Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus lush Night's podcast from News Talks.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
That'd be.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
Greetings, welcome, My name's Marcus. Here till midnight tonight. Loose
like a goose. It's finder. There will be medals, one
hopes there will be Olympics. There will be talk also too,
so non curated talk. Anything goes tonight. Hardly surprised about
christ Church. But what a shame I know to say
about that. But it was always gonna happen. I don't
(00:34):
want to get all I told you, so we on it.
But you know, and I guess what happens now with
christ Church and the cathedral because I know christ Church
and I know how vital the square used to be,
and I now even know that they've got things kind
of built around there that it's a dead zone, and
that's got to be rectified. Because if that's gonna lie
(00:56):
idle for twenty years or whatever until they get that
sorted out, then that's got There's got to be some
solution for that. Okay, So yeah, I'm pretty interested in
this because yeah, it's just boarded up and it just
kills that whole central vibe of town. So yeah, goodness
(01:19):
me anyway, get in touch on talking about that. My
name is Marcus Welcome edd twelve. Heartbroken for christ Chich,
but was always going to happen, always too expensive. What
people say too is that after the war in England
that cathedrals were left in pieces for days and weeks
(01:43):
and months and years and decades before they got kind
of rebuilt. But that's fine, but that's England. You've got
major cities with a lot of old cathedrals, and christ
Chich have just got one cathedral. It's kind of right
in the heart of town. It's boarded up. It kind
of divides the town in two and the square is
(02:07):
not good without it. It's not even a square anymore.
It's just kind of an omen's own. I feel quite
strongly on this. I mean, the tram goes through their
ding ding ding ding ding, and that's all good. And
there is the library. They're the fantastic library too, Dunger
that's there also, But apart from the rest of it
needs the kind of the kick, the vitality. You can't
(02:28):
work out what they can do with that there like
that anyway, some heartbroken about that, but I think it's
always what was going to happen. Could have got a
brand new church now, an exciting church that could have
become the focus for all sorts of communities, that could
be done and dusted. But nope, people got to be
in their bonnet and they decided they needed that. And
(02:48):
you know, we are going to stand in some ways
their desire for it. But government's not going to bail
them out. And now they are a hundred million short
with a lot of money, a lot of coin, lot
of dorami. One day there might be some richie that
denotes fifty million dollars some benefitt I don't know who
(03:09):
that is. Though, then who's going to not on the
money to finish the cathedral. I don't know who's come
from christ Chicks that's worth that much to drop a
spear hundi for the church. Don't know who that person is.
Just trying to thank Chris Marcus, Welcome, good evening.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
Evening, Marcus. Hey, listen, I was living in a spirit
when the earthquake hasn't been spent a lot of time
in Cristis and went past it quite a bit. And yeah,
my wife is involved in the Anglican Church and had
a bit to do with the previous Canadian bishop when
the acistors were being made. The guy in the government
who's been very quiet, and I think the media need
(03:47):
to get him on as the Speaker of the House,
mister Jerry Browne. He was chairman and pushed and pushed
of that group rebuilt that cathedral as it is, which
was totally the wrong decision. Was never going to be
enough money, and Brownlee kept pushing and pushing and pushing,
and I think.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
It was really that there was money. Jim Anderton, that
was the guy behind the one and that guy Burden
were all behind reuilding it.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
Yeah, and so it was Jerry he was right, okay,
fair enough, you know, yep, no, no, yeah, yeah, no no,
but that and he had he had plenty to sail
on it. And maybe he needs to go back into
Nicholas office and used police rank as as an m
Peter's been and probably the second behind Peter's in Parliament.
(04:34):
But it's not going to happen. They stuffed up that committee,
made the wrong decision and now they're running for cover.
Speaker 3 (04:43):
And why did they make the wrong decision because they
were looking back, they were looking forward. It was an
emotional decision. They went thinking straight. I'm going back to it.
But it seemed to me because I quite like Victoria Matthews.
She was the the the Anglican forget what it told
made a lot of sense, and I put the people
of Christ It's true to better. But she knew they
had to move on and go somewhere else, and she
(05:04):
was for that.
Speaker 4 (05:06):
H You're exactly right, Marcus. And and the thing is
that the other option of a more modern style, with
with with saving the rose window, that would have worked,
and and and and could have been affordable.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
Yeah, and look, and I'm going to a boy with
a story, Chris. But I happened to be in christ
Church about a month before the quake, and I was
staying close to and I got it once Siday, I'll
go for a service in the cathedral.
Speaker 5 (05:33):
Right, Yes.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
And it was the most sparsely attended, uninspiring, cold kind
of venue and service I've experienced in my life. It
really was not vital. The congregation didn't seem to be exciting, vital,
progressive or anything. It just seemed to be a building
(05:55):
that it had its time. And that's kind of the
That's the opinion I had, because you know, I know
a lot of those charismatic churches have come on since.
But this seemed to be this seemed to be just
there seemed to be no there seemed to be no
need for that building and that venue there.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
Oh. I think you're I think you're reasonally right. I
think it's a it's what.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
Do you call it, white elephant?
Speaker 4 (06:24):
Yeah, not quite. I mean it's been part of crisis,
but but not to the extent of the money. And
you're right. I mean the pression that the older people
they have to put on the six six.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
That's exactly right, That's exactly right. It wasn't a nice
way and also the the interiors was quite unresolved. There
were sort of beams and sort of steel reinforcing going across.
It didn't have that great vast cathedral field that I
thought it was going to have. It didn't. It didn't
have that spiritual grandeur I thought that was going to have.
(07:01):
But anyway, that might have been the day I was having.
Speaker 4 (07:03):
But yeah, just on just one thing before I yeahs
A Matthews. The problem was the typical hierarchy Bancoan church
in christ Church. You know, I know she's come from Canada,
she doesn't know necessary blah, blah bl she's a woman, yes,
I mean, yeah she Victoria. Yeah did I say he
big about you?
Speaker 3 (07:23):
But I'm saying this, probably if she was a man,
she they probably would have received her more positively because
that's always added to it as well, I thought in
some ways.
Speaker 4 (07:32):
But here you go, yeah, totally. And then and then
the Dean, you know, Dean big, he he you know,
he always heart and the sleeve. But he even supported her,
and I mean he denied. That's grown up in that.
So that's the But I think it'd be good to
get Jerry Browlely's comments from someone.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
But the thing was to the rest of you know,
it's to my eternal anger that the christ Judge never
thought were the rebuild We're going to get a rapid
train system going in there before they did the rebuild
of everything. But christ Church is going great guns. The
own thing that's letting christ Judge down now is the
fact that the stadium I think's in the wrong place.
It's going to kill that part of town, and that
(08:12):
they bothered with that cathedral because that's now going to
be a dead zone for twenty years.
Speaker 4 (08:17):
Yes, yes, I think I would. I would. I tend
to agree with you one hundred percent there.
Speaker 3 (08:24):
But nice to hear from you, Chris. Thank you. Keep
it going. Oh weight one hundred eighty eight ten eighty
nine nine ducks. And I know people are passionate about that,
and I know also too it was a site where
people died too, which adds extra symbolism and extra freshan
is at the right word, I feel it's not, but
you know how it is. Keep it going for what.
My name's Marcus hid On midnight tonight, Billets Marcus, welcome,
(08:46):
good evening.
Speaker 6 (08:47):
Yeah, I'd like to talk about the rebuild of the cathedral.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
Yes please.
Speaker 6 (08:52):
As a twenty twenty the Anglican Church was worth two
point eighty seven billion dollars. Now with that amount of money,
surely they can do something with the cathedral without the
taxpayer is getting involved.
Speaker 7 (09:09):
When you say that.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
The Anglican Church internationally.
Speaker 6 (09:14):
New Zealand, New Zealand Anglican Church twenty twenty is worth
two point eight seven billion.
Speaker 3 (09:20):
Dollars And will that be mainly property?
Speaker 6 (09:24):
It doesn't matter what it is they have that whether
they take a loan out to rebuild the cathedral, that
should be up to them. I'm not being picky, but
money is very tight, even with government coffers. So it's
up to the church to decide what they want to
do with it.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
Is there a censor of thought that they will.
Speaker 6 (09:47):
Hopefully they will do, but it's up to them, and
they've got that amount of assets, money whatever. You can
look that up online if you like.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
Oh, I know it's true.
Speaker 6 (09:59):
To say, really the church should be behind it, not
the taxpayer or the council.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
Do you think there's gamesmanship here that the government has
just said no to force the Anglican Church's hand.
Speaker 6 (10:15):
No because a no, because the Anglican they know that
the Anglan Church has the money available to do.
Speaker 3 (10:21):
It, That's what I'm saying. Yeah, so you're saying that
this might be deliberate from the government because they know
the church will pony up the money.
Speaker 6 (10:32):
No, no, no, I don't. I don't think why the
government would ever involved in the first place. I don't
know what went on about it.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
Well, obviously the Anglican Church wouldn't pay that money, it'd
be my take on that. But so, I like, this
thing's so complicated. It just goes on for so long
that people forget the initial discussions. Craig Marcus welcome.
Speaker 8 (10:56):
Good ething he has to go in this evening.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
Good thank you, Craig.
