Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The z M podcast Network, The Fleshhahwn and Haley Big Pod.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Great things are brewing at mcafe. The Perfect start to
every Day plays Flesh, Thorn and Hailey. Thank you briand
good morning, Welcome to the show. Fletch, Fawn and Haley.
It's two minutes past six, Hi, Hardy.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
What a day to wake up looking like an absolute minger.
You know someday, you know, on Monday. And I made
a comment about it that I just woke up having
a fleabag day where I just looked impossibly good.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Today we have Ulfta, Jason Momore and his band in
the studio before seven, and I know, like, so we're
working on their time, man, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
They're busy people. And uh, this is after he messaged you.
He did message May It was like, wait, let's do
an interview. When are I going to get on your show?
Called it my show? By the way, ha Fletch and Vaughn.
Who mate's passes Heyday?
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Now it's the Heyday, No, the last three years of.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
The day, like his whole He's coming in with his
band soon before seven and was band three. Oh that's
a good number for a band.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
Jenny Dale and Mike Hayes and Jason Moore, they're all
coming in.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
Vawn's not wearing deodorant. He's forgotten deoda and a brand
new natural deodorant. Yesterday. My daughter was like, that one's
a good one because I've just gets used to deodorant
or antiperspirant, and it's like we found out how to
beat that one. And then the next one was like that
way you were smelling at the gym, maybe, yeah, then
that's a gym. I'm also now so paranoid about smelling
(01:38):
every third where I soak whatever I've worn. I even
soak my stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
You never smell like you never smelled you being smelly.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
You were told that we see you every day and
there's a core memory. It's a core memory. And yet
he clocks therapy. Yeah, clock therapy and one and one
go everybody else. It's the problem. We need We need
to source you some deodorant. Yeah, I'm on the hunt,
but you know what I should have down this bathroom
here at me. Sometimes there's a row can, yeah, because
(02:11):
that's when people have people who cycle to work shack
up and freshen themselves up with a wet white what's
happening down there. I just been park up shack up,
like you put your bike in a shack No, I like, yeah, yeah,
So they park it and they have a shower and
freshen up down there. I thought there might have been
a rogue can of do okay, I set off for
a Lynx Africa.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
I do have some Soldier gan Nio body spray. That's
not going to stop this, but it won't stop the sweat.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Oh, we've got some Rick Soner. We've found some. Yeah,
fantastic clinical protection. Good enough for the all blacks, get
your nips out, good enough for me. I had a
great knit days today, because what do you mean? I
just I took a shirt off and the nips looked good.
(02:58):
All right. I love a nip day. I've got good
and bad days as well. Yeah, some days you just learn. Yeah,
yeah it's the cold. If I pull it up and
that puffy, I'll give them a flap. Jason Mami Band
joining us on the show before seven this morning, very
sure live and studio Ali. I've just requested you to
be my sponsor as I'm a visitor at my own
(03:19):
workplace again because I can't log onto the Wi Fi.
God say it just makes me feel very powerful, which
I like. I just sort it out my Wi Fi.
Do you need me to help you?
Speaker 3 (03:27):
No?
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Because Green ned neither of the passwords because they said
log onto the past, use the log on your computer,
and two that work, and neither of them were will
sort this out? Do you reckon? Mike Hoskin? Will hot
spot us through the roof? He could do?
Speaker 3 (03:40):
He hop onto?
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Mi? Is he hot spotting off? As signs? He don know?
We could holp hot spot off the luxury.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Approve now now the studio stings A rick signer is
coming up?
Speaker 2 (03:50):
Sure is? I can't remember what I wrote? I wrote,
Oh yes, yes, the top sex ways to get youth
into district councils, citysels because apparently there's there's an issue
like people don't want to because gets boring. Knok, what
a boring job and it's just old white dudes. And
sure you might have a great idea and some old
(04:11):
white guy will just shambole it and make you look
like a fall in front of everybody and just wend
at you the whole time. Yeah. So still putting the
rates of oh this poththhole year, but we have to
put the rates up to pave the pothole.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
You be a woman rates to go on my bloody
water priss you shit, Well I know, but that's just
because for decades we've been underfunding, like rejuvenating the water
service and one houses.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Yeah, we're just gonna need to like make it better,
and the way we do it is bloody horse. Yeah. Yeah,
I would never do that because you're.
Speaker 5 (04:40):
Spreading on your money on bloody rainbow crossings, Homos, that's.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Stuff I said, no, no, no, no. The rainbow crossing was
like there was a time where the street had to
be shut, but it was going to be shut anyway,
So the cost of the rainbow crossing was absolutely nothing
and it kind of made a whole community feel part
of a larger picture in a city.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Rememberhen they tried to wayne white over it and then
we painted rainbow over it and it made the ramber
colors brighter.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
For the undercut. Yeah, thanks jesneych for the undercut. It's
brilliant anyway. Top six I used to get the youth
into district and city councils. It's coming up in the
top sex play z ms Fleashborne and Hailey David Seymour,
who I believe is a politician. Yep. I think he
works in government. I believe he was made in a
workshop by an old Italian man who made a wish
(05:25):
upon a star that he wondered could be a father.
And when he lies, his nose grows long.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Yeah, yeah he was. He was talking big about these
three dollar lunches.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
These are the lunches that give school kids. They give
school kids. You may remember earlier in the year he
said that they needed to update the woke school lunches.
For example, coscourse he said woke quin woke yep. He
was like, none of that, Hummers, sushi woke yep. However,
chicken katsu, which is I'm the menute, not work, not woke,
(05:58):
which is basically you can can't so crumbed chickens on rice.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
And so he's rejuvenated. These these feed about a quarter
of a million of our kids every single day.
Speaker 2 (06:14):
Wow, them all rich? That's left when bullshit? Isn't it
from me? But I out if they want to bring
total rich kids for lunch, what did you well? I
had a platter after school. I'm talking about it at school, darling,
at school just to shake at lunch time. I was
on the slim fast shakes. It was a different time,
(06:37):
the fat to their face exactly, just like, No, I
didn't know have rich lunches. Al so I didn't grow
up that rich guys.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
Okay, semi rich, Okay, I just say a little bit
humble here, semi rich. So here's some of the things
are on the new menus. And we had to yesterday.
If you're watching the news, you had to enjoy watching
David Seamore eat them. Oh wow, Yeah he's not he's
not an eater.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
He's not an eater. I think he's sort of tube fed. Yeah,
he could. He looked like he was eating for the
first time, Like look at that. Oh god, this is mine.
When when the lux leaves the country, he could the
guy that can't eat could be in church.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
He's either tube fed or he gets fed by hand.
Speaker 2 (07:23):
You know, hand reared. Yeah. I think you could see
him thinking, tongue out of the way, tongue out of
the way, out of the way, updoor down, jew updoor
gel down, swallow. Okay.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
He said he've been able to save one hundred and
fifty million dollars a year with new lunches that will
cost three dollars each three dollars per serve on the menu,
not woke. We have a buttered chicken curry. We have
a chicken cutsu on rice, yeap lasagni yeap chicken pasta sealad.
And they look they look sizable, they look all right.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
Now, I'm not against that, just looking at it, like
knowing that sometimes you'll serve a child a lovely meal
and they'll be like, yeah, you take them out for dinner,
they're like nuggets. It's a waste giving them anything flasher. Yeah, right,
and that's good. I'm pleased. I'm pleased with the menu.
It might be a bit more proceed like ultra process,
(08:19):
but it's not. But the chicken can be a bit
But do they do you get a go like it
wasn't bun. But you've got to put a parking bun
in a in an Indian dish, right, that's right.
Speaker 1 (08:34):
And then there's yogurts, and there's apples. Say they look braburn.
I'm going to say they look bra burn.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
All these brayburn trees. We've got all these brave apple okay,
and we've got to do something with them. And then
I'll say some sort of brownies and slices. Okay, better
than the lunch meeting. It's good. Yeah, was making me
about a china and a brownie. He was asked to
rank them me. Okay, he gave the rissoles nine and
(09:02):
a half out of tea. Know what is a wristole?
Now that's like a coffer, isn't it. Excuse me? What's
a wristole? Meatball? No meatballs and big, big meatballs squished
flat on the barbecue. Not a paddy. That's a paddy.
It's not a paddy. It's got tell me the bread
crumbs between my wrestles have a ton of bread crumbs,
(09:24):
and wrestoles got filler bristles. Was had the bread crumb
to make the meat go further and tough times. But
then also a meatball can have that too, right, stays
in a ball. A wristles a bit more. It's bigger.
That's a paddy. That's my ideas. Size it's too if
you put it on a burger R I S S
(09:46):
O L E S so just how you would think
it was a spout.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Now, just looking at these wristles, I'll say they are small,
thick patties.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
Yeah, that's the thing. It's a mid way between a
patty and a meatball. It's that, but it's it's.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
Wrestsole is a ball or flattened cake of chopped meat
Fisher vegetables.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
God, that sounds originated in France. The result.
Speaker 5 (10:10):
I always just thought it was Australia because of the
Australia play it MS Fletchborn and Hailey.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. This is the
top six. I just want everyone to know. I'm on
the company WiFi again. Oh we got there, didn't we?
We got there? Who helped you there? Who held your
hand the whole time? Fletch flitched it, tried changing your
password and I said, why would that work? And it
(10:45):
did immediately. Anyway, things remain unexplained. Also, Fletch suggested today
stop sex again. Turn away for Fletch. Do you feel
do you often feel the weight of the show on
your shoulders? Flinched? I quite often suggest the top sex.
I know, but I just decided you need this getting
credit for it, right, okay, credits? No like executive producer.
(11:05):
He's an executive producer. I'm not a glory glory hole,
a glory hog. You glory glory the first time you
see glory, glory, whole glory when you Yeah, he said,
he's not a whole or a hog. Okay, what about
are you a glory whole hog? Likele not born no
(11:27):
one else, I'm not, I'm not. I'm not a glory hog.
A rising tide lifts all boats. That is true, he
inspires me. Thank you, you're welcome.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Your excuses will kill all of your dreams and something,
or rather if you lend them.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
Top sex ways to get youth into district and city councils.
There's a push to get young people involved, to make
them feel like that part of a city that they
will never be able to afford a house on. Yeah,
so old men at council meetings, at town hall meetings,
because not the only people that go, let's face it,
Yeah said, then what would you know? You're young, You've
got no experience. I may have been alive for sixty years.
(12:05):
I pay reins, blah blah blah. Like that guy, isn't
that the mirror of gore? Like twenty five or twenty six? Yeah,
and all the old mates like and what a nightmare
was for him together? You know, But anyone can afford
a house in Gore.
Speaker 6 (12:17):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
Aren't they nice and cheap down there? Or the rising
tide has lifted all boats, unfortunately, and it has gone up.
They might be chin comparison, but probably prices are up.
I've got the top six ways to get youth into
district city councils. Number six. Tell them currently the council
is giving low key sigma riz I. I hate this already,
(12:39):
have seen nothing. I read these my daughters last night.
