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November 11, 2025 • 139 mins

Marcus talks 3D printing, where Costco could (or should) expand to, and the journey of a giraffe north.

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus lush Night's podcast from News
Talks at.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Be Greetings, welcome, and good evening. My name is Marcus
Hittl twelve o'clock tonight. I hope it's good where you are.
A couple of interesting things on the road today. Right,
there is a giraffe that is going from christ Church
to Irana Wildlife Park. Sorry, from christ Church to the

(00:34):
Hamilton Zoo. Now this is something we want to follow.
We love a giraffe. The journey kicked off about half
past eleven today. Now, if you're going to take a
giraffe from Kai from Irana Wildlife Park to Hamilton Zoo,
which way would you go? I'll give you a hint.

(00:56):
You won't be going through cau Caulder because it's four
point three meters tall. So I think it's gone via
Culvidan and Wyow. So we've got the giraffe heading north.
I also sure I also saw on Facebook today going
on the inter Islander was one of those futuro spaceship houses.

(01:19):
Now I'm not quite sure if that's I think that's
going north also, So if you've seen either of those,
the giraffe or the spaceship let me know where they are.
We'll keep a track of those.

Speaker 3 (01:30):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
I don't know where that give a phone. I don't
know how the giraffe will have got on the inter islander,
but I think it's sailing at seven point thirty, so
you might be on that vestly you might have seen
it tonight. I would love to hear from you if
you have, oh, eight hundred eighty ten eighty and nine
to nine two de text. If you do want to

(01:52):
come through, my name is Marcus Httle twelve, the Giraffe
and the spaceship House. Oh yeah, all those and more
do come through eight hundred eighty eight, ten eighty and
nineteen nine two text. Billidn't get in touch if you
want to talk now. Ah. The other thing today is
Cup Week and christ Church and today was Cup Day.

(02:16):
If you've been at that, how was it? Because all
the press and everything's saying it was fantastic, the weather
was good and it was one of the great a
veta souf. That's one of the things that you have done.
Let me know how that was. Eight hundred and eighty
ten eighty and nine two nine two detext. I'd be
pretty curious to know about that. If you have been
to Cup Day. I always mean to get there.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
Every year.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
I say I'm going to get there, But every year
it's at the kind of busy part of the year
and I miss it. So maybe next year might be
the here I get there. But they were just coming
back from the races, or are just partying on the strip,
if that's what they call it. Let me know how
that was for you today. I hope it was fantastic,
by the way. I know the people of christ Church
are incredibly proud of it, as they should be. I know,

(03:05):
for a while there became a bit of if I
it became a bit boozy. Then obviously there was the
Crake and the recovery and people wanted to party. But
now it seems we've got its happy medium. So if
your experience that, say, let us know how that was.
Also eight hundred eighty ten eighty and nine to nine,
two detexts. There are two things, three things, the giraffe,
the spaceship and the Cup Week. If you want to

(03:27):
talk about those three things, get in touch. My name
is Marcus Hadle twelve oh eight hundred eighty ten eighty
and nine to nine two de texts. Would love some updates,
particularly on the Giraffe and the spaceship House. But yeah,
of course the giraffe couldn't go up through the coast
all those tunnels, so do come through if you want
to talk about that. There's also of other topics for tonight.

(03:47):
It's a busy brief hitle midnight. So if there's other
breaking news that you've got, let us know what that is.
Get in touch with it. If you've got anything special happening,
would love to hear from you. But the giraffe and
the spaceship and cup date to start off with, and
I'll tell you what else we've got going on as
we go through the night tonight. So oh eight hundred
eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two to text.

(04:08):
Anything else, We're here for you. I'm looking forward to
what you've got to say. There is a three or
four things I think we need to talk about tonight,
so I've got all those worked out for you. So
keep yourself posted and we'll do what we can for you.
As I say, oh, eight hundred and eighty ten eighty
and nine to nine two to text. If you don't

(04:29):
wan to become a part of it, keep those emails
coming through also two people tonight. There are other topics
for you, but yeah, just for those two things to
begin with, and the fact that it's Cup week, Marcus,
I'm getting on the furry it picked And how would
I know, How would I know if the giraffe, how
would I know if the giraffe is transported, I'd see it.

(04:51):
You see a very high box. I would imagine down
where the trucks are. Well, they couldn't have it there
for the crossing good nough, maybe they are. And then
you'll see it going slightly up the highways and a
giant box on the back of a truck. Because I
remember last time, early on in this show, there was
a giraffe that went Auckland down to christ Church. We
had sightings of it the whole trip, so I believe
people will be seeing this to get in touch with that.

(05:13):
So that's at the Spaceship House, the giraffe, and if
you're at Cup, we'd let me know how that went.
I think it's a Cup day today. Then there's a
Gallops race later on in the week and it was
a public holiday and christ Church today, so I'm looking
forward to report from christ Juche because apparently all went
very very well. That's what I'm reading about in the
Pressley say that was a very good day. So yes,

(05:34):
that's of interest to me, as I say, oh eight
hundred eighty ten eighty and nine nine two detext be
a part of you want to join the fray. I've
got my cup of tea, very very happy, beautiful. If
there's something else you want to mention God, feel free
to come through. I don't know why they're transporting giraffes around,
either way, that seemed to me that to me, they

(05:57):
be the right country of giraffes. I know that that
zoo and up and north of fang Aade, they've got
great troubles with that. They're going to kill those animals.
There's some woman thought she'd managed to find a buyer
for it, but no one's going to throw money at
that because it's a dead duck. It's taken millions and
millions of dollars at and just brought heartache. No one
wants to see lions and cages cheapers anyway here till

(06:19):
twelve you on start the whole ball rolling Marcus. How
many overhead bridges between Wellington and Hamilton. It's a really
good point. What route will they take? There is an
overhead bridge south of Tito am I right. Someone might
want to tell me if they are a trucker, how
many overhead bridges would there be that the giraffe couldn't take.

(06:40):
I'm trying to think how it's going to get out
of Wellington, going to get straight up the Gorge, the
Narranger Gorge. You want to bring that across Dan, Yeah,
no worries. Yeah, thirteen past eight you Murray, it's Marcus.
Good evening.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
Oh to tell you we're talking about that's good.

Speaker 6 (06:59):
Thanks, I'm trying.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
On God, yes, the Murry. Why aren't you making your own.

Speaker 5 (07:09):
Well I knew I knew someone you know you would
say that, but I'm expecting that on my own Facebook post. Yeah,
I want you to do this. Why not buy the breadmaker?

Speaker 2 (07:20):
Do you work shop work? Do you workshop your material
on Facebook before you find it through?

Speaker 7 (07:25):
I like that.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
No, but my advance anyone on Facebook was like, you know,
edit twice, send once and never be drunk.

Speaker 8 (07:35):
Okay, yeah, so the bridge.

Speaker 5 (07:38):
I did my shop weekly shop, which sometimes is a
ten day shop. But I'm a budget right now and
I know how much things cost, so the cheapest bread
is what we all know is value or PAMs or
whatever it is. You know copelands, yep, exactly. Now used
to the cheap the cheapest there is also choo because

(07:59):
usually weighs a little left. Now used to weigh six
hundred and eighty grams rather than like seven to fifty
for the same sort of looking loaf. Right, Well, it's
down to six hundred grams.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Is the weight on it, marry or you need to
weigh yourself the weights on it.

Speaker 5 (08:12):
You get slices to crusts. So it's down to six
hundred grams. And two weeks ago it was a dollar
simenty nine at New World and now it's one ninety nine,
which is eleven inflation. Now I heard someone being on
the other day about how they have things under control.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
Really we're talking fourteen cents of slice, are we?

Speaker 9 (08:37):
Now?

Speaker 2 (08:37):
Is that how much it is? Is that I don't
I don't know if seventeen goes to a dollar ninety nine,
how many times? And with your count.

Speaker 5 (08:43):
Slices round of two bucks and call it twenty slices.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
Often the crusts are so fine they'll just as you
put them into the toaster they'll then curl up and
stuff the whole thing.

Speaker 5 (08:55):
And get stuck in the time the elliptroic.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
At yourself because you're in there trying to get it out.

Speaker 5 (08:59):
It's not good now, it's sick for your crumpets, I say, so, watch.

Speaker 2 (09:07):
What's the salient point of that? That things that that
we're not over the inflation, that there's no recovery. What
are we saying?

Speaker 5 (09:13):
No, no, need you know that the only green streets
are growing up from my lawn, you know, and it's
costing me a fortune and petrol.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
DeMott Okay, have you got a Copelands?

Speaker 8 (09:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (09:28):
No, but it is in the shop.

Speaker 2 (09:30):
Okay, nice to talk brow, thank you. It's not your
rousal the spaceship. It's about cover. Someone says, we're the
public holiday on christ itch Is Friday. Even better, you've
got an extra one sixteen past eight, eight hundred and
eighty today. By the way, speaking of animals and cages,
one of the big stories from the UK is that
the Gentoo penguins, right, they're trying to get those freed

(09:52):
from the zoo in London. There's a place where they
are is a grosso or a concrete thing, and they
want the members of Parliament of the UK are calling
for the gentoo penguins at Sea Life London a query
to be released. And I read that because I say
it's Unbritish to keep penguins like that trapped in a

(10:12):
basement without sunlight or fresh air. And I read that
article and I thought, gee, how are we about penguins?
Are we okay with the ones at Kelly Taltan's when
they've been there a long time? Is that the place
for penguin's Tamaki drive? I'm always thinking Kelly Talon's got
a very good reputation for an aquarium, but is it

(10:34):
the place where penguins should be? So I know they've
done very well with the penguins because they can breed them,
I think, and they sell them to zoos around the world.
I'm just thinking about that. Is that where we want penguins?
But anyway, we'll talk about the giraffe'll talk about cup week.
The price of bread seventeen slices for a dollar ninety nine? Yeah,

(10:56):
I think it might be twelve or thirteen cents of
slices do come through? There's anything else you want to
mention it to night be good to hear from you, Marcus,
the UFO is going to Chalkey Island. I don't think
it is. Is it is the giraffe going north or south?
The giraffe is going north. It's going to Hamilton Zoo. Oh,
by the way, there's that zoo for sale. Speak speaking

(11:18):
of zoos, that one and Totong I saw as for sale,
todong A Park, Marshall's Animal Park and todong Is that
any good? Or is it just like peacocks and stuff
which I never like, don't like birds? Is there a
fire out by Auckland Airport? We will find out? Why?

(11:40):
Is the giraffe going north? Everyone I know is going south?
Couldn't they sedate the giraffe and transport it? Lying down?
Might snap its neck? I don't know how you transport
a giraffe. It's a very good question. You want to
watch one of those zoos shows for that, Marcus. You

(12:00):
could take me off the blacklist after all these years.
There is no blacklist. I'm reading your text number ending
in four one three, Marcus, is nothing better than the
Victorian zoo line in a small cage. Brilliant. That's from
Simon Brilliant. He's texting everyone being. This is Marcus welcome.

Speaker 10 (12:23):
You get it, Marcus. You know I went to the
pub today and Christ watched the racing. Yeah it was great.
You behaved themselves.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Can you just lift your voice talk about louder?

Speaker 10 (12:37):
Sorry, Marcus, can you hear me now?

Speaker 11 (12:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Brilliant, that's much better. So which pub?

Speaker 10 (12:42):
I went to? The One Horse?

Speaker 11 (12:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (12:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (12:48):
Is that got a t a B there And they
have a special kind of a cup week thing for it,
do they?

Speaker 10 (12:51):
No, it doesn't know that. It's got the TV screens
and you have a bite to eat and the drink
and stuff.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
Is it called the Horse, Well, it used to.

Speaker 10 (13:02):
Be called the Horse teven, but I don't know what's
called now.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
I think it might just be called the Yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:07):
Yeah, yeah, so there and then just quick me on
the breed markets. I've seen I've seen a post on
Facebook saying that the bread had gone up due to
the price of butter, and butter had gone up because
overseas markets were willing to pay pay more money, and
so it was it was more of a rather than
an infation and tonal thing. It was more of an

(13:29):
overseas competition because I've put.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
I've put often made bread and I don't think I
put any butter on it much. Do you do you
put butter when you make bread?

Speaker 10 (13:37):
I'm not sure. I've never made it myself, but I've
just seen on the Facebook post, so I'm was saying
the price of butter's going up and they're affecting anything.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
How would the cup week in? The race? Is the
one major race? Is it called the christ Your Cup?

Speaker 11 (13:51):
Is it?

Speaker 12 (13:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (13:54):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (13:54):
You got a few other side races and that they
play other races from you know, around the world and
mad as well leading up to it.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Who was the winner?

Speaker 10 (14:04):
You got me the market? They had a few stage Okay.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Good on you being I think it's one of the
great joys of life as summer comes and drinking in
the day in the pub for something like a race
that's brilliant. Yeah, I like in the sounds of that
being good to hear from you. Oh, we're talking about
bread and giraffes. It's going to be a broad show tonight, Marcus.
Why is Hamilton such an attraction for giraffes. He's the

(14:28):
second one that's gone there in the last two years.
I've never been to Hamilton Zoo, but I've heard ads
for it. On the TV or the radio, and maybe
they've got something like Serengetti type planes of Africa cut
thing going on. That's probably why they want the giraffes.
They've got wilderbeasts and things, and I think you can
camp there. Sorry about the heck ups. Brian, How you're doing, Brian?

(14:57):
I'm good. How are you doing?

Speaker 13 (14:58):
All right?

Speaker 11 (14:59):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (14:59):
Pretty cool? Yeah, that day we're just going about Horsewell Hub.
That's all. All's well, and the Hallswell.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
Of course, all's well. That ends well in Hallswell.

Speaker 8 (15:11):
And about nineteen and about nineteen sixty or fifty five
or thereabouts, that pub burned down when I was in
the school bus coming home from school. Were burnt to
the ground.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
Which is not uncommon for pubs, is it most of
them seem No.

Speaker 8 (15:26):
Yeah, that was very old then. My dad was born
there and I think I was born in there as well.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
So was your dad born in the pub?

Speaker 8 (15:38):
In there?

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Well, I met a guy and his wife would bring
him his dinner in the pub with the kits with
the kids in pajamas. That's good, isn't it.

Speaker 8 (15:48):
My mom would go down and pick him out. But
we used to go on a Sunday after church. Catholic
Church are just along the road on Candy's Road. It's
called I think it was called the Catholic Church. You
just go from the Catholic Church down to the pub.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
That's your real christ Church life, isn't it.

Speaker 8 (16:07):
Oh, without a doubt.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
What was the name of the church, And there was.

Speaker 8 (16:12):
Nson Peters and Paul's. But I think I've had a
name change as they pushed the old one down and
built a new one and built a new priest house
and all that sort of thing.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
Now, and what's the road Candy's Candace Candy c A
N d y s Oh yeah, did you do anything
special for the races today?

Speaker 8 (16:31):
No, I'm living in Cambridge now.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
Oh really, gosh, it's a long year long. You're a
long way from home.

Speaker 8 (16:36):
Oh I am a long way from the home that
cows brought me up here.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Oh yeah, yeah with the old white and blacks, are you?

Speaker 3 (16:42):
Yeah? Yeah?

Speaker 8 (16:43):
I was down down in Hall's Well as well.

Speaker 14 (16:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
Funny old name for a place, Hall's will is an Ais.
It sounds weird to me.