Speaker 8 (11:00):
My view is what was probably whenyone else. But I
remember right back at the start the Anglican Church which
came out and said it was too expensive to rebuild,
so they weren't going to do it, And then people
in Christ's got upset about it, so then they've decided
to do it. But they've been mucking around for ages.
But the thing I find funny is just around the corner,
and I think it's Bebetos Street, there's another there's a
(11:21):
Catholic church there. It's about the same size as the
Anglican one, and the Catholic church over in Rome is
paid for the entire thing to get rebuilt from the scratch.
So the Catholic guys are rebuilding there one. Why count
the Englican ones built there?
Speaker 3 (11:37):
I thought the Catholic church was demolished they built something
somewhere else. I thought they took the insurance company money
and went I thought, and they've gone on a different side.
Am I wrong?
Speaker 9 (11:45):
There?
Speaker 8 (11:46):
From what I heard from friends that lived down there
at they rebuilding the church back to the former glory.
But it's all getting paid for off by the Catholic
Church and none of it's coming from the local council.
And you think, well, Anglican Church being quite a large
church throughout Europe, why can't they afford to pay for
it themselves. I mean, yeah, I mean.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
I would just I just don't know that that. I
wouldn't mind fact checking that, okay, but that's just because
I haven't seen that.
Speaker 8 (12:16):
Yeah, I've got friends that live there, and that's what
they reckon. But I mean, you know, it does. They
could be misleted, but it does.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
It does say they've decided to rebuild it on the
same site. Well, I don't know if they're rebuilding. I
think it's going to be a different build.
Speaker 8 (12:34):
Yeah, but at the end of the day, I mean
that's from what I hear, they're going to rebuild it
to the same sort of glory what it was. But
it's about the same size as big as what the
other England one was. But you think, well, if the
cast Church can rebuild theirs, why out the England and
rebuild their one. It seems a little bit of a
double standard, I think, But I don't know. It's I'm
sure I forgot that one day, but it's taken long
(12:55):
enough anyway.
Speaker 3 (12:57):
Well, that's exciting to hear that about the Catholic Church
because I thought they'd rebuild something somewhe because it was
a beautiful building.
Speaker 5 (13:02):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (13:03):
Nice last night on the year mhm, they're.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
Saying they will rebuild it. On the same side, it
will be the first, the first new Catholic cathedral built
from scratch in New Zealand for more than one hundred
and twenty years.
Speaker 7 (13:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (13:19):
It's pretty impressive.
Speaker 5 (13:19):
Eh.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
It looked like it was aamu stone. It was that
white stone. It looked like marble, didn't it. It was pretty
churchy looking obviously.
Speaker 5 (13:26):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 10 (13:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (13:27):
It was really really fancy and really flash inside the
church too, like with all the layer. It was really
really impressive because I went there many years ago for
a friend's wedding and it was you walk in and
you just go wow.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
That It says on and Z story the diocese would
sell off land it owned in the central city in
order to fund the cathedral build yep, so that does
make sense that the money is coming from the town
as well, So that's probably not a bad thing. Yeah,
justause that one has just sort of been forgotten about
(14:02):
hadn't it was that beautiful white double towered cathedral. The
cathedral they said sacrament is what it was called.
Speaker 8 (14:08):
Yeah, everyone goes on about the England one, but I
always forget the one around the corner of Abados Street.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
But surprisingly this is just recent news. It's only April
twenty twenty four that decision to build on the same
site was made, So that's still a lot. That's still
a long time since the quake, because I mean that
must have they must have had robust discussions as well.
Speaker 8 (14:26):
Yeah, I think they probably had to probably consult all
the different powers to be whether for funding and stuff
like that. But but yeah, I don't know. I sort
of reckon they should just leave, like make the other
one safe was what it is, and just leave it
as a memorial to what happened in Crosshatch. But I mean,
it's like the price seems to be going up and
up and up, and it's like how much do you
(14:46):
want to spend on it when you probably could spend
that money more. A lot of money from the councilor
and rate pays Co probably spent on other things that
are probably going to benefit a lot more people are
in Crossache.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
But it'll be clime to agree with you, apart from
the fact that dominates the square, and when it's just
there as ruins, the whole square kind of becomes it
loses its viatality and verve because it's almost like it was.
The whole square was the front of the cathedral, and
that was an important part of it. So it's just
it's just deadened now. And I don't quite know. I
(15:17):
don't I don't know. I can't work out what's gone
wrong there. There's some terrible buildings on the other side,
like the post office building and a couple of bric
a brac stools that sell old belts and stuff.
Speaker 7 (15:26):
But the.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
Square used to be the hardest soul in the city,
and now that it's gone, the city, I reckon is
struggling with the lack of it.
Speaker 8 (15:37):
Yeah, so maybe the rebuilding that would probably give a
lot of hope to people and crushes. You can overcome
all kinds of disasters, really, but.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
There's a price on that, and clear the prices too.
I don't know why the Anglican Jews doesn't pony up
the money, but maybe that's a discussion for another day.
Maybe they're keeping their back pocket for other settlements. Ben Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 5 (15:59):
It was I like this old church. You know, we'll
past the quite often. It's a shame. That's the ruin
of the day on the tax payer. The taxpayer don't
know in this church. In this church is expecting us
to fit the deal for something we don't known. We're
not going to get any benefit from. And you've got
mos up north that are falling over thousands of people
(16:20):
losing their jobs because the power, you know, it's going
to set a president. If you're going to bow the
church at you need to all these other companies up north.
So I agree with what the government's does.
Speaker 7 (16:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
And I don't know the discussion to the government of
head with a church in the background either.
Speaker 7 (16:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
When I found some other source of money, whether the
Anglicans themselves are going to fund it.
Speaker 5 (16:45):
Yeah, but like eighty million bucks on saying we don't
even know the is you know, in this times, when
you know we're every dollar with fineling seems to be dead.
It's just ridiculous.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
Okay, are you in christ Church, Ben?
Speaker 5 (17:01):
Yeah, I live in Crosses, but I trove around for work. Hey,
I'm just one more thing though, I'm then if It
was the other day down on Bocale of work and
I popped into this on the spot twenty four hour
shop thing gets out white Kiwi on the main road,
I think it's d Street and I walked in the end.
(17:21):
I've got they're installing this new eteam. It's a bitcoin
a team. You can go depositive money to this a
team and buy a cryptocurrency for it. So it's quite
big up north and Awkwandan that, but it it seems
like it's it's starting to take off down in the
Vocalo with you too.
Speaker 3 (17:41):
Sure I've never once had a discussion with you went
in Vicago aut bitcoin.
Speaker 5 (17:47):
Yeah I'm not from down there, but no, I was shocked.
I was like, I think we've got one intronal or
doing crosses. But yeah, they didn't realize it was going.
You know, they were putting at MS and E really
you know.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
Sper okay, I appreciate that. By the way, the street
down mccago day they were filming the new series of
the Undtables, which I thought was exciting. Quite a big
camera crew too, six with steady cams and stuff. So
there you go. It must be doing a New Zealand
version it might be part of the British version. It's
not a show I've watched, but people saying to every
(18:21):
passion about it, it's people that have travel dating. I
think that's the way it works. Go figure, I'm seeing
medals before. But we're talking about the christ Church Cathedral
and the christ Church. And I always find these discussions
interesting because it seems recent, but it also seems long ago.
(18:43):
You know, I often go to christ Church with the kids,
and I'm often because you go to christ Church with
the kids, the kids won't know about the quake, and
and it's amazing modern and christ Church because what you
forget over time because it's well, I forget because it's
(19:04):
so much news that's come from christ Churchen that at
the time there was so much confusion about what happened.
But you know, wandering around christ Judge had sort of
explained to the children what happened and how the people died. Wow,
you remember, and it's amazing just how many people died
(19:26):
at that CTV site and the other PGG building. I
mean just and you go to that site, the CTV
in they've got a memorial there and it's growing back.
But wow, I mean, you can't help but feel wandering
around christ Church that that sort of is the that's
(19:48):
the spot where you really really feel it, and you
really feel that That hard to describe, but you really feel
that that's a I guess you feel that that's a
solemn and a sacred place. I guess that's the situation.
It feels like that seems to be the the place
that really symbolizes the quake, and funnily enough, I shouldn't
(20:11):
say funny enough. And I remember the first time I
went back to chrost Each after they built that the
memorial on the bend of the river, and how unbelievable
that was, and what a beautiful thing that was, with
the white stone the river going. But subsequently, when I've
gone back there, it doesn't seem to fall in my
path as much. I haven't ready gone back there to
look at that. Don't know why. Just seems to be
slightly out of the way and actually just by the way,
(20:32):
just as a cobby, not wanting to listen to any
calls or opinion. But I was fortunate enough today because
Martin Phillips from the Child had died two weeks ago
and his funeral was today and the funerals in Dunedin
(20:55):
and I just happened to be somewhere and I saw
on Facebook some and said, here's the live feed of
Martin Phillips's funeral, and I watched it, and I watched
it for two hours, and it was absolutely move and compelling.
