there he was a
mafia plant. So it got quite you know, so you
could see the conspiracies unwilled, unwinding, couldn't you.
Speaker 11 (01:07:43):
Yeah, it was starting. I just think America is in
so much trouble at the moment and the swing to
Trump whoever, I mean, no one wants to be in
that situation, and I think it would be horrible, whether
you like him or dislike him. That's not where we
need to be is global society. Don't get me wrong.
(01:08:05):
I'm just I'm just looking at it. Just I'm not
trusting what I'm looking at simply because of all the
rubbish that's going on.
Speaker 3 (01:08:14):
Okay, if I understand Paul, and then also to ask
question why didn have his shoes on? Could someone explain
that to me? I'm quite sure what that was about,
because if he's on the shoes, the shoes to the
agent anyway, Marcus, Yes, readings, wasn't Courtney place? It was
not pleasant to be in in my opinion, it was
damaged in the Cake Coulder quake. There are a number
of suburban cinemas that are good though, emparan Island Bay,
(01:08:36):
Penthouse and Brooklyn Roxy and Mirama the POxy Roxy Lighthouse
and Patawni Cuba and Pawa Haartanui. And think Queen's Gate
may have opened again in Lower Heart. Thank you, Marcus.
You know about the rare species whale washed up on
the Otago coast, No, I don't. It was on the
mouth of the Taedi. It was a beaked whale and
(01:08:58):
he six if ever washed up. If I'd know where
I was coming past the era, I would have gone
and looked at it. Marcus. My new Partnero's from Tonga
has been an outward bound for the last two weeks
at Anaquiwa. I don't know much about the areages into
you I can see temperatures have been getting as low
as three and four degrees and only highs of twelve.
(01:09:19):
I hope he's been enjoying it. You're not allowed cell phones,
so I have no idea how he's going. Must be
nice to have a break from technology for that long.
Can't wait to buy a loaf of spicy tiptop tomorrow
in our cheese. Lara could Marcus Gregg and deb flutey
breads of the best fruit and nut sour dough grains
breads ever Kai Tire Market every Saturday keeps well in
(01:09:42):
fridge for a week far North End. Look, I do
know about that bread in because I've met them when
they're at the markets at are a tear when they're
going up and down up North. I don't know if
they still go there, but yeah, and of course they
are of course originated from Bluff, the old flutees. So
I have tried that bread, and yeah, I endorse that, Marcus.
(01:10:06):
Your ice cubes seem to get small on the freezer.
That's a good thing. It means that the freezer is
air tight and the cubes are evaporating. Technically, sublimating the
dryness is what's putting the moisture out of the bread.
Oh and it's Marcus. Welcome and good evening.
Speaker 22 (01:10:21):
Good evening, Marcus. At this time of presidential hopeful attempted assassinations,
I'm calling you instead about the incredibly important subject of
bread storage.
Speaker 3 (01:10:32):
Never never apologize for what you're going to talk about.
Speaker 22 (01:10:34):
Owen I storm. Depending on the heat and humidity time
of year, I store my bread. I put it into
a cupboard, and you keep it in a tightly sealed bag,
and you know, really hot, stinking human weather. It might
be only two to three days, or it might be
(01:10:54):
say four days in coler weather. But I only put
enough that I know I'm going to eat that fresh
before it has a chance of going moldy. But any
excess bread I put in a freezer, because I agree
with what was said earlier that if you put bread
in a nice soft, fresh bread in the fridge, even
the tightly sealed bag, it goes stiff and unpleasant. So
(01:11:17):
I either eat it fresh or take it down from
frozen when they usually use it as taste.
Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
The real question, knowing that no one's been brave enough
to answer, if you get your bread out of the
bread bin and the plastic bag and you go five
slices in.
Speaker 13 (01:11:34):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
Yep, there's a bit of mold good to eat.
Speaker 22 (01:11:44):
Oh, I used to, and then I hear so many
horror stories about how bad mold is for you, and
so I don't. I don't eat it like I might.
Speaker 3 (01:11:53):
Get told your mold is bad for you, because I
reckon you just put the taste to get of it
of a scrape.
Speaker 22 (01:11:59):
You're probably right. It's what I always what I always
used to do. But I've sort of listened to the
mold police, and I'm.
Speaker 3 (01:12:06):
What did the mold please say? Because it's all right
on the blue vein geese.
Speaker 20 (01:12:10):
And that's that's exactly right.
Speaker 22 (01:12:14):
We encourage it there, you know, put it with put
it with leather and other disgusting things.
Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
I mean, if you've got if you've got mold, black
mold in your kid's bedrooms, you don't want that. You
want to get out the old, the old mold remover
to get rid of that, because that's not a good
thing if you're inhaling the spores. But I don't think
if you eat mold, is it going to I don't
think so, is it?
Speaker 22 (01:12:36):
Oh? So you're not scraping the bedroom, mold onto your toast, then.
Speaker 5 (01:12:42):
Chee chee.
Speaker 22 (01:12:44):
I used to for for quite at some time too,
you know, a couple of years I used to make
my own sour day bread, make it from a starter,
and and make make my sour dough. And I we've
got too hot water cupboards here, you know, use two
hot water sommers to water comes used to use so
(01:13:04):
young put it in there to rise it and at
one stays there. In one of my early efforts, I
got it out and I sniffed the starter and it
smelt like my muddy running shoes after I'd been for
a run in a muddy fringe of Monacaw Bush trail,
(01:13:26):
and I realized it had taken up the you know,
the spores or I don't know the the what's the
proper word for it, the east from from mere drying
my running shoes out lower down in the hot water cover.
Speaker 3 (01:13:40):
Wow, it was right.
Speaker 22 (01:13:43):
I bifted out and I started.
Speaker 3 (01:13:45):
I'd be curious now that loaf.
Speaker 22 (01:13:50):
Might get your running.
Speaker 3 (01:13:52):
I mean, look, I don't go on about this but
because I don't want the bougie boars to get onto us.
But we have a sour dought. We make sour well,
I don't, but we have soured over it at home,
so I know what you're talking about. A starter and
stuff like that. You know you got to take it
on holiday. It becomes like another child betting the sea monkeys.
(01:14:12):
I'm gonna run on, but thank you. Fancy the mold,
the sourdough, adapting the mold of the running shoes. I
don't really understand that much about molds, but they're pretty
waky dudell, aren't they how people to go and find
a new mold or a new kind of thing for
their new beer, like in a cave and things like that.
We you know, molds, good molds and bad mold just
(01:14:35):
on the back of the old the guy and the
sour dough and all things bougie. I just probably, since
I've got the talking stick, get a quick chance to
talk about some of the great discoveries from our family
holiday of seven eight nine days away. I tell you
a couple of things. Best soup Sonya's Noodle soup hornby
Hub night Market Thursday, unbelievable. You need to get there
(01:15:02):
on a Thursday. Fantastic, best hot drink Sunday Markets Huamaru.
Some woman's doing like a ginger kind of lemon drink.
Well I didn't barb and good, delicious, absolutely delicious. You
want to get that? Always good. The Fijoa second Lollies
(01:15:26):
at the Regina Factory tremendous or rainbow they call it
now well worthwhile. I've told you the praise of the
old library at Roliston, one of the great libraries of
all time. But I'll tell you what the thing with
the real discovery. If you get a chance, and if
you find yourself in christ Church, you need to pop
(01:15:48):
into the christ Church Art Gallery to Puna or fu
and go and see upstairs. There is a painting exhibition
of it's called from Here on the Ground and it's
it's New Zealand landscapes from the It's New Zealand landscapes
(01:16:11):
realistic painting from the forties, fifties and sixties. But it's
not the it's the urban stuff, the railway stuff. The
city's fantastic, all your great to the your cashierat Arounngus
and all sorts of other ones I haven't seen in
the railways. It's a knockout. Unfortunately there's not a catalog.
But yeah, I couldn't believe. I don't know who the
curator was. But Jeet was good. Even some buster blacks,
(01:16:35):
which are pretty important if you do that sort of thing.
He was one of them. Karnakalytes, I think in prison.
I think that's where he was from. But wow, it's
a total knockout. Get a chance, go and see that.
Don't hunt the kids because the kids get bored. But
that's a ripper, that's a fant It's as good as
show as I've seen for a long long time. There
(01:16:56):
and christ which gallery always good, but the painting tremendous. Joan,
it's Marcus. Good evening and welcome Hi Joan.
Speaker 23 (01:17:06):
Hello Marcus. I can only just hear you.
Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
Oh really wonder what's happening there?
Speaker 23 (01:17:11):
Oh no, you've come up better now, okay, God, it's
very weezy in christ Church.
Speaker 3 (01:17:17):
Rain we had we had nine days and not a
drop of rain. And christ Church.
Speaker 23 (01:17:24):
We had some rain I think the week before that
and a little bit. But no, it's pretty weird out
there and there now.
Speaker 3 (01:17:30):
We did we didn't get a bit for our nine days.
Is that was great? And so the weather was fair.
It was cold, but the weather was fantastically dry.
Speaker 23 (01:17:37):
You had some sunny days.