They both had their heads in their hands, were like,
please don't, Dad, Please don't please. Number five one of
the last of the top six ways to get youth
into district and city councils. They could be the mayor
that ate left no crumbs and everyone's de lulu about
what is happening. I'm embarrassed. You should be. This is
the youth number four on the list of the top
(13:01):
sex ways to get youth into district and city councils.
Tell them the city needs their help to get their
yet back and they're gonna need to let you cook.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
God, this is one of you that when it was
my best friend's birthday, that eleven year old daughter was
like things I love about my mom.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
She's kind, she cooks for us. She got a fat
Yeah wow, just was like, thank you. I appreciate that
little little button boost there from the door. Number three
on the list of the top sex ways to get
the youth into the district and city councils. I tell
them that they get to decide if the city needs
more or less phantom tax to get the place it's
(13:40):
dripped back? Is that coolness? It's like a good look
like pipes. Yeah you on a rainy day, you would
think water infrastructure like, oh you look good, drip on god,
litch embarrassing. Number two on the list of the six
(14:00):
ways to get the youth into the district and city councils,
say that council meeting needs you mew and hard and
get those basic those ohio basics to sit. What that
council meeting needs you mewing hard and getting those ohio
basics to sit. That city meeting needs you up there
(14:21):
like doing your thing looking good? Mewing Is that yeah
right back? Okay, So it's been used as sort of
a metaphoric mewing and getting those ohio basics, so you
will know what a basic is, like a basic, but
Ohio is like weird and strange, like these strange weird
basics to sit sit down, shut up, okay, okay, so
we need you up there doing your thing, making all
(14:41):
these weirdos sit down to be quiet. I'm not voting
for him for counsel. I'm not getting my vote. I
don't need your vote, my old vote for the white
wing white man. I've got the youth vote aka no
one from the youth ever vote and number one of
the lists of the top six ways to get the
youth into district and city councils. No cat, this place
is skippity to with al rez and they wanted to
(15:01):
be busting go doing the gritty no bunglin, no bungler Stop.
I am stopping right now because that was number one.
And that's where lists in when you count from a
big number to a small number. Dude, you know when
you get that sort of.
Speaker 7 (15:16):
Yeah, Acid Burn, Clay Fletchforn and Hailey.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Let's talk about Paul Mescal, who, by the way, is
just really doing it for me. You may have seen
him if you follow me on the social media and
if you don't at Hailey Sprowl just getting a plug
in there, okay At Hailey sprowl On on Instagram, ye
I shared his GQ photo shoot where he is hanging
off of scaffolding. He knows what he's doing with his
(15:43):
arms while he's doing it, wearing a.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
Mini kilt almost.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
As short as my like marching kilts, tiny little mini skirts,
and it tickled me and something was some unaware we're alive.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
He's going to be in the new Glady had a
too movie? Which is it out soon and year into
the year November? Yeah, oh my god. Yeah that looks
and picture at pascals and that looks amazing. Yeah, I
just want them get ready for the arms. It's not back. No,
he didn't. He couldn't bring the arms at the end
of it. Didn't even watched a twenty year old movie. Yeah,
(16:25):
it's not a spoiler to say it's a sun a.
It's a great wasn't that kind of seemi well known?
It's a great film twenty four years old. Gladiator came
out in two thousand. I remember it my first year
at UNI Tech broadcast in school when it came out. Yeah, right,
well this is it. He went to a UNI Tech. No, No,
I see Uni slash Tech slash broadcast. It was almost embarrassed.
It was course, it was pretty much he was old
(16:47):
because actually, did my eyebrows done. It was an old
dentist warehouse, so really held high regard amongst two stridge.
It's a degree. Yeah, yea, yeah, it is a degree.
It's a sert. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
So let's talk fashion because the thing that everyone's talking
about is poor Mescal's tiny little watches.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
He's wearing these, like you know, I just googled it.
I don't like it at all, These big bulging arms
like Jack's sidewaysing through doors. Is this eighties mum. It's
never been males fashion ever in my life, remember males
wearing these tiny one mums and NaNs.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
The mums and NaN's loveter. He's been wearing these little, slim, slim,
black leather and gold cardier watches.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
And it's such a change from like men's watch fashion
was like the bigger, the better, chum. You want lots
of silver in there, and like the big big watches,
the crumpass in there and some diving things. How deep
you are? You want a pit boy like I fall out.
You want a big forearm pit boy.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
There the time dials and stuff, and his is just
a ticking hand with with twelve eleven?
Speaker 2 (18:05):
Can you close the rings? Not electric? Electric?
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Jasonmore and the band just turned up. Hi, Kenny, Hi, Mike,
Hi Jason. Well let's stop talking about watchers, do you
know what I mean? It's not really interesting anymore. Now
these guys are here.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Play MS fletched. Vorn and Hailey play z MS fleshed
one and Haley play MS fletch Thorn and Hailey twenty
two minutes away from seven. We are not alone.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
We are joining studio by offa good morning guys.
Speaker 2 (18:42):
Hi, Hi, height your strang to the mic. Jason get
a little bit closer, so I've got to teach up
hold his hand. Yeah I will if I have to.
Jason my headphones?
Speaker 1 (18:53):
Oh yeah, no no no push, push the red button
and then twist.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
Based bass players. Hey guys, jeez, is it.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
On doesn't work?
Speaker 1 (19:02):
This light's not Okay, we'll fix Jason's headphones. Okay, this
is terribly embarrassed.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
But you guys are about to do five shows around
New Zealand.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
Yeah, maybe a little more, depending on how it.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Goes, Depending on how it goes.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
Well, I've already seen you guys, before I came to
Tuning Fork when you played a few months ago.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Like it not.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Honestly, I tried to this interview just to be like.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
No it's bad, No, it's amazing.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
So we're gonna chat with you guys very soon about
the band, the show and all good things.
Speaker 2 (19:35):
Play z MS, Fletch, Rawn and Hilly.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Joining us in the studio. These are words and I
am speaking them. Jason Moore, Mike Hays, Kenny.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Daleta, thank you so much for coming in this morning.
Speaker 3 (19:49):
Thanks for having us.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Jason, you'll be used to early mornings because you're working
on film seats. But Mike Kenney, not so much rock
and roll boys with kids, Oh.
Speaker 2 (19:59):
Yeah, absolutely, I'm not any time of the day or
night with brief children.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
We've dragged you one nice and early. Now you guys
are playing six shows around New Zealand.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
But as I mentioned before, I came to the Tuning Fork.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
Which is such an amazing venue. Like it's a little
it's like a small venue. You're doing a bit bigger.
Now you're doing power.
Speaker 3 (20:17):
Station Station, which we heard was amazing. Everyone keeps raving
about it.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
Yeah, the two thousands was the power Station's heyday and
it hosted the most amazing array of bands. On the
way up. It was like I've seen I hope we've
seen it. The power Station. I've said, no effects at
the power Station when they came late that year, one
of their last tours. Last time they came here. It's
a hell of a venue. It's going fat nights at
the power Station where I've been told I've been at
(20:46):
the power stage and then power Station. You see it
surrounded by like townhouses, and you're like, these poor people,
sorry my umber and these poor poor people.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
But you guys, how did you come together? Because you've
been friends for years.
Speaker 2 (21:03):
Yeah, a long time.
Speaker 3 (21:04):
I actually used to watch these guys in Hollywood. So
Mike used to work at both of them used to
work at a guitar center, and I went in there
and wanted to start learning how to play guitar. Was
like twenty six all the time. And then I met
Mike and I went in there kind of wanting to
learn how to play blues like Bottlenecks, line, Robert Johnson,
Sunhouse stuff. He's a huge Sunhouse fan and Robert Johnson,
and then we connected over the Chili peppers and so
(21:25):
the two between blues and the Peppers. We kind of
like formed and then they He basically taught me how
to play guitar and met Kenny, and both of them
have taught my children. They told him drums, and so
I would go watch them at shows, and that's like
they were just my friends.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
Mike. When twenty six year old Jess and Mama walked
in and you were like, this guy's already good looking
and big and brown and beautiful. Well you're like, you
don't know, you don't get to have a guitar as well, yeah,
you don't get a rock and right, and then he
takes off on his motorbike. He's not too much that.
I had no idea who he was.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
I had a big old dreads that was stargated, big
old dreads. No one kne who the fuck I was?
Predator skinny too. It was skinny.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
He was tall, but he was You look, Jason, you
just mentioned this before. You're doing some crazy clean so
you look skinny. Now, what do you what's the ive?
Speaker 3 (22:19):
Thirty pounds and about thirty two pounds in about sixteen days.
Speaker 8 (22:23):
Now.
Speaker 2 (22:25):
I just sat.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
He just said to our producer. I was like, get
the boy a scne. We can't be heaven there.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
You're a growing man. We need you to have some carbohydrates.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
Trust me, I don't like it either. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
I feel like learning guitar at twenty six is hard though,
because I and learning blues because I learned piano my
whole life, and I learned classical Darling Chopin and Bark
and the likes.
Speaker 2 (22:44):
And then people would always be like, let's have a jam.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
Let's and I'm like so rigid where it's like blues
are so loose and kind of like you got a
vibe with it.
Speaker 7 (22:53):
That's a great thing about Jason's artistry is that he
when he puts his mind to it, it literally happens
like that.
Speaker 2 (22:59):
And he wanted to do it so bad and that's
what And when he came in, he was like, I
want to learn Sunhouse, I want to Robert Johnson, but
I don't know how to play guitar. I was like, sweet,
you know what I mean, Like that's the stuff you read.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
I didn't even how to play chord, but I could
play slide, so I learned. I kind of learned everything.
Back ass Fords as like kind of an actor. You
always like crash chorus, You're yeah, you know the best teacher.
You're gonna learn all this, you know, because you only
have two weeks you're ready for a role. So that's
just kind of how we learn. I wouldn't know how
to at the time. I didn't know how to play
a bar acord.
Speaker 2 (23:28):
Can I ask did you teach?
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Because when I saw the you guys at Tuning Fork,
there was one move Jason that you did on the bass.
Because you're on the bass, Kenny, you're on the drums,
and Mike you do vocals and guitar, and there's one move.
I don't know if you taught Jason how to do this,
but it's in the room crazy and I think it
was at the start of a Metallica song and Jason,
you had your middle finger I'm gonna say hooked in
a cum heather motion and I'm just gonna say that's
(23:51):
how I could.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
Describe it best. It's sort of hooked and understand it
was hooked like that.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
And I could come head the motion like that and
you were sort of sliding it down the neck like there.
And I tell you it really since some of the room crazy,
did you teach Jason that?
Speaker 2 (24:11):
Or Jason, do you come up there on your own. Mykay.
The horso got three kids.
Speaker 3 (24:22):
Forgot. We called him Dick and Ribs.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
It was interesting the crowd though, because you've got like
kind of a middle crowd, like a rock and roll crowd,
a heavy crowd, and then definitely some pretty jazzed up ladies.
