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November 17, 2025 28 mins
  • What did you believe was true? 
  • Were you a special occasion baby? 
  • MORE TO COME

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Ms Bri and Clint podcast play Zidims Brian Clint, Sidims
Brian Clint.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
She's to HBO Max available on Neon. Sign up now
at Neon tv dot.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
Cod inz.

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Clin.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Well almost, we're fifty Bri ideally back tomorrow. And if
she's not back tomorrow, then I think the rumors really
start swirling. I reckon, We rarely start, you know, we
could start the rumors about where she is.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
If she's not back tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
What have you got?

Speaker 3 (00:35):
But she's gone to work for the for the other guys. Well,
the rumor was that you guys went to couples counseling. Yeah,
you started that rumor.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
Yeah, that's the rumor that is.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
So she's still there.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
But anyway, bulla, I'm back from Fiji, and Claudia thinks
I've got a ten.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Yeah, like like a, if you look really close, you're
like half a shade darker glowing, well, half a shade
less lightly yeah yeah yeah, pulla.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
It's a good day for me today.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
I've only had to delete one former post from my
Facebook Memories page. I go through it every day. That's
my way of sanitizing my Facebook as thory. I go
through it every day, and I look for the ones
that go, oh, there hasn't stood the test of time.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
That can come down.

Speaker 5 (01:21):
You only have to do it.

Speaker 2 (01:22):
Every day for a year, right, and then you're kind
of yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but it's good to keep checking.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
No, not racist.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
It was just me in two thousand and eight complaining
that November.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
Was a bit hard. I could not grow facial here
in two thousand and eight. It's looking good now, thanks girl,
my ten Yeah, yeah, it's definitely prison.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
We have got a double pass to RNA to give
away to someone somewhere around the country today. At ten
to four this afternoon, we'll play an RNA track. You
need to hear that. At five to four this afternoon,
i'll reveal the location of the ZiT in Black Thunders,
and if you're the first person there, you can have
the two tickets to go to RNA in the Cadrona
Valley this New Year's Eve. So be listening. I reckon

(02:07):
be listening from about quarter to four if you want
to be a part of that. This afternoon, First though,
we'll crack into a fresh round of Trady Versus Lady
Scores A ninety one Ladies ninety five tradings and.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
We need one of each. One hundred dollars at him right.

Speaker 6 (02:22):
Now plays Brionkland. It's treaty versus.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Leading, and this is trady versus lady. Where the scores
of ninety five trades ninety one ladies? Did you guys
play this game last week? Has it carried on?

Speaker 1 (02:40):
No? We did like a bootleg version of its as
South or North Island versus South Island.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
I like it turns out South Island smarter.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
In that game.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Debatable last week specifically, you know, I love you South Islanders.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
You're digging your own grape. Let's go to our lady
on a one hundred dollars at m. She's in the
North Island because she's in the City of Sales. She's
thirty five, and it was her three kids. Oh, there
are three kids in the car with her. Welcome to
the show, Cecilia.

Speaker 7 (03:13):
Now I've actually got four kids. I forgot we had
one of the friends with us today.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
You forgot that one.

Speaker 8 (03:19):
Yeah, she's in the car though.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Oh that's all the matters, that's the main bit.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
As long as they're in the car, then you know,
no harm, no foul play on you're taking on our
trading today. Who is in the South Island? They're an
Invercaragal the thirty two and he got extremely sun burnt yesterday.
Have you got son in the cargo already?

Speaker 3 (03:38):
Lenen? Yeah, it was like four teen degrees, yes, so
it was.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
It was tropical fourteen degrees. Geez, take one of your
swan dries off.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
Yeah, I reckon, Yeah, all right.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Your buzzer is Trady, Cecilia. Your buzzer is lady.

Speaker 2 (03:52):
And the first person to give me three correct danswers
is going to win fifty dollars cash from KFC. Good luck, guys.
Question them one. Who did the all Blacks lose to
over the weekend?

Speaker 3 (04:03):
Lenin England? Don't bring it up? Lenin? Why'd you bring
that up? Why'd you have to bring that up?