Speaker 3 (01:17:38):
Oh perfect, beautiful, beautiful.
Speaker 23 (01:17:40):
I mean you like Christ, you like christ Church?
Speaker 3 (01:17:44):
Yeah, yeah, I think Christ is good for the kids
in the hollow. There's plenty to do.
Speaker 23 (01:17:48):
Yep, yep, no, I like.
Speaker 3 (01:17:52):
Look my one thought of christ Church. And I know
that this will upset people.
Speaker 9 (01:17:56):
M M.
Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
I probably shouldn't say it. I think the new stadium
is in the wrong place.
Speaker 23 (01:18:03):
Oh yes, and Hue, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:18:06):
It's huge just to just you can see how it's
going to have that big thing over and even already
that part of town that it's over is looking little
bit blocked and sort of.
Speaker 15 (01:18:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:18:15):
I just don't think stadiums are good and they kill
everything around it. So I think they made a mistake.
I think they should have put it out in the wops.
That would have been my take, but I knew why
they did.
Speaker 23 (01:18:23):
It out of the main town in the in the
city sub cbd or But anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:18:32):
The kids went to see the Harlem Globe trotters at
Horncastle what do they call them?
Speaker 2 (01:18:37):
Now?
Speaker 23 (01:18:38):
Yeah, that's okay where that is, and that's.
Speaker 3 (01:18:40):
That's that's that's really accessible. It was easy to get
to it. Caving from Hornby topped them off there.
Speaker 23 (01:18:45):
But anyway, and I think around that big thing that
we don't like. They're going to make one way roads
and they're changing things and that's not going to please
people either, and the people at work in town and
all that. It's just dreadful. And what the Court Theater
is out of Addington. It's off Lincoln Road. It's excellent,
but they're building the one into and there's no parking.
(01:19:07):
I think they have to use parking buildings. I don't
like going in parking buildings. I don't go to town anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:19:14):
And I thought that in the city. The city, I mean,
you know, there's done a remarkable rebuild, all those plantings
around the river and everything is beautiful. But the city,
the city is dead at night. You know, it's not busy,
it seems to if people aren't coming in at night,
so that they're kind of anyway. Anyway, what do you bread?
Speaker 23 (01:19:36):
Well, you don't keep bread in the fridge.
Speaker 5 (01:19:38):
Now.
Speaker 23 (01:19:38):
Oh, when I think it was he was definitely right.
I'm on my own. I often have the loaf of
bread and put the half in the freezer, in the
other half in a I've got plastic bags, and I
get the oh, they're just fridden bags and they're eighty
in a in a you know plastic, you know, and
(01:19:59):
you just open them up and just put it in
there with a clip thing on it. But I've got
a I wouldn't ever keep bread in the fridge, and
he's right about that. But I've got a friend that
keeps hers in the fridge. And she's an English friend
I had lunch with last week. She keeps potatoes and
the little new potatoes and she buys the little diggers
all year around. She keeps her potatoes in the fridge.
(01:20:21):
And I don't know anyone else who does that.
Speaker 3 (01:20:24):
Do you, well, why would you?
Speaker 23 (01:20:26):
I don't know if she does. And she puts all
her bread in the fridge. But I've got another friend, Helen,
who for the last thirty years, she's always kept her
bread in the fridge. And you've always been told and
we're I mean, I'm older than you and we're older
that you keep bread sealed, but you keep it at
room temperature, you know, but freezings far better than having
(01:20:50):
it in the fridge.
Speaker 3 (01:20:52):
So that.
Speaker 23 (01:20:55):
Yeah, yeah, And I think, don't give stale bread to birds,
and do feed the birds and ducks if you want.
Do They try and tell you not to because they
won't find their own food. For God's sake, I love
putting my bread out on the grass between my concrete
and my drive, watch them eating and fly away and
come back again, and it's great. I wouldn't give them
(01:21:15):
moldy breads. I don't let read go moldy anyway, So
now I.
Speaker 3 (01:21:18):
Wouldn't give I wouldn't give breed to Canada geese.
Speaker 23 (01:21:22):
No, oh no, that's a deal. How can they do
one kilo or two a day?
Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
Exactly? Two kilos? It might be chers. Oh wait, one
hundred and eighty. Why don't more caf serve Why don't
more cafes serve raisin toast? It's everywhere in Australia, Hanilton,
for the usual's gone exactly. Why wouldn't they salsa that
tiptop raisin toast? That's what people want their license to
(01:21:51):
print money. Ah, the Ausies have got the whole breakfast thing, right,
haven't they. They love the banana bread too, your Tomas Marcus,
good evening, Good evening.