Speaker 9 (24:37):
Yeah yeah, I was like, this is probably what a
Taylor Swift concert sounds like. When I'm back on the drums, Like,
there's so many girls in Florida. I think I was
very curious what it would sound like to hear just
the ladies scream. Oh yeah, so it's intense. You could
do like it, just like Jason.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
We got him to take his shirt off now.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
Yeah yeah, yeah, I didn't even notice when you did that.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
I was too focused on the music. I mean, I
thought I be cool, and just the place erupted. Yeah,
like I've never said. I was like, wow, I must
have did. And then I look over and he's got
a shirt halfway off. Yeah, yeah, that's what's happening. I
really thought I did something cool. Took a shirt? Can he?
Speaker 1 (25:12):
Speaking of cool, you look very cool when you play
the drums, and I always think Ye're like cool.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
It's like a cool vibe and I learned the.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Drums for a few years when I was a teenager
because I was like, I wanted to be in a
band and I couldn't learn guitar.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
It was too hard. So I was like, hold in
the drums. But I'm left handed. I am too, are you?
I didn't even notice. How do you make it look cool? Because, like,
you know, usually drums are got I just played right handed.
Speaker 3 (25:40):
I played the right handed way.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
But sorry, these guys are musicians. Let me just translate. Hey, well,
we played rop in on the Xbox, were the one
you had to unlock? Yeah? Right? A minute live version
of yeah?
Speaker 1 (25:56):
But usually, you know, like drums look cool because they
cross their hands like you do, and I I couldn't
figure it out, so I'm.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Like, yeah, I look kind of.
Speaker 9 (26:03):
There's there's things if I'm trying to learn a song
and I can't figure out the flow of it, like
the change from playing the beat to going into the
like a field or something like that, I have to
stop and remind myself I'm left handed, and then started
with my left hand.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
I'm like, oh, yeah, which is.
Speaker 9 (26:21):
Which is interesting. Sometimes I get really frustrated. I have
to remember that I'm left handed, so I need to
start it with my left hand.
Speaker 2 (26:27):
Yeah, it's nice of a fellow left hand or in
the studio. Okay, Well, as you guys mentioned playing some shows,
right you see, and I'm going to come back next.
We'll give you the dates and we've got some tickets
to give away. We do tickets that I double past
the each show around the country. Next play it in
fleshed one and Hailey.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
I finally had my way and we've got a rock
and roll band in the studio. I know, don't don't
get me wrong.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
I love love my Taylor Swift Tuesdays. You know. I
had a lot of fun every choose that baby, and
every time I suggest we play some Metallica, you say no.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
We've got the nixt bist thing Tatataran Studio. And you
guys are playing a bunch of was around New Zealand
this weekend, Labor weekend, Auckland on Friday, Cora Glyn Tavern
which is amazing on Sunday and then Saturday second in
r Friday eighth chrash Urt Saturday night Wellington.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
So far yeah, so Sint James Theater and Wellington James
Hey Theater and crash it the Energy Events Center in
Auto to Coragln Tavern this Sunday and power station as
you mentioned on Friday in Auckland. Now, tickets are at Ticketmaster,
but if you would like to win a double pass,
we've got one to give away for each show. Just
text F YEAHF two three. It won't work, It won't work,
(27:37):
it won't work. And after the text the location the
ticket that you want, tickets for e g Auckland or
Cora Glyn, and we'll draw out a double pass for
each one. Okay, we're going to You've picked a hell
of a weekend to play. Yes, this is the week
long weekend. What's the American long weekend that kicks off summer?
(27:59):
As memorial, this is kind of our memorial adds a
long weekend that tells us that summers on the summers here. Yeah. Yeah,
Well we're going to keep trading with next play ms
Fletchborn and can I ask you guys, because you don't
have an opening band, do you?
Speaker 3 (28:15):
Oh? Yeah we have? Yeah, we got yeah.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
Because I just sort of just slide and that I
am actually also in a band, but we play I
think would be a good fit. We play exclusively downbeat.
Covers of System of a Down were called System of
a Lounge. Yeah we're pretty real.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
Yeah, yeah, that's pretty awesome. We're also a three piece.
What do you play?
Speaker 1 (28:35):
I play the keys and I sing and I've got
a keita. Oh yeah, I've got the same keita, A
cool keita, which I know that you played in a film.
But it's it's pretty cool man playing the kita. Pretty
The guitar is not hot, Mike, that's a lie, and
I know.
Speaker 3 (28:55):
That you're being We're going to make it hot though.
Speaker 2 (28:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
Ye, it's just so much easier to not have to
relearn a new instrum when you spent your life playing piano,
to just go look your restaurant.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
Like that and do it. Was it was Frankie Goes
to Hollywood? Was I think so? So that the key tar?
I think flag pol later a way. Thank you, relax.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
I've been told we've got to wrap it up, guys,
but thank you so much for coming and joining us.
Go and see off Tatata or yep, we're giving away tickets, yeah,
ticket Master for the tickets, guys.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
Thank you so much for joining us this morning. Thanks
for having us me.
Speaker 7 (29:37):
Play Zim's Fleshborne and Hailey play Zims Fletchborne and Hailey.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
What's your jobby? What's your jobby? What's your jobby? What's
your jobby? We haven't played in a while, we haven't
played in a while. We ask you three questions about
your job, and then try to guess what your job
is if we can that first person, you were one
hundred dollars, good time for everyone will talked to for
(30:06):
what's your job is? Either at time of broadcast, on
their way to work or already at work?
Speaker 10 (30:12):
Right?
Speaker 11 (30:12):
Yeah, it was.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
That's got the Do you remember when we had the
windows squeaking clue? That was a big clue.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
No, don't bring that up because War was upset because
he did say, I see the first question.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Okay, maybe maybe this is putting a wide in our
friendship this game. Maybe it's good morning morning. Are you
on your way to work? That's not a question, that's
not a question. Don't phrase it as a question. That's
needs on her way to work or it sounds like
she's on her yes, and we get a free beat. Okay,
(30:48):
all right, well the questions start now. Okay, I'm going
to say, do you wear a uniform for your job. Yes,
I do. Good question. This could be just send her
and Clark's baby. No, young young. You know those communists,
they get them working real young. That's a job. That's
(31:09):
a joke. Wears a uniform work she's an early children
educator because they'll often wear a uniform so that you
can tell they're not just someone there to steal children. Yeah,
which is nice. What if the person stealing children wore
the uniform, Well, then I guess they earn those children.
So she's only a way to work.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
It's seven eleven, it's quite early. It's safe to say
that maybe her workday starts at eight, not starting at nine,
unless she's got a huge commute. Okay, I'm gonna say,
do you work. Do you work in the area of
helping people?
Speaker 2 (31:49):
I do. I've got a nurse on her hands, on
her hands, she's called up because she knows it. Every
time I got a nurse on the round of the
we I always feel like nurse the shift work of nurses.
When we start wrapping up their day and she's on
her way home, she would have already clinic born. She
could work at a different damn it. She could work
at a clinic al thoughts. Yeah, okay, So if I
(32:12):
ask the question do you work in health? Well know,
then she's guaranteed a nurse. But if she says no,
or a doctor but she helps people, right, yeah, then
it will narrowive. Then it would be because what if
it's what if it's an old person's Oh, you're an
old person in time, I should say old persons. Yeah.
I think we're thinking say old folks. I think we
say pre grave. Yeah, no, it goes pre school school
(32:38):
life misery, Yeah, retirement slow misery slug slug slog pre
grave grave. Great. Can you ask your question to Neve? Please?
Do you do you work in health? Then the in
the health industry need yes, I do the health are you?
Speaker 12 (33:03):
What do you do you want a little cloe?
Speaker 6 (33:06):
No, no, no, do that.
Speaker 2 (33:10):
We don't do clothes, because you know she's she's she's
she's kind of saying I'm not a nurse. Her offering
this is naughty from you. But you don't know if
that's do you say that anymore? I don't think you
said shut up. Wait, might have been a not. You
(33:31):
don't say we're discussing. We're discussing.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
It's naughty to shut your mouth. Kay, school okay, school
nurse school start? Yeah, just after eight kids are arriving
there hurting themselves.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
Wait, the schools have their own nurse. That was called
nurse dagger crazy. She's still look after us and take
our nail polish house. She was a uniform. Okay, see
our school news, didn't we radiologists? They open at eight?
Speaker 13 (34:05):
Right?
Speaker 2 (34:06):
Do it?
Speaker 6 (34:07):
Do it?
Speaker 2 (34:07):
Come on, ven, you've been right and we've put you eve.
Are you a radiologist?
Speaker 12 (34:12):
You you were so close that you've just seen it
slightly wrong?
Speaker 2 (34:16):
Al radiograph radiofa.
Speaker 14 (34:18):
Yeah, what you mean is that right?
Speaker 2 (34:24):
What Horby? We gets your joby, we guess your jobby.
Oh that's fantastic.
Speaker 1 (34:30):
Well we'll take radiologist radiographer. Well that's what we mean,
same thing, right.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
We're all big part of the big radio family, you know. Yeah,
we're all saving lives and identifying injuries on the radio spectrum. Yeah,
we got it one. It was amazing, Ney, one hundred
dollars cash for you. Amazing, it's great.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
Can you see when I've got like things inside of me?
What because I've had exposed recently and you know you
can see your purple your ampon or.
Speaker 2 (35:01):
Can you see tampons and poop. You can. What's the
best thing I've ever seen inside someone?
Speaker 14 (35:07):
Yes, oh, the best thing I've seen. I think the
most technical thing I've seen is freshot.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
Oh I really thought you were going to say, now,
not fun toy.
Speaker 14 (35:22):
No, I haven't that.
Speaker 8 (35:24):
My colleagues have.
Speaker 2 (35:24):
No, you popped that and you went that out of
the car's safety string. No, that's an that. Therefore they
need to see how far up it is. Oh no,
so they haven't gone in and forgot it's there and
they're just getting a cheat shoulder X ray. Who are you? Oh,
it's start. Next time you get your emr R. I
(35:47):
can just run on your hand to check all cavities. Yeah,
all cavities.
Speaker 13 (35:52):
I actually, I actually am an technologist radiographer.
Speaker 2 (35:56):
So you amazing? Can you next time?
Speaker 1 (35:59):
Today when people jump in the tube chickns in the
American I got in there.
Speaker 2 (36:04):
It was a different radio stations. Yeah, I asked ZM
when I had my MRI last week a couple of
weeks ago. Great, I want to be able to stay still.
I would be laughing rolling around and there again.
Speaker 7 (36:18):
One hundred dollars plays zims fletchforn and Haley fully.
Speaker 2 (36:24):
Silly little pool, silly it is so silly, silly sea
that silly little pool, silly potpole.
Speaker 6 (36:37):
Silly.
Speaker 2 (36:41):
Today today, silly little pole. At group dinner, do you
share like one order for the whole table and sheer
yep yeah, small plates style three three to four large
that don't have to be about small place I went.
I went to the Spanish. I don't know exactly how
(37:02):
you described the of the because they don't do it
on the seas, right, they don't do it on the
ass I shouldn't have done it onalona, but they don't
go aba, this is it. Yeah, I think they're still
a little bit you went full like doesn't need to
be it doesn't need to be for au attack, doesn't
(37:23):
need to be small plates, it can be sharing mains. Yeah, man,
I love it. This happened last night. Out was some
friends for dinner and Matt our friend. Matt was like, okay,
because he's a teacher, he said, okay, hands up, who
wants to order their own thing? And he quickly put
his hand He put his hand out and nobody else did.
