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August 12, 2024 76 mins

Top 6: Horse Plans  

Silly Little Poll!  

Memes ruining the Planet  

Bet I Can Guess Your Mums Name!  

The Impossible Phoner!  

Fact of the Day Day Day Day Daaaaay!

The America's Cup!  

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The ZiT M podcast Network, the Fleshborne and Haley Big Pod.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Great things are brewing at mcafe, the perfect start to
every day.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Good morning, Welcome to the show, Fletched, Fawn and Haley,
and we're down at Haley today. If you were listening yesterday,
she was battling sickness. Yes, viralcs didn't do shit, all
old messes. I'll take two viralcts. I'll see it tomorrow.
I'll be back. Yeah. Day off. Yeah, some chells last night.
So she's in bed for the day. She's good, rest up,

(00:32):
she's out. Get on the lemon honeys. Oh yeah, well
she got a lemon tree full of lemons. Yeah, because
her lemons. And she's in my trees for of lemons,
all these lemons. So catch my lemonade stand sometimes soon
it'll be real cute. Twenty five cents. Will you make
a handwritten sign? Yeah, yeah, good stuff, it'll say twenty
five cents and don't have a crosstir on a dollars

(00:53):
because of inflation. Giving you the chance soon, in fact,
in the next half an hour to see Sabrina Carpenter
live in the US of A. So this Sabrina carpenter
trip New York. Thanks to United Airlines, you get the flights,
accommodation tickets, some spending money. You've got to be listening
out for the mother trucker, either in the song or

(01:14):
the activator in the next half an hour your first chance.
We'll give you a couple of chances during the show today.
Also another one thousand dollars today with our one golden song.
Listen just after the news at eight o'clock for that
song that could win you one thousand dollars today. The
top six on the way apparently according to the Guardian,
a very reputable brand. Yeah of journalism. Horses can plan

(01:36):
ahead and think strategically. So today's top sex is the
top sex things your horse has coming up? And explain
why there's always a diary and a calendar in sables.
Yeah it war, Yeah, big planet. They just can't hold
the pen to write their plans. You know, they are
remembering it and looking at the dates one so yeah,
the things that making plans come out next on the show.

(01:58):
And Audacious audac is theft. Yeah didn't end so audaciously
didn't know. Although details are a bit light, but it
does look like this was stolen from what I read. Yes,
it's something that would be well done. The list of
things I would think, How am I to steal that? Yeah,

(02:18):
and that's coming from the man that has are we
publicly saying he stole steamer was of a steamroller, like
we'll it's just a roller. It wasn't powered by steam
a roller borrowed or well for one hundred meters were
not even that tens.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
Play Flitwa and Hailey.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
A helicopter crashed on the roof of a Queensland hotel.
That helicopter stolen by all accounts that helicopter was taken
on an unauthorized flight but unauthorizers and that tells me
unauthorizers and like from everybody. Yeah, and it crashed, so

(03:01):
do I am. On Monday it hit the Ken's Double
Tree by Hilton the hotel what is described as a
massive explosion. I saw, I saw some photos and so
it's insane.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
Yeah, the fire on the roof was wild. So we
don't know any details. This guy was a very details.
Was he he could do the takeoff part, just not landing.
I don't know if he was trying to land on
the roof. It'll be really interesting to get the entire staround.
Why that hotel? Why there? Yeah? Yeah, because do like

(03:35):
small planes that you know you see at airfields and helicopters,
do they have like ignition keys, like you can lock
the doors right of the plane or the helicopter. But
do they have like a key? I think I've sent them.
Maybe you have to turn the key, but I've sent
the push button all right, okay, Cessna ignition or helicopter. Yeah, fascinating.

(04:00):
So I'm seeing Cessn's run on a key? Okay, yep,
off r L both right or little Maybe you can
start motors one more time there? Put them on both,
start them right. So they had locks on the doors
and the ignition. So what about helicopters. Okay, because when
you get in the door, if you know how to

(04:20):
start it, then it's yours. That's pretty what having been
an alicopter even like this, the seasoned pilots, that first
little pullback of the joists that we get off the ground,
and it's like, whoo, I just that that'll be mad.
I'd ship myself at that stage too far. Yeah, I
mean this guy must have had some idea how to fly,

(04:41):
some idea, some idea, and they're saying it's as a
Brisbane based helicopter pilot who died in the ex and
thankfully the only person that did. Right. A couple of
old people on the floor underneath, apparently taken in for
smoke inhalation, right, imagine that two am. That's a helicopter
landing well, crashing into the roof. But yeah, there's very

(05:05):
light on details, but it'll be fascinating to know what
he was, what he was doing. Yeah, yeah, well so
if he's a pilot, so he was a pilot, well yeah,
Bruce Oka saying pilot, that's okay. Well, floor around for
fifteen minutes. A Sydney tourist has said she's never seen
a helicopter traveling so quickly, but it might have been
the fact that it was so close, right yeah, flow

(05:28):
over her. She said it was terrifying. And next thing
the year the smoke coming off the top of that
bold bold steel, bold steel, old theft, bold theft to
take it and be sure you know how to take
off but not know how to land? Yeah, not for me. No, yeah,
no neither. No pass hard pass pass on the helicopter
stealing eleven past six. Next on the show, Cameo maybe

(05:52):
in a spot of bother you know the website or
the app where you can pay celebrities, yeah, to give
you a greeting. Yes, be in a spot of.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
Bob play Fletch, Voorn and Haley.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
You ever paid for a cameo like a celebrity? Didn't
know anyone that has not at the time, we've probably
talked about it. We've definitely googled celebrities and yeah, see
how much they cost? How much they cost? That guy
off in between us was the first cameo millionaire. We
need a ton of money, doo reckons. He'd sit down

(06:25):
for a couple of hours a day. Yep, yeah, churn
them out and make so much money. Yeah. So apparently
once valued at one billion pounds, cameo so two billion
New Zealand dollars and had a lot of a less celebrities,
but apparently now is and a somewhat of a decline.

(06:46):
According to the Guardian, there's a big article that they've
written just saying that a lot of the A listers
have kind of fled right now. It's a lot of
there's a lot of fringe political figures like you know,
your Rudy Giuliani's farages okay, Yeah, and and then a
lot of reality stars. Yeah, and it was massive for

(07:08):
the actual A listers during COVID right where they were
all locked inside their house. They couldn't do their productions.
They like, let's make a little bit of sidecash and
I've got this time and keep my name out there.
And now they're actually busy making movies yeah, and don't
have the time. Yeah. But apparently recently they cameo who
was fined by the US government for breaching celebrity endorsements.

(07:29):
There's some kind of Celebrity Endorsement Act and they were
made they will find six hundred thousand US dollars and
apparently were said that they were struggling to pay that
and then had to have it broken down and pay
smaller amounts in different states. And so they're just like, interesting,
I want to know what they did. You're a billion

(07:50):
dollar company, but you can't afford to pay six hundred
thousand dollars. Fine, yeah, Yeah, And apparently just a lot
of smaller celebrity and maybe that they're struggling a little bit, okay,
because they take a thirty percent slice. Jeez. So if
a celebrity is doing a video for two hundred dollars. Yeah,

(08:10):
aren't their rivals to it? Now? Aren't there a sports
specific sports one for Australia and New Zealand. Wasn't there's
a new I was going to say there's in New Zealand,
New Zealand. Yeah, it might have been bigger internationally, but
I think it had an Australian and New Zealand branch.
But also apparently the problem is that they're struggling to
like it's not the kind of thing that you you know,

(08:31):
subscribe to, that you're paying to every month. No, you
randomly would get dad's birthday, so you get his favorite celebrity, Yeah,
his favorite right wing celebrity to post a video message. Yeah,
Swash was the Australia was the sports version, right, Okay,
and you could get them from all sorts of sports

(08:53):
of people on that. But I mean still still some
big ash celebrities on cameo and it's still you know,
they're still churning out the video. But yeah, people are
just kind of like, well maybe it's kind of not
as good as it used to be, right, But again,
like you said that celebrities are busy now that actual
size busy year yeah, and I think those politicians are
just using it as another platform to get their thoughts

(09:15):
across something.

Speaker 4 (09:18):
Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
This is the top six. You can lead a horse
to water, but you can't make a drink. As a
proverb that has been used since the sixteenth century to
describe the difficulty getting someone to act and the bit
and their own best intentions. Yeah, I don't think I've
ever broken it down that much by saying it.

