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 at.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
B This is at Hittle twelve. My name's Marcus eight
o seven.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
How are you?
Speaker 2 (00:15):
What's happening?
Speaker 4 (00:16):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Get in touch? You want to be part of it?
Hittle twelve oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty and nine
two nine to two to text, Hey, loose like a goost.
It's Friday, the Friday free for all.
Speaker 5 (00:28):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
We will end up on Friday Fridays like any other night,
but slightly more free spirited. Yeah, so get in touch
if you want to talk Hittle twelve oh eight hundred
eighty ten eighty. It's pretty much anything you want to talk.
We'll see if we can avoid the B word tonight.
That's been a week of it. Not that that's not
a topic we're talking about, but I don't think it
fits for a Friday. That's butter, So yes we might,
(00:55):
although telling people to avoid talking about butter is like saying,
don't think of an elephant. Just thinks of the elephant,
don't they anyway? So that's that. Get in touch, Marcus
till twelve twelve A rooney, So if you want to
get if you've got breaking news where that's happening. People
doing very well about breaking news last night, letting us
know what's happening. The weather TUN's bad tomorrow apparently it's
(01:16):
the mess of something in the Tasman Sea. So you
don't think the weekid is going to be crash hot.
That's fine though. Anyway, do get in touch you want
to be part of it. I'll keep you updated with
the rugby league too, North Queens and gone ahead over Bell.
The Warrior's just the battle of the people outside the
top eight. This is like ten versus twelve. I don't
(01:36):
know if your rum hues be back anytime soon with
a yeah. If you've ever disicated your shoulder, you feel
quite ginger for a while because the ligaments go with
it always kind of popped up. Did they did a
disco to show as a child. It always felt for
a while it felt you kind of you know what
goes on with it. You never have that confidence again
straight away. Anyway, It's enough for me if you want
to start the whole agendas eight hundred and eighty ten
(01:57):
eighty nine to nine to detect that and we will
end up in the course of four hours. I'm in
charge till Bibo's alive. So that's the situation. And I say, oh,
eight hundred eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two
to texts. You want to be a part of it,
you can sit there. Do you know, By the way,
there's breaking us tonight. Tell us what they're breaking news
(02:19):
is if you're summering, something happens, get straight in touch
with us, because it's always really good to hear that
sort of stuff. I've got three or four topics I
can throw you, but you might have your own topics.
You want to check up the mast, fly up the flag,
whatever that's called. Yeah, do that if you want to.
And I've got, as I say, i've got some stuff
to talk about as well tonight a promiser, So yeah,
(02:44):
do get in touch. As I say, oh, eight hundred
eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two to text.
Just so you know, And I don't know if you
would find this interesting or not, but I was never
a big wrestling fan. So some of you might have
spent your life watching ww if is that what it
(03:06):
was called, and you might know something about that. But
if you want to talk about what wrestling did for you,
because I know people are quite passionate about wrestling. I'm
happy to talk about that. Yeah, I'm not highbrow, I'm
not lowbra I'm very happy to talk about Whulk Hogan.
I think a lot of wristlers died very young, didn't they.
I think probably seventy one is quite a good age
(03:27):
for a wrestler treat their body like a fun park. Anyway.
I haven't read the full articles about him or what
happened with him, but no doubt we'll get some light
on that tonight. Because the best way to talk about
someone when they die is by the people that are
the fans, and I think we did that with the
Osborne as well. So you got to say about Huk Hogan.
(03:49):
Jump and you will start with you, Dave Marcus Welcome, who.
Speaker 6 (03:54):
Clear was pretty upset because he was good friends with him.
Speaker 7 (04:01):
Pay tribat to him.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
It's just the start from the beginning, a.
Speaker 7 (04:08):
Hulk Hogan.
Speaker 6 (04:09):
Rick Clair was good friends with Olk Hogan. He died
of cardecer arrest. I think probably all the operations and
the bumps and bruises head over the years, and he
was what made what the double, what the wrestling is
today and how it's become so big what it is
(04:34):
now and I think one time they had a crowd
of ninety three thousand.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Years ago. Why are you mentioning Rick Fleet? Did he
say something about Hogan?
Speaker 6 (04:46):
He did, Yeah, he was good good friends, he was
his best friend. Here their rivals and the rings, but
but they outside the rings are good, good good friends.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
Yes, you know he was, Yes, who was? Who was
the great? Have you followed wrestling yourself? I followed over.
Speaker 6 (05:05):
The years, of followed over the years. It's sort of
entertaining and non next Netflix and peers, it's quite can
be quite quite quite entertaining. And because Dwayne the Rock
Rock Johnson, if he grew up in Grayland, says he's
part of the big box of of of the wrestling
(05:26):
of the current some are in high Chief and they
home in the western summers. So he paid tribute to
to whole Hogan too today as.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
Well, was the greatest restorer of all time, rest of the.
Speaker 6 (05:44):
Seventeen times a champion one or few big big matches
over the over the years. Here it was quite yes,
he was quite pay tributed. Even his daughter Charlotte, Charlotte
paid tribute to it to.
Speaker 8 (06:01):
Directly a years look looked up to him.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
Here, Okay, nice to hear from your day. We're going
to be one. But thank you that Pete, Marc is welcome.
Speaker 7 (06:12):
Just teak kids. Just what sorry?
Speaker 9 (06:16):
I was Peter Pete.
Speaker 10 (06:20):
Yeah, officially a bit of an apology to start with.
I was just at the Avenue Path playing doubles game.
Me and my doubles partner Derek, were playing Nathan and
Bodine and I cheated.
Speaker 7 (06:34):
I put my hand.
Speaker 10 (06:34):
I cheated.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
What'd you do?
Speaker 11 (06:40):
Well?
Speaker 10 (06:40):
They they came to me shooting for the black and
I shore behind the d and I knew what was wrong.
I said, no, I'm coming here all the side of
these are the rules, and I did it. And you know,
as I walked out the door, I felt there I
do you take money as well?
Speaker 2 (07:02):
They don't do your means on here? You call them Chao,
text them.
Speaker 10 (07:06):
I don't know who they were. I'm just one at
the pub at the same time as me, and I'm
just hopeful they listen.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
First, what pub was it, Pete?
Speaker 10 (07:15):
The Albany Pub and up Norfolk on there just this
in Albany.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
And what did you what did you do wrong? How
did you cheat?
Speaker 10 (07:24):
So it came they sunk the white ball, and I
was on the black and the black horse in the
pocket behind the D, and I shot behind the D
to win the game, which is illegal. And I told
them I'm older, I know better, and I'm going to
apologize to you.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
It was it was we're playing for money.
Speaker 10 (07:46):
Yeah, I told you, and I walked out. I feel bad.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
Now should you be driving? Are you intoxicated?
Speaker 11 (07:53):
Pete?
Speaker 10 (07:54):
No? I went my hoober, I mean my my Hoover's
drive me home and I just put it right up.
And on the off chance was in the radio, I apologize.
And if I see you guys at the Albany and
I'll bother you guys.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
Brilliant. I like the gesture Pete, bit of a crying drunk,
the way he sounds full of remorse, jeel remorse code.
Good on you, Pete, that's your Yeah, that's the measure
of a man.
Speaker 12 (08:16):
Good on you.
Speaker 9 (08:18):
Kelvin, Marcus, welcome, hello Marcus, Hey gang. I thought that
was a sign of a weak character. Anyway, what do
I rang on here?
Speaker 2 (08:26):
Hang on, Kelvin, don't live What was the sign of
a weak character? Apologizing?
Speaker 13 (08:31):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (08:31):
Everything that he did, that's a big.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
Cool hang on, hang on, Kevin can we take a
weak character to cheat and Paul, but a gentleman to apologize,
wouldn't you say, ah, A little bit wow? Been cool? Okay?
Speaker 9 (08:53):
I rang up about wrestling in the mid nineteen fifties
here in Hamilton before it was called the Tron in
the mid nineteen fifties, at the end of she Picture
Theater on the stage days to have occasionally risk wrestling.
Now the ard ropes and the met and all that
carry on, and that building is where Richard O'Brien who
did the Rocky Horror Show, where he started from company heir.
(09:15):
But for any about that, the wrestling part of it,
I used to go with a couple of mates of
mine because I was in my mid teens inn in
the mid nineteen fifties and one of the great wrestlers
there was a Dutchman called the Great Zorrow. He had
a big mop of blondie hair and a big cape
hanging down like Superman. And in those days in New
Zealand in the mid nineteen fifties, a lot of Dutch
(09:38):
people came here as immigrants. So if they were born
in nineteen thirties or whatever, they'd be pretty healthly now.
But some of them. You may have some listener who
would remember the Great Sorrow and he was very, very good,
But I got disappointed and watching that TV stuff, I
(10:02):
didn't think much of that.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
Yeah, well it'll be diff though, but you know, once
you've been there right beside it, it's probably more kind
of into it, isn't it.
Speaker 9 (10:10):
Yeah? Yeah, but that I don't know any of the
other names, just the Great Zorro. This only one I remember.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
Yeah, because it was quick at the firsties, wasn't it.
Speaker 9 (10:20):
Yeah? Yeah, it was. And then later on in TV
days and probably the early nineteen sixties or whatever seventies,
it got big time, and particularly on the black and
white TV on the matter was cool, wasn't it.
Speaker 11 (10:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (10:34):
It with Steve Rickard and yeah, who was the other compere?
Steve Rickard and Ernie Oh, his son was involved in
TV for a long time, Ernie Leonard.
Speaker 9 (10:46):
That's right. Idea married Chap, wasn't it.
Speaker 14 (10:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (10:48):
Yeah, yeah. I don't know if I say mayor Chap,
but we do. I suppose he was.
Speaker 15 (10:52):
Ye.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
It's always Chap, isn't it, married Chap?
Speaker 16 (10:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (10:56):
Anyway, a married gentlemen sounds well, just sounds old fashioned.
I mean I don't know you really specify their race.
But anyway, Kelvin, Yeah, how can I.
Speaker 9 (11:04):
Speak young fashion when I'm old?
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Exactly fair enough. We won't go changing you. I didn't
have a question for you. What was it?
Speaker 9 (11:12):
Those are Lemonkens?
Speaker 2 (11:13):
No, No, there's something quite pertinent yesterday I had to
ask you what was it about? We're talking about the
Paul and the Flying Oh no, that's what's going to say.
You know Richard O'Brien, yees who they've got that terrible
statue of and Kerry Carey.
Speaker 9 (11:29):
Rower that Yeah, that's that's where it was originally at
the where where that wrestling was, but it's moved in
front of the museum.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
Did you know he had a son?
Speaker 9 (11:41):
Well, I knew that he was married. I think he
lives are Yeah, yeah, I think so.
Speaker 2 (11:45):
Yeah, because in the film festival this year, right, his
son has made a documentary about the Rocky Horror Show
he is That's right, which I think you'd probably quite
enjoyed because it probably has sort of Hamilton in the
fifties and there's probably some footage from there in it.
You might you might have come.
Speaker 9 (12:03):
About once or twice a year. I come across from
here and that, and I think he lives in I'm
pretty sure he lives in Tote wrong. So whenever I
come across, I'm always have a brief chat to him.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
Oh good, okay, were you there? Were you there in
the day throwing Rice in the Rocky Horry Show?
Speaker 9 (12:18):
No, well you see here Rice?
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Have you said? Have you seen the Rocky Horror Show? Calvin?
Speaker 9 (12:26):
Yes, on the TV. Yes, it was quite a good.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
It was a funny old film. It's sort of I
never really quite it sort of started off quite straight
and it never really came to terms with the Rocky
Horry Show.
Speaker 9 (12:38):
What was the name of the actor who did the
the one like the transvest the cross dresser? What was
his name?
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (12:45):
With those teeth? What an actor to those long teeth?
Speaker 9 (12:49):
Well, no, I'm thinking that one of the He had
the fish net stockings.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
Jeepest, creepy.
Speaker 12 (12:57):
He was a.
Speaker 9 (12:58):
Classy looking dude for a man dressed up like a woman.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Tim Curry, Tim Curry Saradin was the cast. I think
meat it's in there as well. But you go see
the doc I think you'll enjoy it. Hold your horsees
dw with you soon get in touch. Marcus till twelve.