Overall over overalled. Although he won, he wanted to order
(37:45):
it just I don't know a pizza or some Italian.
Did you go Italian? Yeah, we were at Italian. The
lady that was our waitress was like, you can share,
and she kind of got us over the line. She
was like, you know, you can get like three pizza,
you can get some get something like little Passa and
we were like, let's had a meat I've done. I've
never done shed Italian. It was amazing. I love it
(38:08):
because we always do this, and we always make Daddy orders,
like Daddy, can you order? And Yone's like, leave it
with me. It's one of the hardest things he does.
Thank you very much. Yeah, I did great pride, and
it's kind of getting a taste of the table, like
what everybody's after. Recently, we're out and your friend didn't
eat seafood for someone who lives on an island. Yeah,
just absolutely mind bling and we eat a lot. We
(38:30):
love our seafood and I love it. I love getting
a kind of then and then you go through the
menu and you're like, we needed a little taste of this,
and then we want all the different sorts of meats
and I want different cooking styles.
Speaker 1 (38:40):
The good thing with eating with Vorn when we do
this is I think some of the anxiety around it
is that you're not gonna it's not been enough food.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
I'm not going to get enough. Oh you're always get
always get it, always over, always over. He waits until
the waitress's face and looks a bit like and like
we've had it, and she's like, that's a lot of
fur and I'm like one more, one more, it's one more,
one more. Yeah, And then I go I love going
back and be like, actually, you know what I said
to make it through books? Yeah, yeah, yeah, what are
(39:08):
the people said? Well, I'm sad to say selfish. They're
being selfish. They want to order individually, No said, will
share food. Sexty six percent order individually. I love it.
I love eating more than I love drinking. I think
eating is the best socializing To me, I just love it.
(39:30):
Full bellies, happy times, show me conversation is the best. Yeah,
over dinner. Yeah, A couple of cocktails, drill, moderation, of
course you're on it. A couple what do we have?
By the way, I moderately drank a junk of sangree
because it was a happy hour special. Oh nice and moderation.
(39:50):
Actually that made perfect investments. So I'm proud of you
as an economist.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
Yeah, we have to do all things in moderation, including
spending money, so and moderation.
Speaker 2 (39:59):
Yeah, I can't do it all cat individually because I'm
Celiac and I don't like forcing the unhappiness on others.
Fantastic someone who's that you know, got something like that.
Set it out auto your own by all means, but.
Speaker 1 (40:16):
You've got to be vocal to say rather than be like,
can we get some gluten free options, just be like, hey,
you guys go crazy.
Speaker 2 (40:22):
I'll just want to I'm going to get my own
gluten free. Oh my god, do you remember we went
to dinner and we were all sharing and someone just
wanted a bun, a pork bun and didn't want to
spend any more money or order any more food. And
you were there. You went there and just said they're
eating their bun and we were like, thing would if
I had been It was a table of it was
(40:43):
a table of sex. We're not tell me who it was. Yeah,
Jason's already used now if we'd quota for the day,
so I can't. We couldn't tell him not to say
that I counted three And when you say we're can
we say it's like when it's fine, don't worry about it.
(41:04):
It's kind of horny. Actually, yes, Chantelle says, it depends
who is at dinner and if they like this year,
we've got people, please it here some of these at
the table. Yeah, you need to lead you like we
should share, man, it'll be great. Yeah with me pick
up the menu, you take charge. Andrew said, because I
want to eat, because I want to order what I
(41:26):
want to eat, not to share with other people. Also,
you also will say that the reason this is silly,
little pole is because while we're at the dinner, after
we have with this exact conversation carwhen message saying what
should sell a little pole be? And I said, you
were always on that exact question. Well, even though it's dinner,
I'm still working. You're always on, always to a hour,
always climb your back. I will be, yeah, claiming the
(41:49):
dinner because work made me work you perfect.
Speaker 1 (41:52):
I was also working technically because I was preparing for
the off tut tight interview, baby plucking my mustache.
Speaker 2 (41:57):
So I'm always on. If you're going to claim, always hold,
I'm claiming the contractor h always on. Alexandra I usually
share with just one person so we can both try
a few dishes and split our portion of the bill.
That works. That's just a two person split. That's that's fine,
that fits the bill. Are here, Rebecca. It really depends
on who and where you go today. Here's the other thing.
(42:19):
If you're going to a place where the food doesn't
fit the spill, I think it reflects poorly on the
on the restaurant. If you're going somewhere where you can't
order an array of things that everybody wants to try,
you've picked the wrong restaurant. And that's kind of on you.
Unless it's like a pub, which is like steak chip salad,
you know what I mean. We're noting that individual dish.
But most restaurants now are sharing, like Indian. When we
(42:42):
go out to Indian, we should share more. Yeah, you know,
like a bit of butter. It makes people like me,
who only ever get buttered chicken, try different like it
and then you're like that's great. Yeah, Rebecca said. If
I go with my besties, we share food, non besties,
it's individually order way. Going out with it does cause
(43:02):
it brings the table together. Also, you've got to think
some people might not have as much money, so they
could be saving, or they could be on a budget.
Talked about that, and so they can order a small,
you know, cheap dish, whereas if you share, you're more
likely to order more food. Maybe it's more expensive per head,
though comes out pretty good a dish. And then you
(43:23):
get Love said, I'm not paying for cirrus salmon for
a Tata to share when I can't eat it. Well,
this is also the problem because Mike got a Terra
Massou and nobody else did, and now we've all got
to pay a slice of Mike's Terra massoux divided by
eight get put. Well, we had a spoon, but you know,
Mike said Terra massoux, and we didn't. You know, we
haven't got one. Berg was a Terra massoux. Everyone eight
(43:43):
people had a spoon of the.
Speaker 1 (43:47):
But Mike had maybe three or four more spoons. Of
the time, it all comes out in the wash. That's
what we say when we go out. Yeah, comes out
in the wah.
Speaker 2 (43:54):
Yeah, even though every time we go out, my coffee
orders more expensive. I'll just rewind the show. I feel
which other of what did you have? Sangree? I thought,
so you're ready to go. That's a little pile plays
its flesh for Haley. Well last week, Yeah, times are
(44:18):
construct and you're all buying into it. Man, it was
last wake up. It was last week. We talked about
if you were handed a phone at a party and
it was plugged into the stereo and someone said, you've
got thirty seconds to pick the next song. You've got
to save the party. What song would you pick? I
(44:39):
love this.
Speaker 1 (44:39):
It's one of the most cooked playlists, like in terms
of the genres, the decades that it spans, the style
of music, some interesting choices, and not all of them
made the money here. Yeah no, so we aka someone
else in the office went through the text machine.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
Someone made one in our international podcast fam. You can
join that that's on Facebook, but only if you're nice.
We don't like assholes. I'm a moderator. Well, what I did, Fletcher,
was I opened it up on my computer, this playlist,
and I pressed playing. It said it was playing, and
then I didn't, and I was like, I'm all ready
to go for the break, okay, and then guess what
(45:19):
did I press play again? And it said You've got
to sign it, and I just don't. I don't know that.
So now I've clicked it on and I'm hoping for
something a little bit magic. Okay, great, Oh it's thinking.
That's a good sign, isn't it. That's frustrating. Let me
just go straight to the app. Okay, we don't need
(45:41):
to play some songs we do. We can skip through.
We can tell you that I'm on. Our play list
is live. Yeah, it is live. It's on iHeartRadio. Now
I'm streaming iHeart Radio because I opened there my own voice.
We do that the other day. We can't do that again.
Speaker 1 (45:55):
Here it's on the iHeartRadio app, which you should have
already downloaded, because not only can you get our sick playlist,
you can listen to us where if.
Speaker 2 (46:03):
You go, yeah, here we go iv EHS. Songs are
guarantee to say the party. We've got songs we'll put
in apostrophe and songs that doesn't need to be there.
We need to rename this cowardly coward. There's no she's
gas bagging with John. We need to change the name
of the playlist. Doesn't put a possessive apostrophe in songs. Songs.
(46:26):
Song is no song is guaranteed to say, let's leave it.
If vh's song is guaranteed to save a party.
Speaker 1 (46:35):
Only people listening right now at seven thirty six will
know that.
Speaker 2 (46:38):
We think it's funny. Now the rest of the people
who just can't have it. I can't hear that. I
can't Queen Margaret College. Are you kidding me? I can't
have that? What are you doing? You're the worst DJ
in the world. Can you just go a bit go
to mine? No, I've got it? Is that not playing?
Why isn't that playing? You don't got it? It's because
(46:58):
there's the low and slow start to Living on a
Prayer by John John Bond and John Bombo, John Jove,
John bon Have you not? Have you not tasted this
delicious array of desserts? John bon Jovi? It's how there
we go? What? Yeah? I don't like the song? Next one.
Speaker 3 (47:24):
Great?
Speaker 2 (47:26):
Great, I'm going to a party. This playlist is all
over the show as well. Because that started that song,
you're like, what song is that? Then it gets to
that part you immediately know it's Gloria.
Speaker 1 (47:39):
But we've got like the Killers, We've got Bonie Yea,
and we've got chumber One. But Black Eyed Pea Shania
Twain creator is obviously on there, and we want to
make sure that people know that on.
Speaker 2 (47:48):
The songs is from Guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (47:51):
To say the Party, Neil Diamond and then followed by
Neil Diamond, Eminem and then we.
Speaker 2 (47:57):
Jump to be Witched and then forward be wish on.
This is Dane Rumble. Now that's just giving you a little.
Speaker 1 (48:04):
Of what is on this iconic and then it's Tina Turner,
Queen Savage Garden, John Dibbit, like it just can't all over.
Speaker 2 (48:10):
It's so good.
Speaker 1 (48:13):
I'm gonna throw a party. I'm gonna throw a party
just to have this playlist on. Well, there you go,
I go to the next time I'm out of fast forwards. Okay,
well this is the playlist. I believe we've changed the apostrophe.
Speaker 2 (48:25):
It's now just songs. It's so fair you and we're
listening at seven thirty six this morning.
Speaker 1 (48:30):
Will know that originally the artist the playlist formerly known
as if vh's song is that Guaranteed to Save a Party.
Speaker 2 (48:38):
And it's got a little thumbnail and it's us and
my grumpy face. That's just my face. Unfortunately, imagine that's
the face of someone who's like the song that have
saved this party or to it.
Speaker 1 (48:49):
Which is Hailey, which is always happy. That's the face
was made after this.
Speaker 2 (48:54):
That's the face that wants to stay at the party.
And Vaughn's face is the one that's like when you're
leaving my house and I'm like another uber canceled? Can
ever run open their phones and try to get me
an uber pleased?
Speaker 7 (49:06):
Plays it ms Fletchborn and Haley plays it ms Fletchborn
and Haley.
Speaker 2 (49:11):
There is a kid called Jamie.
Speaker 1 (49:14):
He for his entire life has been of the understanding
that he was one of the one and seventeen people
that tragically died when the Titanic sank April fifteenth, nineteen twelve.