Speaker 3 (09:39):
No.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
I mean, I knew that's what I meant, but I've
never been like, oh, this is the difficulty of getting
someone to act in their own best interests. So apparently
research by horse scientists, they say, equine scientists. Okay, yes,
horse scientists suggest that the use of this phrase has
been inadvertently maligning horses for centuries, as they have you

(10:00):
think can play ahead and are far more intelligent than
scientists previously thought. Okay, how did they find this out?
They analyzed their horse responses to a reward based game,
and the horses adapted their approach to the game to
get the most treats for the least effort. I couldn't
it tip of the hat I like more treats, less effort.

(10:21):
That's my saying. That's get the treats, as the saying,
I don't like that because it should be less mahy,
more treats. Yep, more treats for your mahy. Is it
just a bit of all round the same, But they
say yeah. The horses adapted to it. So the game
involved twenty horses who were initially rewarded with a treat
for merely touching a piece of card with their noses.
Then the second stage, they started switching on a stop

(10:44):
light and the horses were only giving a snack if
they touched the card while the stoplight was off. Yep.
At first they ignored the light carried on touching the
card because they wanted their treats. And in the third
stage they introduced a penalty for touching the card while
the stoplight was on just ten second time out, during
which the horse could not play the game at all
and no treats. And then the horses are like, okay,
so touch the card only when they're at the right

(11:06):
time to get the treat and they curt They're saying
they learned right, They could work it out. They had
a little cognitive function, plan ahead, have a have a schedule,
sort of a mini schedule. So I've got the top
six things horses have got coming up because the planet
are busy. Yeah, the planets. They can work it out now.
Number six on the list of the top sex things

(11:26):
horses have got in their calendar a potluck dinner at
their neighbors. It's okay, it's like that. They're all going
to be like, okay. Number five in the less of
the top sex things horses have got in their calendar
coming up. They've got to wait because in the coming
weeks there's going to be a Farmer's forty percent off

(11:47):
red Dots sale. Yeah, and of course they need to
buy some new jockeys because the horses they're planning ahead
for the sale. Yeah. Yeah, they've got it in their calendar.
Ye get a little email reminder. It's like Hokeys. Number
four on the list of the top sex things horses
have coming up in their calendar. They've set aside an
afternoon to organize all of their receipts. Do you know why?

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Why?

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Because if they need to claim on a warranty, they'll
need hearth of purchase. Is it going to be a
stretch the more we yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's retally
the biggest stretch. Okay, number three on the list in
their calendar. These horses have got a plan an international
trip on a plane. Yep. Do you know the plane's
called what air Horse one? Which is the actual name

(12:33):
of the plane that transported American horses to the Olympics.
Is that air Horse one? Excellent? Yeah, great name for
a plane that carries horses. Predominantly Number two on the
list of the top sex things horses have got coming
up in their calendar, they do actually this weekend they've
got a shopping date. Okay, do you know where they're going? Shopping?
Main Street? The main Street. Saddle up for number one,

(12:57):
because here it comes the top sex things horses have
got coming up in the calendar. Just to catch up
with their friends and say hey, like hey, it's good
from you, Like, hey, that's for sure. That's the today
stop section. Play plays just been alluded to this app

(13:20):
someone online perfect in this Cozi Livy crime Cry at
Gross Save g r O is a ve Now it's
a New Zealand app made by someone is it? What's new?
Zea's He's on the description because I was. I thought
it might be like an overseas app. I would liken

(13:40):
this app to gasby get gas by guess Spye. How
do we say that, because you're spying on gas prices? Yeah, guests,
spy guess spye. Where it gives you all the service
station it looks like it's his gas by. Yeah, it
gives you all the service station prices around you or
on the on the route to someone. But this is
for groceries, so good. Yeah, So you go in, you

(14:02):
download it, and then you pick whereabouts you live, all
whereabouts you work, if there is more supermarkets around you're working,
and then it brings up and then you can search items.
It brings up some stuff. I don't know why. It's
this is my list, that says saltbo relevance, bag of avocados,
spring onions, Celery Kermitter chives, right, it's a great You've

(14:23):
got on the way to a great dinner there, aren't you.
You've got a sealery can jump out. We're not just
in Celery, but Kermitter, I could chuck some spring onions
with some chives and mix it up with some smashed avocado.
We're on our way to a neat little guacamology. Eventually
you would just make shopping lists for all your main
items that you want to know, like, for example, one
kg of cheese. I've put in one kg of eat them,

(14:45):
You'd probably be more of a tasty, you'd go into tasty.
But then what it's done is it's told me every
single block of one kg cheese in my supermarket radius,
like all the supermarkets I would use around my house
and work, gotcha and at the moment give it up
for PAMs Eden cheese one kg ten dollars nineteen and
in some supermarkets around the city fourteen it's fourteen dollars ninety. Yeah,

(15:10):
because I'm on my local supermarkets. And then we can
compare same supermarkets, different brand. There's one supermarket that has
a block of Eden eat them one kg cheese for
seventeen dollars thirty nine. So I'm not going there. I'm not.
That's it's a posh brand, a posh brand, but it's
quite it's quite cool. So I'm seeing from it doesn't

(15:34):
let you I don't think. I'll just try before I say,
I don't think it just lets you go one kg cheese?
Could you just put in cheese? So to bring up
all the different cheeses. But if you are making cheese
and bacon rolls, if you are making a shopping list
to always be checking the one kg of cheese, you've
got to save different brands that you would buy. So

(15:56):
it's not like it would just in your shopping list
be an update. That could be enough. We should give
them some customer feedback. She'd just be able to put
one kg of cheese in and it compares at all. Yeah, okay,
it's pretty. It's pretty. Yes, I've just said one kg
of cheese and it has brought up all the different cheeses. Milk, milk,
Your milk would be a good one all the and
you know what, all those expensive things like the deodorants,

(16:18):
the laundry powders, all that stuff that you only want
to buy on special because otherwise it feels like you're
paying way too money. Yeah, and then when you do that,
when you do need it and you've left it to
the last minute, you're like, damn it, this is okay.
You can go milk and then arrange by lowest price.
Oh no, it's included milky bars and bounty bars. Yeah,
I get those out of the way. I don't need

(16:39):
a temptation. Maybe that can be an update. Hide naughty food,
Hide truck is from me, Hide chocolate my mom. This
is a bit beyond her, but love would love this
sort of thing. She's not afraid to go to both
supermarkets when she goes in Tomorrowsville. She's just not afraid
to shoes. If she lived in the Big Smoke, would
she go to three different supermarket?

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Probably? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (16:59):
Wow, she's a coupon chaser. How much fuel is she wasting? Well,
not much and more as well. They're not just wanted
to get to the other and then back past it
to go home, so right, it's all relatively close. And
then just buy whatever's on special. She buys what's on special,
and she almost she's got this weird psychic ability to

(17:19):
know something's going to be on special again soon. Oh no,
don't buy that. It'll be on special every couple of weeks.
They roll around, rotate. That's why if I'm in the
soup bugget, I walk past, like something that I need,
like Deona and or whatever, and I see it's on
a really good special, I'll buy a couple. I was
going to say, if it wasn't on specially you wouldn't
buy you just stink for a couple of weeks, just

(17:40):
for somebody just message just chimed in. I think they
mean just tuned, just tuned in. They could be chiming in.
It's called gross save one word g r O. There's
no W. G r O s a V. By the way,
it's short for grocery, so it wouldn't be g r
O W would be g r o C. Yeah, a

(18:00):
big gross save. This is gassy all over again. It
is yeah gross, But I want to see tip of
the hat to whoever made this app, because it's genius.
But it's pretty. Yeah, it's it's a step in the
right direction if you want to save some moo lah. Yeah,
and I'm surrounded by the three majors. Oh you could,
but that's something you could be like, where am I
going to buy my groceries today? And then chuck on

(18:23):
your list? Yeah, everything on your list and work out
which one is going to be cheaper. Or if you
don't mind going to Christine Smith, you could go to
and save your money.

Speaker 3 (18:33):
Play Sims, Fledable and Haley.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
This is better. Someone messaged in and saying, guys, just
so you know there's an app out for years called
Grocer that does exactly this. So this is an out,
an app that will compare all the supermarkets around. And
I selected the two woolwords I live by the New World,
the fresh Choice and the pack and Save, and then
I searched eat them cheese, and it brings them all

(18:58):
up right side each other. You'll have a direct comparison.
So for anybody out Northwest Auckland, while Westgate has fourteen
dollars ninety for a kg block of edom Pack and
Save today nine nine, look at that. Yeah, that's Rolling Meadows.
Good stuff. It's all from the same cows, isn't it.

(19:20):
Whereas cheese. I don't know how cheese, but it is
delicious and I'll d that's huge feuriture. Well, thank you
for the text messages in or what we're saving some money?
You're Dean of Choice. I'm you and im n Yeah
said Jared and I are were the same. The dry
the dry dry, it's the red one. It's a dry something.