You a lot of the people involved in all that
sort of stuff, so it was great to see them
and see them speak so unbelievably from the heart and
(21:16):
so unbelievably oh just so concisely and errodotally the people
that spoke. But what I thought, it's sort of one
of the few times I had ready sat down and
watched an online funeral, and what a remarkable facility that
(21:38):
is now on the back of COVID that that's become
a thing. So if there are people that you kind
of know and you think, well, I don't really want
to front up to that funeral, because there's probably people
that know that person better that deserve to be in
the room sitting there attending that there's you know, there's
people closer and people need to be there that you
can just go in and do that. I thought it
(22:01):
was absolutely remarkable, were very moving, unbelievably moving, but even
that movement and that emotion, you know, just even watching
on an iPhone, it all came through. Anyway, Yeah, ready
move because right at the end there's his father who
was the minister, was there involved and came and spoke
as well, and at the funeral of his son. So anyway, hey, look,
(22:28):
chee is not happening tonight. There's been an incident at
Auckland Airport. It looks like a Quantus flight and has
had engine problems and has shot flames. There's lots of
delays for arrivals and departures while the runway is cleared.
Some domestic air flights have been turned back to the origin.
(22:52):
So obviously the situation on the tarmac and planes can't land.
You might be there, you might be near there. Let
us know the situation on the ground. Apparently the international
flights are circling. Last time this open, what was it, Dan?
They went to Hamilton, remember that, Graham? AND's Marcus welcome?
Speaker 10 (23:12):
Yeah, Hi reading some seth rora. Apparently on tonight I've
been out was the being of chills. We went to
the funeral the last few hours.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
Graham, that didn't you hear me? Did you hear me?
Just talk about that.
Speaker 10 (23:31):
Yeah, yeah, you saw it on there. Oh, I was there,
it was under there.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
It was unbelievably moving. So yeah, it must have been very.
Speaker 10 (23:39):
Special, mostly intense, and particularly while tears were streaming down
my face during the playing off lou Reed's Perfect Day,
Perfect Day, and there were a woman crying towards the end.
It was very intense. And yeah, I've spent with the
band just thanking and for looking after Mardices and I
(24:02):
go back to fifty years and hears one of my
best mates now, Graham.
Speaker 3 (24:06):
What was staggering to me is that there were a
couple of things and indulge me. While I talked to you,
there was the four band members from the band from
the last twenty years that incantation that were on stage
talking about him.
Speaker 9 (24:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (24:20):
But the other tragic thing for that was that the
band is now over because he was the whole key
to the band, wasn't it. So it was a real
sense of loss for those people their focus for twenty
years because he's not going to be replaced, is he?
Speaker 9 (24:34):
Oh?
Speaker 11 (24:35):
No.
Speaker 10 (24:36):
Iron standing is that he had a couple of Malvins
who had actually been completed and probably only come out
at the end of the year posthumously, and he was
working partway through some other stuff. I don't know what's
going to happen to his house. I didn't get a
chance to meet his family. I know his daughter of
Rachel pretty sorry, it's sister Rachel pretty well. And I
(24:57):
spent some time with the band tonight at one of
the local bars and the Octagon. That's where I've been
to the last few hours, and just got to the
door home. Wonderful service. The photo was one of my favorites,
left us on the front of the service pamphlet, which
I've got with me, and I got quite a few
(25:18):
beautiful memories. I never knew Martya's famous dressonal this new
martive to human being and I felt very provide for that.
And I've known the band, the current band for a
number of years in a wedd lot of their names blood,
I don't need to be wonderful people, and they already
took wonderful musical care of him, and.
Speaker 3 (25:39):
His sister spoke beautifully. That passion of the family came
across as well. The sister's eulogy was extraordinary.
Speaker 10 (25:46):
Uh well, the overriding things for me, and actually Marcus
was the bad taste jokes, and Marty could have been
a world class send up comedian instead of a musician.
He had a really dry, almost warped head to humans,
about as bad as me than that Regain. And we
used to plasically take the mickey out of it each
other and it was all a good chaste and he
(26:08):
was said, one of the best friends I've ever had.
Speaker 3 (26:11):
Okay, Yes, and just back to the Aurora Graham driving
in from Bluff to night at seven o'clock, there's something
right to the west. I presume that's a start A
planet looks like a star. But it's a gorgeous clear night.
Speaker 10 (26:26):
It is a good, gorgeous clear night here. I'd here
at South and ned and I was walking down Bayvy
Road and I was looking towards a southern cross and
I thought like to see a bit of a faint
glow between south and southwest.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
Nice to hear from you, Graham. Thank you so much
for colling. So according to the what's that word Dan
about the takeoff? According to the train spotting facebook page
situation facebook pages, it is a rejected takeoff the situation
they are saying it's a quantus flight. There's a lot
of flames. You can do that. See the visual. A
(27:03):
lot of debris on the airport. This is just screenshots
I'm seeing from faith book. So whether it's birds strike,
I wouldn't be surprised. No one said it's a Canada goose.
I would be surprised about that. But seems to be
under control and resolved, that's what I can tell. They
say they're currently sweeping up the runway off the Quantus
(27:24):
seventy three seventy engine problem and shot flames. So you've
got more information about that now. It's on the Herald's
Breaking News. Multiple domestic intestial flights have been forced to
divert after reports of debris on the runway and they're
just posting Twitter. But if you bring us up right,
they're going to get your actuality and your audio into
(27:44):
their news bulletin. That's always important. So that's what's That's
the only situation I've got now, So get in touch
by name's Marcus Hddle twelve oh eight hundred and eighty
ten eighty nine nine two two text. They'll be Meddals tonight.
(28:05):
They probably by them on temu by now can you
thought it was a bit ram of that BMXA to
say that his medals falling apart. It's everything to win
a medal, but it's another thing to complain about the
quality of it. Whan jeep is. I mean, they're not
going to get used much, are they. They're just sitting
(28:26):
your sopped. I think, famously get in touch Marcus till twelve.
But if you're meeting domestic flights, they might be a
while because they've been turned back. Graham Marcus. Welcome, Good evening.
Speaker 12 (28:39):
Marcus, and good evening to you is always a great show.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
Thank you, Graham.
Speaker 12 (28:42):
I just I just thought I would tell you. I'm
a tour guide and I've been down to cross each
a lot over eighteen years, and I always saved my
groups to the old cathedral and the new cathedral. The
information people at the new Cathedral will inform you. There
are two political people who have in their view and
(29:04):
Hindrance as Jim Anderden and the others a guy Chep Burden.
The delaying tactics, I have been told are huge, and
you know the whole thing has been stifled, as I
have been told by their approach. And I think if
you go down a new check with the ladies or
(29:28):
the guys who are the information people at the new cathedral.
They will openly give you the whole background.
Speaker 3 (29:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 12 (29:38):
Does that make sense because.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
They took it to the High Court and the Supreme
Court to stop the demolition. I mean they were very determined,
weren't they.
Speaker 12 (29:45):
They were indeed? Now which are those? I do not know,
But if you go down and anybody goes down and
they check with the hosts and the new cathedral, they
will be very open. And you only need to mention
who are the political people Burden and Anderson I have
been told, And.
Speaker 3 (30:05):
Who do they say they speak for the church or
they spent by the way, thank you for your service
as a tour guy. Do they speak for themselves? Will
they speak for the church?
Speaker 2 (30:14):
That marks?
Speaker 12 (30:15):
I couldn't answer one hundred percent. I would say it's
their own view on their perception of where the church
should be rebuilt or not.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
Ye okay. And everyone mocked that cardboard cathedral. I think
it's pretty damn fine.
Speaker 12 (30:29):
It is absolutely fine. And when you go in and
have a look at it and me as you have
obviously done the tubes the whole lot, it is just
so pristine. And to think that they can take seven
hundred people in there at once is just amazing.
Speaker 3 (30:42):
A great light, great kind of uplifting space. I guess
over time the computer the cardboard tubes will dilaminate, but
certainly they've got ten years out of it. It's going great.
Speaker 12 (30:51):
Guns what I've been told when I've been down now,
and it was only recently, it's going to be turned
into turned into an ordinary church, not a cathedral. But
I think you will find it was a Japanese who
designed it following the Japans birthday, and it's been built
(31:12):
for a very long time. And if you get to
talk to the ladies that are down in there, if
anybody does, or the guy that's down there, you will
get some fabulous information. But when I was heard about
the history of it, I thought there are two political
people who should take some of the consequences.
Speaker 3 (31:28):
I think Jim Anderson has deceased Graham. But thank you.
Five away from nine, my name's Marcus. Welcome reports the
runway is back open again at Auckland the airport. It
was a rejected takeoff where it's I suspect birds strike
and I suspect Canada geese. Because if you're going to
(31:49):
if there's gonna be one bird that's going to be
there because it's kind of marshy. It's going to be
a Canada geese, isn't it. But I mean, I'm not
aircraft investigates probably shouldn't be speculating on things like that.
But it seems weird that the last time of playing
down it was bird's stroke. Why would this be any different.
(32:10):
I don't know what to happen to people on that flight.
They'll be in for a long night, won't They have
to go through customs again, They'll be really what you
don't want to do is q for three or four hours,
stay in the motel back on the flight tomorrow. Code
share code share. We are talking the christ Church Cathedral.
It's been very good to talk back. We've talked about
(32:31):
it for days and weeks and months and years, and
every time it comes back up, you've got to kind
of reluin the backstory of how we got in this mess.