Speaker 8 (16:52):
Yeah, Well, what happened was it was a funny little
country town, just that cove and two shop still all store,
but then one of my dads makes aside to subdivide
his farm up and that was one of the first
subdivisions outsid. I cried city and I've ended up selling
up and it was called the Pombie Settlement. And I'm
still there today and all England come out and the houses.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
And why would have why would have the English brought there?
Because it was new and they felt rich with the
big expanse and that come from those northern towns.

Speaker 8 (17:23):
Is that what it would have been when I look back,
I don't really know. But one was check Its Avenue
and one was Nottingham Avenue, so I couldn't tell you anymore.
But there was a story about one of them. There's
a guy got missing down there. The house has been
empty now for about five years. I think his mate

(17:44):
shot him. I think that's what the story was. But
I my best friend grew up in that house. Wow,
I just go around and play. Now that house has
been empty. They found the guy's car keys and while
it's on the kitchen table, and they think, you can
think he's best mate murdered him. But it's never been.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Sounds like a particular christ Church crying that one. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
it is a real christ Michael McGrath. That's the one,
very good, and you'll make head his house.

Speaker 8 (18:12):
No, my mate grew up there, and that's why I
used to go around and play with a pony to
that three house, that very house. Yeah, fifty nine chick
at Sevenue. You can look it up, you'll see it. Yeah, no,
I have yeah, oh hit he and the guy, the
guy that the guy that'sposed to murdered.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
Let's not talk too much about that because I'm not
quite sure if that's if we should be saying that.
But I'm hearing you right, I'm sorry, before is it
before the courts? Or where are we with that one?

Speaker 13 (18:42):
Dad?

Speaker 8 (18:42):
I don't know he's I think he's in. Sorry, but they.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
Had two trials, didn't they?

Speaker 15 (18:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (18:48):
Yeah, okay, Well it's so he's down the right of way?

Speaker 16 (18:51):
Is he.

Speaker 17 (18:54):
Should I?

Speaker 8 (18:55):
No? No, no's down.

Speaker 13 (18:57):
The right away.

Speaker 2 (18:57):
Fifty nine is the right of way, isn't it?

Speaker 8 (19:01):
No?

Speaker 2 (19:01):
No, No, it's the front house.

Speaker 8 (19:03):
Okay, yep, yeah, that's front house.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
Okay, I've got to go, Bron. That's been too interesting
for me. I'm not going because I'm scared of what
you're gonna say. But I've just got to get commercials
out before the headlines. But that's brilliant. Get in touch
twenty six past eight, Hitdle twelve, Hold your horses, I'll
be with you soon. By the way, some has texted through.
They send the giraffes to Hamilton for breeding purposes because
the town is so promiscuous. Wow. I don't think it's

(19:28):
fun to make I don't think it's a good thing
to make funada Hamilton, is it? But anyway, thanks for that, Marcus.
Giraffes love Hamilton because when they're in the zoo they
are so told they can see Raglan and Todonger. Well
you've got two things there. Roofing on a theme, Marcus,
google male giraffes fighting brutal the way they smash each
other with their necks. Whould google that? I'm not going

(19:51):
to google. Don't want to see giraffes fighting. I think
it sounds sad. Bob, this is Marcus welcome.

Speaker 13 (20:01):
That's a little bit about their horse gration. Kingsman one
a million dollar race a Leap of Fame which was
a red hot favorite from Australia that won it, and
then the other half a million dollar race was won
by a horse call Gus, who also was from Australia.
The Australians took one and a half million dollars of
our money over.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
To are what a waste?

Speaker 13 (20:19):
That is exactly and one that I backed while I
was still looking for it.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Hang on, did you say three races there? Which one won?
The first race?

Speaker 13 (20:33):
Kingsman won the big race which was with a million
dollars and was a horse called Leap of Fame which
was red hot favorite. And then there was another big
race five hundred thousand bar horse called Guss Australia won.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Have the Aussie horse has been winning for the last
few years? Or is this against the odds? With Kingsmen.

Speaker 11 (20:55):
For Fame?

Speaker 13 (20:56):
Is pretty good most of the time we've been winning. Actually,
I'd just like to tell you what. I'm on the
phone my sister going to rent. I haven't got contrasted.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Oh what happened? Did you fall?

Speaker 17 (21:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 13 (21:08):
I was turning up my cold water tamp outside, slipped
them mend my head against the brick wall.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
So this is how it starts. Because it's not even
like it's winter and the ice is frozen. What do
you slip on?

Speaker 8 (21:21):
Oh?

Speaker 13 (21:21):
I slipped on a couple of slippery bricks. I had
a couple.

Speaker 2 (21:25):
There was my next And when you when you say
a couple, the meddal medical professionals double and so you
had four? Is that right?

Speaker 5 (21:33):
Well?

Speaker 2 (21:34):
Yes, probably might need to wear a helmet.

Speaker 13 (21:38):
I just slipped on a brick down anyway. And they
all went to Australia, all the big ones.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Do they take you to for A and E for observation?

Speaker 13 (21:49):
No? No, they wanted to, but I wouldn't mean them.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
I think you said, Bob, I think you sound I
think you sound normal exactly. Yeah, thank you. That's what
you want to call it. Humor, self deprecating, takes responsibility,
has a few and falls, but owns it. And anyone
that says the horse eyeback is still looking for I
love all that stuff. I love the I love all

(22:14):
that stick around backing bad horses anyway, punting ah. I
don't know where where do all the great harness race
horses in Australia come from? Are there? Is it New
South Wales as a Victoria? I don't really know much
about harness racing in Australia.

Speaker 8 (22:35):
Anyway.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
I tell you what. The dogs aren't coming back? Are they?

Speaker 14 (22:37):
No?

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Rear action with that one. They've gone gone. I don't
know when the last meat will be. It can't be
far away gone.

Speaker 18 (22:48):
So there we go.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
That's that. Over the dog racing, the dish liquors get
in touch. You want to be a part of a
twenty seven away from nine eight eighty ten eighty we
should have entered the giraffe and the great race would
have won by a long neck. Murray says, there is
no butter and Pam's bread. It's canola oil. I don't

(23:10):
know how you can put the price of bread up,
because not either there's a wheat war or is there. Yeah,
I don't know about bread and the price of bread.
I think it's one of those things when you're scanning
you don't look at the price because I don't know,
because it's always just bread. I guess that probably sounds entitled,
does it?

Speaker 18 (23:30):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (23:30):
Eight hundred and eighty teny nine two nine to detext
No one knows where the giraffes. No one knows where
the spaceship houses. Oh Marcus, if you didn't get enough
the Edinfantzgerald author Rick Mixter has been interviewed by George
Noriri about his extensive research on the Edmond Fitzgerald on

(23:51):
Coast to Coast AM. Now start at seven am until
nine am. Where's nine pm? Where's that Coast to Coast AM?
Is it an overseas station? I don't know that station,
but sounds pretty interesting, although I think they're a day
behind love an AM. Where is it from? There's an

(24:13):
American station? Oh, he's right, it's got a good website.
I'm not telling you to go to another station, but
it does say George Norrie every night Coast to Coast AM.
Coast to Coast AM. All is more than six hundred
stations in the US, three million listers weekly. O sounds good,

(24:36):
Old George Norri weeknights, brilliant an American late night ready
to talk. Sure that deals with a variety of topics.
Most frequently the topics relate either to the paranormal or
the sounds excellent and I can't work out what all
the ore is anyway? Getting touch lines? They're free? How
are you going?

Speaker 18 (24:54):
People?

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Twenty five away from nine cup week? Why would the
giraffes be going to Hamilton? And are we okay about
the penguins at Kelly Tarltan's already thought about that. They
always looked delightful. When they're ever, they can't be much fun.
Been a penguin and the old sewer tanks and tarmaki drive. Yeah,

(25:16):
I think they've got nearly and can breed them and
sell them. So that's something you might want to mention
also tonight, looking forward to what you've got. That gorgeous
weather down south by the way, so I'm in such
an elevated mood, delighted. And the bluff under Tens had
a tremendous come from behind basketball one at the stadium today. Tremendous,

(25:37):
like literally within the last five seconds. It was a
total buzzer beater. It's kind of surprising. I've watched a
lot of kids sport in the last seven years, but
nothing's quite as exciting as kids basketball. I never thought
they'd have the skill level. But it's good to watch.
T ball, terrible soccer, terrible softball, quite good, Rugby can

(26:00):
be really good. But yeah, basketball leaps and bounds above
the others. Tremendous to watch. Anyway, be in touch of
you want to talk. My name is Marcus. Welcome, oh
eight hundred eighty. There's other stuff you want to chuck
into the next Tonight loose like a goose. Feel free
to come through. Oh eight hundred eighty, ten eighty and

(26:22):
nine to night, Love your Cup Stories, Cup Week Stories.
But yeah, I'm not seeing tales of bad behavior, which
is good. The headline and stuff is from Timu to
top hats, How Cup Day got its groove back, phillies,
fascinators and fashion fails. The outfit certainly windled. Designer looked

(26:46):
on Timu and Elie Express. One Racegoer laught brilliant. One
Guy City had an independent designer called Elie Barber. It's
a lot of people buying stuff online, which is all
very well, just I get too close to a heater.
But no one, there's no of anyone intoxicated, and no

(27:10):
one's done that classic Melbourne Cup thing when they get intoxicated.
They have a foon of you without your shoes and
your handbag riding a wheelibiners though it's a horse that
hasn't been done anyway, And it seems like check GPT
was picking the winners. That's what everyone does now. Oh,
here's the other question I've got for you. I was
listening to the headlines with Tony or the News with Tony,
The News with Tony, and they were talking about three

(27:36):
D printed guns firearms. So the question I have to you,
and I'm genuinely curious about that. Has anyone got a
and I don't want to make a gun? Has anyone
got a three D printer in their house? And are
they a con or is there something useful to do
with them? I've looked at those. I thought, wy, would

(27:58):
anyone want a three D printer? So you let me
know if you've got one? On what I suppose you
make model soldiers? Do you let me know what you
do with them? Q? Curious about that? Generally curious of bluff.
Give us a holer twenty one away from nine. All
lines are free. Get in touch. You've got anything of
interest to say or not of interest, but particularly interest
about three D printers. They were going to change the world.
I'm surprised if they do, so, yeah, get in touch

(28:22):
if you want to talk. Marcus Till twelve oh eight
hundred eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two de
text anything else you want to mention about tonight, particularly
about cup week. Love to hear about that. Get in
touch if you want to talk about that also, So yeah,
eight hundred eighty ten eighty and nine two nine two
de text Marcus till twelve, looking forward to what you've
got to say? Anything else that would be great to

(28:44):
hear from you? Now let me think of it's got
to do this one thing said this one thing. And penguins.
I've mentioned penguins, haven't I penguins and a captivity? Should
we be concerned about that? I mean, I'm not looking
for things to get concerned about, but if you want
to say something about that, that would be good to

(29:05):
hear from you. And anything else. How's your Christmas Ham gone?
If you ordered that by now? We'll sell out soon.
I can promise you that it's too weird to talk
about the Mutton Ham, but we will before too long.
So yes, get in touch Marcus till twelve anyway, eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine nine to de
text you want to come through, be nice to hear

(29:27):
from you. Anything else you want to mention God. If
you've got any breaking usually us know what that is. Also,
I would like to hear what they're breaking users, So yeah,
but particularly three D printers. I'm not interested in three
D firearms because you're still to get the ammunition don't
you in the ammunit. You can't print the ammunition. You
got to buy that. Am I right? I think I

(29:49):
probably am Marcus. I took my son to A and
E White Cross lun av in the weekend because he
had all these spots. Went in there and they said
go to Escott or Orcan Hospital. They only had a
junior doctor working there and he couldn't see them. So
when to Oscar A and E. The wait time was
eight hours. So went back home and gave him a
hay fever table. He came right, So yeah, yep. So

(30:14):
get in touch if you want to talk about that
or anything else, and the giraffes and the space house.
But get in touch if you want to text to
as I say, eight hundred eighty eight and nine to
the text looking forward to what you've got to talk
about tonight, anything else that's to be hearing from you.

(30:34):
Let me just turn that up. How do I get
out of my text? Then I got to do a
refresh button? Is that what I've got to do? Refresh?
If I search someone? Oh, yes, I want to know
what people are doing with three D printers. Someone texts,
I don't have a three D printer, but plan to
get one to three D print missing board game pieces.

(30:56):
We've lost the pirate from settlers of Katan, so I'm
sympathizing there. Marcus Kingsman won the Trotting Cup leaped to
fame second both good paces. Marcus, I got my hand
from Costco.

Speaker 11 (31:09):
May.

Speaker 2 (31:10):
I ask why you don't like Christmas. I don't mind Christmas.
I don't like disruption to my routine. I don't like
I don't like the weirdness of Christmas. Yeah, I like
things to remain the same. I don't like the interference
with the rhythm. It's just me. I know people love it.
So I adjust myself and I go to people's Christmas

(31:34):
parties and I try and be helpful and try and
get out of myself. Marcus, have you seen the video
better at Kumba Patch? Mispronouncing penguins, he says, penlings and penguins, Marcus,
I saw my first penguin last week in Melbourne's aquarium.
It was nice to see them. I also felt for

(31:55):
his sad seeing them. Not quite right. Dentists are now
making benches with a three D printer. Would like to
know anyone who has them. Are they okay? Well, that'd
be fun to ing up and then speak in a
funny voice, wouldn't it. Marcus, My nephew has a three
D printer. He makes plastic parts for toys or gadgets
if they break. His kids are nine living. They make

(32:18):
all sorts of things. I think they've made replacement lego.
I've heard that in New's in we're using three D
printers to make replacement parts for trade tables instead of
having to order them. Gilly, So it's a fair question.
Have you used a three D printer? And what are
they good for? Twelve from nine Welcome people, Marcus. My
dad had a toothmade by dentist using a three D

(32:38):
printer four years ago. And South Africa good as gold, Marcus,
And news out today the next Costco is going into Drury.
It'll be where the Jolly Poacher was? Was it what
they call that? The Jolly Poacher or the Jolly Farmer?
Would we have to show on that Dan? What do
they call what pub? Was that they called it the
Jolly Anyway, I've heard nothing about Costco's and Drury. Could

(33:02):
someone Google check that for me, because that's big news.
Be going down to Rolliston. Costco Drury. I'm on chet GPT. Yep,
I'm on Costco Drury Community. I'm on the Costco Drury
community Facebook page. EXU, I don't know if there's so

(33:24):
much information now I'm not on chet gpt A. Costco
is not yet open and dreary, but a second warehouse
has been airmarked for the South Drury area with the
opening twenty twenty six. Then you still will be part
of a larger metropolitans tend to be developed by the
Kiwi Property Group. That looks like it's a real thing,

(33:45):
So there we go. If anyone could, if anyone could
ratify that for me, looks like it's a done deal
though I thought they'd be moving into the South Island
so open in twenty twenty six. I won't if they'll
cannibalize your Auklan audience anyway, because I'm sure half of
them would come from there. Yeah. Now, if you want

(34:07):
to talk on air, that would be a great plan
for tonight. Three D printers and if you've seen the
giraffe going around the country or anything else tonight, that's
what I'm about. Oh you come on pee, what's happening?
And also cup week, how's that? Been for you and
the cup day today, let me know how that's been.
How's the nightlife? And christ Church? You might be an uberist,
are you flat out? I'll tell you what. The only

(34:29):
good news story you're hear and you're in these days
with the economy is christ Church, which sounds like it's
the one city that's got the secret source. I think
I'm right nine to nine, so still no sign of
the giraffe and no sign of the spaceship house moving
up and down the country. I'm also curious about that

(34:52):
zoo that's for sale and Todonger. Is it any good?
I saw it on trade. Not that I want to
buy a zoo. There be a lot of work running
a zoo. I just was curious. I've never heard of it.
Marshall's Animal Park, friendly animals and fun. I can't even
see from the screenshot I've taken. I think there might

(35:14):
be ostriches. It looks like ostriches actually, and some peacocks.
I wonder how far three D printing can go, cars, boats, houses.
I thought it was technology that's done its dash. That's
what I'm curious about. Jolly Farmer, that's right, the Jolly Farmer.