(19:42):
And I'll tell you what. We get a lot of compliments.
Don't worry about how we smell. Okay, that's what is
the official What have you got there? Jared brings it
to it because he's extra smelling. Yeah, I'm an extra
stinky boy.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
Nevea for men, stress protect quick dry you said Nevea,
Nevea Nia Neva and slow Niviers Nvier.

Speaker 1 (20:01):
I don't, my god, I kay, I don't know how
to say that all healthcare works.

Speaker 5 (20:05):
A stress protect because I have a stress that.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
You're on a different one now I'm on the red
one fifteen the roll on and I know you're anti
and I don't do anti.

Speaker 5 (20:15):
Roll I alternate between roll on in a sprits now.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
No sixty your T shirt, no thanks. You can do
everything on this one. So that's another one that's just
called grocer c R O CR love this all about
saving some money. Next on the show are speaking of groceries.
We're going to put two brands against each other today
to set a little pole. What is the best chocolate brand? Cabre?

(20:39):
Because all we did off you other? What about but
you know, I love balls, I love plays Flett Pawn
and Haley.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
Haley Silly Little pools.

Speaker 6 (20:54):
It is so silly, silly, silly, smile silly.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Which is the best brand of chocolate? Was our silly
little pulp? Was it? Whittakers. Was it Cadbury or was
it other? There's no argument here, is there No? Eighty
eight percent of people said Whittakers a tip of thine hat.
And is it it's not even because Cadbury made the
block smaller, is it? It's just because Whittakers is just nice.

(21:30):
It's just although I mean, Cadbury do have some delicious flavors.
See I saw someone online put a picture of a
new one up this week and I was like, oh,
that'd be worth a try, that'd be with a I
love Macara milk as well. Yeah, but yeah, the Whittakers
and something about that big block. Yeah, it's good stuff. Yeah,
there's the penant slabs. It's a three pack penuts lab.

(21:51):
It's good stuff, a little bit of a treat. So
eighty eight percent of people said Whittakers, ten percent said Cadbury,
two percent said other. I look forward to hearing. Yeah,
what these other brands got to be some props for
the Lynda balls M said, who in their right mind
would put Cabri over Wittakerskers are nothing struggling right now
living in London without it. Surely there's some Kiwi shop

(22:14):
that sounds very like twenty Bucks. Yes, it's pretty expensive.
Milker says, okay, that is good chop, and then put
a great British flag. I think it's isn't it European?
It's a Swiss brand of chocolate confectionery originally made in Switzerlam.
I think you can. I can. I've seen it in
stores here and I think Judy Free has it here. Yeah,

(22:36):
looks all right. Hazel nous what did you? What did
you just call me? That's Hazel and German apparent Sometimes
IM just reading the packet here. Yeah, they've got delicious
and I think they do biscuits and all kinds of
stuff and Grace lind did. I love Wittakers, but if

(22:57):
I had to choose, they linded especially Linda did bulls.
Somehow it's creamier. It is superior, so nice Linda. Yeah,
the bulls and the rabbits and the rain deer is
and then you don't really see it doing too much else,
do you. My husband works for Cadbury, but I buy
Whittaker's Weekly. I'm a bad person. Jesse, how old he

(23:20):
works for Cadbury. I knew someone that I wonder if
she's eating it? No, yeah, I knew someone that worked
for Cadbury and they just had blocks of it in
their garage. I was like, how do you do this job?
I don't know why, says gel, but just tastes so
mid to both me and my partner Mid. I'll just
explained that as a young person chat for average really

(23:41):
and then what they're saying tastes average must have vo
to Cadbury, Oh you know what. They probably are Australian
or something, you know, and they were used to that
maybe weird young chocolate that Australians show that oily in
your mouth chocolate. Mal says, oh, I'm a minority here.
I always chuse Cabre. I'll still eat if it's available,
unlike my weirdo daughter apparently won't touch it at all.

(24:06):
Being I voted with it, But Cabrey has its place.
Cabria is more joyful, childish chocolate experience for grown ups.
It's sexy and smooth. Okay, interesting artistic breakdown of y
other than there Ben, it's sell a little pump play.
Now we're going to talk memes, okay, And granted somebody

(24:30):
has worked out that. In the UK. By twenty thirty,
the national grids of their power grid. Yeah, six percent
of it will be data centers, so six percent of
total power usage will be massive industrial warehouses that need
to be cooled and powered because of all the photos
of all the photos on your phone, on your camera roll, yeah,

(24:52):
all the memes that you send me that I watched once, Yeah,
that stay on like chats in chat history, or I
might save to my photo on a server for like
Instagram for example, where they were uploaded, and power needs
to be constantly there to access it. Yeah. So I mean,
obviously we're trying to fix the climate crisis and this
is a big part and people are starting to look

(25:14):
into it. Apparently. One researcher estimates sixty eight percent of
data used by companies is never used again, and that
would be that estimate is about the same for personal
users as well. So everything, all the photos you've sent
your friends in chat, so and so all, and it

(25:35):
all needs to be stored on a you know, on
a server. We think of it in the cloud, big
fluffy QTE clouds, but it's not. It's in a giant
warehouse that's using power and is wasting our resources. The email,
the internet, Yeah, conservatively, they think produces four percent of
the global carbon dioxide emissions a year air travel three percent.

(26:00):
It makes more carbon dioxide, yeah, than but I'm all
of air travel. I'm not going to stop sending memes
and videos. That's how we get through our day. Okay,
So after memes and that are massive, what about things
other things that use a lot of the incent like gaming? Yeah,
so I googled how much carbon dioxide does gaming produce?
Microsoft estimates that the average game are using a high

(26:23):
performance gaming device emits seventy two kilograms of carbon dioxide
a year. So gas emit twenty four million tons of
carbon dioxide each year. Globally, three billion plus people who
game are using significantly more. It'squird. You don't think about it. No,

(26:43):
you do everything that requires power yeah, and air conditioning yeah,
to keep cool, And you probably need to air condition
yourself and your house because you're stuck inside in summer
because it's playing a game because it's hot. Crazy. I
never thought about that from that. And then there's also
bitcoin mining as well, which I smully understand bitcoin, but
you know it needs computers. Yeah, I don't know what

(27:05):
that running all the time. There was written a news
story the other day someone rented out the airbnb to
someone like for a few weeks or a month or so,
and they moved in with all their computer terminals. Yeah,
and bitcoin mine and customers thousands of dollars on their
power bill. And so now they were changing their terms
and conditions, like no parties after ten pm, no large groups,

(27:27):
no no stags, no crypto mining. Yeah. But yeah, so
maybe just least mean, maybe just focus on quality memes.
I'm just letting my work email. I feel like I
want to do my part. Yeah, right, I get longer
contact me on my work, right, or you could just
not send like so many memes. No, I want to
send the memes you see, right, So I'm willing to

(27:48):
give up because here it says a short email via
laptop creates point three grams of carbon dioxide, okay, and
I get like ten a day. Yeah, so there's thirty
grams of carbon or three that's three of cabonox. I
could be taking over. You're a hero. You're you're a hero,
absolutely saving the planet. I am thank you. How will
we contact you for work things?

Speaker 2 (28:08):
Please?

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Don't please? Because you're saving the planet. I'm over here
being an environmental warrior. I don't need you marking it
up by producing carbon dioxide contacting me another way. It's fair.

Speaker 3 (28:22):
Play, flits play.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
Should you wash your fruit and vegetables? And the dishwasher
asks the news. It's like when they were like people
are cooking salmon and tinfoil and it's like nothing in life,
no one's doing that. I'm not wasting you how much
a whole salmon costs? That's crazy talk. And I've had enough.

(28:51):
Have you got the news telling us people are doing
a thing when they're not even doing a thing. The
tide pod thing was the biggest overreaction because they had stats.
The only people who had been admitted to emergency rooms
or hospitals for a type pod agition were old people
who were confused, didn't with dementia or something sad like that,
And now they got confused about them. Now even in

(29:14):
America is still time pods are behind like locked cabinets
for no reason. Really, So I want to know there's
not a single person you can text nine six nine
sex right now if you have ever washed your fruit
and vegetables washing? Why do they tell us these things? Well,
so no one's using a like one of the tabs,

(29:36):
are they the dish washing tabs, because that's like caustic soda.
But then that's there's gonna be bits of that still
floating around from the previous wash. I mean, people are
how bloody ridiculous. People might put their fruit and veg
in the sink, right and I'll give it a rint
an give it a rents under a tap? What's the short?
I come, can't make my dishwasher go for a short
five minute spin? And which time? Run it under a tap?