It's wrestling, and it's the Rocky Horror Show and it's
we eat our Race's quick? Calvin, isn't he? Marcus hule
(13:23):
Cogan had a Christmas movie Santa Clause with muscles. I
just remember it existed. Good movie, corning, but good watch
for the kids. Don't have to edit to the Christmas
movie just for the young fella. I'm not sure Pete
did anything wrong. I'd like to see Kelvin go up
against Alk Cogan Old Calvinder. Yeah, I don't think pet
(13:46):
did anything wrong either. I reckon if I ran a pub,
I reckon I have table tennis rather than pee, because
it'd be that many fights over pool tables and you've
got balls, heavy balls and sticks. I don't think it's
a good mix in a pub. I think table tennis
would be good. You thought about that. I mean, there's
(14:08):
not much you do with a bat.
Speaker 12 (14:11):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
By the way, I always played Paul. If you sunk
the white, you could only go forward from the D
you couldn't go backwards. That was my rules. Yeah, and
I was always quite tough on that. So maybe some
people got some discussion about that. I couldn't actually understand
what he was saying to begin with, but either we
go Hey, DNI's Marcus, greetings, welcome.
Speaker 17 (14:30):
You know, Marcus, I think if you're shooting on the
d you go forwards, but if it's off the line,
you go backwards. Wasn't that like the nineties rules?
Speaker 2 (14:40):
How could it be off the line? Because can't you
go whnywhere in the circle? I don't know some of
the people will know.
Speaker 17 (14:44):
Anyway, Well, there's a whole It's not what I was
calling about.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
No, that's right.
Speaker 17 (14:50):
And also what I wasn't calling about was Rocky Horror.
But you mentioned that. You know, that's happened in the
time that I've been on hold. And let's not forget
Rob Muldoon.
Speaker 2 (15:02):
Yes, that's right.
Speaker 17 (15:03):
He was adjudicator or the narrator.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
Yes, wonderful, although he was I think he was there
with I think when he was in the Rocky Horror
show was Gary glitterody also when I think, of course
his star fell because he was here being Frank Concur. Yeah,
I think Rob Muldoon was the was the narrator in
(15:27):
New Zealand doing that? Yes, yes, I'm sure of it. Well,
I'll fact.
Speaker 17 (15:37):
The last time I saw Gary Glitter was in the
Foreign Correspondence Club in Non Pain, Cambodia. He yeah, he
ended up there because they had very few extradition laws.
But again that's not my own call.
Speaker 2 (15:54):
No, okay, good.
Speaker 17 (15:59):
I was calling just because it's you know, freaky Friday,
and normally I'm not up this late. But I didn't
enjoy you're a conversation earlier this week about you know,
the older people telling you about Alexa and all the
beautiful stuff that they have Alexxa help them with in
(16:22):
their daily lives.
Speaker 2 (16:25):
Yes, my elector just been auten to it and.
Speaker 17 (16:31):
You said, you know, is Alecta AI? Or you said,
is Alexa AI? Or whatever else like that, And I think,
you know, like a lot of the conversation around AI
that's been happening is like everything is AI, right, Google's AI,
Alexa is definitely AI. It's just what we're talking about
(16:52):
now is these large language models, which are a different
form of AI. But we've been living with AI for
a long time now, so there's the difference in the
conversation about whether we're demonizing something like that GPT or
GROC or whatever like that. It's like we're still living there.
Speaker 2 (17:13):
Anyway, and where's it end?
Speaker 17 (17:16):
Up, it's here to stay.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
I think, oh no, you can't put that genie back
in the bottle. That's gone that. I think we shared
the hard discussions before it started off.
Speaker 17 (17:33):
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah absolutely. But but as far as
artificial intelligence goes, I mean, that's that's Google, isn't that
that's your trade research, that's all artificial intelligence. It's just
the large language models that we're talking about now regarding AI,
and that's the new form of it.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
The most interesting thing I've heard about AI is that
with those large language models, when you put all the
information and they can digest it, they reckon if they
put all the whale songs into it, they will crack
the whales language. Now that would be interesting.
Speaker 17 (18:09):
Is that true?
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 17 (18:13):
Wow, I never heard that.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
Yeah, well yeah, I'll dig out the research and quote
the article, Dean. But that's what they reckon. They'll crack
the whale speech. And that's a big deal. Nice to
hear from your Dean. Twenty eight past eight, Marcus. The
International Pol rule states, if there is a bulk line
side to side, you must shoot forward. What does that mean?
Otherwise you can plan any direction. But it also depends
(18:35):
on how much bigger than you your opponent is If
there is a bulk line, is it just one line? Marcus?
Did you know the Port of Torong is going to
start charging eight dollars to ender the port? So if
you endo the port, you will play eight dollars per time?
(18:56):
Poor company of things are not hard enough. Ports will
make billions, Marcus. Message for Pete on behalf of New
zal We accept your apology.
Speaker 10 (19:05):
Lull.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Could someone tell me what a bulkline is and what
Dean was talking about? A lightline? The rules of pool.
I've always thought it was cowardby to shoot backwards from
the D. Do you call it the D? The circle?
It's not really a circle, it's a semisit What do
you call that part? Have to google parts of a
pool table? Oh, we've got our We've got our exchange
(19:32):
student RUI made on trains, so it's whirred. He's come
from Tokyo to in Vicago. I thought, well, actually, wow,
we're watching train videos. Not much language on his phone.
Speaker 18 (19:44):
A bit and a fresh plea from the New Zealand
Transport Agency asking drivers to secure objects carefully before hitting
the road. Glass tires, haybales and furniture are just a
few of the objects m ZTA has to collect daily
from South Island State Highways. More at nine or go
to Inzidherld dot co dot zed.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
Thanks Tina twenty nine away from Just as far as
we are talking about stuff coming off, the amount of
stuff I find on the bluff Road, you wouldn't believe it.
Found a ladder, I found fishbonds extra the trouble the ladder,
I found the letder I found. I slid down the ladder.
I'd been up pruning. I slid down the ladder and
cut myself quite badly because when the ladder fell, of
(20:27):
course the aluminium letter it had caused some sharp edges
on it, which I've subsequently had to file down. So
if you do find yourself a leadder on the bluff Road,
file it before you write it. Of course, it could
damaged me in that sore part of the hand between
your thumb and your index finger, the web of the hand,
and that's always poor when that happens. Anyway, I love
(20:49):
my letters. When I'm sweeping the chimney yard eer, I
don't know what my favorite thing I've bought would be.
Would it be the ladder or the wheelbarrow? I love
a wheelbarrow. Had to transport a sheep the other day
in a wheelbarrow and that was quite successful with my
farmer mate moving his sheep and he said, I just
(21:09):
put it in the wheelbarrow, which was there, upside down, free,
happy the sheep of the wheelbarrow. So yeah, you just
do so much in a wheelbarrow, mind you. I'll always remember,
and this haunts me. I'll always remember when Prince William
(21:29):
came to New Zealand and he had a meeting with
this volunteer army guy called Sam about mental health, and
in one of the most contrived conversations I've ever seen,
they had them all sitting in wheelbarrows looking like seats.
(21:51):
Do you remember that? Or I imagine that looked terrible. Look
I thought, cheapest creepers. That would be our lowest moment
as a country, to put the air to the throne
and a wheelbarriwer to talk about mental health. I don't
quite know what was wrong with that. Just looked at
it try hard. I thought, I guess if you're a royal.
(22:12):
I guess if I was a royal, right, i'd be
I'm not doing that, that would be me. I'm not
doing it in a world because you have to, Because honestly,
you go to countries that get you to do some
dark things, you have to say, quite, I'm not doing that.
Do you remember it? Do you remember the image? I've done?
(22:33):
Image such for I can't find it. Might have imagined it.
If I have, I'm sorry. If I've a maligned anyone. Yea,
they sat in Wheelberri's as seats. I often thought about
it anyway, be bad if I have imagined it, misimagined
it twenty seven to nine, Marcus, do you have a
(23:00):
Transformer letder the ones that were on the infomercials?
Speaker 7 (23:03):
No?
Speaker 2 (23:03):
Remember that guy had extraordinary genes. So a n Uggies
little guy, wasn't he up and down the ladder? Passionate?
I'm interested in the rules of international pool anyway. What
(23:30):
if someone text I'd take speech over at Peter Jackson
mower any day? What does that mean? There are topics
that I'm just not quite sure what they are. There's
always topics eight hundred eighty nine nine to text. I
brought some of those stupid water drops that they told me.
I haven't tried those yet to make your water taste
(23:51):
more interesting. So I will do that sometime today big
day watching rugby had the Moffett Cup with the Bluff
against the country kids. I think it's all country schools.
Who was there? Woodlands and Tokanui and Wyndham mensies. Quite
(24:12):
a good tournament, actually, Bluff kids did okay. It was
hard to get because of short games, bang bang bang
game after game after game. Hard to get them focused.
I thought, anyway, very pleasant, kind of a day. That
was one of the stalls put on a real nice
chicken vegetable soup with a cheese roll. Thought that was good. Anyway,
(24:36):
That's what my day's been. Vercold this morning. So yes,
do get in touching you on talk mon. Name's Marcus
Hddle twelve. Someone sent me a poem. Yeah, so a
teacher got in touch with me and one of their
(24:58):
children had written a poem about talkback. Very good and
it's just a school kid. I shouldn't say just a
school kid. I don't really know whether they've sent it
(25:18):
to read on air or if it's I've got to
get approval to read it one of my seventh form students.
What I like about the email is she's translated year
thirteen to seventh form one of my year thirteen the
old seventh form students. Because I refuse to do Year thirteen.
(25:39):
One of my seventh form students chose to write a
poem about you, your show and talk Back as part
of his Level three writing portfolio assessment. I thought i'd
share it with you so you could see the impact
you're having on our youth a Katamu High School. It's
an extremely good poem. Steve. Good evening. Oh got a
(26:04):
lovely phone line. It's nice to hear from you, Steve. Wow,
that's good to be that clear. Got on you. Thank you?
I am good, Yes, good thanks?
Speaker 8 (26:13):
Oh yeah, you're just talking about a bit of wrestling.
Just reminded me of when I was a kid. The
big program that we used to watch was.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
On the Mat.
Speaker 8 (26:23):
Do you remember that?
Speaker 18 (26:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (26:24):
I think we just told it with Steve, Rickartt and
Early Leonard were the compis, weren't they.
Speaker 8 (26:29):
Yeah, And there's the guys that were wrestling with John
de Silver and Robert the Bruce Sama and Joe King
Curtis and yeah, when we were kids, you know, we've
been watching that and then a course we'd go and
try the moves.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
Yeah. I think it was pretty controversial at the time
because everyone with all the school kids were sort of
slamming each other down, weren't they.
Speaker 8 (26:56):
Oh yeah, we used to use a King Curtis move
that was called the rack. I don't know if you'd
remember what the rack was, but it was basically a
couple of knuckles on either side of the head, which
wasn't too clearant But yeah, we learned not to do
(27:16):
it too to an extent. But yeah, as Kidsford Wedler,
all those moves.
Speaker 2 (27:24):
I tell you funny, Yeah, you tell me fair?
Speaker 7 (27:26):
Sorry, no, go ahead.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
Did you ever go to the record because I think
it was at the yam Sa and Auckland was it?
Did you?
Speaker 13 (27:33):
But go.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
No?
Speaker 8 (27:36):
No, I wasn't gonna do it that much, you know,
it was just like when we're kids.
Speaker 7 (27:40):
Never followed it.
Speaker 8 (27:42):
But I did have a very funny situation years ago,
and like I was probably eighteen and nineteen and playing
up a bit man some mates that had a bit
of let's just say weed yes, and we went into
a ye was an Italian pizza restaurant, and I think
it was it was either Mission Bay or Saint Helier's.
(28:04):
And we walked into the place and there's a photograph
of Somo and Joe up on the wall, and we
start talking about it and fooling around, you know, like
tearing on like the wrestlers. And then we sort of
looked down from the photograph and Somo and Joe were
sitting underneath the photograph.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
Wow. Wow, Wow, that is a good story.
Speaker 8 (28:31):
We felt like, sorry, fools, and shut up very quickly.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
Yeah, okay, that's a good story.
Speaker 19 (28:40):
Yeah, probably everybody who's done there. I mean it was
like he was I don't know, it was like, you know,
he probably a pizza restaurant.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
He probably had a deal there. And I mean, you
know what those restaurants are like at Mission Bay. They
like to have some of it a profile hanging out there.
It's good for the image and probably well the whole relationship.
It was a long time ago, and.
Speaker 8 (29:02):
I'm talking close to forty years ago.
Speaker 11 (29:04):
It.
Speaker 8 (29:05):
Yes, it was funny.
Speaker 20 (29:09):
Y.
Speaker 12 (29:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (29:12):
I don't ever a lot to add to that, but me,
I just sort of tell you that stories.