Speaker 2 (04:10):
Question number two closest guest wins so you can both
check one out there. You don't need to buzz in.
How many days until Christmas? Thirty nine to Lenin?

Speaker 5 (04:20):
Thirty eight?

Speaker 2 (04:21):
Thirty eight for Cecilia, and you're not going to believe this,
it's thirty eight. You were on the money, Cecilia, So
well done. That's one apiece. Question number three, tell me
who sings this song Come Circle.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
I'll give you a clue.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
They're brothers, Lady, Cecilia, the Jonas Brothers.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
The Jonas Brothers is correct. Well done, two points ladies,
one point trades. Question number four which rock star who
also plays sinner in the Hunger Games played in Auckland
over the weekend.

Speaker 3 (05:01):
I'll give you a clue.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
Anybody need a clue? He is Zoe Kraviat's dad.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
Oh, Lady Cecilia for the wind Leanni Cravit, Lenny Cravats,
Thank you, Lenny. Well done, Cecilia. That's a win for
the ladies this afternoon, and for the North Island as well. Actually,
so we'll chalk that one up. Ladies go to ninety

(05:28):
two trading, stay on ninety five still in the league.

Speaker 6 (05:31):
C ITMS bree and Clint podcast.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
Breeze back tomorrow. It's what we're hoping for.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
I've just got back from a week in Fiji. Very
lucky to be able to go for a family holiday
to Fiji and we were having dinner on the beach
one evening and we could see the sun going down
and it's incredible in Fiji where if you're out on
the islands and you can see the horizon and it
just stretches for ages and ages and ages. You get
to do that cool thing where you watch the sun

(05:59):
disappear below the horizon and when it hits the water,
it goes quite fast, and there's a moment where you
can swear that you can see the sun moving, and
then it dips and it's like someone's turned a light.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Stopch off, because it's gone.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
Do you see the green flash just as it disappears,
and then there's a glow around the ocean where it is.
And that's when my six year old tuy my daughter.
She said to me, yep, Son's gone into the hole?

Speaker 3 (06:27):
What what? And I said what?

Speaker 2 (06:29):
And she goes the hole The Son's gone back into
the hole. And I said what hole? She goes the
hole where Maui and his brothers fought the sun. And
I went, oh, my god. You you believe Maui and
the sun the legend to be factual. The school that
we have sent you to is teaching you the legend

(06:51):
of Maui as as as as fact. And I didn't
know whether I wanted to break that or not. It
did you what do you do?

Speaker 3 (06:59):
I did? And then we had to. I had to.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
I struggled with explaining the difference between I had to
explain what a legend is to a six and four
year old, and oh my god, they're very smart kids,
but even I struggled to.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Yeah, like if you tried to explain it to me,
so then and then my four year old and then
my four year old goes, so dead, is Maui real?

Speaker 2 (07:23):
And I said, oh, I think he could have been.
It's like Jesus, I mean he could have been. I
mean I wasn't there. Who's to say?

Speaker 3 (07:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (07:33):
And we didn't get into the comp because because that's
when I realized that Tilly also believes that when any
shouldn't she that Maui fished up the North Island?

Speaker 3 (07:44):
Oh yeah, that happened.

Speaker 2 (07:45):
That definitely did happen, didn't it. That one definitely did happen. Yeah, yeah,
but I you don't know that one, you know, the one.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
You don't know that one and.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
His brothers wrote out, I know that story is in
the South, in the South Island.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
That's their waka.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
Yeah, and then they used the jawbone to fish up
the North Island.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
But that's not true true, it's a legend. It's a legend.

Speaker 1 (08:07):
Yeah, okay, wait what Ella? They didn't actually do that,
did they?

Speaker 3 (08:13):
Ella? What I feel like? I'm at dinner with.

Speaker 5 (08:18):
Confused.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
Here's what you've got to remember, listeners is Ella also
discovered this year.

Speaker 3 (08:25):
Ella has Ella has led quite a.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
Sheltered Christian upbringing, and learned earlier this year that dinosaurs
were real. Oh I knew they were real?

Speaker 3 (08:39):
Did you, CORNEYA? What's your memory of it?

Speaker 2 (08:41):
I think it was that she didn't know where related
to monkeys?