(29:57):
You're good? Yeah again, you're silly, goofball. People aren't doing this.
Washing fruits and vegetables helps remove dirt and debris and
reduce potential pathogens. Food safety experts say, but a dishwasher
isn't the best method. Of course it's not. You might,
as I say, people are washing their fruit and vision
they're tumble dryer and they're washing machine. Yeah, and then

(30:17):
and then because it's weird, they're tumble drying. It doesn't happen.
You say this, Stop saying things that people aren't doing.
Someone's messaged in cold water under a tap. I wouldn't
even I wouldn't even rinse my fruit and vision a
hot water and ruins. I don't even rinse sometimes they
just don't boss, I'll give it a bit of a wife,
give it a shirt, see a lady piste asides. Yeah, yeah,

(30:42):
so I don't. I don't know why the news is
saying that, right, but you've had enough. I've had a
guns fall for it. So from now on are we
keeping an eye? And someone said I washed my fruit
and vision, I give it a loving bubble bath. You've
been silly. People don't do that, but you know that'll
be a news story tomorrow. Momorrow people are bubble barthing troubles,
bubble bathing bananas. Yeah, that's what it will be. And

(31:03):
one person puts it on tip top as a joke,
and the news is like, I'm worried about this next generation.
They're washing their bananas and bubble bars. It's it's silly.
And from now on, I've had all. I'm on the
lookout for the news telling people things people are doing
when people definitely aren't doing when they're not doing them.
On washing and this age of misinformation, you are like

(31:26):
to it. Yeah, absolutely, put my foot down. And then
they go because the news is like, well, people are
washing their fruit and veg in the dish washer. We
better get an expert on they talk to Can you
imagine Kathy Savoy, professor and how safety expert at a
university and you need a call and it's like, hey,
we would like a comment on people washing fruit and

(31:46):
veg and she's like, well, you can do more more
harm than good by washing progers and dish washer, sessing
why would people do that? People aren't doing that because
now you're bothered. You've bothered a professor with your silly
nonsense questions. Grow up and stop.

Speaker 6 (32:01):
It play.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
And Haley, we won't talk about now things we're going
to talk about. I'm heartbroken. No, I don't want to
Boozies apparently holding up with Emily Redakowski that song like

(32:25):
I Think It's a fourth week at number one two
in the US on the charts as well. News out
of Australia yesterday that show sponsor mack Is is bringing
a collector's item back. Now this is news from Australia
with somebody's just messaged and saying, really are you going
to say? And I've heard whispers will also be joining

(32:47):
us here in the land, So this is happening tomorrow
and Australia apparently from Wednesday for a limited time customers
who purchase any large quarter pounder meal. I don't know
if that'll be the same if it comes to New Zealand,
we'll receive one of the collector's edition glasses. Now, this
immediately invoked memories of our childhood collectors edition glasses in

(33:10):
the eighties, nineties and early two thousands. Children and ladies
and gentlemen. Anybody that was there will remember filled the
pantry of any metal class family of New Zealand. I
just had a double check because they've got these. My
parents have got glasses at their house and I said, Tom,
I'm sure that in teleglasses. She's like, I don't know.

(33:31):
I'm like, well, you're in the house. Can you go
and check. So she said, your father's just checked it
as in a teleglass move Hello, I'm the milk, the goodness,
and it's a picture of a cow, and hello, I'm
sugarcane the energy. And then I was in there in
the in the Yes. So I googled collectible in teleglasses
and apparently in Intela did this all the time. In
the nineties. There was Simpsons that did a Simpsons range.

(33:53):
They did a Blinky Bill range. I even remember late
back in the day, Mobile did electors glasses and like coke,
if you Macas did the coke glasses you bought how
many cokes Elector's glass? And these Macca's glasses are rare cool.
They look heavy, like they love a heavy glass. They
look at it, they look at heavy glass and they've

(34:14):
got all the different things kind of and would you
say it's like in boss like, I don't know, it's
not printed. I'm not a Yeah, I'm not someone that
makes glasses glass.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
It must be.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
Because you know people go crazy for like the toys
and collectibles. People are going to go nuts for these.
Oh yeah, so you're launching an Australia tomorrow. We're just
reading a text from the We're gonna have an answer
and what you call someone who makes it? Ah, but
we want to know this morning. We want to know.

(34:52):
So I said, there's a huge billboard at Sylvia Park.
Is the mcgonald's glasses are coming tomorrow? Well that's what
they said. I just drove this billboard and I was
very excited to know about it because when you see
the photo of them, they're like it's their vintage j
They could be from the eighties and nineties and very cool. Yeah,
very cool. We want to know, outside of the McDonald's glasses,

(35:14):
do you have like a collectible or something that was
free or something that you were just like, yeah, whatever,
not expecting this to last long that's still hanging around,
like the nineteen nineties Natalla glasses that my dad uses
every single day for as barocca and pills. I feel
like we had some old kind of jars of something
that are still being used as glasses. Yeah, collectible stuff

(35:35):
like Natala or whatever. Well, I guess they had to
be hearty to transport the goods in the first place,
which meant they would last a little bit. Like they
weren't cheap. They weren't cheap glass kind of no, no, no,
they weren't fragile. No speaking to this nateleglass that would
get used every day and washed a hot wash my hand,
no dishwasher at my parents' house. His mom might or
vichy might do the same thing. I feel like they

(35:55):
did that you could once you were finished, wash it
out and it was a collector's glass. Yeah, I feel
like they did. But they were never screw on lids.
They were always the plastic with a thing on it.
Popped them on. Okay, so what anything free that you're
still something that costs nothing that you're like, well it
costs nothing, it's not gonna last twenty years later. People
love a free tote bag. That's easy. That's the best

(36:17):
thing that people will do now. Phosh French cookery brand Lacrousset. Yeah,
it was a bag at work and it was a
La Cruset bag. Oh yeah, And I was like, that's
a bougie bag. And someone said you can have that
if you want, and I was like, okay, so it's
in my car, is it? You're like supermarket? Yeah, yeah,
I think I'm doing okay, yeah, whereas you just got

(36:38):
it for free. But I got it for free from
work and I've never owned that posh. Okay, Well maybe
mom and dad still have those collectible glasses at home
that you had as a kid or whatever it is. Oh,
eait hundred dollars at Amazon number. Give us a call
now tix through nine six nine six. What was a
free collectible that is still in use and has outlasted
all expectations. Well, we've announced it's news that Australia and

(37:01):
Australia Macas are bringing back collectible glasses. Now we have
heard there are billboards up apparently teasing that this is
happening in New Zealand. Somebody takes through because we see it.
In Australia, you buy whatever it is and then yeah
in New Zealand and apparently this person is saying it
will be a share box. You buy a sharebox to

(37:22):
get the glasses started. It makes me feel you won't
get one glass though, will you get my water? Because
it's a share box sharing on again, this is unverified information.
I am verified misinformation but who knows. But it looks like,
yeah it is. It's happening in New Zealand as well,
and people excited about this. Now we've had a lot
of messages in and I anybody on the fhont oh, yes,

(37:43):
I will save my I shall hold my tongue. Some
classic collectibles Minick, good morning. Well I know you have
still it's still going strong collectibles.

Speaker 7 (37:56):
I sure I do. I have a lot.

Speaker 8 (37:59):
But my most savor it was the nineties Looney Tune.

Speaker 9 (38:03):
Cups that you used to get with the meal from
a takeaway.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
Yes, remember all the plastic ones. I'm like.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
Dunner.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
I had one of the pegs yeah.

Speaker 7 (38:14):
I've got like every single one.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
But do you still use them? Like they're in the
pantry or the cupboard.

Speaker 8 (38:20):
So I've got some like displayed in my kitchen and
my kids are always like, oh man, we have our
milk in there.

Speaker 7 (38:27):
No way, Like.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
I can't believe that true because it was from recollection,
especially on the ones like the wiley coyote with the
long nose. The end of the nose was soft. I
can see you complaying with that and eventually breaking.

Speaker 3 (38:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:40):
I love that our parents and our grandparents would have
that real Dalton and that you could never touch. And
you've got Looney the kids. Monique, would you please do
me your favorite sends a photo?

Speaker 7 (38:54):
I definitely would love to.

Speaker 1 (38:56):
I sure will. I found an from the nineteen nineties
that's prom nineteen ninety four, so there's are thirty years off. Yeah,
what they collector's editions are, Nicole, what do you have
collectible wines? It's still going strong. Well. I also hear
the nteleglasses.

Speaker 5 (39:13):
I've got a tall one that's got Molly on Molly
Milk's goodness and the other one as the other ones
are the little Christmasy ones.

Speaker 1 (39:20):
And every day you'll still use those for drinking and
stuff or.

Speaker 9 (39:24):
Are they absolutely?

Speaker 1 (39:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (39:25):
Wow, they still get used.