Speaker 2 (49:28):
God, here we go, Shut up? How old is he
he is? Currently? He's now fourteen, and he's believed this
for his whole life.
Speaker 1 (49:38):
Right as soon as he had consciousness, he would start
telling stories about being on the boat because.
Speaker 2 (49:43):
All of these stories that there used to be lots
of these stories, was before people were like autism, Oh right, okay, yeah.
Kids can become hyper focused on something, learn everything about something,
and then it can be rattling around in their head.
But then sometime I watched a one of them stories
about a documentary, one of them picture films on the
computer thing. It was about how kids. People just don't
(50:06):
think kids are capable of absorbing information, and kids are sponges,
and they'll just be like, what Titanic what when? Especially
if they do have it, they're on the spectrum, and
then they put themselves and their pearents become obsessed with
them telling these stories about listened to this story about
when it was on the Titanic. Fine, and literally, I've
told lies that after five years, I believe them. But
then sometimes kids say things and you hear these stories
(50:29):
and you're like, how would they possibly know that?
Speaker 1 (50:30):
So here's such drawing pictures like his thing was he
would draw pictures. He was like, this was the top floor,
and here's where this was, and this was and this
is where I was as the boat went down, and
kept doing all these really and would always have these
facts about people in the boiler room and he would say, oh,
people in the room, they died first, and da da
da da, And he felt like it was part of
his fault that they were trapped. And when it like
(50:52):
he has just believed his whole entire life. Now there's
they've made like one of those sort of small YouTube
documentaries on him, you know, being like this wild but
his parents.
Speaker 2 (51:01):
The first time, you'd just be like that is creepy. Yeah,
you know, kids and they see ghosts and stuff or
they say something like, mom, do you remember when we
met No, when when we went to the park in London.
We've never been to London. No, not in this life
the last time, and you're like, Jimmy, shut up. There
was a story literally right next door to us growing up.
(51:24):
There was an old house. Yeah, and it wasn't lived in.
It was used as like storage, but it was one
of like Kilta's original houses. And years and years later
this family move into that, into that farm and live
in another house on the farm. But they're all dead
but they no, they're not. They're not dead families. They
were real. But the sun starts talking about his friends
that live in the shed. Oh god, they start living.
(51:46):
And then because kilt is like this area and people
were passionate about the history and stuff of it, and
the local school library there was a story about people
who built the house. And he came home with the book.
He's like found them in the book and pointed out
the people who built the house, what's his friends with
the ghost? That was the whole theory, and it was wild.
I remember when I was young I got to tell
(52:06):
that story. I was like, oh that even now because
me look, because I guess I knew the house and
so I could relate to it, whereas so many of
these stories I'll be dismissive because I've got no tie
into it because I've told the story before.
Speaker 11 (52:21):
That.
Speaker 1 (52:21):
Me and my best friend Jess, when we when most
kids were going to like basketball camp or school holiday programs,
our mothers sent us to witch school. And you do remember,
and we did these four sort of courses on witchcraft,
and one of them was a I'm hearing it. One
of them was about auras, you know, this sort of
potential glowing light and what it says about you. And
there was this young girl, like much younger than us,
(52:43):
called Genevieve, and I'll never forget a long hair, like
wide eyes and her things Adams, Yeah, you're huge, that
kind of vibe.
Speaker 2 (52:49):
And I remember her saying like, oh, I've always been
able to see aras.
Speaker 1 (52:51):
I can see them all, I can see yours at
the moment, and she looked at my best friend Jess
and said, you don't have one, and Jess was always
like one one anyway.
Speaker 2 (52:59):
This is what That's why Bart sold a soul on
the episode of The Simpsons. You've always got a.
Speaker 1 (53:03):
Simpsons reference for us up the sleeve. I want to
know this morning, like, what is the creepiest thing that
a kid is said to you? Could be your kid
or another kid, but you know they just come out
with these really rogue things.
Speaker 2 (53:15):
Is someone in the corner. They've been talking to someone
that's not there. They've seen it. Guys that lives a
past life. This is how scary movies starts. This is
how hard it is the season. We're merely a week
and a bit away from Halloween. Okay, so I eight
hundred dahs and we want to take your call. We
find some spooky music I can find because it's not
Aliens spooky, I'll find some yeah, pumpkins or something and smash. Okay, oh,
(53:41):
eight hundred dars, give us call. You can text her
nine six nine sex.
Speaker 1 (53:45):
What is the creepiest thing that a kid has said
to you? Now we're talking spooky stories, witchy stories. We
wanted to know what is the creepiest thing a kid
has said to you, because there was one kid who
believes he died on the Titanic.
Speaker 2 (53:57):
And there are all these drawings and story to prove it. Katie,
good morning, good morning, good morning. What is this the
weirdest thing a kids said to you? The spot? Well,
it was kind of.
Speaker 10 (54:09):
Me when I was a kid, and but it was
my mum that said the weird thing. So for as
long as I could remember, and what I thought was
a dream where a lady in a white dress was
dark here would come and visit me in my room
and would sit on my bed and touch my foot.
And I remember years later, when I was a teenager
telling my.
Speaker 2 (54:26):
Mum about it.
Speaker 10 (54:27):
I was like, it was a really weird drop that
just kept happening. And she went and got a photo
and brought it back and she said, is this her?
Speaker 14 (54:34):
I was like, oh my god, it was.
Speaker 10 (54:35):
And she said, this is your great grandmother or great
great grandmother, Lily, and she visits all of the females
in our family.
Speaker 2 (54:42):
So she visited my aunties, my family, that's all the
females in the family. For some reason, they made it
so much worse. I don't know.
Speaker 13 (54:53):
I should go to witch I.
Speaker 2 (54:56):
Thought you should come to my witch hard nipples and
not the fun car kind. Yeah, the skid kinds of
visiting you after work, Kayley, Oh no we're not. Oh God,
get out of the bedroom. I actually paid a lot
of money for a woman in a white dress to
come into my room and play with my face. Well
it was in campbo. It wasn't a lot of money,
(55:17):
but it was for them. It was so spooky, Samantha.
What's the spookiest creepiest thing a kid said to you?
Speaker 12 (55:25):
This is my son and he was I think about three.
We were all camping, like family camp out and the
Corimandel and the kids were just drawing pictures and we asked,
you know what they were drawing and sex and stood
on this is I saw sleeping his mum, his dad,
you know. And I pointed to the dark fogga their
hedgeown and he said, that's the man that watches as sleep.
(55:48):
Oh nobody slept that night, if you can.
Speaker 2 (55:57):
Yeah, yeah, that's the start of multiple horror franchise. That's
not good, Samantha. Thank you, Rebecca. What is the creepiest
spookiest thing a kid has said to you?
Speaker 12 (56:10):
Well, I'm a teacher, and one day the little six
year old girl gave me a.
Speaker 2 (56:15):
Picture that she drew off me, and it was a
lovely little picture, but there was this ghost hanging above me,
like in the sky.
Speaker 8 (56:21):
And I was like, oh, what's this and she said, oh,
that's your long friend.
Speaker 2 (56:25):
That follows you, A friend that follows I do like that. Yeah,
you've got a ghost following you, Rebecca.
Speaker 14 (56:39):
Apparently, so I'd like.
Speaker 13 (56:40):
To think of as a little guardian angel maybe, but
I've kept that picture.
Speaker 1 (56:44):
One of my witchcraft courses was on guardian angels, and
so I'm here to tell you it's a guardian angel,
not a ghost.
Speaker 2 (56:52):
Yeah, thank you, Rebecca. Some messages on my son's eighth birthday,
he said, I never thought i'd make it to eight
years old. Said what do you mean? He's like, well,
I haven't the last few time. Oh, not like you.
My son was born and needed to be resuscitated at birth.
As soon as he could speak, he could describe the
resuscitation from a bird's eye view. He was washing it
(57:14):
as that out of his creepy Can I know someone
like that? Ye? Keep your ticks coming. In nine sex
nine sex oh eight, hundrew dars at him Wow.
Speaker 1 (57:21):
I alleterally am like giddy from this. I'm getting chilled
every time we hear in these stories of the creepiest
thing that a kid has said to you. Because there's
a kid that believes he died on the Titanic. That's
what sparked us all.
Speaker 2 (57:33):
And we're hearing, come on, not believe a flit's looking
at me. I had some goosebumps.
Speaker 1 (57:40):
Could almost be I'm just looking at the time. It
could be a spillover, a little Halloween spish.
Speaker 2 (57:44):
Absolutely could be, because some of these are quite like, yeah, okay,
I've been kind of trying to stick to the simple,
small ones. Okay. My then four year old son told
me I was pregnant. I had no idea who it was.
He was right. Several weeks later, he said, I'm sorry
the baby couldn't stay, but you'll be okay, mom, I'm
still here. Oh my god. I had a miscarriage. Three
days later. Oh my god. Two years later, he told
(58:06):
me I was pregnant again. He was right, and he
said to me a little while later, but it's okay.
My brother is going to stay this time. And it
was a boy. Who my god, Oh my god, Oh
my god. How do you explain.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
Explain that, because there's that thing where some people can
smell pregnancy, but you're like, that's not how miscarriage and
how does.
Speaker 2 (58:28):
It even know can smell. I was at a friend's
babies funeral. It was this one of the saddest funerals
I've been to. I was across the road with my
two year old and he pointed in the air and said, oh,
look at the very pretty angels, Daddy. They've come down
and now they're heating away. Oh my god. Even the
mind of children is a wild and imaginative place. But
(58:50):
the time was probably no chips they leave clay Zim
splitchborn Haley. How many times he says for me, a
drink reminds me of what it was like being an
ugly guy at the bar when the bartender just keep
kind of chicks around you. Somebody drink, drink, sorry, somebody
(59:11):
drink three and a half minutes and you're still like,
can I please. That's why you have to get your
wife to go up to the bar and get drinks.
The key was you just get it cash and you
just hold it out. Now this was the early two thousands.
That's Brent Rudkin. Lovely to have you in the studio.
Thank you, You're welcome now.
Speaker 1 (59:32):
I emailed you yesterday some even now and then we
email back and forth and I I just wanted to
know where the utter muddy year had gone from the
news in the morning, and so you've brought it back,
brought it back.
Speaker 2 (59:44):
I get things done around here. I heard your feedback.
I listened. Yeah, and it's back. And you also dropped
in that you had to dream about Hayley, and we thought, well,
we must year about this dream on here. Yeah. Yeah,
do we have some weird sort of dreamy music. Okay,
I'll find some to really dream same. Was it a
scary dream because we've got spooking music on go? No,
(01:00:07):
I don't think it was scary, okay, but it involved you.
I think may have also been the name of the
dances actually in your only time. I don't need to
tell me twice that the show needs more in you.
I've been pushing for it.
Speaker 7 (01:00:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
Years, Every Friday Friday Fast Book, he's like you, and
we're like, no, no more in you? Come on? What'sh there?
Speaker 10 (01:00:37):
We go?
Speaker 2 (01:00:37):
Okay, perfect? Remember And it just got back on the
company WiFi. Oh, yeah, okay, Brent, you're asleep. I'm asleep.