Speaker 2 (29:16):
Oh no, I'm really happy to keep talking about wrestling, Steve,
So thanks, So it's all about wrestling. Sixteen to nine
oh eight, one hundred and eighty Samoe and Joe deceased
at sixty six, so that's not a long age. Joseph
Uffha Masaga. He was one of the fan favorites on
the mat. Great name too, Samo and Joe. Isn't it.
Speaker 6 (29:44):
Anyway?
Speaker 2 (29:44):
Get in touch Hittle twelve We talk about whole codn't Oh? Yeah,
I was just about when Hulk Hogan, when he was
at his prime, started wrestling in seventy seven. I think
were probably the eighties that he was really big FWW
for ninety three, then went to the rival promotion WCW.
Was always a big deal switching from one to the other.
(30:08):
That classic mustache, that's what's always interesting about him. Italian, Panamanian,
Scottish and French descent.
Speaker 8 (30:26):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (30:27):
Also a musician, so that's what we are talking. You
might have met. I don't know if he would have
come here for some event. Wouldn't be surprised if it happened.
Speaker 17 (30:40):
For you.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
That daft here come, that daft mustache. Do talk if
you want to be. He's got a very big Wikipedia
page with many returns and leavings, and yeah, she's a
complicated old world. The wrestler Wrestling World one of the
(31:02):
largest attractions of professional wrestling history. Wrestling historian states, you
can't possibly overrte a significance in the history of the business.
And he sold more tickets than to wrestling shows than
any man who ever lived. Biggest roo in professional wrestling history.
(31:22):
Number one in a list of sixty other wrestlers. Fellow
wrestler Cody Rhodes has said numerous times at Hogan's WrestleMania
X eight match with the Rock is the greatest match
in wrestling history and epitomize what professional wrestling is. There
(31:44):
you go foting away from ten to nine, footing away
from nine. It's called it that eight hundred and eighty
ten eighty nineteen nine to detext a penny of movies.
I think most movies he played himself. Actually no surprises there,
(32:05):
or most TV show He wasn't Muppets from Space. He
wasn't Center with muscles, of course, he was Thunderlips and
Rocky three. Recently in Victoria, this is a text recently
in Victoria, Australia. I presume the pool tables there you
don't have a D on the table, just a single line,
(32:26):
no numbers on the balls, no big or up ups
or unders, just sorry on the table, just a single line,
No big numbers or under numbers on the balls, just
two sets of colors and one black ball. That's good.
I always thought the numbers was ridiculous and people was
(32:46):
going up as and unders evening. What that meant wrestling
all the big stars you mentioned was at the YMCA
seven pm every Monday night. We used to travel from Papacuda.
That's keV. Of course you did. People coming all around
from all around the outskirts of Auckland for that. I
would imagine Marcus wanted Metallica ticket for Auckland gig. I
(33:11):
was gonna say how much would you pay? But I'll
try and get you one for free, because people shouldn't
scout tickets. But maybe someone's bought one they don't need.
Will I go see Metallica? Maybe I love that movie
when they went to counseling all of them? Gee, that
was interesting. Who agreed to that? It's nine away from nine?
(33:36):
I who want to be part of the show? Headle twelve,
My name's Marcus. Welcome be a part of it. Twenty
four to twelve North Queensland over Saint George, Elawarra. But
be a part of if you want to talk as
(33:56):
I say, my name is Marcus Huddle twelve. We are
talking about Hulk Hogan and wrestling. We're talking about the
rules of Paul. You can shoot backwards if the white's
gone down to your pet and you put it back
on the table. Have you got to shoot forwards from
the line or can you shoot backwards? Always? Who'd yet
to shoot? To shoot forwards? I presume different pubs have
(34:17):
different rules depending on who's in charge and who looks
like the other staunches they would imagine. So is that
something you might want to could mention? Oh, this person
wants to play face value for Metallica. They're from christ Church,
fair enough. Six from nine d on Marcus.
Speaker 12 (34:40):
Hello, good evening, Marcus, I sent you that text about
the balk line. Yes, so it's on a standard pool table.
You have a D as you rightly refer to, and
then the correct ones. There are variations of them, but
the thought the proper ones would have a line that
(35:01):
goes from side to side. Now that runs from either
corner of the D if you like, with the straight
liners to each side. And if you have that straight line,
you cannot shoot backwards off that. You can shoot from
anywhere within the d but you can't shoot backwards in
a backwards direction. The boar must cross that line. The
white boe must cross the line fully before it makes
(35:22):
contact with another ball.
Speaker 2 (35:24):
Okay, if the ballkline is not why would the book
that does some tables not have them.
Speaker 12 (35:32):
No, some tables don't have them. And if that's the case,
that you can shoot in any direction.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
Okay, well that's quite a that's quite a subtle technical rule,
isn't it.
Speaker 12 (35:43):
It is and and not not everywhere plays international rules
anymore because of those variations. I learned to play pool
in the UK in the nineties and almost every pub
that you go into that had a pool table would
have the international rules put up there so that there
weren't any squabbles. But over time that changed and that
(36:07):
in those pubs generally that there would be reds and
yellows and a black ball. Very rarely would you see
unders and overs. So, yeah, it's a it's a different
kettle of fish. Paul over there.
Speaker 7 (36:20):
It was a very.
Speaker 12 (36:23):
A lot of people were incredibly good, A lot of
snooker players would play Paul, and there's a lot of
hustling going on and stuff like.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
That, so it always felt quite cowardly if you even
to attempt to shoot backwards from the ballcline. I've always thought,
I mean, it just feels wrong, doesn't it. It's a
gutless little shot.
Speaker 7 (36:39):
Absolutely, Yeah, yeah it does.
Speaker 12 (36:41):
It's and yeah, it certainly does.
Speaker 7 (36:44):
I think it does.
Speaker 12 (36:45):
But that's just that's just I'm old school.
Speaker 2 (36:47):
So oh do you know, I think that's the way
that's always been taught. Maybe we need to put the
rules around. And I appreciate you coming through about that.
Dion cover the topics of chuck atcha interesting article and
stuff not so much an article, more in an opinion piece.
Someone has given up on suitcases with wheels. They've gone
(37:10):
back to a backpack, backpack, backpack, they reckon.
Speaker 3 (37:16):
Yeah, traveling by training through Europe, for this is a
dream springing lightly up the steps to a railway carriages
so easy to be with, trying to hold an overweight
wheelie bag all the time minding the devilish gap boys.
Speaker 2 (37:31):
Surprise how much people travel with. I think, because you've
got that big suitcase with wheels on, you take a
lot more stuff than you really need to. That's the problem.
Whether people think I'm going to fill it all up
because you can wheel it. So, yeah, it's a sea anchor.
You don't want to do that. Never do that. I've
never had a suitcase with wheels, never had crocs, ne've
(37:53):
had channels, never had a suitcase with suitcase with wheels.
If you see me with a suitcase with wheels, tap
me on the shoulder and say I'm disappointed in you,
because you're sure you would be, and you should be.
I'd be disappointed in myself. Mind you. I'm also the
sort of purse that would try one day years later,
everyone else tries suitcase the cheapest creepers. Why it takes
(38:14):
so long to try one of those? So suitcases with wheels,
that's something. Now, people talking about the pain of tattoo removal.
(38:36):
An interesting alchemord of woman getting a Harry Potter quidditch
ball in the colors of the bisexual flag removed obviously
because of JK. Rowling got that straightforward. Apparently those videos
have said it looks like the stuff comes off quite easily.
(38:58):
Lasers are the only way to safe to remove or
reduce the appearance of tattoos. High intensity pulses, pulses and
a billion through a trillionth of a second target getting
shattered ink particles. Yep, there are still limitations, especially with
certain skin types that are more naturally pigmented. There might
(39:19):
be if you our by no Ah, not all tattoos,
especially those with thicker lines, can be entirely eliminated three
to twenty sessions until years for one tetoo to fade completely.
There you go. In the nineties, heavy tribal tattoos are
(39:44):
on tread. A lot of people are removing those now.
A lot of cultural appropriation stuff as well, like Polynesian
sleeves with people not realizing they mean things. There'll be
something you want to mention also, plus wrestling, plus what
do that for? Paul Hulk Hogan Wrestling We've got to
(40:04):
put onto the Rocky Horror Show, which I'm always happy
to talk about, and Pete doing his amends in the
Uber for cheating at pub Poul Marcus, don't forget the
Bushworkers from museum. They made it big and pro wrestling,
that's right. The Bushworkers had a storied career. I think
(40:26):
they ended up one of them ended up doing security
at Parliament in New Zealand. So yeah, they were very
and they had a good look too. The old Bushworkers
had a great look I think in the black singlets.
But Hulk Hogan specifically, I've got some memories about him.
(40:48):
They'd be that would be on trend for tonight. It's
been a bit of a night with people dying too,
hasn't it a week with it with old Ozzy Osbourne
and Hulk Hogan. Meanwhile, Old Dick Van Dyke, when's he?
A hundred? Can't be long now? Just before Christmas? Unbelievable,
(41:13):
But yes, you want to come thirteenth of December. So
if these are things you want to talk about, I'm
here for your people. Eight hundred and eighty ten. Is
it something else you want to talk about? Ask questions about?
Do say ken.
Speaker 17 (41:28):
Cheer?
Speaker 2 (41:29):
I tell you what that old Coldplay films not story
is not dying? Is it? They've now found the woman
watering her garden without her wedding ring. Leave her alone?
Cheapest creepers. And by the way, why do they call it?
What is a jumbo tron? Isn't it just like a camera?
Why is it called it? Got such a fresh flesh name.
(41:51):
I don't think we have those on New Zealand as
a jumbo tron. It's a TV and a camera, isn't
it fifteen past nine? Fayettes Marcus Welcome, Hi Marcus Shell.
Speaker 12 (42:06):
You good.
Speaker 6 (42:09):
Great.
Speaker 21 (42:11):
I just run to have a chat about traveling internationally
and the type of luggage that I used when I go.
Speaker 2 (42:19):
I'll be interested in that. Has it got wheels?
Speaker 21 (42:23):
Well, it does have wheels, but it also has straps
like a backpack. So yeah, it's a hybrid arrangement. And
am I allowed to use an advertising.
Speaker 2 (42:43):
We encourage that.
Speaker 21 (42:45):
Yes, So it's Catman do okay yep, And it's I've
traveled three times overseas in the last few years and
also entert the friends who've traveled with it and bought
they've decided to I won the same because they loved
(43:08):
it so much.
Speaker 2 (43:09):
Wow, And where are the wheels when it's a backpack?
Speaker 21 (43:13):
So the wheels that it's got two wheels which are
on the bottom, and it has a pull out handle
so you can throw it along like a wheelie suitcase.
But if you're in a situation where there's cobblestones or
(43:36):
steps or anything where you need to throw it on
your back, you just zip out the straps and throw
it on your back.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
Well, I suppose you went mountaineering with it at the
top of the mountain, you just actually roll it back
down the other side. Couldn't share with its wheels?
Speaker 21 (43:55):
Well you could, yeah?
Speaker 2 (43:56):
Would it? Would it be called that the catman do
hybrid trolley five the five seven deletes? That would be it,
wouldn't it? Catmen do hybrid pack with wheels?
Speaker 21 (44:06):
Yes, yes, as if the mine's probably about five years
old now, so they probably updated things. But I believe
it comes in two different sizes, so I've got the
bigger size. Not that I travel with a lot of
a lot of weight. So when I head off on
(44:28):
an international trip, I try and pack under ten kilos
of luggage.
Speaker 2 (44:37):
Ye i'd be I'd be two kilos, but yeah, keep going.
It's not about it.
Speaker 21 (44:43):
So that could be up to six weeks of international travel.
So it's not carry on luggage, it's check on luggage.
And then that leaves me room for buying souvenirs and
family gifts and things like that. And usually when I return,
(45:06):
I'm around fourteen kilos maybe maximum luggage.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
Do you miss the hard shell of those suitcases?
Speaker 21 (45:18):
I haven't, No, And I haven't had any bad experiences
of anything damaged inside my suitcase. My travel peck as
I call it.
Speaker 12 (45:35):
So no, no, I don't imagine.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
I imagine that's why people do like those hard shells
so things won't get damaged. They can just bang everything
into it. Know that even if the if the luggage
people drop it, stuff's going to be okay.
Speaker 20 (45:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 21 (45:49):
Like I say, I've had no problems. The last trip
I just returned from to Scandinavia. I bought some vintage
glass hand created Cope mugs. Wow, but I I actually
(46:10):
packed those in my carry on luggage to avoid any
any breakages. But I have had other you know, see
many breakable things I use in my in my checked
travel bag and never had any problems.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
Nice to hear from your faith. Thanks so much. There
we go. We've got a call about luggage. That's good, brilliant.