Speaker 1 (39:27):
Slasher and the pet and is still going. And I've
also got I don't know if you remember, but in
the nineties BP was giving away one of the poo
themed plates cups plant pots right as well. So many
people have messaged in about these nicole.

Speaker 5 (39:43):
Yeah, well I've still got them and now my grandchildren
use them day.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
Can I please have a pot out again? Because I
love you, love the nostalgia and I remember the bit
the minute I said I'll be taken back. I remember them.
Thanks you called Joe. What do you still have? Collectors?
Why is it still going strong?

Speaker 7 (40:03):
I've got they. I think there was some sort of
coke glarks. They're at the Olympics ones, but they're all
tinted different colors.

Speaker 1 (40:10):
Yes, they were the color of the Olympic rings. There
were coke ones were they were they Macas did those? Yeah,
And there were the different colors in the Olympic rings.
So you collected all five and put them in. Then
from the top it looked like the Olympic rings.

Speaker 9 (40:22):
Yep.

Speaker 7 (40:22):
Yeah. I also got a plate that my son, my
son was born in Australia and had his fourth birthday
at McDonald's and the birthday kids all got given in
a breeding butter plates plates.

Speaker 1 (40:35):
Yep, he still has that still and you still use
it like it's just in rotation.

Speaker 7 (40:40):
And he's twenty seven.

Speaker 1 (40:43):
Amazing does McDonald's birthday boys.

Speaker 7 (40:47):
Shell cars that came in the boxes. They were about
six different cars.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Joe, thank you. Some messages in celtext is from the
nineteen nineties. They were like a chunky cut crystal. Not
only have they still the test of time. I love
them so much. They were used at the head table
at our wedding. They were the person who's in it.
I will also need to photos thing. I know, the
ones you're talking about. I feel like my parents will

(41:17):
still have a couple of those. Yeah. Someone said you
could at one stage you could buy a cup of
soup with soup on over soup ingredients and they popped
them in a soup cup with the ingredients and the
recipe on the outside of the soup cup. Oh okay,
last forever, still still got it? Okay. Someone said, we've
got some glasses that were free and from the nineteen seventies.
They're at the batch hardiest glasses you've ever come across.

(41:39):
Someone dropped one recently and I bounced, Yeah. Somebody else said,
collected that, didn't you?

Speaker 3 (41:47):
Well?

Speaker 1 (41:48):
Dinner set when I was nineteen. I'm now forty mumble umble,
three plates, one bowl and a muk So it's slowly
depleting the numbers. But it'll be a sad day when
you finally break that last plate I got free were
the Macca's kids meal, A little peel pair of Hamburglar tongs?
Do you remember that?

Speaker 7 (42:06):
Now?

Speaker 1 (42:06):
I don't remember the Hamburgler tongs. I still use them
every day because they got a plastic on the end
to get toaster toast out of the toaster when it's
stuck in there? Were they for your nuggies? Were they
to pick up your nuggers listening to pick the nuggy
in and then eat the nuggy? Okay? The Hamburger stare
other people's nuggies because he was a Hamburgler. Maybe someone
said I've still got plastic red ball cups from Rhythm

(42:29):
and Vines in two thousand and five, ordered to drink
and they would have put it in the cup, and
then I was like, that's a hearty cut. It's a
good cump. I'll take that cup. A lot of festivals
are doing that. Now you get the you know, you
pay for the recyclable cump. Yeah yeah. Somebody else said
Maccas did plastic lego cups with their Happy Meals ten
years ago. I have six kids. They still use them

(42:50):
every single day, different colors for different kids. That's cool.
So many people with the winning the purboles. I'm surprised.
I don't. I don't remember those at all. Oh my,
someone said, my mom still has the full set of
those learning tune character caups. It's a very special occasion
when you're allowed to use them. Yes, you're not allowed to.
Just someone wants to have shot glasses from the outback

(43:11):
and the early two thousands are considered a collectible. That's
I mean, that's collectors. I haven't have a shot. I mean,
that's how in my experience of flatting in the two thousands,
that's how every flat has. We're settling on encouraging them,
certainly not encouraging it. They were hearty though. The glasses
on a sticky wooden floor lots. I mean, I'd say

(43:32):
the Colake glasses are the most prominent text We're getting
and you can. A lot of servos still do those
have done them over the year. Recently, Johnny, who works
for Coke, said they still deliver them. They're still like, yeah,
really popular. People still love the good glass glass. You
forget that they are a promo glass. Yeah, they just
why at the top, curved sometimes room for ice. Yeah,

(43:55):
it's a in the summer, it's good staff, perfect play play.
Olympics are over, they're done, and a lot of people
sing a lot, especially from America today because I'm saying
they while most Americans were at work, the Olympics are on,

(44:15):
or they were just distracted by it. Would that be right? Yeah,
I'm trying to work out it would because trying to
work out time Northern hemisphere. Yeah so yeah, they seasons.
But people are saying the days at work were distracted
by the Olympics and now they're like the last part
of their day. Yeah, they would have got all the
morning stuff. Yeah. So a lot of people are like

(44:36):
having with drawers or even just from the content on
social media. Yeah. Yeah. The Paris Olympics, apparently, according to
TikTok rape are wrecked up over one point three million posts.
That's just on TikTok. That's just on TikTok. That would
only be the ones that use the hashtag Olympics, right
or or Paris. Yeah, Paris twenty twenty four with hashtag
all the hashtags combined. Yeah, and that's an increase of

(44:58):
nearly two thousand percent over Tokyo. It's just how much
TikTok's growing in. Like the last you didn't have the
in the live audience to capture all the weird angles
and behind the scenes. So when was Tokyo. It wasn't
forteen to go on? Yes, it was supposed to be
twenty twenty, but I don't know if you can remember
this what happened pen panic. That's crazy to think last

(45:20):
time our Olympics came home they all had to isolate
for two weeks afterwards. Yes, that's right, were all in
like isolation around the country their back. I just hate
even when I see like a sign on the footpath
with like a distancing or a one meter you know
sometimes outside to Macas, they still have the marks. Yeah,
you just like get rid of those. Let's stuck them down.
They got too warming and they can't get them up.

(45:42):
It's like pulling off a sticker that you left on
something for too long and Peter, I want to pull
the stick across straight away. You're gonna it's going to
get burnt on there. And people leave this sign like
the QR codes on their check out always pull out
the phone the reminder. The Olympic closing ceremony though, was
pretty impressive yesterday. Yeah, because they hand the baton because
people like, why is Tom Cruise said to be involved,

(46:04):
and it's because the next one is in Los Angeles
and it's yeah, and that's that's kind of what the
end of the ceremony was, the handing over to Los
Angeles and America, and that's why they was at American
Theme which and then after that it's Brisbane, yes, which
is what people are saying could happen, as it could
be some kind of hold and burnout at the end
of the alley four x Yeah, someone stabs for it

(46:26):
cracks the top and it stabs the bottom of the
knife and some kangaroos some guns at and then yeah,
and then it's Brisbane. Yeah. I think we're getting up
in ahead of ourselves. We're going to go through Los
Angeles first. Yeah, but yeah, that's twenty twenty so that'll
be okay. Yeah, wow, what do we do without gold?
What do we do without gold? Fever? Now, surely there'll
be a tour the pas the Paralympics on the twenty eighth,

(46:48):
which I always thought it was just like concurrent. It
ran one ran into the other with a very small
gap between. But that's like two weeks. Yeah, really going
to be just getting straight back. They should get straight
into it.

Speaker 3 (46:59):
While we're on the play Fletch, Vorn and Haley.

Speaker 1 (47:03):
The lipstick effect, which you may have heard of because
I think we've talked to Brad Olsen about it before. Yeah,
it's definitely a popular term.

Speaker 3 (47:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (47:10):
The lipstick effect, defined is when customers still spend money
on small indulgences during recessions, economic downt or when they
personally have little cash that they don't have enough to
spend on big ticket luxury items. However, still find cash
for purchas a small luxury item such as premium lipstick
or You've got because it's times are tough, you don't

(47:32):
have the money to be spending on expensive stuff, you
just buy a little treaty. Yeah, and there's treaty. I
saw that the news storrate of Australia Chemists Warehouse there
just having like boomer a boomer of a time. And
they say because it's the lipstick effects because of this, Yeah,
because people go in for a prescription or not even
for a prescription, and then just while they're there, just
get a little treaty, get a little treaty and themselves.

(47:53):
Is this true? Is this true? Yeah?

Speaker 8 (47:55):
Absolutely, I'm well aware that I do this all of
the time, so much point where I've actually limited myself
to only one lip product a month.

Speaker 1 (48:05):
If you've got a hard soft band in place.

Speaker 8 (48:08):
Yeah, no, it's a hard band, only one, only one
of my What is what.