Speaker 3 (08:44):
Oh is that?

Speaker 8 (08:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (08:45):
That still blows my mind and I'm still not okay,
I know this one is true. Ella learned this year
about the Big Bang.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
That's true, But again I still feel a bit weird
about it, because, to.

Speaker 2 (08:58):
Be honest, Ella, the Big Bang is just a theory.
That's why they named the TV show after it. But
you know, again, we weren't there.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
No, But it's nice to learn, Like, you learn about
one sidebot your family believes, and it's nice to learn
both sides.

Speaker 3 (09:10):
In like twenty five and I'm reading a.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Really good book about this space.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
You know, the moon's not made of cheese?

Speaker 1 (09:16):
Right?

Speaker 3 (09:16):
What Cordia? One thing at a time?

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Okay, he'd will explode Okay, I told my daughters about
the truth about Mali and the sun.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
One day. We just tell her one hour, one thing
at a time.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Too can conquer that tomorrow, Oh one hundred dials it in,
or you can text us into nine six nine six,
like my six year old Ella and my twenty five
my six year old two Here, my twenty five year
old Ella, what's.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
The thing that you believed was true?

Speaker 2 (09:44):
Probably for way too long, And now you're like, oh
my god, I'm such a dongey. I can't believe that
I actually believed that. We would love to get you on.
We'd love to hear what you yours is. I was
telling the story before about the teaching moment I had
in Fiji with my six year old, and now I'm
not sure if I taught her an important lesson or

(10:05):
if I just ruined the legend of Maui for her.
Did she find your version of it interesting?

Speaker 8 (10:11):
Nah?

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Because then I had to explain the whole globe situation
and how the sun actually doesn't move and it fat
it turns, and she's either a flat earther or I'm
a boring storyteller, because she tuned out very quickly.

Speaker 3 (10:24):
So we wanted to know from you.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
What's the thing that you believed for way, way, way
too long like this text. Oh my god, I believed
that Genovia was a real country. I only found out
after being confident playing at a bus stop with kids
when they were singing the song from the Princess Darry.
That's the place in the Prince's Diary, isn't it.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
You're telling me that real shocking.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
I haven't seen it, so I was just trying to
relate to that. But yeah, again, Sarah's here, Hi, SARAHI mate,
what's the thing that you believed for way too long?

Speaker 4 (10:57):
Now?

Speaker 7 (10:58):
I swear to me, but it's also happened in Fiji,
So as you might know, we you can hire the snorkels,
you know, I mean you're stanning in line waiting for
the snow.

Speaker 8 (11:09):
Yes, stanning in line. There is a grown man, an
American man. He is in the front of the line.
He is having an intense discussion with the little by
Fijian lady because he is asking her how long it
will take to snorkels underneath from one side of the
island to the other.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Get off the grass underneath.

Speaker 8 (11:30):
He believed, yes, that the island was just floating, and
he thought he could go underneath to the other side.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
Now, so did I, as a child, believe that the
islands were floating. This is a growing but you were
talking about a grown man. And why why would a
snorkel help you with that? Even if it was possible
to swim beneath the island to the other side, you'd
want scuba gear, not a snorkel, wouldn't you, rich?

Speaker 8 (11:57):
But the thing is to this day so I had
to leave the line because lashing so hard, I had believe. Yeah,
I still don't know to this day if that lovely
Fijian lady actually got through to him in the island.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
He's going, Oh, there's obviously some kind of language barrier here.
Let me find someone. Let me find someone with a
brain who can tell me how long it would take
me to snorkel underneath this tropical island.

Speaker 8 (12:20):
Man.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
That was good, It was too.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
That's a perfect example. Thank you, Sarah Corey's here.

Speaker 3 (12:26):
Good a Corey, good night, how you going good? Was
it you who believed the thing?

Speaker 4 (12:31):
No, No, it wasn't.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
It was my ex Okay, what did she believe?

Speaker 1 (12:34):
God?

Speaker 3 (12:34):
And checked the s X under the bus.