(35:41):
The jolly hello, Marcus, just drop miss it already, just
drove past the Mirror Vale bars in christ Church. The
Cup day After party is going strong, many people standing,
still still standing and smart outfits still in good condition.
I will get there, Marcus. We see penguins every day

(36:02):
crossing the road here in Alfedo Bay, amazing personable creek,
which is awful to think they'd be locked up, but
no whatever bad mouth's the ones at Kelly Tartan do
they And it makes you wonder, doesn't it? Because we
think penguins they walk up. We think they're like little humans,
don't we? So we want them to be happy. It's

(36:23):
just anthropomorphism, is that what it's called. We just kind
of put our human selves into them. They might have
a whale of a time there at Kelly Tartan. I
don't know. But they're getting rid of the getting the
pings out of London, then why wouldn't we do the
same here? Greg. I'm going to put you straight to
where this is, Marcus, and are welcome to you?

Speaker 18 (36:43):
Yeah, just that you know that that cost goes in
Drury Park, which isn't that new subdivision industrial subdivision where
Stevenson's corry used to.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
Be Oh, yeah, that's to the that's to the east.

Speaker 18 (36:55):
Yeah, everybody's known about it for about a year, but
that denied it.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
But now, okay, why would they deny did you say
did you say Drury Domain or Drury Park?

Speaker 18 (37:05):
Dury Park is that industrial area. You'll see it from
the motorway in the left hand side, in the bottom
of our Ringy Road.

Speaker 2 (37:11):
Yeah, there's no railway siding there is there no.

Speaker 18 (37:17):
Apparently what they're going to do, what we can understand
is they're going to have buses running constantly from the
Jury railway station to it.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
So if you're buying a whole lot of stuff and
the trolley, where does that go? That's not going to
work as it great.

Speaker 18 (37:34):
Good, I'm I'm only giving you what we're.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
You sound you sound like you're you sound like you're
in the business. You sound like you're in the No,
I'm looking at Fitzgerald Road and Quarry Road.

Speaker 18 (37:46):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Yeah, because the people with people with people you go.

Speaker 18 (37:55):
Yeah, for geriald roads they're actually making into four lanes
or two ball lanes. I think it is either way
at the moment.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
Because when people go to costcos they buy fifty kilograms
of butter and stuff. Don't they so good? Like good
like getting that on the train.

Speaker 11 (38:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 18 (38:13):
Like I said, it's purely purely speculation and rumor. But
what we can understand is we're being told roughly a
year ago that was definitely going in there.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
How's the how's the hype for IKEA up north? Are
people still going crazy for that?

Speaker 18 (38:29):
We're holding our breath waiting for December for it's open.

Speaker 2 (38:32):
Waiting for December for the stories of Auckland brought to
the standstill traffic chaos. You already a little bit disaster,
won't it.

Speaker 18 (38:40):
Well, I've drived past it every day. These traffic lights
have been put in, but they're not functioning at the moment.
So all the road and all the parking around it's
all underway or just about finished. Yeah, it's going to
be exciting, all right.

Speaker 2 (38:55):
I've never known a country that gets excited to send
all their money to Scandinavia.

Speaker 18 (39:03):
Well, well, you're about to go in there and buy
your coffin, I think with them or that cost goes.

Speaker 9 (39:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
I haven't quite resolved. I haven't still quite resolved how
I'm going yet, So I'm not quite sure off on
the coffin market.

Speaker 18 (39:13):
So you're not going by water on hell?

Speaker 2 (39:17):
No, what you mean a water were they sort of
weird out with water? That looks terrible, didn't it?

Speaker 18 (39:23):
Yeah, there's no No, there's a new place. Apparently they
have increased their sales by seventy five percent. They do
water instead of the flame. They do water.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
No, No, that's that sounds like that sounds like water
boarding to me. Again, didn't go say well on aber
grab or whatever it was called. Gosh, I was all excited.
A miscall from an Auckland number. I call it during
the news it was Skye sky TV. What some offers
around have they? They're ringing me? Of course I'm not

(39:53):
going to wait on hold and have time with the
news and all of that email. Marshall's Farm a great
place for animals and animals for children. It's by McLaren falls.
She do they want twelve million for it? Did I
get that right? It doesn't seem like a zoo. It
seems more like an animal farm, doesn't it. We are

(40:14):
talking Costcos and Dreary cup Day and Christ Jurche. We
are talking also about three D printers. I'm waiting for
the call about the three d printer because one of
you will have. I just want to know what you
print with it. I felt it was like all the
rage three or four years ago. I'm still trying to
work out what's happening with that. By the way, it's

(40:37):
Remembrance Day. Well, I was in a meeting today and
we had a minute silence for Remembrance Day. Actually, I
don't know if it was a minute, but we certainly
stood and were silent for a minute, apart from the
guy that walked through the noisy door. But that was fun. Marcus,
I'm waiting for the all the I stuff that ends
up on trade me. Well, yes, you might be waiting

(41:00):
for that. I think Kelly Talons helped the injured birds
all around the whole ACI Golf good group. I think, Marcus,
the spaceship went south on leaver a Bluebridge Ferry yesterday.
So where did it end up? I bet you it's
going to Tarcica. It feels like that's the place a
little spaceship house will go. Marcus us In's favorite refugee

(41:22):
and Motchuwaka River flood victim Noel Edmund has a new
show starting on TV on Monday on TV one that's
the tale of the text. Now, what do you want
to bring and talk about people? I'd like to know
what three D printers you want to talk about those.
I just want to know what you print. You might
be into hobbies like a war gamer or I don't know.

(41:44):
I just want to know what you make. That's my
question to you tonight, three D printers, what are you printing?
I'll keep you up with breaking news. Also throughout the
course of the morning Lotto. When does Loto go Wednesday night?
That's tomorrow. It could be forty five million? What do
we think too much or not enough worth buying a ticket?

(42:07):
It does, but it does run on the hype of
the big prizes. Would I take a ticket for forty
five million? Would I continue being a hobby broadcaster if
I won? Because that's the trouble with lotto is because
you go through all these great moral dilemmas. Would you
give some away? Would I continue with my job? Then

(42:27):
I'll think about all these things. I'll get to some resolution.
Then I won't win it. That was a waste of
time worrying whether I'm going to keep going to work
or not. I think I would go to work, and
I think i'd give half away. Yeah, yes, yes, you
would get some down anyway. Oh wait, hundred eighty today eighty.

(42:50):
But mainly about three D printers or anything else tonight. Actually,
I'm pretty much in the talkback mood tonight, so I
try you luck with some interesting topics. I'm here for you,
but mainly three D printers only, because the longer I
go without someone calling about them, I kind of take
it as a badge of honor that I can get
a call about it. No new MEAs or cases today, great,

(43:18):
it's good news. And the Iics store opens in Auckland
on eleven am. On the fourth of December, it is
World Origamy Day today. Origami it would be an occupation
or a hobby that causes a lot more annoyance than joy,

(43:43):
would be my fair appraisal of that. And this day,
nineteen eighteen Armistice signed to form the end World War One.
And that's happened. By the way, the Guardians reporting there
will be another series of celebrity traitor in the United
Kingdom because that was such a big deal. I think

(44:03):
it's worth twenty two million pounds to the economy. So yes,
that's going to go again, which would be exciting. For
those that watched, it was really enjoyable. Parliament has its
Christmas tree up. People are saying it's too early, but
I think Luck's going to be a Christmas type guy
because I think it's family like to where there's MATCHI pajamas.

(44:24):
I've seen them in Christmas photos. I think they're all
into it. So yeah, I reckon about ten days before
Christmas is about right for the tree. So yes, that
is a bit early for me. But and greyhound racing
legislation ban has passed its first reading. That will go through.

(44:45):
Even the Greens are into that for everyone's I don't
think actor. I think they're into freedom, just not dog's freedom.
And the Greens are under the banning and national and
labor are I think too. So that will go through. Yeah,
it's been it's been almost eleven months since I announced
that was going to happen. Although something as texts they
say they want the bann of puppy mills and they

(45:09):
want better I can't find the text. But yeah, someone's
not that into that. I think that's hypocritical. Thirteen past nine.
If you want to be a part of the show,
I'll find the text about puppy mills. Copy that, Dan,
since you're right about animals. Parliament is about to outlaw
greyhound racing overnight. Wow. How about making puppy mills and

(45:33):
backyard dog braiding illegal? I'd say hard to police. Someone's
also asking about the fire on Tonguededo. Have you're driven
past that today? How's it looking? Is there smoke or
is it out? I'd like to know about that also
tonight people every day before fifteen December that a Christmas

(45:54):
tree is up and alf dies old Swedish tale Marcus
or people want to know. People are always interested about how
you should improve Lotto. Loto is getting one and split
so much more than ever before. Powerball is currently Lotto
first Division and correct ball from the ten powerballs to
have less balls so that more people from first vision
can win more. Don't even understand that. Thank you Gary

(46:20):
for yours that's noted and looking forward to your calls
to like fourteen past eleven if you want to come
through a heddle twelve would love to hear from you. Also,
cupdated you win and how was the event? Is it
still going strong? In christ Church? Cost Co and Dreary
the second the second of the cost cos and your
calls to people. If you don't wan to talk on
air tonight any of these things, they might be something else.

(46:41):
There's a giraffe heading north up the country. There's a
spaceship heading south in the South Island. Both those are
of interest mainly to me. But always enjoy a truck
driver's report of something interesting on the road. I'll keep
you out data with the UK News also tonight, people,
but be in touch if you want to be on
air now. I'm just trying to think of anything else

(47:04):
that's richingly interesting to talk about, and I'll find those
stories people. It feels like Christmas orry, doesn't it? Can
I say that? I think I just did?

Speaker 12 (47:16):
Now?

Speaker 2 (47:19):
Oh, I am every kid about that three D print
or two? If anyone's done anything interesting with one of those.
I just don't know what function they perform, but I
secretly think they could be revery useful. And it's not
quite sure what four. So that's of interest to me.
So come on, let's be hearing your people tonight. And
as I say, there's something completely different you want to

(47:40):
chuck into the mix. I don't know what it is yet,
I'm sure i'll know one should come through with it,
so you get in touch of your door to talk.
As I say, he tell twelve a beverage along from midnight.
LOTO forty five million dollars tomorrow. There be a lot
of hype about that. I think it's one of the
biggest ever. The potential power comes five years after Loto's

(48:03):
largest Must be one draw in February twenty two. Two
winning tickets split fifty million. They say, buy your tickets.
Earliest stores in my lot are likely to be busy tomorrow,
afternoon and evening. This is the hype kicking in. So
I don't know if it's a must win forty five

(48:23):
the biggest EC jackpots since last year. I wanted to
those international organizations buying mess tickets like they've done in
the past. They did that in America and sort of yeah,
they've played the numbers in one big money. Yes, Sam,
it's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 19 (48:39):
Yeah you get a Marcus hear me?

Speaker 2 (48:41):
Okay there, Yeah, I got you, loud and clear. Thanks Sam.
You've got a three D printer, have you?

Speaker 19 (48:46):
I have not, but I've friends have, and I've seen
quite a few things that have been three D printed.
Off the top of my head, I know that some
guys are in their eg slug gun oppraternity, they can
actually print the big wheels to go on the sides
of their scopes, and then you can actually, rather than

(49:06):
to use a small tool, you can just turn the
wheel like like you know, it's about probably about sixty
milis like a little turning wheel, and then again just
your windage and everything when you're shooting. In that respect,
they print those with three D printers.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
What would what would they have used before that?

Speaker 19 (49:24):
Oh, they would have had to probably get a bit
of plate aluminium, draw it all up and then cut
it all out, draw it out, and then file it
all down and then make it fit onto the piece.

Speaker 2 (49:33):
Okay, that takes quite useful. Yeah, okay.

Speaker 19 (49:38):
With the printers, you basically get in a program probably
it's probably noodled them now, and essentially you can you
become a CAD designer okay, computer aided drawing and then
you you know, can basically draw up what you want
and then essentially leave it running and walk away. When

(49:59):
I was doing a bit of construction and stuff, we
were allowed into one of the units next door we
were working, so we had access to the walls to
blow them through and just on the ground. The guy
was moving out shortly, but on the ground was this
glass case looked like you know in the old days,
a display case for Zippo's for example, you know, and

(50:22):
inside it was this thing zipping around, zipping around, zipping around,
and just it was slowly just putting layer upon layer
upon layer on something. And over the course of a
day or two it was just still going it with
this endless reel sort of like one hundred meter reel
of rope. So you know, for you know, it was
just printing it, printing it. And when I came back

(50:44):
in and seen it later, it was a the thaw
on the iron Man iron Man at first the glove
and it was printing that. As you know, he was
printed his putting your man. He say, oh, yeah I
designed that, I made that, or the computer did.

Speaker 2 (51:04):
Yeah, okay, well that's interesting.

Speaker 19 (51:06):
Yeah, there's there's all sorts. There's people that reprint odd
ball pieces for your shower you know, your shower door.
How it's on a hinge pivot. Yeah, the little place
that pins that go on the bottom. It's one of
those break you may not be able to get them
now from plumbing World or whatever. But you can easily
get someone with a three D printer take the one

(51:27):
off the top, which is a match in a mirror,
you know, and then you take it into it. Then
they could they can have one printed out with Nice.

Speaker 2 (51:35):
To talk, Sam, Thanks very much for that. Richard at
Marcus Good Evening.

Speaker 20 (51:40):
Oh hi, I've been looking up gold mine equipment just
for public fostering areas, and there's a new there's a
gold wheel available. You can buy them and it's full entirety.
And so I'm walking through the internet and I find
this gold wheel available for fifty dollars. But what it

(52:03):
is is the program to put into your three D printer.

Speaker 2 (52:08):
Okay, wow, to.

Speaker 20 (52:09):
Print out the gold wheel.

Speaker 3 (52:12):
I'm sure, I'm sure of it must be. I'm not.

Speaker 20 (52:15):
I've been trying to Richard. Could you tell me?

Speaker 2 (52:19):
Could you? I know, I know gold mining. What's a
gold wheel?

Speaker 20 (52:23):
Well, I hadn't heard of it until about two weeks ago,
and I've been up the public fosking area just briefly
in the last six months. And the gold pan and
there is gold. It's just so fine that it washes out.

Speaker 3 (52:40):
Of a pan.

Speaker 20 (52:41):
If you're not if you're not an expert, you're going
to you're going to pan it. The gold wheel or
a sluice will get it. And the gold wheel is
a new thing that I hadn't seen before. I've worked
in gold mines previously, the professional and I'm just wanting
to you.

Speaker 2 (53:00):
Can you describe what it is Richard?

Speaker 6 (53:05):
It would be two feet across like a tub, and
it's got spiral spirals in the bottom of it and
it circulates, so.