Speaker 1 (48:12):
Is included in lip products?

Speaker 8 (48:14):
Lipstick, lip balm, lip gloss, everything?

Speaker 1 (48:17):
Okay, yeah, because the bombs depending on your still in
winter it could be.

Speaker 8 (48:23):
Yeah, but that's the problem.

Speaker 1 (48:24):
I have enough.

Speaker 8 (48:25):
I don't need another.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
One, right, Okay? Is that because you would just constantly
be looking for treaties?

Speaker 8 (48:31):
Yeah, because it's easy, right, because even though it might
cost me more than just a little bit, Like even
if it's like a forty oler lipstick, physically it's small,
so you're like, oh, you leave them all or chemi
Stwarehouse wherever, being like, oh, just I just bought a
little thing, a little treaty. It's a little treaty. It
didn't cost me that much.

Speaker 1 (48:49):
It did, but you know so Leonard Louder, the chair
of es Day Lauder Okay, I called him Leonard Louder,
But now I've read it's I'm going to go back
to the startup sentence. Leonard Lauder, the chair of es
Day Lorder, following the terrorist attacks of September two thousand
and one that has company sold more lipstick than usual.

(49:09):
As a result, he theorized that lipstick is a contrary
economic indicator, right, and that's where it comes from. Yeah, right,
And so they saw it again in the global financial
crisis in two thousand and eight, two thousand and nine,
the US Bureau of Economic Analysis. So look at proper,
this isn't just some chap having a guess. Publishers quartered

(49:30):
data quarterly data revealing personal consumption expendites on personal care products.
As a result, lipstick indicator, which is drawn from that,
can help the chair of es Day Lorder know how
to plan his budget right all off, if people are
going to be up in their spin on lipstick and
when times are tough, apparently not being able to afford
brand new close For every job interview, you'll splash out

(49:51):
on a slightly nicer lipstick. Yeap, because when they're looking
at you speak, they can see the mouth and they're like,
that's a well presented mouth. This is a good treat
for the girlies. But what's the guy lipstick? What is
the guy's lipstick effect?

Speaker 8 (50:05):
Is it like a little a little PlayStation game.

Speaker 1 (50:08):
It's little, there's no light.

Speaker 5 (50:11):
Yeah, yesterday I took a little trip to the dairy
and got one toll lollibag.

Speaker 1 (50:17):
Yeah, wibe. You're going to say, like a new vape flavor.
I was like, maybe that could be your equivalent. Yeah,
something from the bakery. You can just we just do
bakery treaties. Yeah. Pie. Yeah that's food though, isn't it.
That's just what you need. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (50:36):
But the pie isn't like a central food. It's not vegetable.

Speaker 1 (50:40):
Haircuts apparently this has been theorized, is the male version
of the lipstick effect going to a bar before a
haircut or a bed trim, because you would do it yourself,
or you just let it grow long. It's a little treaty.
Have somebody else to take care of it. You have
theorized on LinkedIn, right, and now that I'm on LinkedIn,
I'm gonna have to tell everybody what I've been up to.

Speaker 8 (51:02):
I guess that does make sense too, right, because it's
about changing your appearance. Because you can't afford a hole
in new outfit, but you can get a haircut or
a lipstick you feel different.

Speaker 1 (51:10):
Yes, okay, interesting? Yeah, was one person on LinkedIn. Yeah,
is backing it up with any info. He's got some
some chat about there, apparently. You know. The tradition was
before going off to like fight like in wars or
and then is from multiple cultures around the world, you'd
get like your beard trimmed or your hair done so

(51:32):
you look good, make you feel good off the right,
so if you're dead on the battlefield, you still look great. Okay, yep,
you look okay. Yes, a little bit of male grooming
could be the male's version of the lipstick effect.

Speaker 3 (51:44):
Play.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
Hey, you on the phone, better can guess your mom's name?
Jane joins us. Good morning, Jane, welcome to I bet
I can give your mum's name formally. Now ask you
five questions about your mom and then try to guess
her name. Sean. If he can do that in fifteen seconds,
you want one hundred dollars cash.

Speaker 9 (52:08):
Jane, Why are you saying my name like.

Speaker 1 (52:12):
I'm trying to tone in. I'm trying to It's just
how he gets you. Don't question this abilities. Can you
hum and then I'll hum and then we'll hum to
get the harmonized. Go fell off? Okay, I did feel

(52:32):
that doesn't bode well, Jane, it doesn't. I'm standing, but
now I'm going to say it. Okay, it's business time.
First question, what's mom's age?

Speaker 9 (52:43):
Oh? Okay, she is eighty one?

Speaker 10 (52:47):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (52:49):
This is this is good bye far. I think we've
had a mom that's been eighty one before, by far
the oldest mom we've had, because you're going to have
to go older names than eighty one. She's on nineteen. Like,
she's not going to be a She's not going to
be a Christine, is she? She's not going to be
a Christine. She could be she could be an Agatha,

(53:11):
she could be something, or a Beryl, A Lynette, a Linette.
Yeah Rightnette, Okay, I liked. I mean, you're never going
to go wrong with your your classic Bible names. Are
you Kathy? Now, I'm thinking because that's closer to my
NaN's age, Marlene. Put Marlene down. I'm going to put

(53:33):
Marlene and Rita yep, because those are my grandmother's names. Okay,
what were your grand Edith? Edith? Yeah, Papa Nita? And
what was your other gramdmar Cheryl Cheryl? Never knowing that
produces both. Are you serious? Is your dad's mom's name

(53:56):
is Cheryl? Or don't you know? You're was you? You're
really toughed with that. It's your grandma. Don't know where
you're laughing so hard? Are you crying? Didn't this her
check in? It's not Cheryl. It doesn't feel like an
English It's like Muriel, Muriel. Yeah, you're okay, Muriel, alright

(54:20):
it down, said Cheryl. All right? From them was called.
That's why I was like, it's quite out landed. Yeah
and okay. Next question, Jesus, what was mum's favorite Olympics event?
Did she watch the Olympics? What did she like?

Speaker 9 (54:38):
Oh my gosh, okay, yeah, she loves the Olympic. Oh,
just about anything.

Speaker 1 (54:44):
She loves the sprinting, I bet oh, I mean, you know,
the gymnastics of course this woman there running or anything anything,
she's Have you got Rosemary? Did Bitty White die? Yeah?
Betty White die? Didn't she at ninety nine dead? So
put Betty down? And Betty short for Elizabeth, isn't it

(55:08):
Queen Elizabeth? Yeah, that kind of era, isn't it? Name Mary?
Put a Mary down? Of course, Queen Mary. There was
the Queen Mary. I might put a Karen, even though
it feels a little that's too early for Karen. You
might want to pop that inn. I had an auntie Elaine,
Oh yep, and my auntie Eve. She could be a
Patricia Patrician. Eve could be an Eve, could be an Eve. Okay,

(55:32):
next one on a mom's siblings names.

Speaker 9 (55:35):
Okay, so Elders Okay, Eric, then Margaret, then John, then
her then Paul.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
Okay, okay, Yeah that's see, that's not out there. Those
aren't out there names? Are they the names? And then
there's going to be out of their names. I might
put a Joyce and Fiona. Have you got Fiona's not
it's not gonna be. There's no chance. What I mean?

Speaker 9 (56:09):
They had half the Beatles, didn't they really?

Speaker 1 (56:12):
Yeah? There was a female and the Beatles. What would
she have been hearing. Should have been called Margaret. Yeah,
John Paul Ringo, Margaret wouldn't have been the same Penn Lane,
Penny Lane. Yes, okay, what pitts does? Mum have none?

(56:32):
No pits? And I don't mean to be rude. I
don't mean to be but that age where she's like,
I can't get a dog because what if I what
if I die before the dog?

Speaker 9 (56:42):
No, she just no, she's never had a peer like
we have family pets, but some people left home. No,
you know, she's such a social butterfly.

Speaker 7 (56:50):
They would Yeah, I like this happens to the pit.

Speaker 9 (56:55):
No, you can't do it.

Speaker 1 (56:57):
Okay, Wow, it's so responsible. So response or Marian Marian
yet good? On a side note, and this is my
primary school teacher died? Oh Lynn was her name? Lynn? Well? Yeah,
Jane raises a good point. How is this really similar? Age?
And she was very out. She did the tramp, she
did the hikes. This is marritis. She was unstoppable. And

(57:20):
my mom told me she'd passed, and I was rout
because it was just last year. She sent me the
work I did when I was a primary school kid
that she kept because of its quality.

Speaker 9 (57:27):
I'm sorry to look at this.