Speaker 21 (01:22:03):
I think mister Trump's got a very big decision to
make after this, and you probably haven't heard this from anybody,
but he's going to have to make a decision to
stand up there and then not be paranoid about whether
he's going to get shot.
Speaker 3 (01:22:22):
Again be very difficult, I would think would be very
very difficult.
Speaker 21 (01:22:26):
I mean I was in Wairu and Papakura for about
six months and I never had to ask myself that question,
could I shoot somebody? Because it never happened. But he's
been shot now, and he was about half an inch
off death. If he hadn't moved his head, he would
(01:22:48):
have been gone. And this man had no experience whatsoever
of firing a rifle, and.
Speaker 3 (01:22:57):
I think he was I think he is also with
his shot. Tommy was hurried because a guy had spotted
him and accosted him, and he got a shot away,
you know, in a hurry, so he hadn't even really
had time to weighm it. So Trump is extremely lucky.
Speaker 21 (01:23:14):
Yeah, this is only my opinion because of where I'm
coming from. I think the fire then they got shot,
and the two other people that were critical were part
of the shooting towards Trump because he had the weapon
on rapid fire insteady fire and a single bullet at
the time. I mean, if that had been a proper sniper,
(01:23:37):
it's one bullet one kill. He would have been gone
as soon as he pulled the trigger. That sniper would
have been gone to get away. This man never even
had the second thing. He was going to get killed
that young guy. He had never even considered that. And
(01:23:58):
I think Trump's in the very bad He's seventy eight
years of age, he's roughly the same age as mine.
Speaker 9 (01:24:06):
As me.
Speaker 21 (01:24:07):
He hasn't it, hasn't considered how he's going to handle
the after part.
Speaker 3 (01:24:14):
What part sorry, the rock part time sorry, the.
Speaker 21 (01:24:17):
After part that, the mental part of it, the mental
part of getting moving on from well, I.
Speaker 3 (01:24:26):
Don't know how. I don't know how Trump handles anything.
I mean, he seems to be he seems to be
the way he handles most things. He seems to be
very thin skinned, takes slight quite quickly, and very retribution focused,
and and perceives any slide anywhere. I mean, even when
(01:24:48):
people from his initial inauguration that he thought people were
making out that less people had turned up to the event.
I mean, he has an extraordinary way of coping with things,
quite a paranoid way.
Speaker 21 (01:25:00):
He doesn't have any good word for anybody. He only
thinks of himself. And I'm drading him having another four
years and there if he wins. I mean, his wife
even after this, never come back to him. She's only
had statements, so she didn't even front up. I think
(01:25:22):
you're either going to see a different a different president
for the Beta or that would be the end of them.
Speaker 4 (01:25:33):
You'll pack it up.
Speaker 3 (01:25:37):
I don't think it's in his nature to peck.
Speaker 2 (01:25:38):
It in.
Speaker 21 (01:25:40):
Now. But that's only what we see with because.
Speaker 3 (01:25:42):
He's help been on revene. He's help been on revenge
for losing a guy and literally convinced everyone they had won.
Then he lost it, and he's still can try to
convince people they had won because of phony voting booths,
I mean, cheap as creepers. He's help been on getting
back into Parliament or into president the president.
Speaker 21 (01:26:03):
There's an old saying about getting back on the bike.
Is he I want to be able to get back.
Speaker 4 (01:26:07):
On the pike.
Speaker 3 (01:26:10):
Yes, we're no fairly soon. I mean all those memes
talk about the US, the final series, the conclusion, Boy,
that was a surprise. What happened on the weekend total Yeah,
I know what you'd call it, But there we go, Marcus.
Two items that are frustrating, hard to find anywhere in
Auckland banana flower ice cream from any supermarket and staking
kidney pies and what happened to the dirt to the
(01:26:31):
end of staking kidney pies and some discussion about Trump also,
But yeah, there's no shortage of punditry. Everyone straight away
this will make them the election's over now, all sorts
of stuff. But you know, things happen, People's opinion change.
(01:26:52):
There is no guarantee that pundits are correct. But you
know it's so indecently quick to have their opinion on
what was going to happen. Now this is meant, this
is the election over. This election just starting all that
sort of stuff kind of based on nothing really, I
(01:27:14):
guess people it's natural for peoplehen they see something to
try and extrapolate what it's about to happen. Yeah, now
the act calling for TV indead to admit it got
it wrong with host shooting a trump bowl with bug
spray shaped it goes breakfast TV. For God's sake, it's
(01:27:38):
trying to lighten it up. You can't take everything too seriously.