And it's not straightforward. I only imagined the arguments and
the dissension and discussion that it's caused within christ Church
(32:54):
because it's very personal to people there. So, yes, where's
the cathedral. A lot of people that think of cathedral
is what makes a city. There's a certain amount of
tree to that. The women's K two five hundred women's
semi final has just featured with Lisa Carrington Alisha Hoskin.
Speaker 13 (33:16):
The Germans closing in on Carrington and Hoskin, but they're
going to be safe. They're going to make it through
to the A final, but they want to lay down
the marker. Crossing the line first in semi final number
two New Zealand followed by.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
Germany, the Netherlands.
Speaker 13 (33:32):
They've got their sunnies on the braided hair for the
New Zealand crew of Carrington and Hoskin and the black
shell part powder its way down ver Semant to give
the Kiwis the victory in one minute thirty eight point
five to.
Speaker 3 (33:46):
Two bit of intel four four drama on the tarmac.
Now back on flight to Napier, Wellington, over two hours late.
Fuel and debris from Quantus engine took well over an
hour to clear. Goodness Napier et cetera. Napier Airport has
agreed to stay open to receive our flight. Otherwise it
would have been canceled like a few others. Fun night
(34:06):
at domestic Airport Aukan Airport thanks that put it texted through.
That's good to tell to have. Now another phone ranger
is emailed. Won't say their name, Marcus. I believe the
Quadas aircraft VHIDVZW encountered an issue while attempting takeoff where
the engine was literally scraping across the one way and
the casing came off. The flames that were seen would
(34:29):
have been the engines scraping against the runway. The debris
have been removed and flights done out of parting and
arriving soon have it on very good sources. That's the
situation there. So I didn't say that it was a
Canada goose because every time for me, if there's anything
that's a situation like that, I always think Canada goose
(34:52):
because that'll stop an air if it goes through your casing. Oh,
by the way, a few people are looking for a
rabbit hole to go down tonight. I spent some time
last night reading. And this will come as no surprise
to some of you, but I spent a lot of
time last night reading about and studying. When I say studying,
(35:18):
I don't mean studying like in a library at a
master's level or anything. I mean thinking about and looking
at something that the ist has made of revery big deal,
and that is this is very interesting, by the way,
I'm sure to some of you. This is the Voyage
manuscript voy in ice H, voy in Iceh. And it's
(35:49):
an old manuscript from the fourteen hundreds that was bought
by an American in nineteen twelve, right, and to book
about two and fifty pages long, done on vellum, which
is sheepskin, I suppose, and it's all been scanned and
(36:11):
uploaded so you can see it all on the internet.
There's a PDF of all of it, and it's full
of words, and it's full of drawings and diagrams, and
no one has any idea on what any of it means.
(36:33):
No one knows what language it's about, no one knows
who's written it. It's one of the greatest puzzles of humankind.
And there's all sorts of people, cryptologists, code crackers, spies,
they've all gone to study it and they reckon it
destroys all the careers because no one's got a clue.
But the amazing thing now with the internet, you can
(36:54):
go online and you can look at every single page
of it. I spent hours looking at it today it's brilliant.
They've got no idea where it's from. And not only
not only they're not know what language it's in, but
the the spread and the occurrence of the different characters
(37:15):
doesn't resemble any other language. So I reckon what they
might have done is they might have made up their
own language then scrambled the language with each words to
make it further more difficult. So why they would know?
Who knows? I mean, who knows what was going on
in the fourteen hundreds. That's when people were spinning round
and round in circles and things. But you go have
(37:37):
a look at that if you get a chance. That's fascinating.
So that's something that's occupied Weday had one of those
days that we occupy with all sorts of stuff. But yes,
anyway here or midnight, minamers, Marcus welcome, Oh eight hundred
eighty ten eighty nine two nine to two de text.
Anything else you want to talk about, that'd be nice
(37:58):
to hear from you, but yeah, be in touch, oh
eight hundred eighty e ten eighty And we also took
about the christ Cathedral and this they get a better factor, right.
I don't think much is going to happen with that,
and I don't know who from Christchurch is like a
dot com and that's got billions and billions of dollars
(38:18):
to pay for the repair of a church a or bitcoin.
There might be a bitcoin multi millionaire or something who knows, Marcus.
When you go to McDonald's, or a large milkshake mix
all the flavors yum. Thank you for that. And a
lot of people sending texted about the christ Chuchee. A
(38:40):
lot of people think that needs to be restored because
it's iconic to the christ Church skyline. I think that's
a reason to save something because it's iconic. The need
to make sense as well. dB Marcus, Welcome, good evening.
Speaker 7 (38:54):
He did late to the story about Auckland Airport. So
I've brought a flight radar and it looks like a
starburst there at the moment was aircraft going in all
directions as they're trying to up. It's five lined up.
Nobody's still stuck in any holding patterns. They're all being
(39:14):
cleared out. But I did notice the end and I
must have had a trouble at tower on it. Maybe
x christ Change did hide rats tracts before getting onto
the onto the ground. Okay, the weather that two is,
there's no problem with the weather there, so it must
have been a little bit of.
Speaker 3 (39:35):
A could that be related to could that be related
to walkland? And they're holding? Pattern was full, it was bound.
It was bound for tod on, I was it.
Speaker 7 (39:49):
There's no reason for it other than and of course
when I was looking at its data, it gained height
at one stage, which is quite unusual. Sola, who flies
those sort of machines? And he just said that technical
problem to appear.
Speaker 3 (40:05):
A was he annoyed that you rung him?
Speaker 7 (40:09):
No, it's only nine thirty. I don't think he goes
to bed. I don't know when he goes to be.
I don't care. One of my children so he can
do is do what he I'd blay like for them.
Speaker 3 (40:21):
Anything else from you, No, that's.
Speaker 7 (40:27):
I'm going to blow my own. I'm trumpet here. I'm
three days into a new career, not but coin. Yeah,
three days into being an old age pensioner.
Speaker 3 (40:38):
Oh goodness, how's that going for you?
Speaker 4 (40:42):
So far?
Speaker 7 (40:43):
It's boring.
Speaker 14 (40:49):
I only have to one complaine.
Speaker 7 (40:50):
My gold card hasn't turned up yet, so I'm gonna
have to ring up Winston and let's go next.
Speaker 3 (40:55):
What do you hope to achieve with it? What are
your KPIs.
Speaker 7 (41:00):
I hope to live for at least another five years,
So my five year goal is to be alive.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
Okay, good luck with that, DV keep us informed. Twenty
six away from ten j JJ Marcus, Welcome, hij.
Speaker 15 (41:13):
Marcus Marcus, good evening. Hey, just quick a few seconds.
Hats off to all our girls bringing in the medals
when New Zealand day do better than the men.
Speaker 2 (41:22):
That's right, And now.
Speaker 15 (41:25):
The main topic is I don't know any listeners out
there who have noticed that on their petrol gauges. You
all know, when the prices were high, we filled up
with whatever, forty fifty dollars and you know the lights
on your display. They do what they have to do.
And recently the price has petrol gone down, right, So
(41:45):
you put the same amount of money in, but you're
not getting the same amount of petrol. I want to
know if any listeners are having any similar situations.
Speaker 6 (41:53):
Now.
Speaker 15 (41:55):
I tend to go for the high, higher quality petrels.
Am I allowed to say the name on here?
Speaker 9 (42:02):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (42:02):
Please?
Speaker 15 (42:04):
So you're looking at vps at any again, So those
are consistencies that I've noticed of high quality, but the
petrol lights just don't seem to move. And so what
I did? I ask one of the four quarter attendants
last week? I said, Hey, you know, the last few months,
I'm trying out the same amount of money. I've been
(42:25):
coming to you the same station for how many months?
Speaker 3 (42:30):
Now?
Speaker 15 (42:30):
I don't get this. I'm getting half the amount of
fuel showing up.
Speaker 6 (42:34):
Why is that?
Speaker 15 (42:35):
Have you changed the formula or something? He had to
smile on his face. I said, can you talk to
your boss?
Speaker 2 (42:41):
You know?
Speaker 15 (42:41):
And he had the sort of grind and his body
language sort of listening, Oh, I can't tell you, So
who's I mean? Obviously with a petrol car, Hybrad is
not going to tell you anything. And he listens out
there in a similar situation. That's all I wanted to know.
Speaker 3 (42:55):
Are you putting a fixed number of liters in and
it's registering least? Is that what you're saying correct?
Speaker 15 (43:01):
Exactly same amount I've been doing for the last eight,
eight months, ten months now it's showing less. And I'm
just really curious. This is not the first.
Speaker 3 (43:11):
Time we've had that might be parallax, that might be
parallax there. That might be just your ability to read.
It's just a gate. It's just a bar that swings
around the hemisphere, right, is that right?
Speaker 15 (43:22):
No, I've got to digital one, you know, up to
date digital one. So it's a here and it's very
very good car. And I've done a lot of road
touring as well like you, so you tend to know
how much money is going to move those lights and
I always keep all the.
Speaker 3 (43:44):
Only way it would it would not move it as
much if they reduced the price of Elita. But I
think they're very well regulated with the price admit with
a waiting measure. People come around and check on them.
Speaker 15 (43:55):
Yeah, well I thought that's what I thought. But just
feel there's something cheeky going on at the moment that
nuns h you know, bringing bringing to the table, and
so the price goes down and you feel, okay, I'm
thinking a lot more vigital to display on my segments.