Speaker 1 (57:30):
It's not I'm not like crying right anything. Where in
New Zealander's mom live Olyn Carol Carol. Yeah, that's a
good one. Marian Lois Lowess either, Yeah, that's a good one.
Shout out to the out to the family and Alpham

(57:53):
Auntie Lowis are still your question? I think I've asked
my question right. Well, now, Jane Bourne has fifteen seconds.
Try and get your mom's name. If you hear your
mum's name, you're out.

Speaker 3 (58:02):
Stop.

Speaker 1 (58:03):
That's my mom's name, Vaughn. Your time starts now. Lynnette, Beryl, Parela, Marlene, Rita, Edith, Eryl, Muriel, Carol.

Speaker 9 (58:12):
And that's my mom's name, which one, Muriel?

Speaker 1 (58:19):
I shouldn't have told you?

Speaker 4 (58:23):
How good?

Speaker 9 (58:25):
Well, don I got it all. You got her middle name,
you got her mom's name, You got it all.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
Yes, So what was what was her middle name?

Speaker 9 (58:32):
So she's Muriel choice and her mom was Edith, So
you just nailed that.

Speaker 1 (58:37):
Was so your great grandmother is one of Flinch's grandmother's names,
and your grandma your mom is Wow, look at that.
So really I had nothing to do with Vaughan's psychic connection.
It was my psychic connection.

Speaker 9 (58:51):
Maybe we're related.

Speaker 1 (58:56):
Both passed well, Janey kicked off the bone, round the bonus.

Speaker 4 (59:02):
Real.

Speaker 1 (59:04):
While you're on the phone, I'll have a go. I
guess in your dad's name. Hmm, okay, heard Muriel Mary
and Muriel's wedding. Can you just google that for me? Oh,
you're terrible.

Speaker 9 (59:23):
Muriel Or used to say that all the time. She hates.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
Yeah, you don't say to her anymore, David all blowing
church ceremony. No, it's not. Inevitably the marriage is a
disaster and Muriel is left as miserable as she was. Oh,
well that was why there was a Muriel's. It is
going to be a name like John or David. You know,
it's going to be a real Yeah. What were your granddads?

(59:51):
You know, like add An Alan and a Hilton for
my granddads who started the hotel? Are you asking me, Jane? Jane,
you also sound way too young to have an eighty
one year old mother, und voice she was a.

Speaker 9 (01:00:08):
Little bit older. Yeah, you know, she's actually I tell you,
she looks like she's ten fifteen years younger than her age.
She just you know, in case you're listening them, I've got.

Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
Eighty one year olds love listening to it in they certainly?
Isn't it born? We need one name? Muriel and Ian? No,
I think that's too young. You think it's too young.
Ian's have been around for a while. But there from Yeah,
there was a gas. Did that give it away? No?

Speaker 9 (01:00:44):
No, I just go with the I just choked on
my coffee. I'm drinking coffee.

Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Okay, what name? What name you want to go with?
You're going to lock an Ian? What is your dad's name?

Speaker 3 (01:00:55):
Jane?

Speaker 9 (01:00:57):
It's been been ben.

Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
Who's be like Ian? Ben? Eighty year old? Called Ben
as your dad? Younger than your mom?

Speaker 9 (01:01:11):
No? No, but like every first born male in their
family for century being.

Speaker 1 (01:01:16):
Benjamin, I like Benjamin Button. Yeah, any bin in? Benjamin Franklin,
Benjamin Franklin. There we go, uncle. Yes, Jane, you've still
won one hundred dollars. Congratulations. Did guess your mom's name?
Well done? That's how you you. You hold the title

(01:01:38):
for the oldest mom to ever play.

Speaker 9 (01:01:40):
Yeah, you could do it, though, I know you could
do it.

Speaker 1 (01:01:43):
I loved Muriel and beIN.

Speaker 9 (01:01:46):
Thank you play.

Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
Guest has been delayed. Guess that we're not allowed to touch.
I cannot speak speak, doesn't speak has a security with
it at all time. Yeah, it has been delayed, but
we will have our guests in studios soon. We are
giving you the chance in the next ten minutes as
well to go in the draw to see Sabrina Carpenter
live in New York. Listen now for the Activator, But

(01:02:11):
right now time for Fact of the Day, Day day
day day, do do do do do do do do
do do do do just telling how she's pathetic and weak.

(01:02:33):
She said she's working up, just working up. She's very sick.
I said, you're a sick o. You're weak empathetic? Is
that how you Is that how you encourage your friend
to get better? Yeah, you know it's not really hah.
This week's theme, I'm not the COVID. She's not COVID.
It's not COVID. Another one of these serious sicknesses going.

(01:02:56):
It does seem like everyone's sick at the moment. Not me.
Touch touch of it? Touch micro? What is this stuff? Yeah? Micro,
mighly compressed wood. Yep, that's it. Touch touch Miley Cambras
press Wood would to this week's theme on Fact of
Today is what people some people won't experience. Yesterday was headaches.

(01:03:19):
Five percent of the population will never experience a headache,
which is wild to me. I had a headache yesterday.
I did not like it. Yeah, horror today nose bleeds
of people will never have a nose bleed. I don't
get blood noses neither. Nah. I've had one blood nose
in my life and it was I've had two, both
from being hat and the first one I ever had
was someone was talking about blood noses and I said,

(01:03:41):
I've never had a blood nose. And my brother elbowed
me in the face on purpose because he got blood
noses right like chronically, Like did you press charges? I did, yes, yes,
press charges. Yeah, he's not allowed anyone near me. That's
why he lives in Australia. But everybody's got a free
and that the slightest and convenience their nose will be like, oh,

(01:04:03):
I can't producer, Jared. You you used to get them
every day.

Speaker 3 (01:04:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:04:07):
I used to be a daily bleeder.

Speaker 10 (01:04:09):
If I daily bleed daily, if I blew my nose,
if I had a too hot shower, it would just
were you a.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
Big Were you a chronic nose pecker as.

Speaker 5 (01:04:23):
A child, Nah, I used to get real bad hay
fever and just sniffly over any kind of irritant.

Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
So I think that kind of that's why you had
to move away from the plains of Africa. The Holland
chart was of Auckland Central. Everybody else around Auckland had
a thick layering of pine pollen over their cars and stuff. Lately,
you know that yellow dust. Excuse the innocenty dweller who
has no idea what I'm talking about. It's a lot

(01:04:49):
of times embraced nature. I just have a black kind
of dusty over my whole lungue and got this black
fig pollutants, whatever comes out of buses. Yeah, but ah,
because I was a chronic nose picker, still enjoy a
good nose. Bad dug around so hard to make a bled,

(01:05:10):
And I figured maybe as a child i'd toughen the
interior of my nose with my fingers. But is that
not what cool. Some of the most common causes include
trauma from nose picking, blunt trauma such as like a buff,
or the insertion of a foreign object, most likely in children.
Low relative humidity, such as central heated buildings, can lead
to some people having nose bleeds. Respiratory tract infections, chronic siginitis,

(01:05:34):
which I always got, the bad sinuses. Yeah, because you
overuse the nasal sprays. Well, there was that one year
I used it every single day because I didn't read
this thing. This said three days maximum, and then you've
got to stop. Yes, environmental erritance such as inflammation, thinning
of the tissue in the nose. And some people get
it an altitude. Oh okay, it gets to the altitude,

(01:05:54):
their nose just starts bleeding. But which is quite a
high number of people. Yeah, we'll never experience it's a
nose bleed unless their brother punches them in the face.
Because they said that they never had a nose bleed through.
So today's fact that they and some people don't get them.
That's what I'm gonna call this week's fat. Some people
don't get it. Some people don't get them nose bleds.

(01:06:16):
Fat of the day, day day day day. Do do
do do do do do do do do do do
do do do do do do do do do do do.

Speaker 4 (01:06:28):
Do play m s flits play M.

Speaker 1 (01:06:42):
It's time now for the impossible phone and topic. And
we spoke yesterday when Hailey was here about the rise
of people that were reversing boob jobs, getting the implants removed,
get the lift and stuff. Fine, took the bood diet,
but if you you can get the imp it's taken
out because as you age, they're not You've got there

(01:07:04):
is upkeep which I want and done. You won and done,
but no that I guess your aging body is like, hey,
these are sagon ten years. You need to get the
year silicon or whatever's and they're changed down, which is wild,
But it got asked the thing in the Great Impossible Phone.
It would be do you regret a cosmetic alteration of oneself?