Here we go peopleheadle twelve, Oh wait a hundred and
eighty Teddy and nine to nine to de text. We've
got an hour and a half without mentioning the B word.
That's good. By the way, if you're much on the mat,
it is on ended on screen if you want to
(46:52):
get a part of that. I think John Dipvig was
also involved in commentating on the mat. Maybe then it
went to TV three and he did it. There is
that right. I've got that right. I've got that right.
I think I might have maybe not. Some peo will
know butter butter butter? I worked out they reckon on
a slice of bread. You put five grams of butter,
(47:19):
which is eight cents worth. It's a hundredth of a
loaf with what were you called pound? What would you
call a pecket of butter? Peck block? Not a loaf
of butter. A lot of people are asking a lot render,
A lot of people that asked me why that caller
last night Stephen puts RaRo and the breed is made?
Does anyone else anyone else make bread with rarow isn't it?
(47:44):
Or meshed potato? But why would you put RaRo and bred? Honestly,
some people should be policing some of these people when
they cook and what they're doing RaRo and bred. MICUs
(48:04):
I was involved with hotel security the Chevron in Sydney
around nineteen eighty. We were charged with looking after Andre
the Giant, who was a hotel guest. He was seven
foot six and way thirty six stone. I was a
mere six foot four and eighting star at the time
and felt like a midget standing next to him. He
spoke very little and it must have had a sad
life due to his enormous size. He was very much
(48:28):
of the Hulk Hogan era and quite the spectacle in
the ring John. I guess these days he would have
been probably steered towards basketball with all their obsession with
height there, I wonder although it would have been a
big unit in basketball. And nicee mail here about jumbo trons,
but this is from Adam high Markers. Jumbo Tron was
(48:50):
originally a trademark from Mitsubishi and Sony, who developed the
large screen technology in the nineteen eighties. It now refers
to any large public display screen, although more often in
America for giant screens used at stadiums and concerts. They
originally based on cathode ray tubes, as you said, using
separate models of sixteen CRTs in each module to build
(49:12):
a large display. Now they usually high definition LED screens displays.
I don't know that he's injurinally embraced the Jumbo. It's
not us the Jumbo Tron. It's always a bit sort
of kiss cam. It's a bit sort of lame but
not at Coldplay? Does there everything they got for going
to cold Play? Looking like that cheapess except the definition
(49:35):
of a covert affair? Is it anyway? Although I say
all those people that get caught would have wanted to
have got caught secretly. That's my speculation with that one.
Tant to removal and luggage with wheels. Also wrestling and
Hulk Hogan mainly you might have had some great Hulk
Hogan memories. You might have seen him wrestle in the flesh.
(49:59):
I know necessarily came here. I don't know that he didn't.
But that's something else you might want to talk about
people and any something else that's got your fancy tonight
be my guest. As I say, eight hundred and eighties,
I keep those ticks coming through too. Marcus the late seventies,
(50:20):
my boss at the time was obsessed with On the
Met and thought it was real. So when they came
on our local theater, he was there with bells on.
But when King Cutis was giving my bosses here are
roughing up, it was all too much for him. So
my boss takes a folded jair and belts Curtis have
the head for really got chased out of the place
by Curtis, who would have her been ascoot as my
boss was a big twenty stone bloke. Haha, thank you
(50:41):
for that. And tat I didn't realize tatoo removal took
so long. It'd be a good thing to go and
get a tattoo that looks like a tattoo that's almost
been removed, wouldn't it. That would be meta. I am
looking for Hulk Hogan calls and suitcase and wheel calls.
(51:02):
Of course, you get suitcases and now you can ride
on them. They've got a motor and then you go
on the supermarket and you just drive around on them.
If you have you ketch be driving one of those,
tap me on the shoulder and say, Marcus, I'm disappointed
in you. I can't see myself buying one of those.
But you don't even know. In a week moment, someone
(51:23):
talks you into it, Marcus, new device out tonight. The
police point out your car the number plate that tells
you if unpaid fines owing, they can take your car.
People get your fine, sordid thanks, Tracy. That's pretty big brothery,
isn't it. I suppose I normally just phone on the
(51:46):
ridio anyway, so it's not that difficult. Kate Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 22 (51:54):
Hi dear Marcus. How are you?
Speaker 2 (51:56):
Kate? Ten out of ten? The scene? How about yourself?
Speaker 13 (51:59):
Good?
Speaker 22 (51:59):
Thank you. I remember a couple of years ago going
to Bali on holiday and you would be no, I
don't know, probably a lot of sixty five year old
retirees from Australia and the pools, big ladies or small ladies,
and they have pets all over them and my eyes
(52:24):
look down down grading.
Speaker 2 (52:28):
Did you tell them awful? I should have told them
to tell them no, okay.
Speaker 22 (52:32):
No, no, never even would The problem is just want
they get warm. They're addicted and they continue and they
cover their bodies.
Speaker 15 (52:41):
It's an addiction.
Speaker 2 (52:42):
I don't get that. An addiction. I mean it seems it
seems very self absorbed to me. Look at me, look
at me, Look what I've done, because they'll always show
you them. They always short clothes, so you're forced to
look at them.
Speaker 22 (52:54):
Yeah, but being the aired in the air and the
air and the air, they won't even just get warm.
And you know, if you ask somebody do they have
one tattoo? I can tell you that a lot of
people don't they add and add an a.
Speaker 2 (53:10):
How do you know this just from observing?
Speaker 22 (53:14):
Yeah, I am living with people and in the community
and talking to people.
Speaker 20 (53:19):
Yeah, and it's sad.
Speaker 22 (53:21):
I mean, when I was in the eighties, the bad
thing we did was we had one or two or
three piercings in our ears, and that was considered awful.
But at least you could get rid of them. And
they grover with tatters. You've got them put your back
and they're actually to me, and it's only my opinion.
(53:44):
Everybody has a different opinion, but to me, they make
you look rubbish. Well, I think it downgrades you and
it makes you look rubbish. I understand some small tattoos
if it's a meaning like a lost one or something
like that, But when they're on your face.
Speaker 2 (54:05):
Now, what would they, Katie need? What would need to
happen to you for you to get a tattoo?
Speaker 22 (54:12):
Nothing?
Speaker 2 (54:13):
If you won lotto, if you want powerable, would you
get the lot of numbers tenned up your arm?
Speaker 10 (54:18):
No?
Speaker 2 (54:20):
Really, no iveryone's got the lots of anyone got the
lot of numbers tentted on them. I'd be curious about
that now I'm thinking about it, and good evening, Rodney,
it's Marcus.
Speaker 11 (54:30):
Welcome, Hey Marcus, this is Rodney here. Ninety ninety when
Whole Cogain slammed Andre the Giant, and nineteen ninety when
he beat Ultimate Warrior. Yeah, Baltimare Warrior the week for
(54:52):
Ultimate Warrior, but ultim Warria. Ultimate Warrior beat the whole
Cogain full able w belts and no he was the
awesome feller.
Speaker 2 (55:05):
Do you remember all of this?
Speaker 11 (55:08):
Yes, yes, Summer Slam and Ressamania, nineteen ninety, Ultimate Warrior
beat hult Hogan call the title, double titles.
Speaker 2 (55:22):
Ultimate Warrior dead at fifty four?
Speaker 11 (55:26):
Yeah, what he denied?
Speaker 2 (55:29):
What he died of?
Speaker 11 (55:32):
Heart tic?
Speaker 2 (55:33):
Yeah, okay, it seems to I guess they take steroids
and stuff, do they?
Speaker 11 (55:38):
They did? They did? I think that's what wrong. What
That's what happened to That's what happened to. Well, that's
what happened to Hulk Hogan. His real name was Kerry.
Speaker 2 (55:51):
Yeah, cardio vescular disease. Rodney, thank you for that. Twenty
one away from ten. If you want to be a
part of it, Wrestlers early deaths, well, I think probably
it's quite an old age for whole Hogan get into
the seventies twenty sixth. Since Georgilla are on the recharge,
go have a look in the old age homes. Tattoos
(56:12):
not so pretty on wrinkles and faded distorted ink. I'm
sure the old people are in love with their bodies anyway,
or are resigned to the way they look. Marcus is
a reason tattoos are called tramp stamps. Gosh, a bit
a judgment about their tattoos. I just thought they're not
for me. I thought the tramp stamp was a particular
(56:38):
sort of a tattoo at the base of the spy
on a woman. I thought that was the one was
called the tramp stamp. It was a specific place you
put them. You do wonder why they haven't developed tattoos
that are temporary. And when I say that, ones would think,
(57:01):
but the win's got like the thing's got like a
ten year lifespan. That would be good, wouldn't it?
Speaker 11 (57:10):
Get it?
Speaker 3 (57:10):
Reason?
Speaker 2 (57:11):
If you want to hello, Jim, it's Marcus. Good evening.
Speaker 7 (57:15):
How did they go? And Marcus, I rang you last
night about the lamb.
Speaker 2 (57:18):
Oh, yeah, about the whe Oh you're the farmer? Yep, yep, yep, yep.
Speaker 7 (57:22):
Well I work for a farmer. But anyway, I'm ringing
up that lady was talking about the tattoos.
Speaker 23 (57:29):
Yes, I think she's totally wrong because I've been in
I've been in prison in that and it's not that
we're addicted to see. I've got a tamare on my nose,
my arms are tattooed, and I like none of my
legs are. I don't go that far.
Speaker 7 (57:46):
But what she doesn't realize some people write a diary
that is with the tattoos. That is our diary. Like
when I was inside and I saw follow the three
three dots down the side of his face, I knew,
oh he's from Pa. Them with them when I see
them around the doves on their neck, Oh he's from
around Eden. That that is our diary. It's not like
(58:07):
what she was saying that you get addicted. She obviously
doesn't know what she's talking about.
Speaker 2 (58:13):
Ever heard of salt to remove them?
Speaker 7 (58:16):
Yes, I have looked at removing the one on my face,
But to tell me back.
Speaker 2 (58:20):
Yeah, but you've never heard of salt. You've never heard
of salt as a removal thing, have you?
Speaker 7 (58:28):
Salt?
Speaker 11 (58:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (58:31):
Someone said salt helps you remove them. But I just
wondered if you'd heard of that, But clearly you haven't.
Speaker 7 (58:36):
No, because I saw a notion and.
Speaker 2 (58:39):
Exactly yeah, And but the tarmacre would be traditional, the
on your nose, is it? That would be all right
these days, wouldn't it?
Speaker 7 (58:47):
Yes? But back then froun the pond.
Speaker 2 (58:50):
But if if you get more and more acceptance these days,
wouldn't you ahead of your time on my farm?
Speaker 7 (58:57):
And now, as you said, people are getting addicted to tattoos,
that's not it. She's for some people might I'm not
saying not everyone.
Speaker 2 (59:05):
What do they do that? Well? Well, yeah, I imagine
that they'd be more painful in present, would be quite
it would be quite rudimentary. The devices, are they?
Speaker 7 (59:14):
Yeah, you just get a bit of guitar string and
meltdown some well I shouldn't say it on here.
Speaker 2 (59:19):
You know how we make them, you know, if it's
top secret. If it's if it's top secret.
Speaker 7 (59:25):
Some Christians might like it how we make.
Speaker 2 (59:27):
Them from the Bible. Yes, wow, wow, Well I guess
that's some way to become part of your body then,
hasn't it.
Speaker 7 (59:35):
Yes, But I'm saying that we're not addicted as it's
when you when when you when you're in prison and
you see tattoos from people, you know where they've come from.
Speaker 2 (59:44):
Yes, I didn't. I didn't realize that. I just thought
it was about people dying when they're on the endside.
Didn't realize that it was party, Medima and Mountain and
with the dove.
Speaker 7 (59:53):
There TETs where they've where they've come from.
Speaker 2 (59:57):
What about if you're from Mount Crawford.
Speaker 7 (01:00:00):
Well, they've got a different tet again.
Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
Okay, you don't know what it is.
Speaker 7 (01:00:04):
Yeah, because I wasn't Mal Crawford. But that's not a prism,
that's only a rehead.
Speaker 2 (01:00:09):
Good point.
Speaker 7 (01:00:10):
Okay, you know that's not a prison, that's a remand
you you don't do it in Remand.
Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
What's the one up the upper heart? What's that one called?
Speaker 7 (01:00:20):
Oh she was the biggest one. But now white couples
taking it over.
Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Yeah, okay, I appreciate that, Jim, thank you. Fourteen to
ten here till twelve thirty two, twenty six North Queens
and over Saint George Elawarra. No way that is. It
might be I don't quite know what stadium that is.