Speaker 4 (12:36):
She believed that the gorilla on the Cadbury ad was
actually trained to play the drums.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
Oh, I mean credit to the Cadbury Chocolate ad company
if they were able to fool your girlfriend.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
And I do I kind of help you girl with it.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
But you know, it was a very convincing gorilla.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
The nose like, the nostrils flared and the and the
eyelids opened and closed. But it was the perfect drumming
of Phil Collins in the air tonight, which was the
dead giveaway for me.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
She believed that for about two three years.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
Eh, Cordy has brought it up on the screen.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
Now the gorilla's wearing headphones. The gorilla's got in ear headphones.
On what planet?

Speaker 3 (13:17):
Is that a real gorilla? You know how old? How
old was your ex girlfriend at the time?

Speaker 4 (13:23):
Oh that's thirty three?

Speaker 3 (13:24):
H jeez, you sho should let her? Should have just
let her believe it. You know, I let her.

Speaker 4 (13:30):
Believe it for about two to three years, and I
couldn't keep it in one day where she was telling
her friend about it. But yeah, I just cracked up
and had.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
To tell her, especially if you knew the relationship was
on its last legs and you're like, this isn't going
to last. Then you go, you know what, let I'll
let the next person deal with that one.

Speaker 3 (13:45):
I might let one go.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
Through to the keeper. Thanks Corey, very good. There's some
great texts on this. We asked, what's the thing you
believe for way too long? Someone said, I believed that
chocolate milk came from brown cows.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
That's a classic.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
Someone has dabbed their friend in and said, Peter Van
thought that Swiss cheese came out of the cow with
the holes in it at age twenty five, shot Peter.
Until I was ten, I believed that one booby had
milk in it and the.

Speaker 3 (14:11):
Other one was juice.

Speaker 2 (14:13):
Was quite embarrassed to find out that they both had milk.
How convenient would that be if one had juice in it?
Someone said? We asked, what was the thing you believe
for way too long? That if you step on a snail,
they don't lose their shell and become a slug, They
just die. I learned that this year when I turned forty.
So you've been going around stepping on snails to convert

(14:35):
them into slugs for forty years, thinking that you were
doing a harmless act. Someone said, I thought fish fingers
were just really long chicken nuggets. I didn't know that
they were actually fish. Well debatable how much fish is
in them, but I learned that at nineteen. I thought,
I think for way too long, I believed my mum

(14:56):
when she would call them mister whippy van the sausage truck,
so that we didn't want any when it came down
the street playing the noise. The sausage truck is diabolical.
And someone said, I remember when I found out that
WWE was choreographed. Now I call it dancing just to
piss my partner off.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
That's good it.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
Branklin the Tea Live from LA with Dean McCarthy.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
I like this story, and I feel you're the perfect
man to talk to about it, Dean. Paris Hilton is
in the news today claiming to be a self made woman.

Speaker 5 (15:31):
Yes, so okay, so let's sust I know I can
barely get the words out with having a little bit
of a giggle here. But look, let's no shade and
no hate. But let's talk about you know, her company's
worth about one point seven billion New Zealand dollars, right,
you know she has fragrances and she has Paris children's
stores all around the world.

Speaker 4 (15:51):
I think she DJs.

Speaker 5 (15:53):
She told The Times when they were doing an article
on her, that you know, I've done this on my own.
I've never been given anything in my entire life, and
that she is quote a self made person. She said,
you know, we are a kinder than any other CEO
that I know.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
Is that she said.

Speaker 5 (16:08):
And she used her grandfather, Baron Jilton as kind of
like Harry, that she.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
Has no help though, Yeah, that's crazy to call yourself
self made and in the same breath reference your grandfather,
the man who started Hilton Hotels. You know, like, even
if she wasn't, even if she wasn't given millions of
dollars to start out with, which I feel like she was, you're.

Speaker 3 (16:33):
Still starting on sick You're still starting.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
On second base by virtue of the fact that you
are a Hilton. You know, like that Opens Doors, that
Box TV show is like the simple Life that gets
you DJ gigs. You know, it's yeah, it's the same
as it's the same as and call me salty, call
me shady, call me jealous, But it's the same as
people who call Kylie Jenner a self made millionaire, a billionaire.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Yeah, I'm like, yeah, you might have.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
You might have gone out there and started the company
and done all those things. But you're literally one of
the Kardashians. You know, you were born a Gina slash Kardashian.
That's that in itself. Is you just you just forfeit
the right to be called self made, don't you, Dean?