Speaker 2 (53:16):
It's a it's more effective than a gold pen.

Speaker 20 (53:19):
Oh yes, it will get your fine gold like like, yeah,
you can't, you can't just can't do does it?

Speaker 2 (53:29):
Does it go on to a vibrating machine?

Speaker 20 (53:33):
Look, there's there's one actually, so a guy described it
to me only two weeks ago and I looked it up.
Oh yeah, for the two brands, you can buy this
whole thing.

Speaker 6 (53:44):
It's powered though.

Speaker 20 (53:45):
So you can't get the powered machine on a on
a public site.

Speaker 2 (53:49):
When you're talking public fossic and you're talking up the arrow.

Speaker 20 (53:53):
Yeah, or there's there's only about five places.

Speaker 2 (53:56):
I think there's one up through the north through the
through Queenstown up. I've seen people there where you got
the old guy's heart. What's that called?

Speaker 21 (54:05):
Ye don't know, but I've been to the one in
our town, and there's one in there's one in the
West Coast that I know of, and I don't know
if there's any in the North Island.

Speaker 20 (54:20):
Public flossicking areas a few and far between, because of
course everything's been split up into termits stuff and that.
And I was just interested because I tried panning, you know,
out in this area, and you can see the gold
in the bott once you get to the bottom of

(54:40):
your pan, and there's a little quite a bit of
dirt in the bottom of it, but you can see it.
But washing it out of the pan is so so
a pan a gold pans designed to capture the gold
because it's the heaviest metal. But if if the piece
of gold is so small, it's going to be very
light and.

Speaker 3 (55:00):
You wash it out.

Speaker 20 (55:01):
Yeah, And these gold wheels are designed just like a
shaking table for a sluice to capture those very fine
pieces of gold. And so I'm looking up this new
stuff and there's gold wheel and it's gonna see gold
wheel for fifty dollars, but it's not a gold wheels.

Speaker 2 (55:22):
Yeah, what makes sense.

Speaker 20 (55:23):
It's a program to throw into a three D printer
to print out the gold wheel, which which I don't
know anything about these three D printers, but I guess.

Speaker 3 (55:31):
You have to pay for the plastic that they make.

Speaker 10 (55:35):
Yeah, the ice.

Speaker 2 (55:37):
It wouldn't be much. I wouldn't have mentioned.

Speaker 3 (55:40):
So it's a fifty dollars for fifty dollars cost.

Speaker 20 (55:42):
And I was thinking, what fifty dollars this gold wheel
that they said, you know, and of course I'm not
necessarily that technical a techie guy, and I'm thinking what
fifty back? And this one's two grand?

Speaker 2 (55:56):
Okay, I mean leave it there. That sounds great, Richard,
thanks for that call. Hey, I hold your horse if
you're coming through, I'll be back to your suit. It's
twenty four past nine. This is Marcus Ian, Welcome County.

Speaker 16 (56:10):
I've talked to you before.

Speaker 10 (56:12):
I'm from Tower On Great.

Speaker 16 (56:15):
And I just thought i'd mentioned because you mentioned you'd
like to talk about something quite interesting and it's kind
of a little bit about printing, but not quite But
I met a chat probably a year ago, and he
had this locker for about a couple of hundred square

(56:38):
queen square meters and I sold something to him and
I gave him a hand to get it to his
locker and I went inside and there was like these
big rectangular, really flash looking boxes about two meters high

(56:59):
or maybe three meters high and a meter or two square,
and he had about six of them, and I said,
what are they doing? They're all kind of let up,
And they turned out to be they were seeing tea machines,
and he manufactured at night. They would just run all
the time and they would make the components for a

(57:20):
widget spinner. Have you ever heard of one of them?

Speaker 2 (57:24):
No?

Speaker 18 (57:26):
So, people, where'd you meet the guy?

Speaker 16 (57:31):
I was just in a lock up over it.

Speaker 2 (57:33):
Now, I mean a fidget spinner.

Speaker 16 (57:36):
Yeah, fidget spinner.

Speaker 2 (57:37):
So yeah, yeah, I was an early adopter of the
fidget spinners. I know those, Yes, I do.

Speaker 16 (57:44):
Yeah. So he made them out of titanium. They were
like top in fidget spinners. I didn't even heard of
these things, but I googled him and he was like
the world's most wanted bridget spinner designer.

Speaker 2 (58:03):
Really really yes online. I was committed in the early
days to spending a lot of money on the fidget
spinner because the technology and the bearings everything were extraordinary.

Speaker 16 (58:15):
Yeah. Yeah, and he had robots like he was he'd
invested millions, Like every one of those sen Sea lads
was worth like five hundred grand or something. And he
had four or five of them, and he was putting
in robot arms, five excess arms to take them from

(58:37):
the robot to the polisher to polish them, to put
them in a place where people were coming in the
morning and assemble them.

Speaker 3 (58:45):
Yeah, and put them in boxes.

Speaker 16 (58:47):
And everything was sold in Europe. There was no none
of it was sold here. It was too expensive. It
was all made a titanium.

Speaker 2 (58:56):
Do you know what? Do you know what the spend
time was?

Speaker 22 (59:00):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (59:01):
Yeah, I dn't.

Speaker 16 (59:02):
I couldn't tell you, but they were. They were immaculately.
I was like, yeah, really impressed day please guy.

Speaker 2 (59:11):
Do you know what the brand was?

Speaker 17 (59:15):
Nah?

Speaker 16 (59:15):
But I googled his His name was Angus and I
googled him and I think he had like nine million
hits on one of his videos on YouTube. It was
he was really really well known. But yeah, interesting dude,

(59:36):
just like you wouldn't know walk going past them. It
was just all lockdown.

Speaker 2 (59:41):
Angus or Magnus. Can't you're lucky on the Google. You're
lucky on the Google was where he's got a lot
of he's got a lot of hits.

Speaker 16 (59:52):
Yeah, it's incredible.

Speaker 2 (59:54):
Yeah yeah, Like they look like the throwing stars, the
triangular and stuff.

Speaker 16 (59:59):
Yeah yeah, yeah yeah. And he was like, really he
is a really good guy, like I had good with them.

Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
I hang on, sorry, Tony half past nine headlines please.
So did you have in the same storage unit as so?
Was it how it happened?

Speaker 15 (01:00:17):
No, I just had We got a kitchen manufacturing business,
and I had all this storage capacity for you know,
the little swatches of melanmine andy, and they all fettered
really nicely. We customers that made it, and it all
fed it really and then we came to the point

(01:00:38):
where we didn't need it anymore. We were doing something
else in another way.

Speaker 16 (01:00:41):
So I chucked it on trade me or Facebook or something,
and he came around and bought it and yeah, and
I said, oh, well, we're going to get it there,
and he says, I'll have to go and get a trailer,
and I sole chuck in the vent and drop it
over to here. So that's how I kind of got
to talking to him. And then he said, what do

(01:01:01):
you want to ever look at the machines I've got running?
Because I've been talking about machines that work and stuff,
and I was, I was like, godsmack. I mean it
was a real interesting character.

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
If you just go, if you just go Magnus fidget
spinners and he looks like is he is he Scandinavid,
he looks like a Magnus. I haven't got the volume monitor.

Speaker 11 (01:01:23):
It was.

Speaker 16 (01:01:25):
It was a Scotsman actually an engineer. Yeah, but yeah,
he was clued up me.

Speaker 2 (01:01:32):
He was, It's pretty it's pretty high end precision machining,
isn't it.

Speaker 16 (01:01:37):
Yeah yeah, really clever titanium. I mean you'd never wear
it out, you know, super.

Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
It's Christmas sort of. Then, thanks very much for that.
Loving those Chris, it's Marcus.

Speaker 11 (01:01:51):
Welcome, good Chris. Yeah. Listening to his conversations this evening
around three D printers and a little bit of lacked
knowledge about the mines. I'm onto my third one now
and I've been using them for about three four years.

(01:02:13):
And it originated with our daughter and husband in their
business and mikey Ones. In fact, we felt the little
pieces of plastic he was having to use or having
to buy to put us of spaces and albinion doors
between the bill frame and the strike plate and a

(01:02:35):
little bit of plastic goes in there, and he felt
he was being charged too much from the supplier. So
he bought a three D printer and he couldn't get
it going. So me, with my background in it and
program for many years, gave it to me and see
if you can get it to the work well.

Speaker 9 (01:02:56):
Cutting.

Speaker 11 (01:02:57):
While story is short, I hap to familiarize myself with
a CAD system, of which you can get a number
of free ones over the internet. I eventually finished up
with the right sort of engineering focus. They have different
focuses whether you want to print figurines or industrial shapes.

(01:03:18):
So I've got a CAD so I use the CAD
system to design these little bits and pieces. Currently there's
about ten in total. And so you design it. It
sits on a plate and you've probably seen it on
movies or on TV. You can twist and turn the
plate as you build it whatever you're building. And then

(01:03:43):
once you've got the specs to your satisfaction, you export
it from the CAD system and it goes into another system.
It goes into a thing called another bit of software
called a slicer, and in the slice that you define
what sort of print you got to print it on.
What sort of filament People have been calling it string,
Well it's not actually, it's reels of plastic and the

(01:04:08):
oreels are about three hundred and fifty meters long. And
so in the slice you define the type of print,
the type of plate you're going to print on, and
then the type of filament you're going to use. And
there are all sorts of filaments, and those different types
of filaments are growing almost weakly. There are new types

(01:04:29):
of filaments coming out. That part is quite amazing. I
mean there's carbon fiber that you can get now you
can put in carbon fiber and the ones that I
the filament I use is strong, as strong as possible,
and also can use the outdoors. It gets wet, it

(01:04:50):
can absorb you raise no problem, It doesn't change color.
And once you've defined the characteristics of your little bit,
you export it from the slicer and import into the printer.
And the printer basically is is uh. You You hit
your a reel of filament on the side, you fill

(01:05:15):
it up, pass it up into a thing called a
print head. And in the print head, where is where
you have defined what temperature you want to print the
filament at and that ranges from from about two hundred
C to two eighty three hundred C for the filaments

(01:05:36):
that I use. And the file that you that's been
imported into the printer is a thing called a g
code file. In other words, it's got a name dot
G CO, G C O D E and that that
that's the secret. That's that's that that is what's used
to you know, to print whatever it is you want

(01:05:57):
to print on your three D printer. So then after
all that, then you've got to calibrate it. And my one,
my latest printer, is great because it does that all automatically.
It works out the levels that printer works out from
the print head. How far from the print table it is.
It's got to know exactly how far because as a

(01:06:20):
previous call is said, of prints and layers, so just
wizards around preg and layers slowly slowly going upwards. Prints
each layer is about two were.

Speaker 2 (01:06:30):
Just interrupt there, Chris, because it's quite technical. The sure
the explanation that once you have designed your widget for
your son in law, did you say who is your
son son in law?

Speaker 11 (01:06:40):
Yep, yep, yep?

Speaker 2 (01:06:41):
Do you make is there share? Where is there proprietoral
stuff that people share with each other. Is there a
community of people exchanging their computerator designed with each other?

Speaker 11 (01:06:51):
Yes, there is, Yes, there is. Now that's the other
type of hobbyist who doesn't want to be bothered designing
stuff and doesn't want to go through slices. And there
are many sites on the internet where you can go
and buy your your figurines and the dozens and dozens
of cigareines you can get, so.

Speaker 2 (01:07:09):
People people sell those, people sell their designs. Do they
the prototypes?

Speaker 11 (01:07:14):
Yeah, some of sylmers are free, but most are sold.
And you can get you don't get planes, and you
get trains that you can get ships, and you get
all sorts of things in various stages of details. Some
are quite amazing.

Speaker 2 (01:07:29):
How much money is you he's saved by having you
do it all?

Speaker 8 (01:07:33):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (01:07:33):
Is it? It must it must be incredibly it must
be great for his business?

Speaker 11 (01:07:39):
Yeah, he said, each each one was. It was costing
about ten, ten twelve dollars each.

Speaker 18 (01:07:44):
Wow.

Speaker 11 (01:07:45):
And with this new printer it works out working at
the cost based on the amount of filament used. A
real filament is about thirty forty dollars depending on what
the filament is after three hundred and fifty meters. The
cost of each the little bits that I print is
a dollar or less. Wow, And I've and I printed

(01:08:06):
one hundreds and hundreds, hundreds and hundreds, he said, an
order through today for three three individual ones. One are
you one for hundred, the other one he wants for
a hundred, and the other one who's fifty. And each
one of those takes about an hour hour to print.
So I've got a bit of work and trying to
be there.

Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
Nice to talk, Chris, Thank you so much. Thank you
for explanation, very kind. Twenty one away from ten. Hello, John,
it's Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 3 (01:08:34):
Here you go, Marcus.

Speaker 2 (01:08:35):
Good John.

Speaker 3 (01:08:36):
I've got a small business I set up about four
years ago. I'm into jet ski fishing and I started
and I also into three D printing, so I bought
a printer and I started making bits and pieces. Now
I've got about eight printers and I'm sending stuff all
round the world. Yeah, so a side business. It's sort

(01:09:00):
of overtaking my real job.

Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
It's a golden ay jake, because you can do all
that with the Internet's the key as well as the
three D printers. As you can get your information out there.

Speaker 3 (01:09:07):
A yeah, there's there's apps. Is one called Shopify, which
I run my business, and that's that's just as incredible
as a three D printing. It's just so easy because
I sold eighty percent of my stuff goes to the States. Yeah,
and I do I do the standard it's called FDM printing.

(01:09:28):
You know, it's a plastic filament, but also do a
resin printing. Have you heard a risin printing before?

Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
But I could, I can imagine it.

Speaker 3 (01:09:36):
Yeah, yeah, it's it's Yeah, it's the each your typical
layer on a on a standard printer, it's probably about
two point two of a millimeters, so five layers per milimeter.
With a resin printing, you're getting twenty layers per millimeter.
So when it comes out of printer, it's literally like
it's been injection molded.

Speaker 2 (01:09:58):
It's a finer resolution.

Speaker 3 (01:10:02):
Yeah, and it's being resin. There's technology these days is
so many different types of resins with different properties. And yeah,
it's quite amazing. And and I've set a little paint
underneath my house and now I'm doing two pot paint
paint painting these mounts and things I'm making.

Speaker 2 (01:10:21):
It's so John is just to get back back because
it's pretty exciting. Is this to mount fishing lines on
the back of the jet ski?

Speaker 11 (01:10:28):
Is that?

Speaker 2 (01:10:29):
Is that what your business is?

Speaker 3 (01:10:32):
Just people like there's there's a jet ski called a
fish Prone and it's basically it's an out of the
box fishing jet ski has rod holders and things. But
I've had a couple of my customers saying, well, no,
we had at a knife and a and a pair
of pliers and et cetera. So I modeled and three
D printed a you know, a a part. We can

(01:10:55):
put your a knife and a and a tool. And
that's one of my most popular things. I make little
lure holders and things that go on the back of
your fishing rods for holding some of your sliders and things.

Speaker 8 (01:11:11):
I've got.

Speaker 3 (01:11:11):
I've got a website. It's called a command instead and
that's a H on the A and C H O
R and command You used to get ahold of the things?

Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
Are they quite slow? Because you know, have you got
to have ten machines running the whole time to get
to get scale up?

Speaker 13 (01:11:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:11:30):
You don't, you don't. Yeah, it's I mean, my big
mouths they take a day in.

Speaker 2 (01:11:34):
A bit it's a lot of time.

Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
Yeah yeah, so yeah, yeah, but technology again that the
modern printers now are just just unbelievable. They just don't
miss a beat. They've got AI so they've got little
cameras that keep an eye on it of case something
goes wrong or if the filham and gets stuck and
things like that. They yeah, they're incredible.

Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
What a great idea, turning some sort of side hustle
hobby into your job into your job. Do the do
the Yanks? Is it fresh water or salt water?

Speaker 3 (01:12:05):
But are both? But are both mostly Florida areas is
where it is the most popular. But yeah, right through
right through the States. I've sold products to Tahiti, Hawaii, Memirates, Switzerland, Sweden, England.
It's just incredible and it's good. I like it too

(01:12:28):
because if somebody comes to pick something up, you know,
we have a good chat about the fishing, and you know,
it's quite it's quite a social thing.

Speaker 2 (01:12:37):
The Trump's tariffs a picture.

Speaker 3 (01:12:39):
Yeah yeah it did. Yeah, what we're going to do there?

Speaker 13 (01:12:43):
Yeah yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:12:45):
I had a couple of Iron customers saying, well, you know,
I've bought the fifty dollars items they're charging me twenty
seven dollars US because they pay the terriffs, plus they
get charged a fee, you know, they get a like
a you know, a fee from the from the carrier
to process the process the tariffs.

Speaker 2 (01:13:06):
Anchorman dot and Z not dot co zday. That's not
you do.

Speaker 8 (01:13:10):
Yeah, you got that.

Speaker 2 (01:13:12):
Oh that's fascinating. Did you give up your day job?

Speaker 3 (01:13:15):
No, No, that's the hardest thing at the moment. I'm
doing my day job. I'm doing this and that's just Yeah.
Have you got a few weekends?

Speaker 2 (01:13:23):
Is there a plan you scale up enough when you
can ditch it?

Speaker 5 (01:13:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:13:27):
I turned sixty this year, so it's my sort of Yeah,
I'll like you just do this all day.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Oh, it sounds fantastic, And it's if once you look
with the reason they're a very highly refined product. You've got.
It doesn't look three dly pritty at.

Speaker 6 (01:13:41):
All, does it.

Speaker 11 (01:13:42):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:13:43):
No, it looks actually better than yeah, than the factory.
What's that mount you see on my site? Yes, what
I did is the fish Pro comes out with a
fish finder on the right hand side, but not the
left hand side. So what I did, I've got a scanner.
I've got to scan. I scanned it, then I married
it and I re engineered it to go on the
left hand side, so they're really popular.

Speaker 2 (01:14:07):
John looks, thank you so much. I've got to run
for commercials. But that's enlightening, so thank you so much
for that.

Speaker 9 (01:14:11):
There we go.

Speaker 2 (01:14:11):
I knew you guys would be three D printing once
you come out of the waterwork. That's great, John, twelve
to ten. I'm finding it interesting. I hope you are too.
We are talking three D printers because I thought there
for a while that it was a technology that had
come and was life changing it. No one was that
into it, but clearly for the more refined stuff there

(01:14:32):
is a niche for it. I'll get some texts. I'll
get to those. I have a three D print. In
many cases, you can just download a model for one
of the dozens of websites dedicated to three D models
and start printing in a minute or two. This applies
where they're making pigs for the washing or legal items.
Guns quality three D printers less than five hundred bucks.

(01:14:53):
The kiligram of plastic filament is around thirty five bucks.
From JCA, you can print a lot with a kiligram
of plastic. Look up on Google bespoke three D printed bridges.
Some of them are STUF Marcus. It's quite coincidental this one.
I'm currently CNC Manu machining titanium parts that have been
three D printed. They are near replacements for medical use.

(01:15:17):
Biggest free sight of three D printing stuff is thinging
Verse free good and will presented options to donate to
the makers as well worth a look. Someone says, can
you eat giraffes? And someone said they've sent the photo
of the knees, the titanium knees.

Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:15:33):
Oh, they're amazing, the artificial need. They've sent those to
my Facebook, to my email. Not you need to know
where that is. But yeah, So we talk about three
D printers. That's what we're on about tonight. If you've
got some experience with that, we'd love to hear from you.
It's good stuff. So that's what run about. Also Cup week,

(01:15:55):
how that's been And the giraffe. There's a giraffe going
from Irana Park to Hamilton. It hadn't couldn't go up
the coast because of the tunnels at car coulda had
to go up through wyow. I presume that's got I
don't know if giraffes get seasick. The Aussie hors has

(01:16:16):
won the won the New Zealand Cup, McCarthy and Kingsman
yep our New South Wales Pacer three wide at the
last four fourteen hundred. Also, it's a good day there.
Actually every year I promise to get there. I will
be there soon. Next year I might book it. And

(01:16:36):
now seven away from ten. If you want to get
on here tonight, what do you print with your three
D printers? That's the discussion and I'd like to hear
from you about that. Marcus our Son makes boxes and
containers with three D printers, like this one for the
Skip Go Bab skip Bow game he gave us. Marcus

(01:16:58):
three D printers are extremely useful for classic car enthusiasts
and restorers. Rare cars are offered re fuddly defined fiddley
par like glovebox catches, interior lock buttons, indicator stalks, etcetera. Chris,
Thanks Chris. As soon as you said glovebox catches, I
know where you are, Hi, Cherry Marcus, Welcome.

Speaker 5 (01:17:22):
Marcus.

Speaker 23 (01:17:22):
I attended the Auckland University Golden Graduates Lunch and it's
an annual event for people who graduated more than fifty
years ago, so you can guess at my age now.

Speaker 19 (01:17:38):
The speaker this year they always have.

Speaker 23 (01:17:41):
A professor speaking about some a search that's been done
at the university, and he talked about three the printers.
I'd never come across them. It was, you know, beyond
beyond me. But the first fascinating thing was they had
four students playing in a country band, country and western

(01:18:06):
band as an item, and he said after they had
finished that the instruments they used had all been created
by three D printers. He elaborated about the incredible use.

Speaker 20 (01:18:23):
That they were for.

Speaker 23 (01:18:26):
In medical research and medical procedures and creating missing parts
and organs, and he also touched on the sort of
criminal use of them as people printing off or creating
guns and then being able to destroy them so any

(01:18:47):
evidence is destroyed.

Speaker 2 (01:18:49):
And thought the second part because you could melt them.

Speaker 23 (01:18:51):
Yeah, yes, it was absolutely fascinating. I just had sitting
up here in the north, my isolated little life. I
had no idea of these amazing things, and having somebody
who was at the front of research made it even
more fascinating and up to date.

Speaker 8 (01:19:13):
So I thought I'd just add cher to you.

Speaker 2 (01:19:16):
That is fascinating. Before you go fifty years ago, what
did you study?

Speaker 23 (01:19:21):
I did a Bachelor of Art and the only subject
I seemed to be able to pass was geography. I
had five out of my nine units, and geography.

Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
Brilliant, always my favorite topic. To that one, Cherry, thanks
so much, newss. Next we are talking three D printers
is for interesting particular? That goal that fidgets went that goal.
Those jet skis fishing jet skis well, and I think
good on them. I'm please have found a use for
jet skis. It sound like a great use. Oh wow, wow, Cherry. Here,

(01:20:04):
I just spoke to you, asked me what subjects I
studied all and you know it's cut up before I
could finish. I had multivalley one is my foreign language unit.
So I'm one of thirty people with that in their degree.
Two years later it became a separate department. Wow, Marcus,
I'm not using three D printing, but I'm making giant
versions of every day items and iconic Kiwiana website is
xlarts dot co dot in z at seventy years. It's

(01:20:28):
been my first real hobby. Xlarts dot co dot in z.
Whatever he's making giant things of Pardon the website doesn't work.
That's a worry. What did you get, Dan? Dan put

(01:20:51):
it in wrong, that's all like Dan, I'll just to
see it. They see what they're doing. Oh that's good,
that's really good. Well done you. I'd like, well done you.
So xl arts. Actually I didn't go back and read
that text again because so he says, not three D printing.

(01:21:16):
I'm not using three D printers. But how are you
making them? Giant versions of every day items? Iconic Kiwiana.
So there's jandles, There's a giant big light. There's a
giant peck of snifties. There's a giant reel cassette tape.
There's a giant box of matches, a giant red bull.
What'd you say, Dan? There's a giant packet of Marlborough cigarettes. Wow,

(01:21:41):
giant jendles, giant pencil, giant peg, giant peck of life savers,
giant tomato sauce bottle, giant jelly tip, giant big whisk,
giant toothbrush, giant Wiggly's fruit, giant Rawley's tin, giant jarvegimte,
giant Why can't a draft bottle opener, x L arts

(01:22:03):
dot co dot the Giant Durix, XL non Giant Rubik's Cube,
Giant take Measure, Giant liquorice All sort, Giant Panton chart,
color chart, giant jar of Poolhoy, authentic yogurt, giant sneaker,

(01:22:24):
giant pack of espirin, Giant crunchy bar, Giant KitKat. It's
very good. Wow, are larger than life, praises a handma
using writing and tales, many wood, thow, metal and recycled components.
Are well done. You for a hobby that's extraordinary. Xcel

(01:22:46):
arts dot co dot nz, Giant Crunchy Bar. There be
some great gifts there for you to find. Xlarts dot
co dot nz, thanks for that text. Smile wise and
blend him. Three D prints false teeth. There's a UV
into which cure is extremely fine layers. We use a

(01:23:09):
scatter to get our oral records and design the teeth
from that. They are impressive. So the topic tonight is
three D printers. If you want to add to that,
that's what we're about. Ten ten Marcus till twelve.

Speaker 13 (01:23:19):
Come on.

Speaker 2 (01:23:22):
You might be doing something like that and that would
be great to hear from you I'm all about that
tonight because I'm finding it fascinating, which always helps. Yep,
So get in touch, meat or twelve people, oh, eight
hundred and eighty ten eighty and nine nine two ticks.

(01:23:42):
Also looking for that giraffe that's coming up the country
if you've spotted that. And the spaceship traveling through the
South Island, one of those futuro homes, which I'm curious
though where that ends up. That's what we're about tonight.
Come on, it's also cup week. You've got a report
about that. That would be nice to hear from you.
It's also I'm sure there's other days too, yep, yep, yep, yep.

(01:24:09):
But get in touch if you want to talk. Here
till midnight tonight, thirteen past ten, and how you're going, Peter,
what's happening up there? And this is a beautiful day
down south, Hope it's good around the country. Not long
till Christmas feels like about five weeks. Get your Christmas
ham ordered, get your Christmas cake made. We are talking

(01:24:32):
three D p infact, I suppose some of you will
be making gift out of a three D printer. I
don't even think i've touched it. I don't think I've
had experience with anything on a three D printer. That's
what I'm kind of curious. It's not my thing. It's
not something that I would want to get and make things.
But I know there's so many people in garages listening

(01:24:52):
to the show at night to be out there making something,
working on their side hustle, doing something with three D printers.
I'm curious to know what it is. But when that
guy rang up about the glass company, that aluminium glass company,
with the bits inside there, it made a lot of
sense of what people would be making. So we are
talking three D printers. That's the main topic for tonight,

(01:25:15):
And if you've got something to add to that, I
need your calls now because it'd be great to hear
from you. What are you making with three D printers?
A lot of people are making things for board games
as well. I suppose if you into kind of model soldiers,
what's that called wargaming? I guess that's something you do.

(01:25:36):
I guess it's just printing stuff out of plastic. Although
there's other stuff you a resident things too, So that's
what we're wrong about tonight. If there was other stuff
that you want to talk about good, I'd like to
hear from you. I've mentioned Cup week, Get the race
is today?

Speaker 18 (01:25:54):
How was it?

Speaker 2 (01:25:54):
How's the night being in the christ Church tonight? Also
they can't get to the papinui Asa because that has
closed shady. A lot of Pea people wearing outfits from Timu.
I guess tim who has made going to the races affordable?
You can just buy something online, get it in four days.

(01:26:15):
Cost you're twenty bucks. You're only gonna wear it once,
so why not? So they are the discussions if you
want to become and be a part of it. People,
come on, have you got something else you want to
check into the max good? I don't know why else
there is tonight that you want to talk about. You
tell me. That's always the best way to work it out,

(01:26:36):
when you tell me what you want to talk about.
There is a giraffe heading up the country. It would
have come off the entrone Fery about now, so watcha.
I don't know how to get out of Wellington. I
don't know where the overhead bridges are. By the way,
there's gonna be another series of celebrity traders. The BBC
has announced Parliament's already got its Christmas tree up and

(01:27:04):
Greyhound racing band legislation pasted its first reading. Yeah, there's
no fight back there that'll go unfortunate. Well, and I
say unfortunately, but they couldn't make it strong enough case
to keep it. And because the Green supporter it's got
unanimous support, I think probably ACT will be the only
party that wouldn't support it. I don't know that, but
that's what I imagine. They goes back to the Sleek

(01:27:27):
Committee for public feedback report due thirteenth March. Come on,
anything else you want to mention. The grab bag of
topics would be good. Not too fuss for what you
want to talk about. But yeah, three D printings are
good start. If you've got some experiential intel with that,
would love to hear from you, and keep those textst

(01:27:48):
always good to get the texts. Marcus. Christmas cake just
out of the oven. Cheers Gary Marcus. This is John.
I just talked about my small business designing, making and
selling jet ski fishing accessories. This is the Sea Doo
Fish Pro. It's a great fishing platform, really popular all

(01:28:08):
around the world.

Speaker 5 (01:28:09):
John.

Speaker 2 (01:28:09):
Oh, thanks John. It has come through. My brother makes
a lot of parts for his large model era planes
and he builds and flies rramock Control. That's from Karen.
Nice to hear from your Karen. Then we just have
a look at this jet ski because for a while
kayak fishing was big, but I guess jet ski is
just easier. Alight, She's nice. Thirty eight grand for the

(01:28:33):
fish Pro Trophy one seventy You have to catch a
few fish to make that worthwhile. A PwC made for
the most passionate angler with a live world, Anxiostem, fish Finer,
trolling mode and more. The Fish Pro Trophy DELI was
the ultimate fishing experience with the offshore or on the lake.
I'd be good for the bluff that park at Madrive.

(01:28:56):
I suppose someone could pinch it. Steve Marcus welcome.

Speaker 24 (01:29:00):
Oh I guess he don't, good Steve.

Speaker 2 (01:29:02):
Nice to hear from you.

Speaker 3 (01:29:03):
Good good?

Speaker 20 (01:29:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 24 (01:29:05):
Just mentioning three D printers, and I just wonder like
a lot of your listeners may not know just how
advanced they are and what they're capable of. For instance,
the rocket Lab three D print all of their actual
rockets for the engines. They're all three D printed.

Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
So when you say rockets and engines with normal visions,
they would be metal, wouldn't we do they not need me?

Speaker 24 (01:29:40):
Yeah, they are metal, And you can do three D
printing and metal you can like you can do it
in titanium or whatever metal you want. You use a
laser to melt the point the metal as it is distributed.
That laser bonds the metal, melts it and builds it

(01:30:05):
up really really complex. You can imagine a rocket engine
how complex it is.

Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
Yeah, So it takes all the need for machining because everything,
all the design can just be done on cadcam and
just printed exactly. So yeah, and I guess it's the
real really precise margins, is it.

Speaker 24 (01:30:24):
Yes, And like the cost of your development that just
is just so much less. And if you're using C
and C and having to make individual parts and so forth, Yeah,
the cost cost factor is just immensely cheaper.