The segments hardly moved.
Speaker 3 (44:15):
It's like, ye, but how much does it come down
from three? How much is the percentage? Does it come down?
Speaker 15 (44:23):
So it's almost half Marcus, It's really strange, And.
Speaker 3 (44:29):
Is the petrol price halved? Is the petrol price halved.
Speaker 15 (44:33):
Well, petrol prices are low. You know, there used to
be two dollars ninety, right, and all that sort of thing.
Now it's you can get up for a dollar seventy
and all that sort of stuff when you drive around.
I'm not sure what the petrol people are doing. I
would like some shed some light on that, if anyone
has a chance. Might take some time, though.
Speaker 3 (44:56):
Because I don't think that. I don't think the petrol
jockey's going to know much about what's tapping a head office,
are they?
Speaker 15 (45:02):
Oh, they probably don't want to know, Marcus. No, I'm
really curious. This is not our first time thing. Even
last year I noticed this phenomenon. So something's put in
your diary.
Speaker 3 (45:16):
Why don't you fill it up? What do you filled
the whole tank up?
Speaker 4 (45:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 15 (45:20):
Well I could do that. But what I've discovered is
you increased obviously the mass of your car, so about
obviously you know fifteen percent is going to burn off
just lifting the load of the tank. So I'm one
of those people. But I've had the camp for four
years now. I know what forty dollars does, and I
know what twenty dollars does or fifty for example, But.
Speaker 3 (45:42):
The price haven't halved. If it's gone from two ninety
to one seventy, it's not halved.
Speaker 15 (45:46):
No, it's not half, but I would actually I was
getting more bangs on my buck when the price was
higher for some crazy reason. I get the feeling some
formulas being changed, that's all. I'm a little bit suspicious.
Speaker 3 (46:02):
How's that working out?
Speaker 16 (46:05):
You know?
Speaker 15 (46:05):
It's like memory score. You got big musally bars and
now they make it look big, but it's not big.
Speaker 8 (46:10):
Remember.
Speaker 14 (46:12):
Kind of like that.
Speaker 15 (46:13):
A bit of a brain teaser going on. But if
anyone out there has got some knowledge, I'll be interested.
Speaker 3 (46:18):
Thank you, Jay. Do you want to speak to Jay?
Because psychologically I find that quite fascinating. I'm not quite
sure why. I don't think it's gone down that much.
Here's what the text have said in order cut him off, Please, Marc,
(46:41):
is that guy said a dollar seventy? No way, cheapest
news in is around two point fifty. So yeah, I
don't think that it's decreased that much. So I think
that's where he's wrong. I don't know, because don't want
to sound check your privilege, Lush. I got a fuel
card for it, so I don't check. I'm just filling
in on the old end dead man we go, so
I don't check the price of it. It's one of
(47:01):
the things I laugh at to worry about, so I
never look. But you only thought it would be up
and down ten percent? Cut it off, please, Marcus. That
guy said the price is one dollars no way cheapessons
ended is around two fifty for ninety one one seventy
elater ha ha ha. Where does he live? Alaska has
(47:25):
dropped around forty cents this year, So from two dollars
ninety to two dollars fifty, it's not that much, is it, Marcus.
I don't know if any petrol price which has gone
(47:47):
down from two on ninety one seventy all the pumps
I've seen around two that is Mary get in touch
by name? Is Marcus welcome? Hitded twelve. You've got anything
to talk about him if you had anything to say
about him, But if he thought it had dropped so much.
But he's clearly got a run rubble or who is
he getting it? I hope he's not putting diesel and
(48:07):
there's car Maybe he's changed. I don't know what tip
ning ja Marcus welcome.
Speaker 14 (48:16):
Hey, Marcus, how's it going good?
Speaker 5 (48:18):
Thank you ja.
Speaker 14 (48:19):
Yeah, I was just thinking about what the previous polo
is going about. Yeah, that that one seventy is a
bit outrageous. Yeah, yeah, I think the lowest we've got
down in Wellington is probably like two forty two. That
was the packing say voucher. That's probably the cheapest we've had.
(48:43):
But I kind of see the the idea that he's
where he's coming from, Like how a lot of the
different companies that are making the prices go up, but
the packages that are actually all like like the ten times,
how that's become more expensive.
Speaker 3 (49:03):
You're still yeah, I know, I know, but he's paranoid
because you can't just restrict how much guess goes in,
because that's a real serious thing. You can't skimp on
what's aleater.
Speaker 14 (49:15):
Yeah, that's that's that's the problem with what he was
saying about it like there's always checks and balances, the competition,
there's other companies who are checking other companies, that's whatever
they're doing.
Speaker 3 (49:30):
Yet we're where the warning belt went off for me.
If he's actually if he's actually having arguments with the
people behind the tell about how much his petrol is
when they I mean, they could do without the grief
with someone saying, oh, it's not as much as it
used to be, what are you doing? What are you
doing with the petrol? When that could be if he
gets quite heated about that, that could be quite frightening.
Speaker 17 (49:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (49:52):
And I don't think that the people behind the count
have any idea.
Speaker 3 (49:56):
No exactly, They're just trying to say, well, yep, sill
have a couple of two kitkits for a dollar, thank you, Jay.
He's talking about diesel. That was up to two eighty
hours down to one seven. We didn't say diesel, did
he He didn't mention diesel. But understand now copy that
was he talking diesel, But they ever said diesel, never
(50:18):
said diesel. Well, how many times this commony said journey
with the old, with the old, kier and cheap as
he comes to journey, they're behind the journey. At the
end of the journey, my word of the Olympics. What's
the moment of the Olympics. So they've got a moment yet,
have we probably some on Biles I think with their
(50:39):
tumble I mean when I said tumble it on the mat,
I can't think of the moment of it. The sprinting's
been all right, but no one's done like a Hussein
bolt bow drawer. Any great celebration. You're not ever quite
sure what the moment has been. I suppose it's the
guy the shooter from Turkey that did it so old
(51:02):
school with the hand in the pocket. I guess that's
been the moment. Marcus. First though, that Jay Biz scares
at BP and Z. Why don't you fill a twenty
letter container and see what you get your muppet from
(51:22):
Big g G. It's always an escalation to call someone
a muppet. I always find that one of the most
offensive terms. Your muppet always good too, when someone put
some meme on Facebook or something with the Muppet movie.
You know, it's always always works well. That one always
sort of say I'm not going to say what the
things you do for because it's always a road, but
(51:43):
you know what I'm thinking. Nine from ten. If you
don't an old das that doesn't look happy, the old
Gold Coast coach. They've been hammered forty four zip by
old Cranulla Dan, it's Marcus, welcome, Marcus.
Speaker 14 (52:00):
How are you man?
Speaker 3 (52:01):
Good Dan? Good Dan? Good Dan?
Speaker 9 (52:03):
Thank you?
Speaker 14 (52:03):
Ah I just hate that.
Speaker 2 (52:05):
I couldn't believe O petrol maynt. I listened to that call.
Clearly he's got a late model hou and I they
all run on petrol. He's stated petrol several times. He's
he's lost in La La Lando.
Speaker 3 (52:19):
What's happened has been so well? I don't know, Yeah, because.
Speaker 2 (52:23):
But the main point I want to get onto it
about tonight is I think Lydia Coe, she's got a bronze,
she's got a silver, she's going to get only three
back going into the last round. And she is a
phenomenal golfer. And you know, for the first five years
of her career, ten years of her career, she could
only draw the ball. Well, now she can cut the ball.
(52:43):
She's thinking, and that golf course sets up for her,
and I think, I think, well, she's going to win tonight.
I've I've got a real hot feeling.
Speaker 3 (52:49):
Eh, Hey, she got another round to go?
Speaker 10 (52:51):
This is it?
Speaker 3 (52:52):
Four rounds? Was this the last round?
Speaker 2 (52:54):
Ladies golfers? Three rounds?
Speaker 3 (52:56):
You sure?
Speaker 2 (52:57):
Yeah? Well, I'm ninety percent sure on the LPGA too,
are ladies golfer's only three rounds?
Speaker 3 (53:03):
I got to my producer Dan, you know that she's
on that spreech down for the round as she I saw.
Speaker 2 (53:09):
Oh god, if it is for it's four round, that's
even better because it gives them more chance to chase that.
She's only three.
Speaker 3 (53:15):
Back, eh Dan, How old is she? That idea would be?
We used to Dan call her Dan twenty eight. I
think she's twenty seven. She's still unbelievably young.
Speaker 2 (53:28):
I've got a funny story about Lydia. I used to
play golf at Poo Pookie Golf Course in Auckland, where
and I worked there, and that's where Lydia started when
she was twelve years old. She has coached up there,
and she was the number one amateur in the world
when she played there. And she's just a phenomenal talent.
And she's a prauer kiw yeah, no.
Speaker 3 (53:48):
I think and look, and she said herself too, and
she every time she's always spoken to the media, she
speaks with quiet determination, and she herself has said that
she wants to set I think she'll get it.
Speaker 2 (54:01):
I think she will too. She's only three back. She
was seven back going into last night. She had a
phenomenal round, which means she's got her eye and she's
she's she's worked out. That course, I reckon it's going
to I can't wait. I can't wait. I'm going to
stop and I can't wait to watch it.