Speaker 3 (17:16):
Don't you agree?

Speaker 4 (17:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (17:17):
No, I tolte so. I think of a self made
billionaire as someone who just started like an irregular, normal
family and then went and built a company from nothing,
like Charlie had a TV show that had international audiences
when she launched her I'm not tryingly hateful, but I
just don't have a seat self made.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
I don't think you can be self made if you've
never if you've never been poor.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
That's the thing. So but again, call us call us haters, Dean.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
We're just hating from outside the club, aren't we.

Speaker 3 (17:43):
We can't even get in.

Speaker 2 (17:45):
That's the tea's over here, right, stupid Paris Hilton. That's
the Tea with Dean McCarthy podcast around twenty five years ago.
I know that because it has to do with the
turn of the millennium, did this competition where they from
memory and I remember this because I was listening to
it while I was at high school and it was

(18:06):
one of the first radio competitions I heard, and I.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
Was like, that's a crazy idea.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
They booked out an entire hotel. They invited couples to
come to this hotel for the night, and the idea
was you get pregnant and try and.

Speaker 3 (18:21):
Give birth to the first baby of the New millennium. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
So it was like they did some something like it
was what was obviously nine months before New Year's Eve,
and the idea was, can we get a baby? Because
New Zealand was the first country in the world to
see them a new millennium, can we get the first
baby of the new millennium? We have one of those
babies on the phone with us this afternoon. Welcome to
the showcade. Hi, I'm good. So tell me were you

(18:47):
the first baby born in the year two thousand?

Speaker 3 (18:50):
I wasn't.

Speaker 4 (18:50):
I was pretty close for December seventh.

Speaker 3 (18:53):
December twenty seventh, nineteen ninety nine. Yeah. Oh, your parents
would have been gutted.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
I mean obviously happy, but also gutted at the same time.

Speaker 6 (19:02):
Yep, so too.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
Close to Christmas?

Speaker 2 (19:05):
Is that how they've explained the competition works to you.

Speaker 3 (19:07):
They showed up to some.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
Hotel with a bunch of other randy couples and they
all went off to their rooms and did it on
the same night in the hopes of having the millennium baby.

Speaker 8 (19:16):
Yeah, pretty much.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
That's pretty weird.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
To know exactly when and where your parents did it
to make you, isn't it.

Speaker 6 (19:24):
Yeah, it's pretty out there.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
Do you know from memory if they ended up the
Zenim competition ended up getting a millennium baby. Did we
get a baby that was born on the first of
the first two thousand?

Speaker 8 (19:37):
I'm not sure, has to check with months.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
Yeah, actually that we.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
Got an email from you this week because you Millennium
Baby Cade have just had a baby of your own.

Speaker 3 (19:47):
Yeah, have short haird what's their name? What did you get?

Speaker 4 (19:51):
A little baby girl called Esther born on August twenty eighth.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
And you've sent through a photo of ast in the
Zidim Millennium Baby onesie, which is a very cute full
circle moment.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Yep.

Speaker 5 (20:03):
I made sure to keep it until I had my
own kid.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
Yeah, I feel like we should get you a new one.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
We should refresh it for you and send you out
a new one, or at least a zidim hat for
that baby or something like that.

Speaker 7 (20:13):
Yeah, I think we should get some shirts.

Speaker 3 (20:15):
Or something like that, saying like that, at least a
bumper stick of a stick on the.

Speaker 1 (20:18):
Baby, Yeah, on the pram.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Oh well, congratulations, Kate. That's such great news man, and
thank you for sharing.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
It with us here. Thank you, no problem.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
That's kid, the almost millennium baby. And I thought this
afternoon we could ask people with the question were you
a special occasion baby? And by that I mean were
you born on a significant date? Like were you born
on your mum's birthday? Were you born on nine to eleven?