Just because people do something doesn't mean someone's going to
do it. You know, most actions are taken by individuals.
(01:27:59):
You can't see how they've done this because someone's got
to apologize something's on a year or two ago. It's
kind of crazy ev act party. This kind of looks
a bit sort of juvenile. What oh, these people need
to apologize. It's almost like they're saying or something's happened internationally.
We're desperate to get our own take on it. Anyway,
(01:28:23):
I'm getting texts about that as well, which is kind
of weird or weird from this end. Oh, eight hundred
and eighty ten eighty is the number. Hey, I'll tell
you what after midnight tonight, Roman Travis, Roman Travis. Today
was the day tour in nineteen thirty three that Jack
(01:28:44):
Lovelock smashed the world mile record. I just speak that
wasnt scanned over. I'll check that. I'll fact check that one.
Peter Marcus good evening, Marcus. Yeah, Hi, Peter.
Speaker 8 (01:28:58):
Oh he look, just.
Speaker 3 (01:29:01):
Being your radio off there if you can, if you
get your radio.
Speaker 8 (01:29:03):
I thought it was off man.
Speaker 23 (01:29:05):
Almost there we go.
Speaker 8 (01:29:08):
Trump's got a pretty thick high hear me back, but
look got wringing about bread. Now. I going to take
you back to the fifties because I'm an old howler
and there was two types of many bread delivered to
the letter box, which had to cut out for your
bread as well as your silver topped milk or your
blue top milk, or your quarter a pint of cream,
which is. The milk was four cents of a bottle,
(01:29:31):
the silver top milk, but the bread was. There's this
one called Sydney flat, which is a square long bread
which is and the other one was called a chubby,
and there are a nice thick sort of white both white,
same flavor bread, but very very tasty. And both of
(01:29:53):
them would hinge or breaking breaken, breaking half.
Speaker 3 (01:29:59):
Were they rapped.
Speaker 8 (01:30:02):
Just they wrapped a piece of paper that as wide
as a piece of toilet paper at you just round
the middle for.
Speaker 3 (01:30:09):
The handle, Okay, And they were, and they were delivered,
and they were delivered.
Speaker 8 (01:30:16):
I will remember because when I was a naughty boy
riding the bike around, if I was doing skids on
the neighbor's lawn or something and I got told off,
I'd sneak over in the morning, grab their chobby loaf
of bread and hinge it open, break the middle open,
and eat the middle out and hinge it back again
and put it back in their lidle.
Speaker 17 (01:30:36):
Wow.
Speaker 8 (01:30:37):
Wow, Yeah, that's the sort of naughty thing you'd do
as a kid, as bad as naughty as it got.
Speaker 3 (01:30:43):
Where was that, Peter?
Speaker 8 (01:30:46):
There was Mount Eden in those days.
Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
Yeah, okay, you get you get caught in midlife.
Speaker 8 (01:30:53):
Not that I recall, probably did, but not that our recall.
But the beds in the middle was always saved because
you break them into two halves and cut those ends,
and they're both fluffy and they're particularly nice to eat.
But look, I just comment being a fridge guy. Also,
if you don't mind on breads in the fridge, et cetera.
(01:31:13):
And if people back then breads were never in plastic bags,
and of course now they are. And to give bread longevity,
it's better in a plastic bag. But if you keep
it out of the out of the fridge in a
plastic bag, of course it's sweats, as you can imagine,
because it's got a lot of moisture and bread, which
makes it nice and diry, and it will sweat quicker,
(01:31:35):
and it will certainly write quicker. We'll go moldy quicker.
And that's why if you keep it in the fridge,
it will longer. It will last longer, like any bad
it will last longer in the fridge.
Speaker 3 (01:31:46):
But then Fee, it's not going to sweat if it's
in the bag in the fridge.
Speaker 8 (01:31:52):
It's what you're saying, won't sweat as quickly, and if
it does sweat, it won't mold as quickly. Like anything
in your fridge is kept, you know what, it's preserved
better because of the lower temperature. So it is the
sweat coming out of the bread that make to go moldy. Obviously,
you know.
Speaker 3 (01:32:08):
I mean the reason we're talking about this because the
baker Poor Hollywood, from the British Bakeoff. He said the
place the reason you don't store bread in the fridge
is because it goes stale, because it dries out quicker.
But obviously he's talking about storing bread in the fridge
that's not in a bag.
Speaker 8 (01:32:26):
Yes, like anything in the fridge, Marcus, that dehydrates, it goes,
it dries out quicker.
Speaker 3 (01:32:32):
Yes, certainly, Okay, Thanks Peter, good stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:32:35):
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