Marcus Teddy's are part of life. If you look at
the history tatoos are a supportan's family and culture. Only
(01:00:48):
selfish people complain because they're the ones that aren't happy.
And seventy two hours the Navy were eight tattoos above
my elbows and up to my shoulders. I have every
overseas country visit Teddy around each tattoo. I don't forget
any of them and never get them removed. Good on you, Well,
it's Marcus good evening.
Speaker 24 (01:01:08):
Oh good a packers.
Speaker 2 (01:01:10):
I feel Yeah.
Speaker 24 (01:01:14):
I was just going to say to you, have you
ever heard the saying about if you want to be
a rebel, don't get a tattoo because everyone else does?
Speaker 2 (01:01:23):
Yeah, I haven't heard that. Is it actually saying? I
guess it's because you said it.
Speaker 24 (01:01:27):
Yeah, yes, it is?
Speaker 2 (01:01:28):
Okay welfare.
Speaker 24 (01:01:30):
Oh and I was just going to talk about the wrestling.
No one seems to All day I've listened and no
one's mentioned the wrestling Superstar documentaries. There are about an
hour forty minutes goes in depth with them and all
the stuff they had to suffer.
Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
Where's that?
Speaker 24 (01:01:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 23 (01:01:50):
And where could you?
Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
Where can you watch that? Joella? I'm sorry, Phil, I
was on because there is what on Netflix? Is there's
one about the guy that's behind all the wrestling. Oh McMahon, Yeah,
have you seen that one?
Speaker 24 (01:02:07):
No, I'm gonna watch it. But that Crispin wha was
the worst one I ever heard because because he killed
his kids, his wife and himself and he was a
real top wrestler.
Speaker 25 (01:02:21):
What was his name, Crispin Wahnt Oh?
Speaker 24 (01:02:29):
Yeah, yeah, horrible story. He just lost the plot. I
don't know why, but he did. There's horrific stories of
the wrestlers. They had horrendous life some of them.
Speaker 2 (01:02:43):
Yeah, look at Crispin. Why Now that is horrible, isn't it.
Speaker 7 (01:02:47):
Yep?
Speaker 24 (01:02:48):
Certainly, And well that's probably the worst one.
Speaker 2 (01:02:54):
I think wrestling attracted those people that the wrestling made them.
Speaker 24 (01:02:57):
Those people, well, they were fit, healthy, even wholt Hogan.
I couldn't believe he was doing steroids. But anyway, well
he is was.
Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
I mean, that's effect is he? Have you heard that today?
Speaker 25 (01:03:15):
Ah?
Speaker 24 (01:03:16):
I was suspicious about him because I thought he'd just
trained and all that and built up his muscles.
Speaker 2 (01:03:23):
But you know, well that's always what they say. They
always say it's just come from training. But then they
get injured and stuff, and you lose your your form.
So you've got to get steroids to recover. I would
imagine going to listen to Nick Foley.
Speaker 24 (01:03:38):
He was incredible, and he wrote a book, He wrote
three books about his own life. Who was such a
nice guy. But man, did he put him through some
tor himself through some torture.
Speaker 2 (01:03:51):
Was here a wrestler?
Speaker 24 (01:03:53):
Oh have you not heard of Nick Foley? And they
locked themselves in a cage and they've got a fight
to sort of not the death, but injuries, and he
ended up getting so injured he went back out to
whatever you call it, but he came running out. He
(01:04:16):
couldn't remember nothing. But his story is unreal. So much
respect for that guy, Nick Foley. Okay, yeah, mankind about too.
Speaker 2 (01:04:33):
How big was the cage?
Speaker 24 (01:04:37):
Oh, it's just the same size as a ring, but
they put a cage on it. And you've, ah, yeah,
have you not seen all that? It's quite amazing.
Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
I'm not interesting. I wouldn't watch it. Oh no, was
I well you know all about it though.
Speaker 24 (01:04:55):
Oh well, I've been into Well. I always thought it
was weird that I thought it's not real, but then
I respected them when I found out all the storylines
in that, yeah, and how bullshit it was, and I thought, yeah,
but that's still what they put their bodies through is incredible.
Speaker 2 (01:05:20):
I might look at that cage. I appreciate that, Phil,
Thank you. Seven to ten Marcus till twelve thirty eight,
twenty six North Queens ever sent George just three minutes
left and that's North Queens and will win this while
getting to the top eight Joanna Marcus welcome, Hello, how
you ella.
Speaker 26 (01:05:40):
So you've had a few people come in talking about tattoos,
either getting tattoos or hating tattoos.
Speaker 7 (01:05:49):
Yes, correct, I work in a tattoo studio.
Speaker 26 (01:05:52):
I watch I've watched thousands of people get tattoos. People
get tattoos for a bunch of different reasons. Some spur
of the moment, Some are to have a bond of friends,
some are for art pieces, some are for family.
Speaker 9 (01:06:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 26 (01:06:11):
Not many people go into it just because they're addicted
to getting tattoos. Like, yes, there are a few people
that come in and they're like, I love getting more
and more tattoos, but they love the art. They're not
just oh that's a random tattoo shop, I'll get a tattoo.
If someone's getting a lot of tattoos, they're planning out
(01:06:31):
the pieces of art that they want to carry with
them constantly.
Speaker 2 (01:06:37):
Okay, are there people that you say, maybe come back
another day.
Speaker 26 (01:06:47):
Well, if someone wants to come in and get a swastika,
it's a bit questionable if someone's coming in obviously and
seriously intoxicated. Not a good idea, but it's if.
Speaker 7 (01:07:06):
You know, if you're like.
Speaker 26 (01:07:09):
Going to be sensible, you can show that you want
to know what you're getting yourself into. It's your body,
and you have come to a tattoo artist because you
want a piece of art to carry with you constantly
that no one else can take away from you.
Speaker 2 (01:07:28):
Good place to work, oh, they.
Speaker 11 (01:07:33):
It is a lovely environment.
Speaker 26 (01:07:36):
Like everyone's upbeat, like it's the only it's one of
the only retailed places that you can work where pretty
much like there's been maybe one or two unpleasant customers
that I've seen in five years. Because you're coming because
(01:07:57):
they're either coming to get get something inscribed on their body,
so you don't want to mess it, so you don't
want to like be an asshole to You're sorry for
language to your as her artist, or they're coming to
get a piercing, and you don't want someone who's about
to disturb a sharp object into your skin numb to
(01:08:20):
be upset.
Speaker 5 (01:08:21):
With you.
Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
With piercing it. These days still big.
Speaker 26 (01:08:31):
There's a lot of people get pier things. Different pier
things come in and out, so like tongue pier things
have been a bit slow for those last couple of years.
Belly piercings are pretty common at the moment. A lot
of people coming in to get like non load air
(01:08:53):
pierc things. I almost don't see more people for those
piercings than low piers.
Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
A lot of people in the middle of the nose
done too, aren't they.
Speaker 7 (01:09:05):
Setting pier things?
Speaker 2 (01:09:06):
What's it called syptom to your symptom so the odd symptum.
Speaker 26 (01:09:10):
Yeah, it's basically you your nose is made up of
like a plate of cartilage above and below, and you
have to put it right between those two plates or
else it won't it right.
Speaker 2 (01:09:23):
Always looks good, I think the septum one.
Speaker 26 (01:09:27):
Yeah, it's if it's done right. It's hard. It's hard
to make it look bad.
Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
Yeah, I agree. Nice to talk to you, an, I
thank you. We're talking wrestling and piercings and tattoos. Enjoying
the judgment from everyone. Cheap as creepers. It's not be judgmental.
Get in touch. You got to be a part of it.
Heddle twelve Rome is it where man from twelve is
(01:09:56):
not run out of money on holiday yet? Goodness any
who are weight one hundred and eighty. We were talking wrestling, John, Hello,
and good evening and.
Speaker 14 (01:10:10):
A good evening to you, Marcus and your listeners. Just
a couple of good wee things. Sad that old hook Hogan,
but unfortunately we all got to go there somewhere and
many years ago, I've seen the biggest wrestler in the world.
His name was Haystack Coloon. If you're looking him up
(01:10:32):
on the internet, he was the biggest wrestler in the world.
He used to wear jeans, that's yeah, that's one of
his specialty of American jeans. He'd only have to sit
on you and you would submit. Going back further than
that was the octapus clamp. It was a wrestler many
(01:10:55):
years ago, that's well and truly passed on. He used
that octopus clamp and people would submit.
Speaker 7 (01:11:04):
And on the mat.
Speaker 14 (01:11:05):
I used to watch coming back to your tattoos, I've
got art on my body and there is beautiful art
out there on everybody. You see them, I look at them.
Some of them are just wonderful and it's up to
(01:11:26):
your own personal whether you get a tattoo or not.
And I just think it's just the work of art.
My tattoo, I'm very old. I'm not young. Mine's like
a two year old. I think it was the orange
roughy because I used to work in a fish outfit
(01:11:47):
in Dunedin and the oils used to get into your skin.
And it's well and truly looked after the colors on.
Speaker 25 (01:11:55):
My art on my body.
Speaker 11 (01:11:57):
That yeah, yes.
Speaker 14 (01:11:59):
But as for this wrestler, Haystack kloon a man, I
couldn't believe that he got out of a holding. One
side of the car just completely folded right over, and
he fought In and Addington at the stadium. The yeah,
(01:12:19):
and the big springs that they have inside these the
rings that they used to jump up and down at.
It was amazing, absolutely amazing, and their bodies did get pounded.
You know, it wouldn't be easy.
Speaker 2 (01:12:34):
What year would have Haystack, Calhoun, Addington and who else
was on the bill?
Speaker 14 (01:12:41):
Oh sorry, Marcus, I can't remember that there's a stadium
that's still there on the side just before the Big
League Area was that it was in there that they
had a fight in there many years ago. I can't remember. Actually,
(01:13:03):
i'd probably be early seventies.
Speaker 2 (01:13:06):
He was at the seventies here.
Speaker 14 (01:13:08):
Yeah, yeah, but it was it was wonderful to see,
you know. And he was friends of Hope Hogan too.
But if you look look him up on the internet
you'll see it.
Speaker 27 (01:13:21):
And when I say.
Speaker 7 (01:13:22):
About he's a big unit, oh he was massive.
Speaker 5 (01:13:27):
It was.
Speaker 14 (01:13:28):
He was amazing, absolutely amazing, And there was Tojo and
Simon and Joe and that there was a lot of
them that did pretty well.
Speaker 7 (01:13:40):
He is.
Speaker 14 (01:13:43):
Really sorry.
Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
Yeah, I just got to say really nice to hear
from you, John, and thank you so much. That called
twelve past ten Wrestling and tattoos. That's two of the
discussions for tonight and Suitcases on Wheels. Anything else want
to do? It is Sunday Friday, Monday's Friday three for all.
So if you want to come through about this good
wrestling as well. Mark The match that I was talking
(01:14:10):
about is Mankind versus Undertaker. Also on YouTube, you can
find a Dark Side of the Ring. It's a documentary
on different wrestlers. Is a reviable purpose having solar powered
digital road signs, and all they do is flash slow
(01:14:30):
down when drivers exceed the speed limit. They're scared everywhere,
especially back rural roads, but totally ignored. And they don't
work after dark, so what's the point. Sometimes they work
after dark. We've got a solar powered road sign coming
into bluff and I always know when to take my
(01:14:52):
foot right off the accelerator just near the bluff sign
if I'm going one hundred and two on autopilot, and
then by the time I hit the slow thing and
I'll bring my speed up at fifty exactly where I
hit that. It's put me great pleasure that it's different
when it's whet the cargoes further or if there's a tailwind,
(01:15:15):
very exciting. So a big fan of those signs. Just
bring it out there. And goodness, we we've changed the passport.
Despite everything with the homeless and the inflation and the
food prices and the job numbers, they've found time to
(01:15:38):
change the past. But I don't know how much that's costing,
but they've done that. They've swapped and New Zealand because
like that matters, unbelievable, it's actually good nickname Haystackers and
I like that. Harley. Hello, it's Marcus. Welcome.
Speaker 5 (01:15:54):
I guess I'm only going to mentioned two rastlers and
I'm going on seventy nine who used to see them
in Carlo Park. One was John of Silver and one
of Padder Connor. And this is before we came all
through for money. And I think pet O'Connor was world
(01:16:21):
Champion of the world.
Speaker 2 (01:16:24):
I've heard of John the Silver, I've never heard of the.
Speaker 5 (01:16:29):
Yeah, Peter Connor. Oh he was a big man. But yeah,
this is a lot wrong time ago, Marcus, you know,
and because they just had a lot of boxing there
and Carole part you know in the old league field.