(20:46):
Were you born I'm choking here, guys. I got nervous
and said nine to eleven way too early? What's some
other dates of significance? Were you born the day the
All Blacks won the Rugby World Cup in twenty eleven?

Speaker 3 (20:55):
That's very good. That's better than nine to eleven, isn't it?

Speaker 4 (20:58):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (20:58):
Our hundred times in or text us on nine six
nine six, if you were.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
A baby born on a special occasion The ZM podcast Network, we.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
Just talked to someone whose parents entered a Zidim competition
twenty five years ago to try and make him the
first baby born in the new Millennium. A whole hotel
booked out by ZIM, all the rooms filled with lusty
couples who are looking to conceive, and he missed.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Out by what do we work out, Claudia, about three days?

Speaker 2 (21:26):
I think he was born on the twenty eighth, Yeah,
of December eighth, Yeah, not quite there, but pretty close. Anyway,
our Zeddim Millennium baby has now had a baby, and
we want to talk to people who were born on
days of significance, and there are some great ones coming
through on the text machine.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
But first let's talk to Hailey. Hi, Hayley, Hi, how
are you good?

Speaker 2 (21:46):
Your sister was born on a day of significance? And
I believe it's one of the ones that I rattled
off before.

Speaker 8 (21:51):
It is that's what made me send the message.

Speaker 4 (21:54):
She was born on the night at the All Backswan
in twenty eleven.

Speaker 3 (21:57):
The Rugby World Cup. Yeah, still was born the night
of the Rugby World Cup.

Speaker 5 (22:02):
Yes, and my dad makes it very clear every time
we talk about it that he's very upset he missed
the game.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
Yes, yes, because how dear your sister, she could.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
Have been born the morning of the Rugby World Cup,
and then that would have been that probably would have
been the single greatest day of your dad's life, you know,
to get it, to get a daughter in the morning
in a Rugby World Cup in the afternoon, you know.

Speaker 3 (22:23):
Yeah, But that's a good one. That's a good one.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
At least he would have been able to I probably
couldn't even go to the parade the next day. That
wouldn't be the right thing to say to the to
you the mother of your new child. Hey, I'm just
going to pop out and have a few beers on
Queen Street with the Fellers. You're good with the with
the baby thing. Thanks, Hailey, that's a great one. We
want to know if you were born on a day
of significance.

Speaker 3 (22:42):
Kyler is here? Hi, Kyla?

Speaker 8 (22:44):
Hi?

Speaker 3 (22:45):
Are you good? What's significant about your birthday?

Speaker 7 (22:48):
I'm actually born on the leap day the tween nights figurrey.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
Oh my god, I love leap babies. So how old
should you be and how old are you?

Speaker 4 (22:56):
So?

Speaker 7 (22:56):
I'm twenty one?

Speaker 8 (22:57):
Yeah, and I am technical five and called it so
instead of birthday party, I actually had a fifth birthday
party on first on.

Speaker 7 (23:08):
My twenty years. Oh wow, all my friends got dressed
up in like five year old costumes like theories and
their maids. I love that Rushy did past the pastor
and stuff.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
You as a leap baby, can just three out of
four years, you can just make up your birthday, so
you just chuck it anywhere you like.

Speaker 8 (23:25):
So I usually celebrate on the first of March.

Speaker 7 (23:28):
And my mum said it because she wasn't in label
with me on the twenty eighth.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Fair, Yeah, that makes sense. All right, Well, good luck
turning sex. Thank you like what three years or something?

Speaker 3 (23:40):
Yeah? Thanks, Kyler, that's great. Dan's here. Good day, Dan,
Good day, Budy. Are you good?

Speaker 2 (23:47):
Your mom and brothers were born on a significant day?

Speaker 3 (23:50):
Is that right?

Speaker 7 (23:51):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (23:51):
It is.

Speaker 4 (23:52):
Well.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
My mom was born in nineteen forty nine and she
was born on Labor Day.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (23:58):
My older brother was born on nineteen sixty nine, and
he was born on Valentine's Day.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
My younger brother was born in nineteen seventy nine and
he was born on Anzac Day.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
And I was born in nineteen seventy three and it's
my birthday.