Speaker 3 (54:18):
Better than work it, better than sitting in your car
looking at your gay Jay Dan.
Speaker 2 (54:24):
Late model Hyundai DOLLARSA.
Speaker 3 (54:28):
Well, I don't want them to be wrestling that. I
don't remember to be wrestling the people in the gas station.
Speaker 9 (54:33):
Because trying the hardest, be working for you know, probably
not help exactly, not a lot more than minimum wage.
They always there when you need then good people, and
he's harassing them for the price of petrol.
Speaker 3 (54:45):
And they also get docked with the people that drive off.
And remember those stories, some of those. And he's in
there saying that your weights and measures have changed. Oh far,
far out, far out Brussels sprout. That's the word I
hope you're going to say. Nice to hear from you.
Twenty seven. She always seems like she's been around forever,
Lydia cour. I always get a shock when I see
her age any who. Of course, these days I suppose
(55:08):
a lot of people zoom into church. Don't they never
need churches? Now you do it at home. On the
old Zumaruni can't imagine it's the same, but just putting
it out there. So things have changed. Been a long
time ago. Now lot can happen in thirteen years with technology,
So that is something you might want to mention. Also tonight,
(55:29):
my name is Marcus Hitdle twelve o'clock. A bit of
everything tonight, So if you want to round something off,
be nice to hear from you. Also too, highs and
loads of the Olympics. No loads. I just think it's
been sensation. I didn't watch any of the opening ceremony.
I'm not saying that as a hire a lobe, but
just to I wasn't in front of a TV to
see that. But everything else I've seen has been magic.
A few sports to duds, but a few sports are
(55:50):
really really good. Skateboarding I thought no skateboarding was fine.
Skateboarding was slightly disappointing, and the freestyle BMX, but we've
got the breakdancing coming up. Love the rock climbing, love
it all. I love trek and field. I love a
false start. Favorite things the false start. They rather they
slow down, look up at the screen. There's someone with
(56:12):
a clipboard, comes across, tap them. Love it diving leaves
me cold. Can't we get the point of diving? But
I reckon I can judge it pretty well. You just
get the swing of it after a while.
Speaker 9 (56:26):
Don't you know?
Speaker 3 (56:27):
That's not that rhythmic gymnastics. Neither here nor there. But
people are into it. Good on them, not hurting anyone?
Speaker 5 (56:35):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (56:37):
Sport climbing? Oh, here we go, this is good. Ooh
swimming the sewer swarm, that's great. Even I enjoyed the triathlon.
I think we've learned a lot, haven't we. That Greece
is the first team to go down the river, that
(56:57):
the metals are made from part to the Eiffel Tower.
There'll be a good learning curve anyway you want to
talk about that. Also too, in the christ Church Cathedral.
The other thing that christ Church has got the challenges
reinvigorating the inner city because after dark there's not much
(57:18):
happening there. So I don't know how you resolved that
square cause the cathedral sort of boarded up and sort
of looking half finished, which it is, recks the vibe
a bit, kind of divides the city in two bits.
(57:38):
One part of town where the rest of the little
Regent Street, that place they like, so, yeah, there you go, Marcus.
I don't know if you saw the news article day
about the American scot that showed his bronze meddle and
how it was changed color. It said he gave it
to friends to where over the weekend. I would have
thought that bronze against skin oxidizers, so therefore it discolor
the metal. Surely the news and the person. Surely the
(58:00):
news and the person knew this. It surely shows their
intelligence not to know this. I tried not to be
too judgmental, but I thought the guy thresht is metal,
Marc is sorry to be a pain and send another email,
but I thought I'd send you let you know that
(58:21):
this you might want to tell someone. I applied for
a path on the fifteenth of July and just got
an email to say it's been sent. I paid the
standard feeds taken over three weeks, just in case people
think they need to pay four thirty for the urgent fee. Marcus,
if only I could watch Lydia in France and having
(58:43):
difficulty seeing any golf or any kiwis on free TV. Oh,
this person's in France. Go mark on the computer. As
you would expect. The coverage is of many local competitors.
(59:04):
Glad I found news talk provide adding some live commentaries.
Go Kayaks day by the way, all bar about one
lady's golfers over four rounds. Try to buy a local
corner of Sky, but account because the phone table zoned
in Z and you can't access skygoll Gold commentaries because
about his own catch twenty to Cecilia, why don't you
(59:26):
go along to it? Are you in Paris or just France? Paris,
France landa romance film, Marcus.
Speaker 18 (59:34):
Welcome to Marcus Hilts in the Olympics. I think we
can we can handle amazing spectacles and medals, but we
can't handle or just middles, but we can't handle have
some really amazing spectacles and no medles. I think we've
got to have meals, you know what I mean, Like
(59:55):
we couldn't live that embarrassment down, you know. But I
want to get to the food climate that I think
is one of the most phenomenal displays of human ability.
And I'd like to see your comparison made, you know
how sometimes they comparison like a Formula one car and
a motorbike and a kit or you know, a race
(01:00:17):
horse and a runner or whatever. I want to see
the takeoff or the acceleration comparison between one hundred meter
sprinters and the climbers, because I mean, they look phenomenal
the way they get up the wall. It's just look
at it, and I think, I try to imagine myself
and my most extreme physical potential, and I can't even
(01:00:39):
comprehend keeping up with, you know, like being able to
do half that pace.
Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
I only learned tonight that the wall comes up from
the vertical five percent, so you're actually coming out backwards
from very hard it's harder. Yeah, and you and I
know that we use our arms too much. The leagues
would learn too, did Jillian? That starts shaking, because that's
what happens with climbing. Your leagues go, well.
Speaker 18 (01:01:04):
I mean you imagine if you crouched down on the
ground and you jump up as high as you possibly can,
neither you r I I think I can safely say
could could even get close to one single one of
their dumps. They're doing it multiple like how many individual
steps from one handhold or foothold to another are they doing?
(01:01:27):
All about that wall? You know? And they're doing it
at that past. It's I think it's actually a much
more impressive thing that most people look even looking at
it and being impressed, as they probably are. Yeah, I'd
love to see that comparison though, that if you could
(01:01:48):
have them side by side to gale and show, you know,
the difference in acceleration of the mark between those two
hundred readers and the speed climbing.
Speaker 3 (01:02:00):
How far they are the fifteen meters up? Do they is?
But found them?
Speaker 18 (01:02:05):
But I I mean that I think like a lot
of the pace and one hundred meter run at all,
and it's in the final fifty meters I think they's
or sixty meters or so. So I think if you
could have them both at first fifteen meters, I think
would probably. I think I think we'd all be quite
(01:02:28):
surprised at how long it took the the sprinters to pull.
Speaker 3 (01:02:34):
Away, no doubt that much. I wonder how the gymnasts
would go on the wall too, because they're pretty agile.
Speaker 18 (01:02:42):
Probably quite good good.
Speaker 3 (01:02:44):
Thing to start mixing them up, wouldn't it. Thank You're
nice to talk nineteen past ten, Marcus. One of the
best inventions watching the diving is the camera which drops
as and with the same acceleration as the diver or
the divers days of the frame for the entire dive,
including below surfers entry. I haven't seen that. I've seen
how they've done the stop gap, and you see the
different ones of it. I haven't seen the drop camera, Marcus.
(01:03:08):
My fuel gauge determines the amount of additional kilometers based
on its previous driving usage. For example, if I've been
driving around town, the Klumter gauge for new petrol will
appear less on the fuel gauge. Oh, however, I've been
driving around open road, my kilometer usage will appear higher
on the fuel gauge. It's interesting. Wow, it's gonna take it.
(01:03:34):
But to get my head around that. Okay, So some
fuel gauges might show efficiency as well, would they, Marcus?
I understand the Anglican Church, Jones, the christ Church Cathedral,
as you mentioned there, with billions, they should pay for it.
Three instatement open up their pockets of cash, not blood
(01:03:56):
of Kiwi's generosity, chairs Nick Marcus. When ten gets to half,
it will evaporate faster because of air. I don't think so.
I think it's sealed back at you. My name is Mark. Welcome.
The only minor quibble I have about the climbing, and
(01:04:19):
this is a personal quibble. I'm only speaking for myself.
I've seen several people that appear to be the coaches
of the climbers, and they have those giant holes in
their earlobes. There was a thing for while and people
don't even know what they are. But people put to
(01:04:40):
of thumb sized kind of rings in their earlobes and
stretch them. Wow, I've never felt the love for that.
I've always looked at those people, what were you thinking?
And when out of the box? Thinker of people are
doing stuff that's interesting like that. But those things, I've
(01:05:01):
never thought they looked any good on anyone. But that
seems to be a thing in clobe. Have they put
rope through it? If there's some sort of connection there.
I've seen several people and each time I sort of
recoil back. Why would you do that to your ears?
(01:05:22):
But it's always a thing. It's always been a thing.
I'm always surprised. You see more and more people doing up,
more and more people you do see people doing always think, wow,
that gave me a shock. Don't even know the name
of it. Are they called sleepers?
Speaker 10 (01:05:34):
Done it.
Speaker 3 (01:05:35):
But there's are big ones like two cents across, three
cents across. You stretch your lobes.
Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (01:05:44):
Now with the bouldering light lead bouldering, the climbers have
come out, get this, the eighth finalists. This is about
to happen. The crowd have got given them a standing
ovation and they're all in their shorts and their jackets.
But they're all got binoculars, so I presume it's of
course they haven't seen before. They've got the knock us
to look up and see where they're going to put
their handholds. Pretty geeky, but pretty delightful. So yeah, that's
(01:06:08):
what they're going to do. And it's there aren't obvious handholds.
Most of them are like half spheres with sapherical indians
in them. And they all go to the wall at
the same time, which is interesting. They're running at the wall,
they panic, they're looking, they're pointing, they're helping each other out.
No they're not. They're planning and visualizing climbing up and
(01:06:32):
doing their handholds of how they'll go up it. They
must get to look at for thirty or forty seconds
before they go back out there. And look, honestly, you
want to watch this. Forget the radio. This looks like
it might be quite exciting. Let's be on channel Paris
eight or something. This is the rock climbing final. There's
no key with in this. There's three rock climbing different disciplines.
There's bouldering in speed climbing, but there's this one which
(01:06:54):
is bouldering lead something like that. You've got to get
right to the top with one go and there is
a bit of a rope on that that comes a
bit of surprise to me. So you must put yourself
on there where they carabina, is that right? And then
you go up that way? So yeah, And they've got
their monockers out there looking at the top of the
binoculars to look where they're to put their hands, and
(01:07:17):
maybe they hide them so they can't see the other people,
because surely they'll be an advantage. If you go last,
you might not get to see the other people go up.
I didn't see this last time. Some I'm fescinated by,
but huge audience. The Paris love rock climbing, but don't
they because there's always French people. There's like that weird
go with along here that climbs buildings in that tightrope
(01:07:38):
walker guy. He's almost a bit of a climber, isn't he?
That guy? That weird guy that went across the twin towers.
I think we're French. Every passion about that sort of
sums up their individual fleair. I think that's what they're
all about. I only got a couple of minutes before
the news. Jamie, you got anything, You got anything to
say that's of interest?
Speaker 15 (01:07:56):
Oh, a lot of interest.
Speaker 16 (01:07:57):
But I just want to say, how good is it?
You know?
Speaker 17 (01:08:00):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
Great twelve twelfth capitor.
Speaker 6 (01:08:04):
I'm a big per capitor man.
Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
No, no, Jamie, that's I reckon, that's like desperate.
Speaker 17 (01:08:10):
No, no, what I'm trying to say, Marcus, I was
a per capital man.
Speaker 18 (01:08:14):
And twice then.
Speaker 17 (01:08:16):
All the nations, all the nations below us.
Speaker 15 (01:08:20):
My god, I think we've done bloody well.
Speaker 17 (01:08:23):
Continue to do well.
Speaker 3 (01:08:24):
Yeah, but remember it's not you and I out there.
They are individuals, aren't they.
Speaker 19 (01:08:30):
And if you look at the middles, if you go
into really cratylo detail, ye're the girls.
Speaker 15 (01:08:34):
The girls have done well.
Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
Yeah, okay, I'm hearing you. I'm not a per capita guy.
I like Fiji forgetting the silver. I think good on them.
I like Saint Lucia. I think it's delightful that story.
I almost want to go to Saint Lucia. On the
back of that. You probably go there people running around
really fast. So I'm going to beg on Saint Lucia
because they top all the per capital ones with that goal.
(01:08:57):
Did you get a silver from the two hund Also
big on India because they don't get much and they're
really populous, the most popular nation in the world world,
So how are they feeling. Of course, they don't sekew
that well in the Commonwealth Games either, and they're about
a third that there might be half the people in
the Commonwealth are from India. But yeah, I just think
(01:09:19):
everyone good on the wall, getting across there, up and
down the wall anyway, Marcus. The speed climbing wall is
a set specification worldwide. The only variation is the friction
coefficient of the hand footholds. Complishing walls are slightly slipperier,
again closely regulated. The skill is thereforetally dependent upon technical execution. Well,
(01:09:43):
how come they're looking at it like it's the first
time they've seen it? Oh, it's not speed climbing guys,
I'm not talking about speed CB about the boulder in
climbing lead. Marcus, I agree about the whole in the
earlobe thing. I wonder if they realize our ears keep
growing as we get older. Marcus, I'm definitely with you
on the earlobe loop. Can't imagine what I would what
(01:10:08):
it would be like to get hooked up on something.
My eyes are stinging just thinking about regards Judith.
Speaker 13 (01:10:13):
What an incredible achievement. They are six meters ahead. Oh,
they're flying the Kiwi crew. There is no stopping Carrington
and Hoskin. They are heading for the finish line and
they are miles ahead of the opposition. Carrington and Hoskin
a boat length and a half.
Speaker 3 (01:10:34):
Lead New Zealand Gold.
Speaker 13 (01:10:40):
The golden time continues for Carrington and Hoskin. Two golds
in two days for the dynamic duo, and the legacy
of the goat in the boat just gets bigger by
the race. Carrington's tally is now seven gold medals and
(01:11:02):
Hoskin has two.
Speaker 3 (01:11:04):
Who did a couple of times today the goat and
I think that's going to get a fair airing. But
that was an extraordinary performance. Water is slightly choppier, but
they just smoked them. And because for the other crews
it was a real race, there was not much between
all the others. They really were else don't know who's
second and third. I think that's a photo provisional finish.
They got it BF but Harrick, Carrington and Hoskin were
(01:11:26):
just miles ahead of them. It was it almost looked
like a mismatch, but the rest of them were recompeted
and very much the same. What's that about. They were
just all even apart from Carrington to Hoskin. They just
went for it. So yes, they're just heading now to
the pondtoon to come up. There will be a medal ceremony,
well sometime they will be. They're going to go and
(01:11:47):
the whole Kiwi crew there or there to meet them
on the pond tooon. I don't know what their impulsory.
It'd be curious though, what there are heart rate gets
up to. For that, I wouldn't mind seeing some chucking
the old heartbeat monitor them to see what that gets
up to, because it seems as though it's a short race.
But boy boy, they're going for it. They're now out
(01:12:08):
of the boat and long hugs of each other, long embrace,
ten twelve second embrace and the double tap on the
back and they just look ecstatic, absolutely ecstatic. But if
you just join us, they just another goal there. And
how many is that now?
Speaker 9 (01:12:22):
Five?
Speaker 14 (01:12:22):
Dan?
Speaker 3 (01:12:23):
Four or five? Isn't it five golds? I think?
Speaker 2 (01:12:27):
Is it?
Speaker 9 (01:12:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:12:29):
Two for them and one in the rowing and one
on the sevens and one and the kayak to the
kayak race with old Butcher from Alexandra. But that was
an unbelievable performance. Six gold, six silver, two bronze. Yeah, anyway,
get in touch if you want to talk. My name
is Marcus hill To have also got the consolation final
(01:12:51):
for the men. If you want to we will have
that before too long. Also, oh eight hundred and eight
text get in touch Marcus, till at night. Anything else
you want to talk about You want to comment on
that too? It's pretty amazing, Aaron, Marcus were welcome.
Speaker 17 (01:13:07):
Hey evening, Marcus, how are you good?
Speaker 3 (01:13:10):
Thanks?
Speaker 5 (01:13:10):
Erin, Well, you should.
Speaker 17 (01:13:12):
Be better than good. Marcus. I'm over the moon, almost
crying having along listening to race on the radio.
Speaker 3 (01:13:19):
In some ways, it wasn't as exciting as last night
when they got that gold because it was such a
tight race. It was screaming at the TV last night.
Tonight it's slightly different. I guess I probably knew how
good they were.
Speaker 17 (01:13:30):
Again, Yeah, there is an emplement of that, but I
just hope that every New Zealander really appreciate the term
that goes in the boat almost sounds great, But Lisa
is not just the greatest. I mean she's our greatest
Olympian of all time. And I made that call myself,
(01:13:51):
possibly even on your station prior to the Tokyo Olympics.
She's always been my pick as we'll go down as
our greatest Olympian, and that's what we're seeing right now
is and you think of all of our history and Olympics,
she is the pinnacle. She is unreal and that's why
she smoked that field tonight. It's just wow. I'm just
(01:14:13):
blowing away. And we're so lucky to have that in
our lifetime that we get to see it and see
such great coverage of just I'm an I'm.
Speaker 8 (01:14:24):
In awe of that this year.
Speaker 3 (01:14:26):
Nice to hear from you, Aaron still official top of
the race. I'll bringing the full details when I can.
Johnath's Marcus welcome and good evening.
Speaker 16 (01:14:34):
You know mate, how you we lift oneingson on e
island flight at seven o'clock, got to Auckland and circle
for forty minutes and then went back to Ringston because
we are on shore.
Speaker 19 (01:14:49):
And the great crew on the innis and playing said
they would all buddy step up and do overtime because
the the ins and thiland they could stand down on
that and would stay in oneings in a game for night.
And they said, nope, we'll get everyone back to Auckland.
And were just landed and just got out of your port.
Speaker 3 (01:15:07):
Oh that's exciting, okay, wow.
Speaker 19 (01:15:10):
Yeah, so we all the crew on board the energine
plug on a big round of the floors for putting
in the extra work, you know.
Speaker 15 (01:15:18):
And that's good.