Speaker 2 (01:16:43):
Yeah, oh yeah, no, and there was and there was
a ring in the middle of them, was there?
Speaker 5 (01:16:47):
Yeah, did right? Yeah, I remember Tennis Cannon and John
and Johnny Smith. Yeah, way back in the day, Marcus, honestly,
but big men. But yeah, well yeah, it's sad to
see the followed the Big Boss song. But yeah, but see,
(01:17:09):
wrestling was a big game, especially the tag wrestling in
that and you know the rings were all sprung, but yeah,
that's serious as Pat Connor and John and Silver and
John the Silver little ut Tea.
Speaker 2 (01:17:25):
And that's the mid nineteen fifties. Do you reckon?
Speaker 25 (01:17:28):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (01:17:29):
Oh wait, wait, well then I must have been ten
years old or somebody.
Speaker 2 (01:17:34):
Oh yeah, okay, well yeah, what a great sports. That's
a great sport for you, Carolile Park. The league was
great to watch there. It was very exciting with the
people besting on the tin. It was a great place.
Oh thanks, Marcus, you know, nice to talk, Carl. It's
been my pleasure to think anyway, right, good Old Harley. Ah,
(01:17:55):
there we go, wrestling Wrestlinger. No one's seen Hulk Hogan. Well,
I guess some people must have. Their family must have
taken the America to watched the wrestling, some of those
families that are wrestling obsessed. As we amble towards the weekend,
which I'm so looking forward to. Got a lot playing
this weekend. Trees to plant a show to go to.
(01:18:19):
Oh yes, trained spotting with the Exchange student. Rue doesn't
know much English, but that seems to be fine on
his phone a lot. I hope that changes. It seems
(01:18:43):
like a pretty sweet boy. I don't know how old
he is, listening to be eleven or ten or eleven?
I think I think it's just over here for English.
So that's come over for twelve days or something. Brought
the boys Japanese pajamas, which I thought was a nice
touch to they're loving those. It's like a little Sili
kimono type thing. Every you know what they are. Actually
they's got top end, there's a top and shorts. Actually
(01:19:04):
got photos sent. Oh I'll be into that. Yeah, they've
got shorts and like a top with a sash that
goes I look quite smart. Ope, I got a pair.
(01:19:28):
Look forward to those. Anyway, do get in touch. If
you want to talk about wrestling and luggage with wheels
and tattoo and tattoo removal, you would use salt fan
them using a Bible to know that makes sense. I
suppose it's one of the books they get plentifully. But
(01:19:52):
you still get in touch if you want to be
on the airwaves, if you got some other topic, bust
you want to come through with, Oh, here we go,
Here we go. This is a great question. Part from
calling me mister Rush. It's quite a funny name that
(01:20:12):
Marcus Rush. Hi, mister Rush. What are the cars on
the side of the road with people taking photos with
the camera past the Eshley River heading north before Salt Creek.
A Monday to Friday commuter past the Eshley River heading
north before Salt Creek. I presume that is in Canterbury
(01:20:40):
Salt Creek, Eshley River. What are the people taking photos
with a there all week? You won't know anything about that.
I've never heard of it. Where's the Eshley River? I'm
trying to friendly find that on Google Maps. I like
(01:21:03):
a puzzle text. Yeah, I don't know where the Salt
Creek is on this so iever, I can't find that
on Google.
Speaker 14 (01:21:12):
You might know.
Speaker 2 (01:21:14):
I'm none the wiser, So do come through if you
want to talk about that. Eels have scored six to two. Good.
Never liked Brisbane as a team, but yes, if you
want to talk. Marcus till midnight tonight, eight hundred and
(01:21:35):
eighty ten eighty Marcus. I'm going for a birthday party tomorrow.
My identical twin grandsons are tuning one. Leo and Archer.
Bring such George our lives. What a gift twins are?
Everyone loves twins. Brilliant. Oh that's a big day, Marcus.
(01:22:04):
Also big bed John Andrea, the Joe and the Butchers.
I remember Trevor Hi, Marcus. My mum used to watch
King Curtis and Co. On a Sunday afternoon TV show.
Used to do with the ironing. Whish was watching it
and do the iron and the iron was banging on
the board the whole program. She got so excited. Saltwater Creek.
(01:22:29):
So what are people stopping for to look at at
Saltwater Creek. That's a good question because I'm curious to note,
like all week apparently, what would they be taking photos of?
You have to say, give us more information because I
(01:22:52):
don't know much about it. By wood End, bypass just
north of Pegasus and wood End. Why don't you stopping
ask them? Because is it to a tourist thing? Got
(01:23:14):
no idea? Ten twenty six oh eight hundred eighty eight. Oh,
we're getting there tonight. If we had a laugh tonight though,
you remember laughter evening? Wayne, This is Marcus.
Speaker 11 (01:23:34):
Welcome now, am you Marcus?
Speaker 5 (01:23:37):
Good?
Speaker 12 (01:23:37):
Wayne.
Speaker 28 (01:23:39):
There's the guys on the side of the road. People
can give photos of the tracks passing by. We get
it all the time. I'm a truck driver and they
always take you photos.
Speaker 11 (01:23:49):
As we go past.
Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
The truck spotters.
Speaker 28 (01:23:52):
Yeah, the hitting your photos and we sometimes get them
on our Facebook and through chap of guys that face them.
Speaker 2 (01:24:02):
Is there is there an overbridge there that where are
they taking them from?
Speaker 4 (01:24:06):
They back on the side of the road anywhere?
Speaker 28 (01:24:09):
Actually between christ Church and Ambly.
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
Well is there a name for them?
Speaker 28 (01:24:16):
I just called track spotters, okay, because.
Speaker 2 (01:24:18):
I think I think with trains, the people that take
photos of trains, yeah, are called foamers because they're foaming
at the mouth.
Speaker 6 (01:24:30):
But I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:24:31):
Maybe I don't know what truck drivers if it's the same.
Speaker 28 (01:24:37):
Yeah, I don't know, because we don't I can't see
what'slf in theodo that I've seen them.
Speaker 9 (01:24:41):
Be on the road.
Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
So, yeah, it's a great story, Wayne, thanks for coming
through about that. There we go, truck spotters brilliant near
of good evening.
Speaker 25 (01:24:52):
Yeah, good evening, Maus. You just pulled up about Saltwater
Creek and yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:24:58):
I think it was talking about there's oother Saltwater Creek
in Canterbury and north and Pegasus north of christ Jews.
But yeah, I know Saltwater Creek and Tim there's a
restaurant there, tire restaurant. We stopped that right by there once.
Speaker 29 (01:25:08):
Yep, Oh, there might be it might be there, but
I hadn't been back there for oh well, I made
I made and a half years of as and then
I don't think i've been back there since.
Speaker 25 (01:25:20):
All I remember about it is living in Timorrow and
going out to Sotwater Creek when the first plane ever
arrived from Australia and landed at Saltwater Creek. And the
plane was one person on board that was flying it,
(01:25:44):
and she was a lady, I don't remember her name.
And we all went down there because we're we have
school went down there. Lots of schools went down there
and watched to fly in and she stayed a couple
of days and in Tomorrow, and then she flew back
(01:26:07):
to Australia. But it said all I know about it,
and I'm just listening to your radio right now, And
I thought, well, I was just fringing up and give
you what I know.
Speaker 2 (01:26:18):
So the creek, was there an airstrip there? Lived? Was
there an airstrip there?
Speaker 25 (01:26:25):
She landed, No, no, no, no, they she landed in
a peddic but that paddock was a designated strip, but
she was the first one to land on it. And
when I was a young boy, I had some relatives
(01:26:52):
that flew out of that air strip and sold a
creek timorrow. It was about four or five case list
from from Timoru South and yeah, oh no a nater
that a lot of planes did land there.
Speaker 2 (01:27:15):
Yeah, there we go, keep in touch. Yeah I didn't
know that. But there's a guy on the Bluff Road
that's always taking photos of trucks too. I don't know
what they do with them all. I suppose they upload
them or you've got websites of trucks, each to their own.
I've read the synopsis of that South Park episode. A
lot going on in that one, A lot going on
that yeah, boy oh boy. So anyway, that sounds like
it's a bit of a ruffle. I think where was
(01:27:36):
I reading that? I think Cartman's got some funny things
to say. Yeah, I just haveve it of a quick
look at that, because it's quite funny. Anyway, do come
through if you want to talk about everything. Tonight we
(01:27:56):
are wrestling and the Cartman's about something sermon in the
mount South Park's and cars as they grapp with a
(01:28:21):
fallout from a lawsuit against the president who has depicted
oh yea, I won't say was depicted with and the
end of NPR. Randy is trying to prevent it. Oh yeah,
Cartman's depressed over the end of NPR because he sees it.
He thinks it's hilarious with its wokeness. Anyway, it's all
(01:28:42):
about Epstein and Trump and stuff like that. I presume
we still get South Park. Haven't watched it for a while,
but I don't haven't watched it because I don't think
it's probably necessarily suitable for the children, and I'd probably
want to watch it twenty eight to eleven. We have
had discussions about I don't think they're far off watching it. Hi, Jet,
this is Marcus Welcome. Hey, hell go good, Jet, Yeah, yeah,
(01:29:07):
real good. You know about Hulk Hogan, Yeah, yeah, for sure,
if you go.
Speaker 11 (01:29:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 30 (01:29:14):
I'd just like to say that he was definitely not
the greatest bird, and I'm not too sympathetic about him.
Speaker 2 (01:29:23):
Sure go on.
Speaker 30 (01:29:25):
Yeah, you know, I just don't really like he was
a big, big Trump advocator, and I don't like that.
You know, he voted real, real hard for him, campaign
real hard, and then and then then he passed on
without having to deal with the reparations of.
Speaker 24 (01:29:41):
It, you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:29:43):
He also was involved with some tape that got the
whole became a kind of a test case for some
sort of privacy law case. Remember that whole situation.
Speaker 30 (01:30:01):
Oh pardon, I didn't didn't really catch the tape with
the law case.
Speaker 2 (01:30:06):
He had a sex tape. Yeah, And there was a
group that published the sex tape that was it called
Gorka or did something with that, and then they were
actually there was some great court case about their rights
to do that, and I didn't follow it that closely.
But as a result of that, there is all sorts
of claims found against him, and the magazine folded because
(01:30:29):
of it. On the back of it.
Speaker 13 (01:30:32):
Yeah, I mean I would never condone the unlawful release
of something like that. Of course, doesn't matter what your
political ideation is. Yeah, yeah, I just think.
Speaker 30 (01:30:49):
Honestly respects what he's done for a career.
Speaker 2 (01:30:54):
Isn't that part of the thing with wrestlers. Aren't all
wrestlers failed people anyway? And of course they'd be the
sort of people that would support Trump because that's kind
of pretty much where they're from, isn't it. That's that
that's the stick, isn't it.
Speaker 11 (01:31:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 30 (01:31:10):
Yeah, No, I'm sure. Yeah, it's definitely their stick. It's yeah,
it fits right in with it, their general quota. It's
like the thing is they it's like with the whole
with the whole six tame thing, you know, that came out,
and he was obviously against that, which of course anyone
(01:31:32):
would be, and he was running real, real hard for Trump.
He was at multiple of the rallies and then recently
with the whole Trump Epstein files as and Trump is
very hard denying the fact that he was ever in
the files. He ran with the cause of releasing those files,
(01:31:55):
and then as soon as he is president, they didn't exist.
Speaker 9 (01:31:59):
You know.
Speaker 30 (01:32:00):
It's it's I feel like it's a bit of a
bit of a similar thing.
Speaker 10 (01:32:03):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:32:07):
Yeah, I'm hearing your jet. So I have a mic
off there for a sex while I was talking. I
can't say it again because it didn't come out quite right,
But yeah, I'm hearing you. Nice to hear from your
jet twenty away from eleven. The number is eight hundred
and eighty ten eighty nine two nine two detect if
you want to come through here till twelve through something
you want to talk about tonight, looking forward to your calls. Yes,
I don't think the Trump's the Epstein stuff's going to
(01:32:27):
go away with Trump. But Jet makes a good point.
I mean, you you run with something that you tell
people there's a great conspiracy were and release the names
and all the stuff like that, and then you just
kind of run a thousand miles from it. Anyway, Marcus,
I'd rather watch Happy gilm or two rather than Trump. Marcus.