Speaker 3 (24:12):
In twenty nine November. Hang on, what's significant about yours? Nothing?
But I'm the special one.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
You're you're you're the special one because yours doesn't have
a nine and a public holiday on it.

Speaker 8 (24:23):
That's right. And I'm the middle child.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
Hey, get this, Dan, you'll love this text in that's
just coming someone says, my mother was born on the
fourth of the fourth, forty four, and her mother was
born on the tenth of the tenth, nineteen ten. Wow,
that's a four four forty four and a ten ten ten.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
And did you know this that the forty four number
is our family's special number.

Speaker 3 (24:45):
Get off the grass, Dand what is going on here?

Speaker 4 (24:48):
I know? Right?

Speaker 3 (24:49):
Have we entered some kind of parallel dimension right now?

Speaker 4 (24:52):
May it sounds like it?

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Okay, what's the next significant one that's coming up? What
are we We're in twenty twenty five? You can't have
a twenty five twenty five twenty five? We can have
a two five Now it came two five to twenty five.
We'll work on this, Dan, your meal works on this
after the show. Okay, good birth Okay, mean, thank you.
Some great text about birthdays of significance. I was born

(25:14):
on my mum's birthday, which just so happened to be
nine to eleven as well. Yeah, let's focus on the
mum's birthday, but that sounds a bit better. I was
born on my brother's birthday, which is April Falls, two
years after him. We were both due on my oldest
sister's birthday, which is the twenty sixth of March.

Speaker 3 (25:32):
And you know what that says to me about that that.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Your parents only do it on a very specific day
of the year. They when they when they decide that
they want to do the thing that means that you
will be born, they must do it on exactly the
same day every year.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
They must be is it dad's birthday?

Speaker 2 (25:51):
Go find out what your dad's birthday is and see
if that is nine months before April falls. I would
put money on the fact that it is. I was
born on the day of the moon landing. Yes, that
does make me one of your older listeners of ZiT End.
But I still love you guys, We love you too,
Thank you very much. My daughter was born on the
eighth of the eighth of the eighth, which is great,

(26:14):
except her birthday was three months later. And speaking of
spooky things, that's today the day that we're talking about
birthdays of significance, and this person's daughter's jude Eate back
in two thousand and eight was the seventeenth of November,
and we're talking about that right now. Someone will find
that Spooky I find that Spooky I had a son

(26:36):
that was meant to be born on the first of
the first two thousand, but because he had to be
a c section and everyone was worried about the Y
two K bug and they weren't sure if the power
was going to stay on, they pulled him out early
on the thirtieth.

Speaker 3 (26:51):
That's good. Anybody who's old enough to remember the Y
two K bug. That was a real thing.

Speaker 8 (26:56):
Me.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
Our family had like six two liters milk bottle was
filled with water and the garage because nobody.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
Knew what was going to happen. That would have saved you. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
what did you think? We had wheat backs and boxes
of wheat baks. I thought the world. They thought the
world was going to end. They thought planes were going
to sort out of the sky. But it's not like
they didn't think. They didn't know. We didn't know. They
are like, can computers do zero zero? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (27:22):
Oh my god, my brothers and I were born on
Halloween but three years apart.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
Spooky, Yes, that is spooky.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
I was born on my granddad's fiftieth birthday. That's nice
for your granddad, and you know it's good symbolism. I
was the first grandchild too. My nine year old daughter
was born on what would have been her great grandmother's
eightieth birthday, the day after.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Ireland beat the All Blacks for the first time. Her
Irish grandfather referred to her as a lucky charm. Yeah, okay,
I remember that day.

Speaker 2 (27:52):
And I was born. Oh this is a good one.
Oh wise, dad, not here anymore. We've got someone who
was born on the fifth of the fifth, two thousand
and five of five five.

Speaker 4 (28:01):
Um.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Yeah, and lots of mums that were born on Mother's Day,
which they said sucks now that they're a mum because
they have to share their birthday and Mother's Day, but
only once every seven years. Because it moves, doesn't it
rolls around?

Speaker 6 (28:16):
Play Dead ms Brion clint On Inster, Facebook, TikTok

Speaker 3 (28:20):
And live weekdays from three on zed m
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