(01:07:25):
We thought, because not everybody's had them done, that automatically
makes a little bit harder. And then to admit, yes,
I spent ten thousand dollars getting it done, but I yeah,
to regret it? But did you? But then that's the thing.
And you see, especially celebrities that I don't think they
would ever admit to regretting having all this work done
or admitted done first days. But yeah, I mean some

(01:07:45):
of them must, like you look at them and you're
just like, what have you done? Too far? But has
anybody listening for the Impossible Phone? And topic, had plastic
surgery and you regret it? Had a left your attack
and you regret it? What about like the are tattoos
because either tat because changes the fashion, the fashion of
eyebrows changes. Have you got those ones real thin? You

(01:08:09):
have gone? They probably drew back in any minute. Now
if you had those ones that you know, those ones
that are brushed up to make them look extraordinarily hick,
that's not gonna be around forever. You shouldn't have got
that tattooed. Yeah, but maybe you just got standard brows.
But then also, like do you regret lasering because a
lot of people will laser everything off and then then
and then tubs are back in fashion, The seventies are

(01:08:31):
back and back, and you've got nothing. Well, this is
a question today for the impossible phone and topic. Great
for American business, great, great for the pubid weakens yep,
only eight hundred dials it in You can text as
well anonymously. Nine six nine six. Do you regret getting

(01:08:52):
a cosmetic alteration? Whether it was plastic surgery, a cosmetic tattoo,
a nip tuck, yeah, left, a slight change, an air tucking?

Speaker 3 (01:09:04):
What it is?

Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
It is endless? Last the impossible phone and topic today
read a cosmetic alteration of oneself. Whether it was plastic
surgery like a nose job and plants, yep, because a
lot of people now regretting getting like breast in plants

(01:09:25):
because of the upkeep as you get older. Well, someone
messaged in saying exactly that I regret my bird job.
That's just too big. Now all the bras are so
expensive and I can only buy them online. Usually they're
just boring grandmar bras with no push up unless so
they want to go expensive, go back a couple of sizes,
go back right. Sure, I got breast reduction, a breast

(01:09:47):
reduction surgery, which I didn't regret, but they ended up
growing back. So now I still have the big boobs
where they've got scars all over them. You get your
money back for that, Like I guess there a money
back guaranteed. I don't know. I remember at school a
girl wanted a breast red and the doctor's told her
it wasn't any point yet. They said, yeah, right until
you're like twenty growing. So it's like it's like when
you're eye you want to get laser eye surgery if

(01:10:09):
they're not finished a tear aating. You'll just be back
in there. Yeah. Weird to connect boobs to eyes, but
that's how you see them though, isn't it so with
your rights? Are you ready to tell somebody off? Yep.
I haven't had the work done yet, but it's around
twenty thousand dollars for a boob job in New Zealand now,
so I'm heading to Turkey for a mummy makeover. This

(01:10:31):
is why I said to Haley. They'll steal your liver.
It's no your kidney. They'll steal one of your kidneys.
Boom left im pint three sixty LiPo. I don't know
what that means all around us, that mean three sixty
degrees like and a tummy tuck. It's going to cross
cost roughly fifteen thousand dollars and that's including twelve nights accommodation.
And they'll remember a kidney for you for anothering. Just

(01:10:52):
check you've got your kidneys before you leave Turkey. Yeah, yeah,
check you've got both of them. I don't know how
to tell where are the kidneys lower back? Feel for
scars back there? Yeah yeah yeah, yeah yeah, not so
much cosmetic, but kinder I got foot surgery so I
could run further and stay trimmed. Nine years and plus
thirty kg's later, it did not work. What do you

(01:11:13):
mean footstep so you can run further. I don't know
if they had some sort of foot changing. Maybe's slightly clumped.
Maybe they've got heally surgically implanted. That's you've got to
keep those CRC. You got to keep the heeling. Yeah, yeah,
they're in there. But nine years and thirty kg's later,
I don't think they worked. No, my eyebrows look great.

(01:11:34):
I should have removed more moles earlier in my life,
and I'd wish. I wish I'd taken more off my nose,
but I'd never do rhino plast year again. It hurt.
It hurts so badly. Oh right, so it's not going
enough on the nose job, right, but apparently it hurts.
I regret the eyeliner tattoo. So that's not eyebrow, that's
the eye liner. Oh yeah, because that's not Do they

(01:11:55):
lonely last like ten years? Or are they permanent? I
got it done before cosmetic tattooing was thing, so it
was a standard tattoo is using a tattoo gun and
you couldn't che that. She said she was very skilled
in that. But when I look, they're uneven and it
bugs me. So they've got tattooed eyeliner. Yeah, and that's
the thing. You'd notice that and then you'd never not. Yeah.

(01:12:16):
So there's a few people there that have had cosmetic
surgeries that they regret.

Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
So not impossible play Sidiums, Fletchbaorn and Haley.

Speaker 1 (01:12:26):
It's the America's Cup and David Blakey also joined. You
speak America's Cup and you can speak on behalf of
the America's Cup, which I believe is about to embark
on a tour around New Zealand.

Speaker 2 (01:12:35):
It is so we're going to take the America's Cup
on tour. So with our help of our friends from Toyota,
New Zealand, we're going to visit forty locations around the country,
from Kitty Kiri in the north to in Vericago in
the south, taking the America's Cup on tour to sailing clubs,
schools and Toyota stores.

Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
It is quite the site to behold.

Speaker 3 (01:12:54):
I didn't think.

Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
There's and then it's an it's got and I thought
it looks a bit taller and that's because when they
run out of room for engraving not only the winner
of the races, all races in the final in the
America's Cup, but also the details of the race, like
how far it was, how much they won by ten
minutes and seconds, they add another layer.

Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
That's correct. It is a spectacular looking trophy, it is.

Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
So it's the oldest sporting trophy in the world.

Speaker 2 (01:13:23):
That's correct.

Speaker 1 (01:13:24):
So that bit down to the base is from when
eighteen eighteen fifty one. Wow, that's insane started adding more
older than New Zealand. No, just just just older than
New Zealand. No, just young, younger, just younger, depending on
where you put that establishment date. That's amazing. Wow. So

(01:13:47):
it's made of sterling silver, that's correct. How much does
it weigh?

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
It weighs seventeen kilograms.

Speaker 1 (01:13:54):
How much is it worth? Like money wise, it's replaceable, irreplaceable.
But if we were to put it on trade, me like,
how much we're going to take it to a scrap
metal dealer for Sterley silver?

Speaker 2 (01:14:07):
Well, what we can well, what we know from history
is that there's some of the world's wealthiest and most
influential people. They have spent hundreds of millions of dollars
trying to win it, and in most cases they were unsuccessful.

Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
Wow. Yeah, so we're very lucky to have it. Yeah.
So when it's the next America's Cup, it's in.

Speaker 2 (01:14:24):
Barcelona, Barcelona. The America's Cup defense itself is in the
month of October. The regatta is about to kick off
at the end of August.

Speaker 1 (01:14:32):
This yes, let's roll around so quick.

Speaker 2 (01:14:35):
Yes, that's right. That's why we're taking it on tour.
It's an opportunity to visit those clubs around the country
where the sailors first started to learn their trade. But
it's also an opportunity for the community, our people to
sign messages of support. We're taking a sale. People can
sign the sale. We'll deliver that to Team New Zealand.
But also just as you guys have had just experience
and see firsthand what a spectacular trophy.

Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
And it is pretty impressive. It's pretty impressive, very detailed.
So will people be able to get a photo with it. Absolutely,
But you're not allowed to touch today because when it's handled,
it's with the gloves. You've got to have special gloves.
I just learned there's a special cleaner. Special someone cleans
it a special jeweler cleans it. Wow, it's impressive. It
is impressive. It's very impressive. So how which part of

(01:15:19):
the cup has on there where New Zealand did not
do well? We were up like a yeah, yeah, it's
going to be the longest one because it had to
be the most racist in America's cup history, right that one.
While we don't talk about that, I know, we don't
talk about it. I just don't want to face him.
I don't want the bad karma of that side of
that side of it. Is it hoglow? Can it still be?
Is it still tradition to drink out of it?

Speaker 2 (01:15:40):
It is still a tradition to drink out of it.
But there is a there is a pin holding it together.
So there's a rod that goes from the top of
the clup down to get to hold all the pieces together. Right,
because it is such a big trophy.

Speaker 1 (01:15:51):
Yeah, sevent it is so well. Your chance to see
it because it's touring around the country now, kicking off
on the second of September.

Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
That's right, And all the details are on the website
kiwecup dot co dot in zid easy.

Speaker 1 (01:16:06):
Thanks coming in my pleasure. We must get a photo.
Now we we ate pretend that we've won the Rostrafy
next to this one hundred Yeah. If you like today's podcast,
tell your friends you could send them the link. And
if you don't have any friends, just pretend you did
yeah great, and rate and review and maybe get out

(01:16:28):
there and try to make some friends.

Speaker 3 (01:16:32):
Zid MS Fletch, Vaughnon Hailey
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