Speaker 3 (01:15:19):
Yeah, great, So tell me something. Did they tell you what?
Did they know what was up when you started super?
Speaker 10 (01:15:25):
No?
Speaker 16 (01:15:26):
They they just said there was an incident on the
runway and walk. So yeah, that's all we that's all
we heard.
Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
And where did you go?
Speaker 10 (01:15:33):
Run?
Speaker 2 (01:15:33):
And around?
Speaker 3 (01:15:33):
You went run and round above the right tire above Reglan.
Speaker 16 (01:15:37):
I had an a mile seat I didn't actually see
and where it were?
Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
So did they give you? Did you did you get
off the plane when you did you get off the
plane when you got back to Wellington or turned around
and straight back out?
Speaker 19 (01:15:49):
No, No, we're probably there for about three quarters of
an hour.
Speaker 20 (01:15:52):
The refueled, you know, for the mucking round, and we're
just able to stretch your legs on the plane and
and and then took off again and back to work
on here.
Speaker 3 (01:16:03):
O gude, that's been a long time. John, that's a
great And you're across what happened. There was debris on
the runway from a Quanta's flight that was that was
a what do they call it dan? A return rejected takeoff?
Speaker 16 (01:16:17):
Okay they decided just heard it before when I jumped
in the car and someone was missing about it, so
you don't know anything.
Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
So oh, great to hear from and John, and thanks
to Kevin crew. That's good stuff. I appreciate that. It's
hard to I've got to mention the gold medalist Lisa
Carrington and Alisha Hoskins, so I apologize for Michigan name.
She's the new gold medal winner. It looks like the
youngest young rooster from Great Britain's won the climbing bouldering.
He looks ecstatic, looks about twelve, but they're all cheering him.
(01:16:47):
I didn't see him go up. I don't see how
high he went, but I don't know if he got
right to the top because I was watching the Lisa Carrington.
But he looks kind of the standing ovation and he
looks speechless with the excitement of all Maybe yeah, so
that's the situation. He's the climbing champion, looks overwhelmed, completely overwhelmed.
A twenty eight past leven. My name is Marcus hid
(01:17:08):
Midnight tonight. If you want to be a part of it,
eight hundred eighty ten eighty nine two nine two to text,
get in touch. Have you got anything to mention?
Speaker 21 (01:17:16):
Say?
Speaker 3 (01:17:16):
Talk about here to the end watching the bouldering Dave
will be watching that. But it seems like the brick
guy has won this. I don't know if he's one
that I appreciate he has won that. Did you see
how high he got on that?
Speaker 5 (01:17:29):
Dan?
Speaker 3 (01:17:32):
Okay, okay, I would have liked to have seen that.
So I can't do the replay because I'm a chipid
memories full of the sky. Anyway, if you want to
talk on here eight hundred eighty eight day, we will
have the middle ceremony before twelve o'clock just to confirm
gold for New Zealand and the women's K two which
(01:17:57):
is only just concluded just ten minutes ago. So it's
sort of been a habit for getting golds in the
last hour, which I've enjoyed greatly over the last nights.
So yeah, he has been exciting to watch Lisa Carrington
Lisha Hoskin with the two. So that's a situation there.
(01:18:19):
And the Brett has won the gold in the bouldering
and looks genuinely elated and overwhelmed. Looks about eighteen, looks
for every young so I'm good on him. But get
in touch if you want to. Oh eight hundred and
eighty teny and nine two nine two to text. Toby
Roberts is the guy's name, very British outing name. He's nineteen. Yeah,
(01:18:44):
well I suppose I've been climbing since the four. Very
very good Marcus. We would due to fly out from
Auckland to one at eight pm. We were waiting to
text down the one way. I was watching the hostess
suddenly chatting. I said to my husband, and something is up.
After forty five minutes, the captain said there was debris
(01:19:05):
on the one way and we can't go yet, we
will soon. Our hostings were lovely and we all had
a neat whilst they got sorted safely in Wellington. Now
that's a great outcome. So certainly some flights have been
disrupted tonight too, where we still don't quite know what
happened to the Quantus flight. JT. It's Marcus, good evening
(01:19:27):
and welcome.
Speaker 9 (01:19:29):
Marcus.
Speaker 11 (01:19:31):
There's been so much misinformation talked about the ALTRICTI sector.
It's yes, I lled. Some people are saying on this
station that there's a shortage of eltricity. Yes, whereas it's
market failure. That's the way the market's market dynamics. We're
(01:19:56):
experiencing market failure. There's no shortage of power. There's been
no shortage of power apart from a couple of brownouts
for about fifteen years now, agreed, the only time people
lost powers due to the weather and floods and stuff
wiping out their local local lines.
Speaker 5 (01:20:18):
But yeah this.
Speaker 11 (01:20:21):
I heard someone talking to Heather today and he was
only he summed it up really well. The market is
designed for a continuous supply of gas and now that
that has ended, they need to they need to fix
it up. Yeah, the cathedral. I think it's just the
(01:20:46):
whole heap of posturing going on at the moment.
Speaker 3 (01:20:49):
I agree.
Speaker 11 (01:20:49):
You know that that guy Mark Stewart, you know what
he's worth. You know, he's worth over a billion now
because of his father, Sir Robinson Stewart. Remember he had
P D L. Yes, and he sold some dog food
(01:21:13):
company a few years ago for about a building. So
I would say that and he will get the government
to put in, and then they'll get some other buillionaires
from around them put in. That'll probably get it over
the line. But they need to reduce the scope of work.
Speaker 3 (01:21:38):
So how do you reduce the scope of work?
Speaker 11 (01:21:39):
Then, well they've probably gone for the goal played design.
Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
Yeah, it's but it's just but it's a it's a
stone building on swamp, you know. I mean you've got
some You've got some fairly complicated scenarios there, because your
subterranean stuff's got to be coded that that's that's where
your cost is, isn't it.
Speaker 11 (01:22:04):
Yeah, But I think all the foundations of any been done.
Speaker 3 (01:22:07):
Yes they have.
Speaker 11 (01:22:10):
My mother's actually on the Senate and that she hasn't
been giving me any any information. But I've got properties
that they'll be able to sell it may they may
have to leave it sitting there until Labor gets elected again.
Speaker 3 (01:22:25):
Why have they been slow to sell their properties because
they haven't thought that was what they've wanted to do.
Speaker 11 (01:22:31):
Well, do you remember that Victoria Matthews, yes, one from Canada.
Speaker 3 (01:22:36):
Yes.
Speaker 11 (01:22:37):
The judge ruled that she was giving fouls and misleading
information when he said that the Anglicans couldn't sell other
properties around the around Canterbury so offset the cost of
repairing it.
Speaker 3 (01:22:53):
Okay, And what was and what was the reason for
saying that?
Speaker 11 (01:22:58):
M hm, Well, she didn't want it to be saved.
But because if you look at all the buildings, the
historic buildings after the eth quake, there was only one
or two of them that weren't wrapped in plastic. And
that to keep the pigeons out, they'll probably cost them
about five millions just clear out all and that.
Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
Yeah, don't disagree, but people.
Speaker 11 (01:23:21):
Want people want them. They probably want the cathedral to
be really flat. Well, all they need is get it
to a a weather type stay. Don't worry about ren
saving with power or if you do use umber. There's
lots of different things that can be done, even if
it takes twenty years.
Speaker 3 (01:23:41):
Makes sense. Thanks JT. Pen with thirty six paramount of
thirty four, you wouldn't have predicted that as a close game.
Two minutes forty six left to go? Wow, I think
the good players are on for Penwrith two clear is there?
(01:24:02):
I haven't seen the others there, but yeah, there should
have been a walk over anyway, so two point four
to six to Paramota be desperate and they've got the
ball too. They might go the droppy on this one.
It's hope that happens. This could be an exciting finish.
I could monster them over and go the droppy. Are
(01:24:23):
they going to go for a kick? Now they're gone
for a review? Peter Marcus, welcome, good evening. Hey yeah mate,
good Peter.
Speaker 21 (01:24:33):
Yeah, i'ming you from Australia. Last lay o, good on
you mate? Yeah may I just watching the game. I
turned off because back pain normally back paramount of But anyway,
they turned around the last five. I go outside the
win and I go inside and watch them lose every game.
I've been watching this one. He foty tips. Now I'm
(01:24:54):
trying to be a great eight year old grandson. The
point Chips is killing me.
Speaker 3 (01:25:00):
Might go to Golden point two. The guy's got the
kick out in the front of this is over. It's
Golden Point. You got money on it?
Speaker 21 (01:25:08):
No, No, I've got a family for keeping you over
night year old grandson's trying to be me. Yeah, it's sad.
I know. I'm trying to know when you see a
lot of.
Speaker 3 (01:25:18):
Yeah, I gave up on mine. Too many worries and
my team. I gave up on that. Gatherson's going for
the kick. Now there's only one from seven for the
from tonight, so his boot's not that much for he's
checked it. Oh, gathers it off the park. There was
a disaster. One of the worst kicks of all time.
It was embarrassing. Anyway, that's it for me, people. I
(01:25:40):
should be back on Monday with no Olympics.
Speaker 1 (01:25:44):
For more from Marcus Slash Nights, listen live to news
talks there'd be from eight pm weekdays, or follow the
podcast on iHeartRadio.