Speaker 20 (01:30:49):
So if you're I'm at a point close to a
point of having all I'll say it is at all
developed that I've designed, and I'll be getting it three
D printed.

Speaker 11 (01:31:06):
Just to.

Speaker 24 (01:31:09):
As a development see how it works and so forth,
and then it may have to go through a process
you wouldn't three D print every If you're doing a
mess production, you wouldn't three D print.

Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
Everything, But.

Speaker 24 (01:31:28):
The development of it cost Lise is so much less
than going through the process of making up molds with
the CNC.

Speaker 2 (01:31:42):
So if you didn't, if you did go to production,
then would you go into molds and sense?

Speaker 8 (01:31:46):
Is it how you do it?

Speaker 14 (01:31:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 24 (01:31:48):
Yeah, you test that, test that original design with a
three D printer and do any adjustments that you needed
to do, and then take it to.

Speaker 3 (01:32:01):
Say, if you're going to do.

Speaker 24 (01:32:01):
A plastic molding, injection molding and so forth, then you
would have molds made up and still with the seeing
machine and so forth, and that's where your costs what
comes in what.

Speaker 2 (01:32:16):
Uh what field is your item? And are you in
there in the rockets area?

Speaker 11 (01:32:22):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:32:22):
No, no, no, I really I'm sorry. I can't really turn.

Speaker 5 (01:32:28):
Sound.

Speaker 2 (01:32:29):
I feel terrible. Yeah, okay, you save that. Thank you, James.
It's Marcus. Welcome, good evening, said.

Speaker 9 (01:32:36):
Was very fruscininating. I've not known anything about this.

Speaker 2 (01:32:39):
PU headphones out hang on, yep, keep going.

Speaker 9 (01:32:44):
Okay, market a query Mark Marcus, and I'll tell you
my situation. I'm sitting on Oriental Bay Beach in Wellington. Yes, copy,
and it's a clear, clear sky in Wellington, hardly any wind.
And I'm looking to the north and there is a
very very bright light in the sky. Yes, it's probably
possibly your planet. It's possibly Jupiter. But I'm wondering if

(01:33:08):
any of your better informed listeners would know what it is.
It's very very bright. It looks like an aircraft coming
into the end, but it's been sitting there for twenty minutes.
It's not an aircraft. It's a pretty low on the
horizon and I'm just wondering what it is.

Speaker 2 (01:33:26):
So you're looking straight up north, straight up state how
we went up the Narronger Gorge that way. It's above that,
is that right?

Speaker 3 (01:33:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:33:32):
Yeah, pretty much here.

Speaker 2 (01:33:34):
And it's not one of those balloons that are nighttime.

Speaker 9 (01:33:39):
I don't think so. It's not moving at all, it's
not at all. But it's very very bright. It's a
lot brighter than you would see Venus or Mars on
the sky, a lot brighter than any of the stars,
but not very big compared to compared to looking at

(01:34:00):
the Moon, it's probably probably about a sixteenth size of
the Moon.

Speaker 2 (01:34:07):
I'm just talking. I'm just looking up on the night planet.
It looks like Niptune and set and are close together.
Is that what you've got, Dan, don't.

Speaker 9 (01:34:27):
Set, there's a very close together.

Speaker 2 (01:34:31):
There's a comet in the sky too. It looks like
Nipchun and Set and are close together with a comic.

Speaker 8 (01:34:35):
This is the.

Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
The sky from Willington looking due north. That's what it
looks like to me. Yeah, so Niptune's at fifty degrees. Yeah, yeah,
what website is that on the skylive dot com. If
you go and look at that, that's it seems to be. Yeah,

(01:35:01):
and it looks like Setting and Niptune are right together,
and there's a comet up there as well. But I'll
see if anyone else can see as well. James having
a pleasant evening, even a pleasant evening apart from this.

Speaker 9 (01:35:11):
I am thank you very much listening to you and
listen to your very informalists.

Speaker 2 (01:35:15):
It's a clear sky obviously.

Speaker 9 (01:35:18):
Yeah, it's great. It's been a great day on we well,
a great afternoon. The morning wasn't great, but the afterthing's
been very good.

Speaker 2 (01:35:25):
Dan, I thought if it was a comment that we
could see, people would know about that. But it doesn't
like there's a comment there, doesn't It five R two swan.
I thought we would have heard of that. So if
anyone else in the night sky looking north and Wellington

(01:35:52):
C two two five ARTI swan is a long period
comment that it's got eleventh September twenty twenty five. Yeah,
so I'll see visit visible from earth. The visible from
Wellington don't appear to be that from that website likely

(01:36:14):
faint says these days. But if you want, if you've
got any information about that, you get in touch. Good
a Marcus Pete here at long last sum competition in
the grocery market. Opening first week of November. Plenty of
Foods is Upper Hut's newest full server supermarket, created by

(01:36:37):
locals who believe grocery shopping should be fresh, fear and
full of choice. Located in the heart of brew Town,
we're here for everyone, from local families and walls full
of state residents to weekend visits, sports phones at Maidstone
Park and anyone looking for all turn to the big
super market chains. Our shells will be stocked with the
essentials you need and the extras you'll love, from cheap
fresh produce, competitive meat prices to a wide range of

(01:36:58):
grocery staples. We're also you'll go to destination of international confectory,
snacks and drinks you won't find anywhere else.

Speaker 11 (01:37:05):
Upper Hut.

Speaker 2 (01:37:06):
We're passionate about being local and loyal, proudly weeking with
food and great producers from our own community. We make
space for the flavors and makers that make up unique
At Plenty Foods, you'll find more than just groceries. You'll
find a team who knows you, a store that feels
like yours, an aisles full of reasons to shop local.
That's at Brewtown. Actually, I heard something else that's new

(01:37:29):
going in Brewtown.

Speaker 11 (01:37:30):
What was that?

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
I heard? That was on one of the radio shows recently.
There might have been there, but I don't think so.
Something else is going in there that I thought was
quite an exciting kind of a new thing for an
Upper Hut. It might have been the Souper make, but
I thought it was something different. But good on them.
That's exciting are three D Prindice and comets. That's what

(01:37:52):
we're on about, but mainly three D friends and mainly comets.
It's good that night sky thing, isn't it?

Speaker 8 (01:38:02):
So?

Speaker 2 (01:38:02):
If you look in Willington North, he said, it was
quite spectacical. He thought it was a plane, So, I
mean it's quite a big thing of I think it's
a plane. The plane, the plane, Tim Beveridge from Midnight
You heard that her first. It's his night Chinese China

(01:38:23):
seer two missions falling for the past eighteen months, according
to analysis, Good News Now Canada no longer measle free
as outbreak spread. That's happening your Maxine, Welcome, It's Marcus

(01:38:45):
good evening.

Speaker 8 (01:38:45):
Still older than me, I take it me?

Speaker 2 (01:38:49):
Yes you How old are you are?

Speaker 13 (01:38:51):
On you the other night?

Speaker 2 (01:38:53):
How do you your age?

Speaker 13 (01:38:56):
But you're older than me.

Speaker 8 (01:38:58):
Yes.

Speaker 23 (01:39:00):
But apart from that, I think.

Speaker 6 (01:39:03):
Mama might be the.

Speaker 23 (01:39:06):
Thing that's opening up you mentioned earlier.

Speaker 13 (01:39:10):
Oh what's that it's a restaurant. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yes.

Speaker 2 (01:39:16):
It seems to be a bit of a hutbrew town.
They've done well with it, haven't they.

Speaker 8 (01:39:19):
Well. I haven't been there, but apparently from what I've
heard on talkback.

Speaker 9 (01:39:23):
Yeah, yeah, Well.

Speaker 2 (01:39:26):
Do you live near to there?

Speaker 11 (01:39:29):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:39:29):
I live in the cargo Oh je creepers, Yeah, fancy No.
I was just listening to one of the other talkback
hosts this morning and they were talking about businesses closing
down and the hardship of this, that and the other,
and how they're opening up a Mama restaurant.

Speaker 2 (01:39:53):
Mica, I can find some more about that vaccine. Thank
you for that, Thank you very much. Twenty seven to eleven,
Good evening, Gary, This is Marcus.

Speaker 7 (01:39:59):
Welcome again.

Speaker 9 (01:40:01):
Marcus.

Speaker 7 (01:40:01):
I just happened to turn on the news and listen
to the headlines a bit. In the first bills passed
in Parliament to end the greyhound racing industry in August, I've.

Speaker 19 (01:40:12):
Got a question for you.

Speaker 7 (01:40:13):
Do you think it's fear that the government, which will
mister Peters, the Minister of Racing, is going to allow
ententayme to beman greyhound racing from Australia when their youth
in asia rate and injury rate is three times worse
than ours in New Zealand.

Speaker 2 (01:40:31):
Okay, Gary, Yes, you've rung up three times about greyhound racing,
right yep. One of your arguments was in a cost
of living crisis and unemployment at the highest it's been
for nine years, do you think it's right for the
government to kill an industry and put three thousand people

(01:40:53):
into unemployment? Is that the number?

Speaker 7 (01:40:56):
Well, it'll be very close to that.

Speaker 2 (01:41:00):
That's one of my main a convincing argument. The second
argument you make, do you think that greyhound racing is
unfairly cruel to dogs when in Auckland last year they
euthanized six thousand dogs?

Speaker 18 (01:41:16):
Is that right?

Speaker 7 (01:41:17):
Not one of them was a greyhound?

Speaker 2 (01:41:20):
Have I got the numbers right? Six thousand?

Speaker 7 (01:41:22):
There's actually six and forty nine and seventeen of them
are days.

Speaker 2 (01:41:26):
That's appalling.

Speaker 6 (01:41:28):
Yeah, But.

Speaker 2 (01:41:31):
A problem with dogs is not greyhound racing. Our problem
with dogs as private owners, not wanting them, not looking
after them. That's what Winston Peter should be focusing on.

Speaker 7 (01:41:43):
Exactly what there was. There was seventeen dogs youthanized greyhounds
in New Zealand last year on the race Hend racing
track and there was probably fifty to one hundred injuries
which weren't life threatening.

Speaker 2 (01:41:57):
You guys have got you guys have got every reason
to feel that you have been made a scapegoat because
the numbers just don't stack up.

Speaker 7 (01:42:06):
I'll tell you why, Marcus, we've made a scapegoat is
because the Greens they voted on geo blocking and the
only way that the Green Party would support it is
that the greyhound racing industry went.

Speaker 2 (01:42:22):
So GEOE blocking is to give INTAE the monopoly for
and they can technically stop other overseas agencies. How do
they do that?

Speaker 7 (01:42:34):
You can't bet in New Zealand unless it's with NTAIN,
so you can't ring it. You can't have a bet
three six y five account or a UNIPA account.

Speaker 2 (01:42:45):
But that's that doesn't include online poker and stuff doesn't gambling.

Speaker 7 (01:42:48):
It's just they didn't get that. They didn't get that
they weren't allowed to have it. Okay, but you're right, Marcus,
we've been made of scapegoat.

Speaker 2 (01:42:58):
Wouldn't if they be able to get that across the
line without the sport of greens with just.

Speaker 7 (01:43:02):
No they had to have all the parties, a whole
lot had to vote to get it through.

Speaker 2 (01:43:08):
Okay, and I understand that. But you're you're in the
you're in the you're the greyhound guy.

Speaker 15 (01:43:15):
You'd know this.

Speaker 7 (01:43:16):
Yeah, Well, what my biggest concerer market is also what's
going to happen to the to the greyhounds? Like the
n z g r A spent seven million last year
on rehoming. We rehome seven six hundred and forty three greyhounds.

Speaker 3 (01:43:32):
What what is it?

Speaker 7 (01:43:33):
What are the what is the sbc A going to do?

Speaker 11 (01:43:35):
You think?

Speaker 2 (01:43:37):
Why did you guys not fight it through the Supreme
Court or whatever it's called now?

Speaker 7 (01:43:40):
We did, We went to court and they we're going
back in December. It's already cost a Greyhound Association four
hundred thousand dollars of of the n z g r
a's money.

Speaker 13 (01:43:55):
Will it go underground?

Speaker 7 (01:43:57):
I don't know the But the good thing about is
I have through heard through the Grape One markets that
Australia are trying to block Australian greyhound race and betting
over there, are trying to block in tain bringing in
grayhound racing if.

Speaker 19 (01:44:12):
We go under.

Speaker 2 (01:44:13):
Tell me about that? What do you mean to bring
into there? Trying to block it? For Zeland?

Speaker 7 (01:44:17):
If the New Zealand Grayhound Racing Association go under, New
Zealand Greyhounds go under, Australia will have to in tain,
will have to beam and more racing from Australia to
cover what the New Zealand product that goes. But Australia
are going to try and block in tain, beaming and
greyhound racing because they're saying it's hypocritical.

Speaker 2 (01:44:39):
Is it in solidarity with you guys. That must be reassuring.
Good on them.

Speaker 7 (01:44:43):
Yeah, well well well Winston Peters is saying, oh, it's
too many injuries in New Zealand and it's unfair on
the dogs. But he's going to lay our Australia to
Beam and Beaman racing so Intang can continue to make
continue to make money out of the industry.

Speaker 2 (01:44:58):
It's not it's not that that's hypocritical, of course it is.

Speaker 7 (01:45:03):
But the worst thing about it, there's all the all
the peace people in New Zealand that don't understand what's
going on.

Speaker 2 (01:45:10):
Gary, Where do you fit in? Where do you fit
in with and it in greyhound because you're a very
effective advocate, because your facts.

Speaker 7 (01:45:15):
Are good in the industry for thirty years and I've
worked in the greyhound kennel. I've worked for greyhound trainers
and I currently race dogs there with my out of
a kennel and we smelting and we've just been as
I said to you, my biggest concern is what's going
to happen to the dogs. SBCA can't look after the

(01:45:37):
dogs in Auckland Sore. How the hell are they're going
to go on six hundred and forty three dogs we
rehomed last year.

Speaker 2 (01:45:46):
When when's the last race?

Speaker 7 (01:45:49):
Gary, July thirty first, apparently, how are.

Speaker 2 (01:45:53):
The field's going? And a lot of the people's stand, well,
no one's no.

Speaker 7 (01:45:57):
One's allowed to breed, so the fields are probably basis
sometimes the down to five six runners. No one, no
one's breeding because no one's allowed to. And you know,
and if you've got a dog on the list now
on the list rehoming list, m ZGR are doing the
right thing. They're paying their owners twenty dollars a day,
which is one hundred and forty dollars a week to

(01:46:20):
keep the dogs and keep the trainers feeding and you know,
keep them feeding. There do you think the SPCA going
to stamp up any money for us?

Speaker 2 (01:46:28):
But thanks that, Gay, I appreciate the points you're making.
You make them well, thank you. Twenty to eleven, eighteen
to eleven, Hello Gay of Marcus, welcome. Sorry bad push
for me? Good I gave.

Speaker 12 (01:46:40):
Oh that's good. Yeah, we've also got a dog, a
family dog. It's a Labrador.

Speaker 10 (01:46:47):
It's a golden door.

Speaker 12 (01:46:48):
Actually yah, yeah, she just blurred a cruciate ligament. Yes
they do.

Speaker 2 (01:46:59):
Yeah, she's not a race she's not a racing dog.

Speaker 12 (01:47:04):
No, No, she's like a labrador.

Speaker 10 (01:47:06):
Yeah, cross with.