I haven't been sleeping very well because I've done something
to my foot.
Speaker 3 (01:00:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:00:49):
I sprained it about fifteen years ago playing Ripper Rugby.
And I think, well, they say things linger, so I'm
just that ended your career. Yeah, because you give me
Aaron Cruden vibes. Oh he looks a little bit like
legendary all Black Aaron Crudden. Okay, right, I don't know
that Aaron Cruden played Ripper Rugby. Peo would have started somewhere, Yeah,
(01:01:10):
I suppose.
Speaker 2 (01:01:10):
So, Yeah, you're not sleeping well at the moment, yet
my foots keeping me up. Fifteen year old sprain. Fifteen
year old Sprain. Well, there's the health system in action,
isn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:01:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:01:21):
Anyway, I had a dream about you, Hailey. Do I
look good? Have you been taking sleep assistance? Some PILs
or gummies? Perhaps red wine? Yes, nothing like a red
Wine's lumber and a bit of Bailey's moder You've got
kurd lt or.
Speaker 15 (01:01:43):
But yeah, I've been dreaming about I had one dream
about Haley. Okay, And and you're on the inter islander.
Speaker 2 (01:01:49):
I haven't been on for years. I've never been on
as an adult. Yeah, so quite happy that you were
on the broken one.
Speaker 15 (01:01:54):
I think it's the other titty okay, which is I
think up in Singapore at the moment getting repaired. So
you were on it when it was in the cook
straight it lost all power, a major blackout.
Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
My god, my time. And are you on the boat
as well or you watching from a farm? I'm like, god, right,
so you're not even in your own dream, not in
the not in the dream? How bizarre? Yeah, yeah, it
was I panicking in the darkness.
Speaker 15 (01:02:19):
Well, you were mustering everyone, You're getting everyone a hero
of a leader. Yeah, effect, you're trying to get into
the bridge.
Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
I think of the ship. Wait a minute, wait, So
she was storming the captain's quarters yeah, wow, yeah, do
you have a moose head on? And was wearing like
one of those things paint this storm in the capitol
and it was like that Captain Phillips movie. Oh yeah,
yeah yeah. And Hayley's the Somalian pirate and yeah, I
also saw I would have given that role to a Somalian.
Speaker 15 (01:02:47):
But that's why wow exactly. I also saw a lot
of peacock feelers, so I was wondering I was wondering
if you were off to the world of wearrible arts.
Speaker 2 (01:02:57):
Perhaps what direction was the interoreland to go? Was I
coming picked in two? Same? But now we're going picked
in Wellington. I'm on my way to the world. Wait,
so the ship has lost all power and Hayley's wearing
peacock feathers. Peacock feathers. Well, I know you weren't wearing it.
There were just I just saw them. They were around.
I don't know if there was a shipment of peacock. Yeah,
(01:03:18):
perhaps they were peacocks there. And were people listened? Were
they following my orders?
Speaker 15 (01:03:22):
I think so?
Speaker 2 (01:03:22):
Were they being mustard? Yeah?
Speaker 15 (01:03:24):
I can't really remember, but I did write down because
I always google what do dreams mean?
Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
Oh?
Speaker 12 (01:03:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
Nice? So that was the extent of it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
You watched me pretty much mustering people in an emergency
on a bike, somewhat of a hero.
Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
I tried to google what that could mean, and it
came back with two options. What did you google?
Speaker 15 (01:03:43):
I said, ship breaks down, the coastguard had to come
and tie it back. Amazing, So I think I googled
that and it came back with one one.
Speaker 2 (01:03:54):
Turbulent times Feeling overwhelmed No, does that resonate with you
turbulent times feeling overwhelmed?
Speaker 15 (01:04:01):
See I was I thought it might resonate more with you.
Oh I was dreaming about you. But yes, I don't
know it deeply. Or two, you just have a strong
desire to travel.
Speaker 2 (01:04:12):
Yes to bus, I think the turbulence, but that my
life makes me want to travel more. Yeah, I think
you're putting this on Hailey. This, this is your dream?
Speaker 3 (01:04:21):
Is it for me?
Speaker 2 (01:04:22):
But it wasn't It wasn't in your head.
Speaker 1 (01:04:24):
Yeah, I don't think my meaning would come all across
all of all plans.
Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
You're your dreams onto Haley. Did you google dreaming about
peacock feathers? No, but let me do that. You want
to do that right now? Get that on this? That
could mean something. Dreaming about a peacocks spreading feathers. I
dream about peacock feathers can indicate a new phase of
life that relates to new opportunities, new beginnings, and the
ability to rise above any challenges in your way, like
(01:04:49):
a ship lost at sea, ship loss at sea. If
you're feeling stuck, this could be a sign for you
to make a change. So we just need to work
out whose meaning it is, do you feel a bit
like a ship at sea without a rudder? Ah? Well
my last name.
Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
Yes, it's all connected. Well, maybe this could be this
meaning of feeling losses. He could be related to your
love life, because we do want to have a little
bit of an update.
Speaker 2 (01:05:11):
Oh, yes you did. You went on a date with
a clearvoyance. She was an older woman, much much older,
and she has passed since he has passed. Yeah, she
didn't see it coming. The second one, because the first one,
I believe, the Scottish Scottish one, Lorna, she threw you
a never spirit Yeah, native American Indian, how dont know?
(01:05:33):
Worried Cherokee? Yes, and he was your spirit guy, and
she passed away. She's carcked it. Sorry.
Speaker 15 (01:05:41):
And then my other one, my other one who I
suppose I went on a date with. Yeah, she died too,
a couple of months ago.
Speaker 2 (01:05:49):
Wait, so a third, the second one has died, right, Okay,
oh god, I know are you what are you feeding
these clearvoyants? Well?
Speaker 15 (01:06:02):
I don't know too much time, but I'll be honest,
like I predicted her death because.
Speaker 2 (01:06:14):
He's been handed the mantle. Because she had a very
bad hip and she she walks sideways in these old birds.
That's why they've all got bad hips. Like a crab,
like a crab. She walked like a crab. Does she
have pincers like that? Which should have been she could
have been a crab.
Speaker 1 (01:06:32):
So you've do you reckon, you've been handing, and this
is why you're having dreams about me and you're not
in them because you're clear voyance.
Speaker 2 (01:06:37):
You're seeing for other people. Now. So I do have
turbulent times ahead, and I do need to travel. I
need to go over seats.
Speaker 15 (01:06:45):
But maybe that that's a warning don't travel by it
by ear because you could have turbulence.
Speaker 2 (01:06:51):
Okay, and so you've got to be but if you
travel along I don't have that on a holiday. But
you could save everyone. I only have allocated leave. You know,
it's not like this in your song sal sail Away.
Oh my god, this is not coincidence. It's all connected Jesus.
Speaker 1 (01:07:12):
I think that we need to do now that we
know that Britain has hit these clearvoyant powers. Now, I
think next time we get you in, we could get
some callers on and you might be able to.
Speaker 2 (01:07:21):
Channel through the microphone through the headphones. Some clairvoyance, but
there haven't been any other dance with clearvoyance. Well, actually
I do have an update. I've recently started volunteering at
an old people's home. Oh my god, love it. I
wanted to do that and then I was like, oh, yeah,
you should come with me. Yeah. Well, yes, somebody else
(01:07:41):
that works here volunteers and they, oh my god, it
makes you so sad every time they put up a photo.
They don't get any other visitors. Yeah, I know the
old people. Yeah, like they don't get any other videos.
You're right, is that why there were some of them?
You don't really want to hang out. You're looking like
a saying and I tee it up for you to
just spike it down. And you're like, you can see
(01:08:02):
why the family don't visit. Yeah. I wouldn't use those words, right,
but I'm sure the old girls are really like flirting
with you in the moment.
Speaker 3 (01:08:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:08:09):
Well, I've been discouraged from encouraging relationships. I'm more of
a companionship.
Speaker 2 (01:08:15):
Oh right, sort of some appropriate behavior. Okay, Well, we
look forward to your updates and your clairvoyant powers back
on our radio. Ye, people are loving it. We want more.
Brad Brain Yeah, we'll give you some more brand updates,
more brand when they happen.
Speaker 1 (01:08:33):
Yeah yeah, Next on the show yesterday and copped a
bit of an eye fall, saw a bit more of
a trading than I was anticipating. In the afternoon play
Ms Fletchborne and Haley play z Ms Fletchborne and Hailey.
Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
I was ha story, It's me, I'm telling a little story.
I'm biting a battery. Why should I not have done that?
The lovely text? Sorry, I complained, Catcher, I'm so sorry.
Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Well, we just had lovely Bryn Rudkin and studio who
at the end mentioned that he was volunteering.
Speaker 2 (01:09:09):
And then you know, he played it off and he
played it down, and of course he made a slight
bit of jest, didn't he that, you know, not all
of them. Well, someone just missaged and saying their dad
has just gone into full time care and they were
walking on one day to visit their dad and they
heard Bryn's voice in the corridor, a very recognizable voice.
And I'll tell you what, he is very very good
with the elderly. I bet he is. We love Brun,
we love al Brin. And now we can see into
(01:09:31):
the future This is fantastic, right men. I bought a
ticket before Bryn gave us his numbers, so I'm just
going to run on that post Brin Okay.
Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
Yeah, weird that his numbers were one too through seven eight.
It's so unlikely. It's as likely as any other. Now,
yesterday I went to my friend, my friend's house. It
is my friend because we all share him as a friend.
Because I need to pick up a pail of paint.
He had a particular time up of.
Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
Paint and we only needed a little bit. It's no
point getting some, so Aaron sent me to go get
this paint. And where our friend lives is at the
back of a very big.
Speaker 1 (01:10:09):
Property, like a long property to live in a tiny home,
and you have to pass this big house that's being
built there.
Speaker 2 (01:10:17):
It's huge.
Speaker 1 (01:10:17):
Vaugh knows this house and they have a lot of
trades working on at the moment when I turned up,
which I will say and not to have a dig,
but I have finished renovating, so I feel warranted to
do so.
Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
Six thirty per year. I turned up and the trades
were still going. Wow. House Cash's work at six City.
It's a cashy. Oh, it's a cashy. After making the
most of the twilight. It's cashy. A little bit inside
knowledge there. Yeah, I'm just saying that I know what
(01:10:49):
trades are. Like, Oh yeah, same, I'll turn up at
any time for a bit of cash. You're not going
to get anything from the I thought it was like
turn up at twelve smokeo at twelve thirty. Anyway, Um,
I need a part beg one for three hours. Yeah,
I need a park not they're contactable by fine, Definitely
not going off to another job anyway.
Speaker 1 (01:11:05):
So I tuned up a lot of trades there and
I had a little white waivers. I pulled in, but
I was so tired yesterday just because I loaded a
skip all day.
Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
Do I look jacked?
Speaker 3 (01:11:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:11:17):
Yeah? Ripped yeah, rapped.
Speaker 3 (01:11:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
That's actually what Carlin said to me. She's like, man,
your shoulders gonna a look pretty jacked for Jason Mamore
coming in studio with all the heavy lifting into a
skip anyway, So I didn't want to stop.