(01:32:48):
The tire restaurant going into Timidou now down Strepp Street
and renamed Finns. That might have been Lady Bird Walton,
the Aussie woman pilot brilliant. Someone said it would have
been Gene Batton, but they're spelled a Gene Button. Any
other news to a I've got for you, Well, it's
all about south Park. South Park's yeah, really gone over
(01:33:11):
the top to ridiculed Trump in such a way. Probably
I imagine he'll react. They haven't held back on that one.
I'm not quite sure when you can see South Park
in New Zealand kind of lost touch with that. By
the way, tough weather coming in the weekend. Not tough weather,
but it's been kind of still and dry down South
think now the rain starts. They're calling it a severe
(01:33:35):
weather shift minus seven and a half seven point five
at in Airport last night. But yes, the rain starts now.
I think maybe it's not going to be too bad.
You know, it's going to be slightly warmer as what
(01:33:55):
normally happens with the wet weather. We are talking wrestling,
Hulk Hogan. We are talking also tonight about oh flip
tattoos and suitcases with wheels, and the rules of playing
pool in a pub and whether you ge hit backwards
(01:34:18):
from the d I would have said never. If the
white goes into the pocket, you've always got to shoot
down the long way of the table. I mean, you
never do. It looks like such a coward shot anyway.
And I'm not a great pool player, but like all
pool players, I'm one of those people that once in
a while it all comes right and you pull out
one of those games that even surprises you. How well
(01:34:39):
you play the next game the net very next day
you've lost it all again. Just sometimes, you know, the
pool gods look down on you think, yep, it's time
for a good game. Bang bang bang bang bang, never
to be repeated. And yeah, Lorraine, it's Marcus. Welcome Hi Marcus.
Speaker 20 (01:34:58):
I just don't because it's Friday night, I thought you
might like to know. There's a dreadful flu that comes
around every winter and leaves people a with an ongoing
cough for about six weeks.
Speaker 17 (01:35:09):
Now.
Speaker 20 (01:35:09):
The best remedy is black balls and whiskey. So you
buy that, You get the black balls, which is the
hard sweet that is old fashioned, put it in a
jar and put some whiskey over it, and the black
balls just integrate, leaving you with a black liquid. That
is just the best cough remedy.
Speaker 27 (01:35:30):
And it's it just it just works.
Speaker 2 (01:35:34):
Soid have you have you experienced this? People in christ
you're experiencing.
Speaker 20 (01:35:40):
It now, No, we've We've had some of my family
have had the flu that has got this dreadful cough.
The doctor just says, nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:35:51):
We can do lorain it. Certainly lasts I had it,
I mean the cough, you know, particularly end of the
night at work, you find your sort of it's yeah,
it did. It did seem to linger a bit longer
than I expected.
Speaker 20 (01:36:03):
And there's no treatment for it. The doctors will just say,
you know, going to be like this for six weeks
or so so and some people just you know, it
leaves them quite exhausted. So this black balls and whiskey
is just the best cross res remedy.
Speaker 2 (01:36:21):
Get dissolved in the whiskey.
Speaker 25 (01:36:24):
They dissolve in.
Speaker 20 (01:36:25):
The whisky and at least you with this jar as
a black liquid in it, and people don't mind taking it.
You only need a little sip every now and then
and it's just a wonderful cure. So I thought Friday
night you might like to know that.
Speaker 2 (01:36:40):
Yeah, she is a bed one, Lorraine, thanks very much
for that. You I'd to stay clear of it. I
don't think I have the whiskey, but thank you for that.
Nine to eleven, if you want to be a part
of it, Marcus till twelve, Thanks Lorraine. Good on. Your
people have got to come to quickly before the news
would be great. Some chit chat about the tattoos brilliant,
Hi Val Marcus welcome.
Speaker 20 (01:36:59):
Yeah, Hilo, Marcus, I got something different to say. I
want to talk about clothes quickly before the news. Why
they make me in socks so down tight round the
top that people in rest homes have their legs cut
in and it's been going on for years. If people
could just make the sock and don't put the ribbing on,
it would make people's legs so much better, especially for
(01:37:20):
women too.
Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
Would you say happened at rest homes?
Speaker 20 (01:37:24):
Well, the people that the old people in the rest
homes that their socks are so tight around their legs
that they cut into their legs. They get into lots of.
Speaker 2 (01:37:34):
People's people have puffy legs when they get old.
Speaker 20 (01:37:38):
Well, most the socks are all too small. That you
can get comfort socks from Australia and they're very pricey.
But why can't they just make even woman socks without
the tightness around the top of the sock. We don't
want all these socks that just sit into the shoe
down low. So that's a different thing to talk about.
I don't know how to stuff it. I've tied it
(01:37:59):
for years.
Speaker 2 (01:37:59):
I've cut them on when you wear your treksuits in
their or your ugboot in the ug boots in the
rest home if they could.
Speaker 20 (01:38:07):
I'm not in a rest home.
Speaker 2 (01:38:08):
But do you go to a rest home?
Speaker 10 (01:38:11):
No?
Speaker 20 (01:38:12):
No, no, but well my parents were alive yet I
think you're right.
Speaker 2 (01:38:15):
I think I have seen old people the socks coming
into their sort of thick legs.
Speaker 20 (01:38:20):
Yeah, it's shocking, you know, it's giving them ververicus pains
and not dotting the blood flow freely or anything like that.
Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
So why they've got the bad legs because the socks
have been too tight exactly.
Speaker 20 (01:38:31):
But what can we do about it? We cut them,
then they frey and yeah, you stitch them up with.
Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
The As a guy, you wouldn't want to lose sock.
That'd be something to feel terrible if you lose sock?
Is not is loose? Don't want to lose sock?
Speaker 20 (01:38:46):
Well, believe me, some men have got very bad vericus
pains and they don't need they don't want to sock
tight round them. But anyway, we'll put it out there
and see what happens if someone wouldn't up with a
good idea.
Speaker 2 (01:38:55):
Are you putting out there where you get loose socks?
Speaker 20 (01:38:59):
You know what you can get about twenty five dollars
at campfy socks. But yeah, but they need to not
put the tops on the socks.
Speaker 2 (01:39:08):
Is it the top that's is that top? But that
brings them right? And is that what it is?
Speaker 20 (01:39:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:39:13):
Okay, enough, got on your valid, you'll do it. You'll
do me. You never had a talkback called about socks before.
Speaker 5 (01:39:22):
I think.
Speaker 2 (01:39:24):
I guess one day I kicks and all the conversations
will be documented. I can actually search the things I've
talked about and talk back over the last how many years, Marcus,
here we go, this is something. Oh my god, how
true socks are our biggest issue, always cutting them? Best
called twenty twenty five. I think she might have been
(01:39:45):
a super cooler. She might have been a supercoler. Yes,
no one says they know how to get black whether
we can get black bulls. The socks are tight because
it stays up and doesn't drop down. I wonder if
when someone's gonna invent something that's going to surpass socks.
(01:40:06):
I don't know what it would be. One thing I've
learned in life, if you ever lose a sock, you've
got to then stop everything and fight tooth and nail
to find the other sock. Because you don't find it
then and there, you'll never find it. Jenny quickly.
Speaker 31 (01:40:23):
Like I just listen here, you're talking about socks for
elderly folks that have carry give two legs. Now, I'm
going to say something here. You've probably understood Team in
heav accually what they called diabetic socks, and they really
do work.
Speaker 2 (01:40:40):
It's good, old Timmy. How much are they.
Speaker 31 (01:40:44):
I think they're a bit they're about six dollars for
about four or.
Speaker 2 (01:40:48):
Five per How much is delivery.
Speaker 31 (01:40:52):
Will usually if it's spent, forty dollars free.
Speaker 2 (01:40:56):
Okay, okay, And that's because they're loose around the top.
That's a great digestion.
Speaker 31 (01:41:03):
They they haven't got the type type ripple at the
top of it. You're going to have make one gray
one a white one.
Speaker 9 (01:41:10):
Come you like your.
Speaker 2 (01:41:11):
Legiend, Genny, thank you so much for that. One of
my favorite things and talk back is say how much
and how much to have it delivered? Oh, delivery is free.
They always say, we all know deliveries free. It takes
me a while to ask that. Ah, it's free. Good evening, Genny.
This is Marcus. We are talking socks. Welcome, Hello, Marcus.
Speaker 15 (01:41:32):
It's about socks. Most of mine. I've cut them about
an inch down at the back of the sock because
it's the very top of them. It's very, very tight,
and because they're all machine made. I suppose that's what happens,
because you do need the ribbing on them to take
them up above your ankles on your leg. But it's
(01:41:52):
the very top, probably four rods and I just get
a pair of scisters and just slip the back of
them barely an inch down, and I find that does
they don't slip down? They just stay where you put them?
Speaker 2 (01:42:04):
Do they not free from there? It is not doesn't
continue to tear down.
Speaker 15 (01:42:10):
Because I just know I've just done a complete and
they're quite warm socks. But I've just taken a slip
not even an inch probably from the top down at
the back, and you don't see it. Usually it doesn't
appear any different. And it's so far the snow fraying.
And I did mine last winter winter.
Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
I haven't really thought about bringing it up. Yeah, I
haven't really thought about my rest. I haven't really thought
about true, I haven't thought about my rest home wardrobe,
what I'm going to be in.
Speaker 20 (01:42:40):
We go?
Speaker 2 (01:42:41):
Yeah, because because the shuffles around in socks and slippers
and some traxit pants, don't they.
Speaker 15 (01:42:47):
Well most of them do for come to death.
Speaker 7 (01:42:50):
Yeah, a good topic to bring up.
Speaker 15 (01:42:53):
Great topics are all made on machine. It's probably hard
for them to reseat it when.
Speaker 12 (01:42:58):
They cast them off.
Speaker 2 (01:43:00):
What about you get those those knitted socks. They're quite
good with thick well, aren't they any of that tied
up the shin.
Speaker 15 (01:43:07):
The ones you yourself, Yeah yeah, but you can't. You
can do your own tension on me.
Speaker 2 (01:43:14):
Yeah yeah, that's I might get my knitted socks.
Speaker 15 (01:43:18):
Tension on those. But the manufactured ones, they do that
and they think they will cheat them up, but it
does cut them.
Speaker 2 (01:43:26):
Nice to talk to. I'm a huge fan. This is
not cash for comrade, don't work that way. The norsewear socks,
those gray lizard wore ones, They're tremendous. They are a
great sock. They are I forever sock. Those thick knitted
ones A couple of peers are those. You're good to go.
Even if you buy your shoes a bit too big.
There's room in them. Brilliant or they might always get
(01:43:49):
full of gorse. They gets in the gun boot, but
that's because I can't be by the lacing the gun
boots up. It's the last thing you want to do.
And you don't. Don't on the red bands because too
much gorse gets in them. A couple of vertical cuts
on top of these nasty socks will prevent your low
legs from looking vacuum packed. It's a good text. I
work for Macy's and Newlyn Orctaware of black Bulls available,
(01:44:09):
most might of ten Ciros and our available and original
flavor and three new flavors orn Lemon, Ginger. I love Curoles.
Timmu socks are plastic, not cotton. Rest home wardrober but
some of the prison wardrobe, Yeah, just shuffle around. I
(01:44:34):
buy compression socks lovely even pressure all the way from
the ankle to the canee Anna streetten us in and
brand to a nice patent one. Marcus, my grandson had
a cough for three weeks. He's only one year old.
Poor little guy, and the doctors won't give any medication.
Doesn't sleep well because of the cough. The socks are
(01:45:02):
tight because it stays up and doesn't drop down. And
watch your rest home wardrobe because honestly, I don't know
what my rest home wardrobe would be. I guess And
the end You're going for comfort, aren't you? I suppose to.
(01:45:24):
You're often other people do your shopping for you, are you? Yes?
Do come through if you want to talk about that socks.
Anyone knitting their own socks? I think it'd be quite
a tricky thing to knit. I wonder if leg warmers
(01:45:47):
would be better for some of those people like an
ankle sock and a league warmer because they always end
slightly loose. You don't see many people in league warman's emoor.
Do they occasionally come back? Where's the people look smart
than leg warmer? Well, that's what I think. Yeah, those
(01:46:09):
norsewhe socks, they're the ones great believer in those. Anyway,
eleven eleven is the time, and I'm looking forward to
your input tonight. My name is Marcus. Welcome, Come on.
Speaker 13 (01:46:27):
What do you got.
Speaker 2 (01:46:33):
Wrestling? Also if you want to talk about that. Oh,
by the way, it's loose for the end of the Friday,
end of my week.
Speaker 23 (01:46:38):
Yay?
Speaker 2 (01:46:40):
What the calls have been very good this week. Yes,
so you've come through quite effortlessly, which I appreciate. Just
putting that out there. Now they'll stop ringing. And I've
just said that. Jinks myself self jinks, Oh Stevie self jinks.