Speaker 12 (01:47:12):
Well anyway, she's got a Cruisiet ligament displacement seven thousand dollars.

Speaker 20 (01:47:17):
To fits it.

Speaker 2 (01:47:19):
Well, thank you for that game, tied, Marcus. Good evening.

Speaker 11 (01:47:24):
That you, Marcus, yes kid. Yeah, they going on about
these greyhounds. I mean I've worked in the kennels and that. Well,
what about the dogs that hunt pigs? Yeah, they get
slaughtered by the pigs, and the pigs get slaughtered by

(01:47:46):
the dogs. So what are they going the racehorsing, going
over the hurdles. Where are they going on about whippets?
I mean, whippets don't only purchasing rabbits and hares and
possums and things like that, because they race them and
they break the rigg as. Some think, what about all

(01:48:07):
the dogs? Big dogs are going into the vets Because
I've been hipped up by a bet boar.

Speaker 2 (01:48:15):
I mean, I think you've got to acknowledge, though, that
the sport is dying around the world. Pardon dog racing.
Dog racing is dying around the world.

Speaker 11 (01:48:26):
You have to it could do too, because it's gambling. God,
your God doesn't like gambling.

Speaker 2 (01:48:32):
Any gambling in any gambling in the Bible.

Speaker 11 (01:48:36):
No gambling in the Bible.

Speaker 2 (01:48:38):
No, are you sure sure about that?

Speaker 11 (01:48:42):
I'm absolutely sure about that. You can get the Old Testament,
the New Bible that they've just put out, and I
bet you can't find any gambling in there.

Speaker 2 (01:48:55):
But what about what about the guards drawing lots for Jesus' clothes?

Speaker 3 (01:49:00):
Pardon?

Speaker 2 (01:49:01):
What about the guards drawing lots for Jesus' clothes?

Speaker 11 (01:49:06):
Don't quite hear I'm pretty old, I'm ninety.

Speaker 2 (01:49:10):
There is there is a part in the Bible, right.

Speaker 11 (01:49:14):
Yeah, and what what what what chapter.

Speaker 2 (01:49:22):
Stand by?

Speaker 11 (01:49:24):
Pardon?

Speaker 2 (01:49:25):
And then you and and the New Testament, the Gospel
where the guards draw lots for Jesus' clothes.

Speaker 11 (01:49:32):
Yeah, that beside the point of what's going on in
the world.

Speaker 2 (01:49:37):
Yes, no, that's right. I just try to see what
the Bible said about gambling.

Speaker 11 (01:49:41):
Yeah, but that Ark fifteen pardon no, it was Lucas
three was three to ten. But anyway, but one of
these these people going on about that all the time,
about the dogs getting hurt.

Speaker 2 (01:50:03):
Yeah, we'll talk more about that, Kim. But thank you
for the to eleven. Mainly it's three D printer is
also a side pivot into the race dogs. Someone's already
sent me a picture of their ex greyhound. This is
my Radar with his favorite toy. He's having a great

(01:50:26):
retirement after his great racing career. So sad, I want
me to have another wonderful pet in the future. And
it's a jet black greyhound. Would many of them? Jet
black that's got a slip in its mouth, and it's
got a gorgeous, gorgeous yellow and black checkered coat and
read dainty feet. It looks like a loved and beloved dog. Radar.

(01:50:53):
I don't know if Radar is its racing name. I
don't know how many winds Radar had. Someone says recompelling argument.
My views have changed, whether that was Gary or Ted Marcus.
I think the Trots and Christitch seem to have been
a success, but I think only has another decade left.
I don't disagree, Marcus. It's gim I got the treffector

(01:51:16):
in the trolling gap. Any ideas how much the traffector paid.

Speaker 8 (01:51:21):
Dan?

Speaker 2 (01:51:21):
Is that something you can find out? Yeah, you do,
tab treffector usually than cup whatever it's called, Marcus the
latest If anyone else knows what the traffector pay. Let
us know, Marcus, the latest three D printers are extremely
fast machines compared to what was available a couple of
years ago. We have three D print everything from model
t rex heads to discontinued curtain hawks that are no

(01:51:44):
longer available. That's a good use. You can even print
your own shoes using TPU filament. You can repair broken
objects by printing you parts, either by three D modeling
or even three D scanning existing parts. Very compelling argument
of views have changed here. I thought gery was good.
Not necessarily agree with him, but I think he is

(01:52:06):
whole the hypocrisy of the decision. Marcus just wanted to
send a warning out as I've had a bad stomach
virus going around on an Aukland hospit at the moment
had five bags of fluid so far and morphing. As
I'm in pain and coding in needs to make sure
I don't feel sick when I eat, which is I
can't stand at the moment. I've lost all my energy,
just want to sleep. It's pretty bad. Wow, that's a

(01:52:26):
pretty sobering text. Get kevback on. Someone says, what what's
that of ninety The trifecta three hundred and forty one bucks.
Hardly worth the effort. Thanks for that, Dan three four
ones might take on that if you know, you know

(01:52:48):
eight eight to eleven heat L twelve. So here we
are again, people six from eleven. Then we give my
ears a bit of arrest. I like to do that
about this time of the night. I'm going to have
a lie down in the news. I have a power
nap and I'll be back for the hour of Power
Fallen asleep on air on Friday during talking to Pete

(01:53:09):
about the parking at Burger King Hamilton, it's like a
Kiwi short story or Kiwi movie that one. I haven't
heard anything about tong and Edo in the fire there.
If you're driving past there in the truck, tell me
if there's a glow by the way. There's some interesting
freight moving around the country. There is a giraffe in

(01:53:30):
a tall box going between christ Jurich Irana Park and
Hamilton Hamilton Zoo Zoo Zoo Zoo, so it's going to
five meter create. It can't have come up through Kakart
to go the inlet because of the tunnels. I'm not
quite sure the overbridges I think the overage south of Tito.
I think there are overbridges on the main road north.

(01:53:51):
I'm not sure how it's going to cope with that,
but if you said, give us a tinkle. The other
thing that I'm interested in, one of those futuro spaceship
houses is moving south from the north. Is it's in
the south at the I don't know where it's headed,
but that's of interest to me. So both those topics,
you want to talk quickly before the news, that would

(01:54:12):
be the best bet for me. That's best case scenario.

Speaker 11 (01:54:18):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (01:54:20):
I think the trifector was one hundred and seven dollars
ninety for that for the right race, because two people
have sent that through, so Jim one ninety. Marcus, you spoken,
but quick on measles. What's the latest? No more cases
wamu who've been and now has simply food, lovely vegetables.

(01:54:44):
No word on the bright object in the sky from Hamilton,
from Wellington looking north. If you know about that, get
in touch. And that's about it for me. I did
also want to talk tonight about cup Week in christ

(01:55:07):
Church and also the in London they're getting rid of
penguins and the penguin enclosures in London because they say
they're cruel, the sort of underground and not where penguins
should be. How are feeling about the penguins at Kelly Talton's.
Have they done their dash? They'll probably be happier Antarctica,

(01:55:28):
wouldn't they. I'm not stirring, but I'm just looking for consistency.
It's eleven oh seven. It's the final hour for my
show People of New Zealand. We've been talking mainly, I
guess if you'd call it mainly about three D printers.
Very enjoyable the discussion. If anyone's got any more to
add about that, I'm all in. There's something I know

(01:55:50):
nothing about, finding fasting what people are doing. Wasn't that
was amazing? That guy Magnus that makes fidget spinners and
total Longer, which is the story I've never heard about,
and does them very very well. But that's what we
are talking about tonight, and cup we can Christ if
you're involved with that. If people are still out parting,
I'd like to know, be a big night for the economy.

(01:56:13):
I would think. I'm sure a lot of people would
travel around the South Island to go and be a
part of that so, yeah, that's something. That's what we're
right about now. Also tonight there's been other topics. I
can't remember what they're all. What so, what's next on
the chopping block? Rodeo? How many places have sheep runs

(01:56:33):
through towns? I think they've tried to get rid of Rodeo's,
but not that because it kind of has kind of
skills that are unvailable that I think probably suffice and farming.
I would think. Now this is May. It's Marcus, good
evening and welcome.

Speaker 3 (01:56:50):
I may.

Speaker 25 (01:56:52):
Yeah, hi, Marcus, how are you good?

Speaker 24 (01:56:54):
Thing?

Speaker 10 (01:56:54):
You May?

Speaker 26 (01:56:55):
It's good.

Speaker 25 (01:56:56):
I was recently at a little festival in the Moderator
VLLLEYNI school puts it on and three D printers this
little young guy and his wife. What a lovely thing.
It's called the Monster, the Monster naturally, no, the Monster

(01:57:16):
Hatchery and if you go on the website you'll find it.
It is so cute, honestly, these little dinosaurs. I was addicted.
I started following them. Said the green kids are going
to get some other little great grandchildren some for Christmas.

(01:57:37):
They're so sweet. That's three D printing?

Speaker 2 (01:57:41):
Was he making them there?

Speaker 3 (01:57:43):
No?

Speaker 26 (01:57:43):
No, they've got a store they had all full of
this stuff and there was a lot of Star Wars
stuff too, which is wonderful for kids.

Speaker 25 (01:57:55):
But these little dinosaurs. If you go on the have
a look on his website. I was just trying to
find that our here it is this card here and
he gave me a little stamping and it's yeah, it's
called the Monster's Hatchery.

Speaker 26 (01:58:11):
Well, it's so cute.

Speaker 2 (01:58:13):
That sounds like a good place where you live. Where's
the name of that? Where's the name of that? School mate?
What did you say it was called?

Speaker 25 (01:58:19):
It's not a Moti school. Oh yeah, it's a little
country school. But every year label weekend they put a
festival on and parents the parents make cakes and that
goes from morning and afternoon teas.

Speaker 5 (01:58:36):
And oh it's lovely.

Speaker 2 (01:58:38):
You know, there's nothing better than the school festival, school
fate like that. They're fantastic, aren't they.

Speaker 25 (01:58:43):
Yeah, And they make a good amount of money with
people are very generous.

Speaker 2 (01:58:49):
So how far would that be away? Fro much awake
And it's about thirty k's down the valley.

Speaker 8 (01:58:52):
Is that right?

Speaker 21 (01:58:53):
Oh?

Speaker 25 (01:58:53):
Yeah, so I live in pok Aurora.

Speaker 2 (01:58:55):
Yeah, copy, I can see that on the map net yep.

Speaker 25 (01:58:58):
Yeah, that's about ten minutes away from the school that
the kids used to catch the bus, and it would
take them half an hour to get the school.

Speaker 2 (01:59:05):
You know by the Yeah, I can imagine.

Speaker 25 (01:59:08):
And uh yeah that all my kids went there, My
husband went there, and his parents.

Speaker 2 (01:59:14):
His father went It's like the old days. No one's
moved out of the valley. Gosh, no one could escape.

Speaker 25 (01:59:21):
No, we can't escape. You want to see the damage to.

Speaker 2 (01:59:25):
Ye, I've heard about that. Yeah, it's still it's still.
It's still bad, is it. Yeah?

Speaker 25 (01:59:30):
All my places, yeah, a lot of other people's are true.
I've got still got peaks of the same castles everywhere.

Speaker 2 (01:59:37):
And there weren't many people in your town? Would there?
Would there be a hundred?

Speaker 25 (01:59:43):
Not really sure?

Speaker 2 (01:59:44):
I never counted them. I see you've got a you've
got a hall. Well that's always a good thing, isn't it.

Speaker 25 (01:59:50):
Yeah, we've got two halls, oh god, go you na
and mighty hall. And we've got our little poker or
a hall up there. It's used a lot.

Speaker 2 (01:59:59):
Yeah, the great things country halls, aren't they? I love them?

Speaker 12 (02:00:03):
Lovely?

Speaker 2 (02:00:03):
Yeahs always nice.

Speaker 25 (02:00:05):
Oh hang on, And we've also got the fire Brigade hall.
So we've got three. Yeah, yeah, we're very lucky. And
the school. School's well supported. I'm not sure how many
got a very good principal there at the moment.

Speaker 2 (02:00:20):
Doesn't it well?

Speaker 26 (02:00:21):
The kids love it?

Speaker 16 (02:00:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (02:00:23):
How many were this? Is it seventy kids at the school?

Speaker 11 (02:00:27):
Oh?

Speaker 25 (02:00:27):
Yeah, easy?

Speaker 11 (02:00:28):
Yeah? Sure?

Speaker 25 (02:00:30):
Five teachers or something like that.

Speaker 2 (02:00:32):
And is it mainly a farming or a horticultural kind
of a place.

Speaker 25 (02:00:38):
It's not so much farming now, just sort of lifestyle
block quite a bit. Ye, yeah, farming Lakefield Tapa Ware
is the one for other kids because they go from
primers right up to.

Speaker 20 (02:00:52):
High school there.

Speaker 2 (02:00:53):
Oh okay, sure, so they've got one of those area
schools yet, yeah.

Speaker 25 (02:00:56):
Area school, but this one once the kids get to
form two or whatever it is, eleven nine, I can't
think of it now.

Speaker 2 (02:01:05):
That's a stupid So I always still with my kids.
I always say, when you're going to be I refuse
to use the new system.

Speaker 25 (02:01:11):
No, we should get with the play.

Speaker 2 (02:01:13):
No, it's too complicated.

Speaker 13 (02:01:15):
I like the way it was.

Speaker 2 (02:01:16):
Anyway, where do they go? Where do they go for
they go to watch a week of high school?

Speaker 26 (02:01:20):
Yeah?

Speaker 25 (02:01:20):
They go too much awake. A lot of kids go
to board at Nelson Boys or Girls, and one of
my child children went through to Wyma. We used to
have to take him out, would take him out every
day and he'd catch the bus and we have to
him night for five years. He's now a geologist.

Speaker 2 (02:01:40):
So what what is where is it? Where's Ymere School?
I don't know where that is.

Speaker 25 (02:01:44):
That's just out of Nelson.

Speaker 20 (02:01:46):
Okay, understand in between Richmond and Nelson.

Speaker 25 (02:01:50):
Yep, big school, big school, high school.

Speaker 2 (02:01:55):
We probably was into geology because where he was living
in the hills there, it wasn't so much the school
that where he was probably.

Speaker 25 (02:02:01):
I think he had a very very good teacher helped
to let them let them go on Fridays if they
went to school and really learned, he'd let them have
their little bit of downtime on a Friday, mister Rogers.

Speaker 12 (02:02:13):
And he was fabulous.

Speaker 2 (02:02:14):
What downtime looking for rocks or something?

Speaker 25 (02:02:17):
Oh no, anything that they really loved and he would help,
you know, he would put energy into it. He was
such a good teacher. Great, yeah, okay, thank you.

Speaker 2 (02:02:28):
Loving to talk to you, may thank you so much.
I enjoyed the little window into your world. Thirteen past eleven.
If you've got anything to add in Three D printers
and school fears. Love a coconut shie, I love a
lucky dip, love a school fair, love a toffee apple,
love coconut ice, love a lucky dip, love a.

Speaker 17 (02:02:50):
Love a.