Speaker 1 (01:11:27):
And catch up with my mate. I was like, give
me the paint, I'm gonna go. So I was quack
and I came in, pulled in my car to my friends.
He went in, got me the paint. I put it
in the front seat. I buckled it in, he said,
because the lid's not tired. Oh yeah, good, bucklet it
in like a pa or far. Always buckle your painting.
Always buckle your painted kids, You must remember every That's
what the song's about.
Speaker 2 (01:11:47):
Buckle your paint now.
Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
Then I backed out and I drove past the trades again,
and they obviously anticipated that I was going to be
staying there a little bit longer, or else arriving for
dinner or something like that, because the look on a
guy's face as I drove past a tree and I
turned just happened to turn at the right time, and
I saw a willie.
Speaker 2 (01:12:07):
I saw a fresh willy. He was going, how did
you see a fresh will He was going to the
He was.
Speaker 1 (01:12:12):
Having a wee wee against a tree tree. And I
think that he didn't anticipate that I would be driving back.
Speaker 2 (01:12:17):
Past so soon. Not hear the car coming.
Speaker 1 (01:12:20):
Yeah, I know, but he was mid stream. There was
something that was a dry between me and him. Yeah
by the time I was there, because you'd left the
car running. So he's like, oh, it's up there. Yeah, yeah, okay,
So I saw it all I saw it all right.
Speaker 2 (01:12:31):
Yeah, yeah, I saw it all. And the worst part
is what you have to do as a penis owner
is you got to shake it. Right at the end,
I thought you're going to say, have to get warrant
and registration every year. Yeah, you got to do that.
Take it. You got to take it into a pt
and Z. You don't have to do that. You don't
have to do that. You do what has Aaron got
(01:12:52):
to warrant a ridge on his No, he's got road
user charges. Yeah, he wants to get the rush around
the edges. Check that because that's coome structural.
Speaker 1 (01:13:01):
Yeah, I know, I know, I know I'll get a upgrade,
but yeah, he and then he had to quickly shake it,
and I did.
Speaker 2 (01:13:08):
I saw the whole thing. And I don't think I've
ever really looked at a Willie shaken before. You've never
been in the shower and your boyfriend's gone in there
and used the toilet and had a shake. Yeah, but
I've never seen it. I really caught its eye, right
the eye. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
And then I caught the builder's eye and it was
he was so embarrassed. It was so embarrassed that I
saw it all.
Speaker 2 (01:13:34):
And then I horned off. I should have done more.
Did you give him a little beep? No, I didn't.
I just sort of was like, looked its eye, looked
at his eye, and then I just kept on driving.
But yeah, it's it's it's odd. I haven't seen the
fresh time. It's a weird one. The old Willy shake
because at a yearinal if you're just like blinkers on
straight ahead, but then someone next to you is given
(01:13:56):
the half yeah, half provement, fantastic porophial vision. Look, you
can see behind it and you don't want to come.
Of course, you've got to give it a shake. You
see a flash of beige down there, and you're like,
I've seen it. He's more than welcome to be against
(01:14:18):
the try. I have no problem with this.
Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
The Trade is lands on site, you know, I don't
think they anticipated a woman driving past and clocking it
right in the eye.
Speaker 2 (01:14:26):
Out of ten, I'm not used to. You know, if
I was going to see one, i'd want to see
it in a different state. So I don't feel rank
based on the state it was in. Okay asked you
to rank. It was weird that you said my rating
out of ten and then renegged on giving a rating
at a ten. Yeah. Yeah, no, I'm just not here
(01:14:47):
being like and we knows k why do you want
to Clay Zims, Flitchford and Haley.
Speaker 11 (01:14:57):
Fact of the Day, day a 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 do do.
Speaker 2 (01:15:13):
It's cars week here at Fact of the Day. No,
not like Queen, you're silly idiots. Cars as in the vehicles.
It's a themed week Effect of the day. And yes,
this is I had all my facts sorted on Sunday,
but I've changed them out because I kept getting great facts.
He's rolling with it. I found this one, okay, by
happy coincidence. Remember we were talking about what those things
(01:15:34):
are called that drive around Antarctica. Yes, oh yeah. They
mentioned my cousins in Antarctica. Yeah, and we were talking
about them and I was like, does he get to
drive there? And I was like, what are those things called?
And there's summit. The ones on the track get the
Antarctic Center and they sit on top. Yeah, Hoglundans hoglands
(01:15:55):
is what they're called. Hogwoons track fun. They're like like
tractor tank. No, they're not like tracked tanks. So they
got the tank wheels.
Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
I don't know how the top are They like a
mini van or in the sand. Cube meets a tank
like ammmobile tank.
Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Yeah, like amobile fire engine cab without the bonnet and
without any of the fire engine on the back.
Speaker 12 (01:16:17):
Just yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
Yeah, we're trying to describe these things. We've used about
ten different cars as reference. It's this square on tracks.
It's not cube esk.
Speaker 2 (01:16:28):
The signature thing about the cube is the weird little cubes. Yeah,
a couple of cubes, very boxy, and it's on tracks.
And I was like, what are those things called? And
not called hard loans? But I googled what are those
vehicles they drive an Antarctica called? And Google told me
Voltswagon Beetles. And I said, you have officially lost your mind. Yeah, AI,
(01:16:50):
you can't trust it all the time. Wagon Beetle stupid.
I looked into it. The first commercially made vehicle to
be driven in Antarctica was of Voltswagen Beetle, like the
bubbly one, the bubbly old school classic. Like, how do
they sound when they go down the road. They're like,
(01:17:10):
it's quite good. Actually they sound like a Chitson's car
had one. Did they have special tracks on them or times? No? Standard?
One of them Voltswagens. The first one is called Antarctica one.
It was a red Voltswagen beatle, which is the best
color for a classic Volkswagen beetle. And it got shipped
down there and it was used at Morson Station exclusively
(01:17:32):
between nineteen sixty three and nineteen seventy. There's an entire
book called the volts Wagons of Antarctica. There's another book
called the Antarctic Volkswagens, and it tells the story about
the ruby red beetle Antarctica one and two orange beetles
that followed afterwards, Antarctica two and three that were used
on this stuff. No chains, just as I recall real
(01:17:55):
wheel driven. They were real well driven cars because the
engines in the boot and the the boots up the front, right,
that's how that's how it look. They didn't have chains
on it. No chain thing. Okay, we would have chains
to Kadrona, I know. But look here it is towing
a slid. It's towing a packed sliding. And they said
it was reliable, it never skipped a beat. It was
(01:18:16):
comfortable and they drove it around Antarctica at Morson Station.
It was their first official, like commercially produced vehicle on
in Antarctica. The first cars of Antarctica, the Antarctica Voltswagens,
it's called. It's like a really well documented history. If
you're into voltswagons or just cars and weird places, fully
reckon giving that a Google Today bit of a rabbit hole. Yeah,
(01:18:39):
slipped a little bit of time for rabbit hole. If
you've got time for a rabbit hole, get amongst that.
But today's fact of the day is the first ever
commercially produced vehicles and Antarctica were Voltswagen Beetles. Fact of
the day, day day, day day. Yeah, did you did?
(01:19:07):
In Fletchborne and Haley friend of mine, his name is Auburn.
He lives on Guernsey in the Channel Islands in between
France and England. They can't decide what they want to be.
And people on Facebook marketplace they see Nazi memorabilia. Oh wow,
what are Nazis? And the Nazis had it during World
War two? Did they? Yeah? They were that claim that
people who are just like in their gardens and they
(01:19:27):
find like people who have like buried medals or like
and the old ship something. Also they're not like, I'm like, hey,
how great is this? Let's all be Nazis this thing
I found had or inherited, dig it up in their garden.
I love antiques and lots of old things, but I
would never have Nazi memorabilia in my house. It's cursed,
neither to get rid of his full he has in
(01:19:53):
the entrance way, we just and I digress. He told
me that he's had this bung shoulder and he had
to go in and get an X ray and an injection.
This is your friend, is my friend not a n
He's a Nazi sympathizer at the most, but he's not
yet a Nazi. He doesn't collect the memorabilely, he's not
a Nazis. We round and we're digressed, so digressing, we're joking, jesting.
(01:20:19):
And the doctor gave him the steroid injection in the shoulder.
That's what I'm getting next week. He said it did nothing.
But because he's a medical professional, all right, okay, he's not,
he's not okay, but he knows better than everybody. So
the doctor is a full of course, his wife's a physia,
so it helps. So he gets the injection, the steroid injection,
and then the woman's like, I'm the woman. That's fine
(01:20:42):
on behalf a woman. The medical professional is like, I'm
going to put because there's a big needle. Is that right?
I don't know what I've had one on my back,
but I don't look. He said. It's a big scary
needle stick as a McDonald's straw, and it's sharp. They
don't even look. They just shut their eyes and hope
for the best in Germiny somewhere in the local and
city's guided them. And then then they guided them. Yeah,
(01:21:05):
I have one a couple of weeks ago.
Speaker 3 (01:21:07):
Got it.
Speaker 2 (01:21:08):
And then she's like, that's gonna need like a plaster.
Oh yeah, And she pulls out a ball of cotton
wool and a plaster and comes towards him, and he's
like a terrified of cotton wool. Really, it is a
yuck like rub between you. It's like when people rub
like the marshmallow, cornflowel or whatever they put on those.
(01:21:29):
Some people can't do marshmallows because of and they do
marshmallow without it, but they all stick together. I don't
like it, but I'm not phobic of it. Yeah, but
the cotton wool, he's like, always, has been always. Sometimes
you get a blood test and they'll give you the
little cotton wall and a plast tape over it. Yeah,
it's absorbent. So he's like, get that away from me,
Like that's the pastor will take the past the cotton wall.
(01:21:50):
And she's like, are you scared of cottonwall? And he said,
I just it's just he's scared of it.
Speaker 3 (01:21:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:21:57):
He's a big man, so he's not scared of cotton wall,
but he won't have it any near him. She's like,
we've got a new phobia treatment at the clinic and
he's like what. She's like, you put on a VA headset. Yeah,
and it slowly introduces your fear. And apparently there's a
cotton wool setting. Yeah, it makes I believe it. Maybe
(01:22:19):
AI generated It'll start small, a little bit of cotton wall.
I don't know how to get this because the sound
in the field is a big part of the cotton wall. Yeah,
I've heard, and apparently you leave it on for an
hour and it might take multiple sessions. But there's like
a flying one like you're in it and you're in
the plane and then all the unusual noises of takeoff
and stuff happened, right, And it's what is that exposure therapy?
Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
Because I got off at exposure therapy when my when
I nearly crashed my car on the motorway because an
moth flew in the window and they were like, it's
getting a little stupid, and other story about them, t oh,
I was when I used to I flattered and my
flatmate moved out and I lived in the flat alone
for a year and I had something in the oven
and then Mt H came in the front door, and
(01:23:03):
so I just grabbed my keys and ran out the
door and drove my parents house, which is an hour away,
and I got to the whited Opera and my dad
was like, yeah, you can stay, and I was like, no,
you've got to come back with me.