We might have to bring up the B word. But
(01:47:04):
baa baa baa baa baa batter butter, butter, butter, butter, butter, butter, butter, butter, butter, butter,
butter butter. Yep, it's certainly the word of the year
is butter can you see me the article for the
Odt Dan about the baker from in Vicago having a
go joke Pudden having got Joseph money about saying you
(01:47:24):
can use margarine. How do you they have a South
Minister for the South Island that says we can use
margarine instead of butter. That'll be one of the fundamental
things you should know as a as a member for
the South Island is what you need to cook good
home baking and it's not margarine instead of butter. I
(01:47:47):
was in Copeland today picking up the meat pies for
the Bluff Club day tomorrow. We'd like to give the
teams that travel a pie. That's part of all the whole,
you know, being a good guest, a good host. Gee,
that's busy Old Copeland's a lot going on in there.
See a lot of pastries, a lot of people buying
a lot of pastries. Actually couldn't see a SELLI lun
(01:48:12):
because it was a top it from this week. Probably
one of the most calls that I've remembered the most
from this week is the purse the ring up texted
yesterday and what they do with their Sally Lunn is
they slice it in half and they butter the bottom
half obviously one lotto.
Speaker 4 (01:48:32):
And then.
Speaker 2 (01:48:35):
They put the top down on the buttered side. But
they put the top down on the buttered side. I
seen side first, so you can eat it without the
coconut dropping everywhere. I never would have thought to have
done that. Never. Oh, this is the bakery in Gore
(01:49:05):
and putting out the gap and the butter and margarine
A Southen MP. Oh the other MP. It's a south
of the other was the MP, the minister for the
South Island. But it's the MP that's for that region.
The clue the region the guy that took over from Oh,
there's been a long rate. There's been a long list
of idiots in that seat. There was the guy that
to that got caught releasing a list and left in
(01:49:26):
ignominy and now he's a real estate agent. But anyway,
and pointing out the price gap between butter and margarine,
a South and MP has reminded people that deial tunives
are a cheaper option. In response to head Baker to
gool Bakery said there was no comparison. While at South
Southern Farmer said in the cost living crisis, he understood
the public's need to diversify South and MP Joseph Mooney
(01:49:52):
post a photo on social media this week showing a
five dollars between a tub of marjorine and more expensive
block of butter. Interesting compare the price. I've always preferred
butter myself to great, but great to have choices. He's
gaslighting us, Marjorie. It's not appropriate or turnative for oven
Fresh bakery head baker Ler O'Bryan, who said it does
not taste the same for the bakery's bake goods. Nothing
(01:50:14):
beats butter, which has got its flavor and salt vectors
from its milk solids. Fed Farmers South and Dairy chief
Bart Ludgin sit understood the MP statement of the price.
The dairy was outside the farmer's control. It's a shame
that the butter is a price it is, but that's
(01:50:35):
the reflection of the international prices, he said. Somebody else
put out too. The money coming to New Zealand for
the farmers, most of it goes to the Australian banks
or overseas for tractors and gods, so it's not coming
back into the New zd economy. A lot of its
going straight overseas banks for profit. And it's not like
we're making tractors in this country or farm machinery. Most
(01:50:56):
of it's straight out of here. Anyway, I said, I
was going to talk about butter, and here I am
talking about butter. Good evening, Jeanet, it's Smart's welcome.
Speaker 27 (01:51:08):
Hime Marcus. I fell asleep from there.
Speaker 30 (01:51:12):
Sorry about that, right, You do what you.
Speaker 2 (01:51:16):
Do, what you're like.
Speaker 27 (01:51:17):
Yeah, just ringing up about nineteen fifty. I love resting.
I used to wrestle my father, and I've got a point.
A neighbor took me to the town hall and I watched.
I'm sure his name was Costello. Coun't really remember, but
(01:51:41):
he was a magnificent figure. He had a long came
in with red birds, and he was blonde and he
had a beautiful red gown. His wife was lasts year
long blonde here and everything. But they did proper racing
and there was lofty blonde field.
Speaker 2 (01:52:00):
Oh yes, going to that's right famous.
Speaker 27 (01:52:06):
Yeah, And he was the one who did the octopus clamp.
Speaker 2 (01:52:12):
And what did that?
Speaker 27 (01:52:13):
Ld Oh papa wrestling.
Speaker 2 (01:52:17):
But how do you put the octopus?
Speaker 17 (01:52:18):
Is it?
Speaker 7 (01:52:18):
Yeah?
Speaker 27 (01:52:19):
Oh yeah, Well my father used to we have a
lot of fun together. My father and I and he
used to wrestle me. I think I was supposed to
be the boy the family. And we lived in this
house where we used to play cricket in the hall
and I mean really but anyway, we writtle and I
(01:52:40):
was quite strong. I was about fifteen, but you know,
really strong. So we're playing a lot of sports. And anyway,
he told me this thing octopus claim, and he'd put
both his legs rever me and he'd squeeze it, you know,
and he couldn't do a thing. It was so funny.
We used to laugh, laugh, laugh, good, the good.
Speaker 2 (01:53:03):
Fun What when you went to the wrestling your neighbor
to the town hall? What city was that in Auckland?
Speaker 17 (01:53:11):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:53:11):
Okay, oh good?
Speaker 27 (01:53:13):
It was picked out and I was on the top
floor and bring the fashion the day of all gloves. Yes,
And my neighbor was so concerned at my excitement that
he thought I was going to lose my gloves over
the side.
Speaker 29 (01:53:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 27 (01:53:29):
Good.
Speaker 2 (01:53:29):
Do you know Lofty Blomfield was fighting?
Speaker 27 (01:53:33):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm looking at I'm.
Speaker 2 (01:53:37):
Looking at the octopus hold.
Speaker 24 (01:53:38):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:53:38):
It's quite confusing, because you got it's almost like the
two leagues are tied and not around one of your leagues.
You're standing up. It's quite a it's quite a good hold.
Speaker 27 (01:53:48):
Yeah, Oh it's brilliant. You can't do anything. Yeah, and
yeah it was. Oh I love trying that trick on him,
or he did it to me. That was about the then.
Speaker 2 (01:53:59):
Yeah, oh brilliant. Oh that's a good story, Jennie. Thank
you for that. You go to sleep now. Twenty eight
to sorry, twenty eight to twelve is not twenty eight
to twelve. It's eleven twenty two to twelve. Need to
get that right. Good evening, clear, This is Marcus.
Speaker 14 (01:54:14):
Welcome, Hello Marcus clear speaking.
Speaker 2 (01:54:18):
How are you good?
Speaker 16 (01:54:18):
That's not good now, MICUs. I've got a funny story
that I thought you might be yest. And when I
was a little girl, I used to see the nothing
about socks or anything. I used to the used to
be a couple of dogs that lift up our streets,
and they were always siffing around each other. And I
used to think, ooh, what are they doing siffing around?
Speaker 12 (01:54:38):
Right?
Speaker 5 (01:54:38):
Red?
Speaker 16 (01:54:39):
So when I said, I said, Daddy.
Speaker 17 (01:54:41):
What isn't this doctor?
Speaker 16 (01:54:42):
I said, every time I see this, doctory're always stiffing around?
He said, oh, I forgot.
Speaker 14 (01:54:47):
To tell you, he said.
Speaker 16 (01:54:49):
A long time ago, there was this huge dog convention.
All the dogs came rushing in the Winton's the convention hall,
and I were busy listening to all the speech fivure,
and all of a sudden that the people were fire fire,
and all the dogs rushed out and they grabbed them
bottoms that they had to leave these tails at the
(01:55:11):
front door. They all had to leave their tails at
the front door. So of course when they rushed screamed
out fire fire, all the dogs came rushing out. They
just grave the old tail and to have And ever
since then these dogs have been looking for their own tails.
And you know, I believed for years, so I was.
(01:55:31):
Of course, I don't realize to understand it now, but
I thought that was ever so funny. And when I
bought a book for one of my great grandchildren and
it had something like I like bums, and all of
a sudden that story came back to me. Told me
about bums and kids. I bened to do with poos
(01:55:51):
and wheeze and bums, don't they?
Speaker 2 (01:55:53):
That seems to do with it. That seems to be
where the books go these days. It seems to be
the books. So yeah, okay, and I like bum so.
Speaker 16 (01:56:01):
Of course immediately I thought my darling old father told
me this. Ever since seeing these poor dogs wondering in
the world looking for the behind.
Speaker 2 (01:56:12):
Love to hear from your clear clear, clear by name
and clear by nature, clear voice, clear phone line, which
I like, free, clear voice, Stiffany, Marcus, welcome.
Speaker 4 (01:56:21):
It's good morning, Marcus.
Speaker 2 (01:56:24):
Are you you're I'm calling it good evening, Stiffanie. But
you're welcome. You're on your own clock. You can do
what you want. I respect that about you.
Speaker 11 (01:56:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:56:35):
Socks, you know, yeah, I have the same trouble. You
know what we're what angle socks are just up there
above the ankle, but they really cleaning on your arm
on the bottom of your league.
Speaker 2 (01:56:51):
Bad And they leave a group, don't They could leave
a groove?
Speaker 4 (01:56:54):
Yeah? Yeah, well not only your group, but the bottom
of your league is narrower than above the where the
sock was.
Speaker 2 (01:57:01):
Yes, that's right.
Speaker 4 (01:57:03):
Yeah, And you can lose them and side can't believe me.
I've done it twice now yeah, And where do they go?
Speaker 2 (01:57:13):
I don't know. I think I think so. I think
before long there's going to be socks with some sort
of computer chips so they can always trigger where there
are other sockers. I reckon, that's going to be a thing.
Speaker 4 (01:57:25):
Oh, it's going to have to be you know. It's
only about two or four square meedles or something.
Speaker 7 (01:57:33):
Here.
Speaker 4 (01:57:33):
And yeah, I've done it twice now and I did
it again today when they get dressed and he only
one sock and you look all around under the sleet,
through everything.
Speaker 2 (01:57:45):
That what set me there on the art? What set
me there on the artist? Stephanie, Oh there was another guy.
Speaker 4 (01:57:52):
I'm just saying. It's a big board up through National Park.
Speaker 2 (01:57:55):
A big fire. Quiet, Oh but quiet? Sorry my hearing
any word about Olivia.
Speaker 31 (01:58:04):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:58:10):
I got into Wellington this morning at a bit of
a flash five and it was supposed to be there,
but it was still in Picton.
Speaker 2 (01:58:21):
So there's troubles with it. There's troubles with it already,
is there?
Speaker 25 (01:58:25):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:58:25):
I think it's just teasing troubles. So they didn't send
it back this after noon. They send it for ony effect,
so I think it may have run out midnight.
Speaker 7 (01:58:37):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:58:39):
I guess the crew have got to learn the whole
intricacies of docking and everything. I guess it's probably not
that straightforward from the beginning.
Speaker 4 (01:58:46):
No, it would be slightly different to the Connie Marra,
but it's similar.
Speaker 2 (01:58:50):
But the truck drivers haven't said if the what what
the rooms are like, if it's a good ship or
anything like that.
Speaker 4 (01:58:56):
No, no, no it was it did it's made in
broad and come back to Wellington and then went back
to Picton and that was the one that that was
this morning. I haven't spoken anyone who's been over.
Speaker 2 (01:59:10):
Did do you have a drive in the South Island?
Speaker 4 (01:59:14):
Not very often. I've been down the oh about six
or seven times since I've been with Horse.
Speaker 2 (01:59:21):
Oh that's over about.
Speaker 4 (01:59:24):
A teen year period.
Speaker 2 (01:59:25):
Oh yeah, you don't ask for an awake trip once
in a while, no, okay.
Speaker 4 (01:59:32):
And crawly just sleep and then going back to Atland easy.
Speaker 5 (01:59:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:59:41):
If you go over to pick them, then head christ
You've got to have a teen hair break before you
can carry on the christis so make it for the
three day trip.
Speaker 2 (01:59:52):
Understand that I'm going to go because your line's cutting
out there. But it's definitely but nice to talk to you.
The number is eight hundred and eighty nineteen nine to
the text looking forward to what you've got to say
socks and wrestling. I bought at the department Farmers department
store a pack of three, A pack of three piece
of socks, one pale gray, one dark at gray, one black,
(02:00:13):
no ribband atop, just cast off great. I'm wearing some tonight,
no ribband at the top.
Speaker 1 (02:00:19):
For more from Marcus Slash Nights, listen live to news
talks there'd be from eight pm weekdays, or follow the
podcast on iHeartRadio.