Speaker 2 (02:02:52):
When they spin the wheel for raffles, and then there's
not much of I don't like. So there we got
that to I need to I need to be in
a country. I need to be a school fair this weekend,
I think cos it's always early to be talked out
the weekend. It's Tuesday, but I feel dual weekend now.
If you want to talk about three D printers, Marcus,

(02:03:13):
maybe a new venture for the grave and industry. Does
anyone race pigeons? And what's the bet the pigeon population
outnumber the humans. I don't know if you bet on
the pigeons, it's probably too easily corruptible to bet on.
I am kind of fascinated by pigeons and pigeon racing,
and they're all taken together and released. It's kind of

(02:03:35):
quite interesting. Fourteen past eleven, if you want to be
on air, that's the whole plan tonight. I'd like to
hear someone that was at the races. Today, I'd like
to hear some more talk about three D printers. I'd
like to hear some more talks about people that have
seen the giraffe that's traveling up the because normally last

(02:03:57):
time a giraffe came down everyone had seen it, but
today not so much. I think it's probably just come
off the ender on and now it's what we're on
about tonight. You've got something to add good, so be
in touch. Let me think what else I can say. No,
I can't think. Come on, three D printers, measles, greyhounds,

(02:04:26):
the big object in the sky north from Oriental Bay.
There are all things you might mention tonight. Now we
play England on Sunday. It's going to be at fourteen
am again. Aikia opens on the fourth of December in

(02:04:47):
New Zealand. That's an Auckland Carmageddon. You want to be
racing off there to get their scandy tat. By the way,
there are met service warnings of period who were reign
for the Upper North Island. Across tomorrow and into Thursday,

(02:05:09):
it is World Origami Day. Not a fan of origamy.
I think you're going to be very organized to get
that stuff right. It leaves most of us feeling worse
than when we started. Got quite strong feelings about origami,
not God. Hello Rosie, this is Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 11 (02:05:30):
Hi.

Speaker 14 (02:05:31):
Yeah, ringing up with it. Three D printers mys son's
got four of them in operation.

Speaker 2 (02:05:38):
What's he do with them?

Speaker 14 (02:05:40):
Family makes masks and all sorts of.

Speaker 2 (02:05:43):
Things, masks for himself.

Speaker 14 (02:05:47):
Yes, yes, you know, for stars.

Speaker 2 (02:05:52):
Yeah, it seems quite amazing what people can DoD. He
just teach him.

Speaker 9 (02:05:56):
Is he a kid?

Speaker 13 (02:05:56):
Is he?

Speaker 11 (02:06:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 22 (02:06:01):
Nine O take of my garret.

Speaker 2 (02:06:09):
They teach himself how to use it.

Speaker 12 (02:06:11):
Yeah, he does.

Speaker 2 (02:06:12):
Well and just types all and outcomes a mask.

Speaker 7 (02:06:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 17 (02:06:18):
He's got lots of different propriums.

Speaker 14 (02:06:21):
You can go download on the anternet.

Speaker 11 (02:06:24):
Yeah, he's made the pokemons.

Speaker 5 (02:06:28):
And he does a lot of stuff.

Speaker 2 (02:06:29):
From my from my granda, it sounds like quite a
lot of people have got three D printers in their
houses and just doing stuff all the time.

Speaker 14 (02:06:38):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's all of food stuff that's acoustics.

Speaker 11 (02:06:47):
For Warri's sort of stuff.

Speaker 14 (02:06:50):
Is wearing his colors and yeah, even made a great
big he met me a great big Halloween.

Speaker 2 (02:07:05):
Oh what a true fancy Yeah. Oh, nice to hear Rosie.
Thank you for the eighteen past eleven school fears and
three D printing, and and and anything else. That's what
I'm about tonight. My name is Marcus. Good evening. Any
breaking news, I'll bring that too. You can't see much

(02:07:25):
happening so far tonight. The night is still young. Ah
what else is coming up? And what do we look
forward to between now and Christmas? I'm wondering your Christmas ham,
the Christmas Mutton, your Advent calendar? What else we can
be excited about the next couple of weeks. Oh, there's

(02:07:48):
the anniversary of the final Concord flight twenty six or you?
How many years is that? Dan A three? Two years,
two thousand and three. So that's coming up. Oh, I said,
I've got to do my summer line as Hi Marcus here.
I'm currently sunning myself and sunny more. I hope you're
having a great time. He's a favorite song I've chosen. Oh,

(02:08:11):
little dumb boy, I'll be back on here. I'll be
back on here late January. Have a festive time. One
year I got early on in the piece early doctor
got chet Ais to do it. It was heartbreaking to
listen to and to read it out. Actually felt part
of me died there. Not a fan of chet Ai

(02:08:32):
at all. Well, it's changing the world, Jeff, this is Marcus. Welcome.

Speaker 17 (02:08:40):
Yeah, good evening, Marcus. How you doing, Geff?

Speaker 2 (02:08:42):
I'm going well, how are you going?

Speaker 11 (02:08:44):
Well?

Speaker 17 (02:08:45):
I'm a little bit disappointed in what's happening in New
Zealan at the moment. It's happening before everybody's eyes, and
we should be we should be concerned about it because
our grandchildren are going to reap the benefits of all
these ill decisions that are being made now, left, right
and center. And one of the things I'm referring to

(02:09:06):
as the conversion of beautiful dairy farms into forests. It's criminal,
It's absolutely criminal. What's going on? You know that we've
got we've got tons of marginal land that we can use.
What the hell are we using good dairy farms for?
You tell me, I know, trying to get onto a

(02:09:28):
dairy farmer and.

Speaker 2 (02:09:29):
They can't even not the dairy farms going into trees.

Speaker 3 (02:09:32):
Though, yes it is, yes it is.

Speaker 2 (02:09:35):
You got all of my marginal land.

Speaker 11 (02:09:38):
No it is not.

Speaker 17 (02:09:39):
If it was, Marcus, I wouldn't be talking about it.

Speaker 2 (02:09:41):
Isn't that always, isn't that always? Agricultures Always things come
along and people scream, it's going to be into the world.
They said that when dairying came in.

Speaker 17 (02:09:51):
I jumped up and down when the deery went down
to it down to the sheep country.

Speaker 11 (02:09:56):
But you know they didn't.

Speaker 17 (02:09:57):
They sort of completely did a rethink. They destroyed all
the rivers. They're slowly bringing them back. But having said that,
to convert a dairy farm now into a forest once
you once you've done that, you've actually ruined the soil.
There's better ways to make money out of out of
a farm than to get them to convert it to

(02:10:19):
vetty pine tree. It's just it's just nuts. Whoever makes
these calls, it's just nuts because what it does it
takes away the ability of a young farmer to get
onto a farm. Anyone who's a shermiller knows exactly what
I'm talking about. You know a lot of these old
guys are moving off their farms. They're selling out. They've

(02:10:41):
got their body what do you call them, the fonterra.
They've got all their bucks tied up in fonterras. So
they're laughing all the way to the bank. Anyway. But
the people who are buying them are corporation. They want
they want the what's the name credits?

Speaker 14 (02:10:57):
You know.

Speaker 2 (02:11:00):
It is overseas money coming in. There's a speaker of
boom and dairy farm as well too, isn't they're getting
good money for it? Well, you big Ponzi scheme or
the farm prices they go up and up and up.

Speaker 17 (02:11:12):
Yeah, I know that. By the same taken a head away,
our young farmers get onto a farm. How the hell
do you get started bed enough to buy a house here?
Do you get started on a farm which cost you
five million dollars and you're a shoemaker.

Speaker 2 (02:11:25):
I don't think that. I don't think the trees are
going on to quality land.

Speaker 17 (02:11:29):
They are going on to quality there. And make do
you make looked before I get on it? Before I
ever get on your program, I make sure that I've
got my affect straight. That's the main thing is to
get affect straight.

Speaker 2 (02:11:41):
Where's the quality land? Jeff?

Speaker 17 (02:11:43):
Up north up north?

Speaker 11 (02:11:44):
Up my car cover?

Speaker 2 (02:11:46):
Well, that's not good. The cower car is not good
for dairy though, is it.

Speaker 6 (02:11:50):
Yes, it is, yes, it is.

Speaker 17 (02:11:52):
You're going look at You're going to look at the
production they put out. It's brilliant. And you'll say, down
on the South, down on South Island. They're doing it
now in the South Island.

Speaker 2 (02:12:02):
It's crazy whereabouts.

Speaker 17 (02:12:05):
And Central Otago we're talking.

Speaker 2 (02:12:09):
We're in Central Otago and they're planting trees.

Speaker 17 (02:12:14):
I can tell you what. I don't know exactly where
the spot is, but it wouldn't take me half an
hour finding out. It put them open to the public, Marcus,
and it didn't and it didn't tell you what's t
happening in their own backyard. There you go.

Speaker 2 (02:12:27):
You got any good news, Jeff, Yes I have.

Speaker 17 (02:12:30):
I'm going to sue the Boddy. I'm going to sue
the CEO of Watercare okay, for devastation your worry the
marine reserve?

Speaker 2 (02:12:40):
What'd you say?

Speaker 17 (02:12:41):
I Am going to sue the CEO of watercre for
destroying a natural reserve. If you I did it, we'd
be in we'd be in jail, mate. These guys are
getting away with murder?

Speaker 2 (02:12:54):
Is it the good news story you sound heated up about.

Speaker 17 (02:12:58):
Well, it's about time. It's about time these guys set
up and take notice of Actually, you know some really
decent that information there on the hellbent on destroying what
we've got, which is our coastline.

Speaker 2 (02:13:11):
Have you got any hobbies to relax or anything you do, Jeeve?

Speaker 17 (02:13:15):
I listen, made, I've been diving for for the last
sixty five years. I've been diving the entire coast of
New Zealand. Okay, I've seen the devastation that goes on. Wow,
the hurricane golf is verging on on ritually extinct.

Speaker 2 (02:13:30):
Okay, yeah, I don't disagree.

Speaker 17 (02:13:34):
Well, you can't disagree with Marcus at least you come
down with media and to where we were used to dive,
and there was calp pars count Pass to Africa, the
car pat.

Speaker 2 (02:13:47):
What do they call those kind of things? What are
they called? A kenner balum or what are they called?
When they're everywhere?

Speaker 17 (02:13:52):
The kenner, the kinner have been, the kinner have been,
if you like, they have overrun what we used to
have was, which was you know, proper help grades, beautiful, culpa, beautiful,
the becker. Try with all kelt, the whole lot. You
go there, now you can't find any kelp. It's gone.

(02:14:13):
And the reason why it's gone is because we've taken
all the crapersh out and all the big Snapper. All right,
all the big Snapper. They were the predators of Kenner.
You're right, the big crapers were predators of Kenner.

Speaker 2 (02:14:28):
What are they called?

Speaker 5 (02:14:30):
What do you call it?

Speaker 2 (02:14:30):
When you're there's Kenner grow all over the ground.

Speaker 17 (02:14:34):
That's that's Barren's.

Speaker 9 (02:14:36):
Barons?

Speaker 2 (02:14:37):
Is it called Kenner baron?

Speaker 16 (02:14:38):
Is it?

Speaker 17 (02:14:39):
That's what it's called. We're not as a diver, We're
not there to touch Kenner with our screwba gear. It's
just it's just nuts. They're out of control. They're like,
you know, they're disliked possums. There you go, They're just
like possums. How much a docks been on possum?

Speaker 2 (02:14:55):
Are you a million? Are you into?

Speaker 18 (02:14:57):
Doc? Jeff?

Speaker 11 (02:14:58):
Of course I am, but not but not but not?

Speaker 17 (02:15:01):
Two four five?

Speaker 3 (02:15:02):
Seen?

Speaker 2 (02:15:02):
No way, okay, good on you? If there we go
and leave there there? I think twenty nine to twelve.
Who's whinding about the tree? Someone's whinding people up about
the trees?

Speaker 5 (02:15:14):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (02:15:15):
I feel there's some podcasts they're listening to. Sure enough,
each to your own, get in touched by him as
MICUs welcome. What if he's got a three D printer?
Twenty six to twelve, good evening. This is Louise Marcus.

Speaker 18 (02:15:31):
How are you god?

Speaker 22 (02:15:33):
You wouldn't fall asleep with Jeff, would you?

Speaker 17 (02:15:35):
Well?

Speaker 2 (02:15:36):
Almost, but no, I wouldn't.

Speaker 18 (02:15:38):
Oh.

Speaker 22 (02:15:38):
I think he's amazing, really wonder.

Speaker 20 (02:15:42):
Awesome.

Speaker 7 (02:15:44):
Jay.

Speaker 2 (02:15:45):
I thought he was a bit sort of I wouldn't
want to be that wound up about things coming up
to bedtime.

Speaker 22 (02:15:53):
Well, I think I can understand where he's coming from.
He sounds like he's a man that's got years of
knowledge and years of experience and practical, real experience. And
he said, sing, what so called university educated people are
doing to the environment.

Speaker 2 (02:16:15):
So we're going to tell Are we going to tell
people now what they're allowed and not allowed to do
on with their land?

Speaker 22 (02:16:21):
No, it's not that I'm talking about the fact that
we can't ignore these older people that have got years
of wisdom and experience because they've lived it, and we
can't dismiss them. They're so important.

Speaker 2 (02:16:38):
Wouldn't you think older people get more closed minded as
they get older.

Speaker 22 (02:16:43):
No, I don't think so. Yeah, I mean, look at
what's happened in Hawke's Bay to what's wh when Cyclone
Gabriel struck and what happened with those rivers that they
hadn't graded.

Speaker 2 (02:17:01):
What's that with all the slash?

Speaker 22 (02:17:04):
No, No, it's the build up of them in the rivers,
and they won't clear them. And they raised, they raised
the bottom of the rivers. But we've got to respect
these older people and their knowledge. And I sensed his frustration,
and he sounded very knowledgeable, and I agreed he did

(02:17:27):
his homework. He wouldn't be coming on without facts and
we and I think these are the people that we
need to listen to. They're old school, they've lived it,
and they're not five minutes out of university.

Speaker 2 (02:17:45):
Why do you dismiss university knowledge so much.

Speaker 22 (02:17:48):
Because it's not in the real world. It's not practical,
they haven't lived. It's wisdom. It's all theory.

Speaker 2 (02:17:57):
So someone if someone's a surgeon or a doctor, Oh no,
I'm not.

Speaker 22 (02:18:03):
No, I'm not talking about something like that. I'm thinking
more of environmental I'm thinking more of environmentalists.

Speaker 2 (02:18:12):
People that would be studying man's impact on the environment
and they'd be quantifying that.

Speaker 22 (02:18:19):
But but at the at the by dismissing somebody who's
lived I don't know how old Jeff is, but by
the sound of it, what is experienced you can't. You
can't beat experience and wisdom and knowledge through having lived

(02:18:40):
it compared to something that's, you know, a hypothesis.

Speaker 2 (02:18:46):
Nice to talk to you, Lois. Thank you for that, Dave, Marcus,
good evening.

Speaker 27 (02:18:51):
It just quickly is, is that you know that that
ladies making comments about that people at university may or
may not do. She hasn't got any idea if she
hasn't been there and done that. You know, So I
haven't done environmental sciences or whatnot, but I've certainly been
to university and plenty of experiments, and the skills that
I learned at UNI I apply in real life today
and it's actually helped me to solve some quite significant

(02:19:14):
problems that I probably wouldn't have been able to do
if I didn't hadn't have gone to university. So now
I can't comment about people that have done things that
I've never done. And if you haven't walked a day
on someone's shoes, you probably shouldn't say anything.

Speaker 2 (02:19:29):
Very well put David, thank you for saying it. I
appreciate that.

Speaker 1 (02:19:33):
For more from Marcus Slash Nights listen live to news talks.
There'd be from eight pm weekdays or follow the podcast
on iHeartRadio,
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