Speaker 2 (01:23:12):
He said why, I said, the ovens on. He was like, shit,
we get in the car. I was like, what am
I gonna do? Stay in the house. Yeah bad. I
know it's just any moti, but I know. But I
got off at exposure therapy, in which I would have
to confront one and I was like no, really, Now
I'm thirty five, and I wonder if a fear is
(01:23:34):
so great that exposure therapy is. I tried hypnotism because
that's softer. Yeah, yeah, it didn't work. Nah, but I'm
not a believer, right, I'm too you know, cynical about that.
What you were ohm under, you were changed my brain chemical.
An hour ago she was almost in tears because of
spooky things. Kids said she was too cynical for.
Speaker 3 (01:23:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:23:57):
True. So I wanted to talk this morn about confronting
your fears. When did you have to? Maybe you were
terrified of something but someone was in peril, or you know,
like my mate, if his kids fell into a vat
of cotton wool and they were going under, he would
jump in and say, jump in and save them. Or
we can make more kids. It's actually quite we can
(01:24:18):
make more kids. I've taken notes on what I did
wrong this time. I won't do it again. The processes.
You've been going on about winning lotto, like all day? Yeah,
what how much is lotto? Thirty mil? Giving? What if
we put thirty million dollars in a bag, but it's
in a room with a thousand mot hs. All you
(01:24:39):
have to do is walking? How much money thirty millions madness.
Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Of course he's going, Yeah, you'd have to, but I'd
be My legs wouldn't work properly, so i'd have to
crawl like they make my But they're.
Speaker 2 (01:24:51):
Going to be all over you. There's like thousands of
them there. I just have to scream through a m
But you would do it. Yeah, what if it was
just for like, say you're tack at and you're like,
wait a minute, those numbers do feel familiar, but I'm
not sure if those are my numbers are not? And
they were it was on a table, and what if
they weren't eat they were slowly eating it? Because do
you know how they eats? What if it was a
(01:25:12):
thousand dollars? No way, ten, no, one hundred. Now we're cooking, okay,
we want to take so hot, we want to take
your calls this morning. I'll eight hundred dollars at them.
You can text hero nine six nine sex. When have
you had to overcome a phobia? When did you have
(01:25:32):
to conf not overcome, perhaps confront confront When did you
have to look it in the eye and be like
play here, I need to get this done. I feel unwell.
Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
I've closed the text machine because people keep on texting
in the MTh word and I can't evenlie just to
make you.
Speaker 2 (01:25:46):
Go, that's me, that's me. Yeah, So maybe I don't know.
You're in a situation where you just had to do something. Yeah,
that can for me.
Speaker 1 (01:25:54):
A lot of people have a phobia of spiders, really
crippling phobia of spiders, and then you're in your house
and there it is, and you're the.
Speaker 2 (01:26:00):
Only person who's going to deal with it. Let you're
late for a job interview, but there's a spider on
the front door, mat on your keys, on your keys, Like,
what do you do? I guess you just don't get
that job. I guess you're just never making money ever
again again. Oh eight hundred dollars at Emazon, number nine
six nine sex text. Then when did you confront your phobia?
We're asking you now, when you had to confront your phobia?
(01:26:21):
Look at right in the ugly eye and just say hello. Yep.
It's so many messages and close this text machine. I've
got to say, I've got to congratulate people sharing these
stories because some of them are quite traumatic. Yeah, some
of them are full on. Phobia is not a joke.
Kaya you're on your way right now to confront your phobia.
Speaker 14 (01:26:42):
Yeah, I am packed right outside.
Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
Wait what are you doing? Yeah? Yeah girl? What you so? What?
What is it for you? Is at the noise of
the drill?
Speaker 14 (01:26:55):
Oh, it's just like a little bit of backstory.
Speaker 13 (01:26:59):
When I got ten years old, I saw a picture
of dead friends Wisdom Taste that he'd got taken out
and they so we had part of the gums attached
and everything so pretty much been scarred since I was
probably like ten.
Speaker 2 (01:27:12):
They say there is always an inciting incident, you know.
I actually read something earlier this week that really tickled
me genuinely. I read it on my phone and I laughed,
and I recounted it to this too with tears in
my eyes. The next time, you're the dentist to alleviate tension.
Every time they put their hands in their mouth and
your mouth looked theres oh yeah, a real conscious.
Speaker 3 (01:27:40):
Finger.
Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
And I always have to fight myself, don't like don't
go yeah wait, so every time something goes in your
mouth to look at yeah, do it. Confession there You're
going to be fine. It's going to be great. They're
great people. Every care Yeah. Otherwise asked for the gas cute.
Speaker 14 (01:28:02):
Apparently you have to go through a special.
Speaker 2 (01:28:07):
When they give you the injections to numb everything. It's great,
you don't feel a thing. Yeah, you'll be okay, You'll
be okay. Thanks Ka Zoe. When did you have to
confront your phobia?
Speaker 8 (01:28:18):
Actually, very recently, I have a absolutely like gut riching,
very bad phobia or vomiting.
Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Oh wow, my niece has got this. If someone says vomiting,
she starts crying and just like runs aimlessly away. I
really hates it. So how did you have to confront
it recently?
Speaker 8 (01:28:36):
Well, it's all like happened a very long time.
Speaker 6 (01:28:39):
When I was like thirteen, I got really vicious food poisoning,
and then from then I was just like, na, not
for me.
Speaker 8 (01:28:46):
And I've managed to go, like.
Speaker 2 (01:28:48):
Many people do see someone vomiting and they're like, yeah,
good stuff, man.
Speaker 6 (01:28:53):
Some people can deal with it and it's not that
big of a deal.
Speaker 14 (01:28:57):
Yeah, But for me, I'm just like not for me.
Speaker 6 (01:29:00):
So I've gone maybe.
Speaker 8 (01:29:03):
Eight or nine years avoiding it at all.
Speaker 6 (01:29:06):
Cough, and then recently I tried a new antibiotic and
just did not agree with me, and it all happened
and I was.
Speaker 8 (01:29:13):
Like, oh my gosh, breed your spine. I was like
boarding my eyes out. I was absolute wreck. But you know,
it's just got to keep exposing yourself to it.
Speaker 2 (01:29:21):
Do you think it made it better at the end
of your bout of illness? It did?
Speaker 8 (01:29:26):
Actually, yeah, exposed bad about it?
Speaker 2 (01:29:28):
Yeah, you can look in the eye. Yeah, when you
said exposure to your bent, how's this going to work?
But you just kept you to the doctor's office and
they make your sick. Zoe. Thank you, Maddie. When did
you have to confront a phobia?
Speaker 14 (01:29:43):
I am still currently having to confront it after a week.
Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
Why what what's your phobia?
Speaker 14 (01:29:49):
I have a massive fear of spiders and I last
week I was driving to pick up my son from
school and a spider went across my windscreen right by
my son vibe And it was just small, but it
was fast and I literally almost crashed my car and
then got to the school and thought, oh, we'll just
leave the car there, And when I picked up my
(01:30:11):
son and then realized I had to drive home, so
I had to confront it. And I climbed into the
back seat and tried to spot it, couldn't say it,
and then I've proceeded to bomb my entire car. Still
haven't found it, and it'd been a week now.
Speaker 1 (01:30:27):
And when those awful creatures do die, they curl up
into a tiny ball. You won't even see it. It'll
be crushed under floor.
Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
It'll be fine, don't you yep? Oh god? Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:30:37):
In a week of driving with it and just hoping
that it doesn't appear to sell the.
Speaker 2 (01:30:42):
Car, Maddie.
Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
To be honest, I think we could set there and
you can blow up the car.
Speaker 2 (01:30:47):
I guess TV texts coming in nine six nine Sex.
When did you have to confront your phobia? We've run
out of time. A couple of quick text message When
did you confront your fears? Someone said? Another dan to
work when I was terrified of dental work. I'd have
to be sedated to even go for a check up.
I took a job at a dental school. They told
me to just lightly expose myself, be around it more often.
(01:31:10):
It cured me. Really, I've just been around it. I
guess that's exposure. It doesn't say they would teaching people
how to do fillings got my fear of flying. I
became a pilot.
Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
Wow, Okay, people don't know that Vaorn and I are
trained doctors and you're a trained pilot.
Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
It's so weird, that's crazy, but you know, to have
someone to fall back on it. Yeah, yeah, that's my
fallback career as medicine. I'm scared of the same thing
Hailey scared of I had a C section and they
must have stitched a nerve and made it crippling to
get around, and moth flew at me and I jumped,
huge amount of pain, but then it was gone in
the pain never returned, so thank him off. I'm still
(01:31:46):
scared of you.
Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
There was one person who takes them as well, saying
they've got the same phobia as me, and they have
a child and once one of the moths flew into
the kid's ear and the kid the kid was in
a great amount of distress and fear because the thing
was alive.
Speaker 2 (01:31:59):
And so what are you gonna do. He's gonna watch
a kid in distress suck it out.
Speaker 1 (01:32:02):
Nope, she had to get a finger nail and deal
with a fluttering I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:32:08):
Know I'm sharing this story. Seezes, I've I have a
gut wrenching fear of being home alone. And when I'm
home alone, all the kittens use the TV for once,
and just everything around me scares me. Everything, but I've
already got used to it. Yeah, it's jumping, that's terrifying.
(01:32:31):
I've got a huge pair of rats and mice hat
to combat my fear. When I worked in a pet shop,
but I to feed them. What do you don't forget
a job there? The only thing they have a selling
pitch chops anymore is rats, I know, and birds. Terrible
place to work if you've got a fear of those things.
I have flown over thirty times, but every time I
have fulling panic attacks. Trying hyper villain, you know, the
sort of person you absolutely want to sit behind. I've
tried hypnosis, natural remedies and lately diazepan from the doctor's
(01:32:53):
nothing works. Still terrified of flying? Yeah, yeah, many people,
We're just all afraid. We're just little babies. All little
babies were afraid of live spiders. A white tail dropped
out of my son had.
Speaker 1 (01:33:06):
A watch tap. We've had to watch tap from the producers. Look,
George's there, She's like, it's.
Speaker 2 (01:33:09):
My time, It's my time. A watch to warnsmith. Georgia.
You know what we've taken some of your time, my
son's dayca bag a white tail dropped that it was
just Madhaim at home. I sprayed a whole can of
bug spray on it. I think I did ruined the
surfer was on, put a container over it could finally
lately move from the spot. Worse here, I'm terrified of
dressed up characters.
Speaker 1 (01:33:29):
When I was about four or five years old, my
old school or KINDI was having a Teddy Beers picnic
and my dad was dressed up as a giant beer.
So to confront my fear, they made me go into
a room where there was a massive beer there to
show me the inside of the costume. And when I
lifted the head, it was my dad. And then I
learned to not be scared. It's just my dad in there,
(01:33:50):
so we.
Speaker 2 (01:33:51):
Should have dress her father. And then, well, congratulations to
you podcast listen. You've reached the end. So I would
assume if you've listened all this way through, you're either asleep,
in which case wait, or do you enjoyed it, So
(01:34:12):
drop us a review and tell your friends that's how
podcasts work. Play z Ms Fletchborn and Haley