Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
The hurd Ache breakfast thing. So Bunning's trade. Load up
on landscaping with Bunning's trade. Jenny, good morning, welcome along
to the herdeche break for show. Matt's not here anymore,
but I'll tell you who's here. Measure, you're here.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
Yeah, good morning, Jerry.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
How are you made? Rudy you're here?
Speaker 3 (00:18):
This feels unusual looking to my right and not seeing
the big man there.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
And Glane's going to join us this morning or for
the first new mant and Jerry, well, Jewish very good, Okay,
there it is.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Okay, So they're taking out sixty seconds, okay, sixty seconds.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
So I've I have vowed to give you give the
team five dollars to put it into a jay every
time I say that.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
Okay, this is good, five dollars.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Does that apply for the rest of the team as well? Jerry?
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Do you think do you think every time we mentioned
Meddie Heath that we are going to have to put
twenty bucks or five bucks or whatever dominant denomination we
recommend into a jar.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
Yep, sure, here's the jar right here. Okay, here it
is that I'm just going to put you right here.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
Maddie heath as well, and then I said it.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
So it's fifteen dollars up to fifteen okay at the
mid each week.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Maybe we can give it away o the listeners or.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
Something like that.
Speaker 5 (01:01):
This is a great idea. This is a great idea.
I hate to say it, but I feel like it's
going to be. This gonna cost me a lot of money.
This is gonna cost me a lot of money.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Eleven years, you say one thing all the time, you
keep generally saying it. Lot's coming up this morning. I
want to talk about a recidibus crime and the aeroplane
to it it that I witnessed. Oh, also some school
holiday hacks and blowing on a pie. How effective is it?
I thought about this over the weekend. Does the weekend?
Does it actually work? Why do you do it? What's
(01:35):
the science behind it? Is there any science behind it?
Speaker 5 (01:38):
The hood?
Speaker 6 (01:38):
As you breakfast with Jeremy Wells already.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
So do you see the story about Sir Peter Jackson.
He's invested ten million dollars towards the startup company aimed
at reviving extinct animals, and one of the animals that
they're focusing on is the dodo.
Speaker 2 (01:56):
Okay, sure, Is it just because he's got a funny name,
or is that because it's actually achievable.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Well, I don't know whether this is achievable or not.
It's a good question because the Dodo, if you're not
aware of what the dodo is, the Dodo was discovered
in the sixteen hundreds by Dutch soldiers on an island
in the Indian Ocean. Someone else probably discovered it well
before then, but it had no known predators, and eighty
(02:21):
years later rats, cats, probably dogs. I assume we're on
the island too, and that was the end of the Dodo.
Hence that saying as dead as a Dodo.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Yes, because I was going to ask you about it
as a dodo because that is something that I use
often and I've never really thought about it.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
But now I know why I use the phrase. You're
always using that phrase, do I don't know why. It's
one of your key phrases.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
Man looking at a photo of a dodo here, Yeah,
it's a chicken, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
Really? It's a chicken with a weird beak.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
I know one of they look so useless and I know,
look glass azzes here and Nz because we've been known
to produce birds with a lack of capabilities at times,
But Dodo really is. Look if I was a rat
or something that was keen on a bit of blood,
I can see why they take it.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
To the Dodo. You go straight for the Dodo.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
It's so low to the ground as well, just picking
around there.
Speaker 7 (03:11):
Now.
Speaker 3 (03:12):
You guys talk about the Dodo being a funny name, right,
Mass and Jerry, But I think the more exciting and
funny name is the fact they want to bring back
the wooly mammoth.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Also, hang on.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
So it's not just the Dodo that no, No.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
No, they want to bring back quite a few things.
Speaker 8 (03:24):
No.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
So the company that they've invested in is called Texas.
It's called Colossal Biosciences. Sure, and it's a genetics and
biosciences company. And yeah, it's trying to bring back a
whole lot. It's a Jurassic Park kind of a thing,
isn't it. Ah, So they put ten million bucks into it.
I mean that's the start. Are they mates with the Jacksons?
Are they mates with Peter Jackson and Framish? That's what's
(03:45):
going on Because ten millions turns out it's not very
much for Peter Jackson. I was just having a lock
and they thought he's probably worth now about four billion
New Zealand, right possibly. I mean, well that's not taking
into count how well his investments in the things that
he's going are. But he got one point six billion
(04:06):
selling wetter. That was quite a few years ago. He
would have he would have doubled that.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
Oh sorry, we to workshops. You mean not sorry.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
I was still in the world of animals differences, and
I thought you were. He was kind of off. He
did not sell the wetter.
Speaker 4 (04:20):
That is just an aspersion to go there, Jeremy.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
Well, yeah, no, he's he's worth so much money you
may as well. You may as well chuck ten million
at that.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
Do you know what upsets me about this? Is one
of my favorite things about life is you can't put
a price on it. And I mean, no matter how
much money you throw it.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Extinction. Oh we should we want to be able to
bring back life. You know, well, what happens once you
brought it back? Where you put it? So is it
a dress situations, you put it in a cage somewhere.
It's gonna you got to bring back two, don't you? Oh?
And then what happens because those two things have to breed.
You start, How does it all work, because there'll be
(05:00):
are shockingly inbred. You're creating a whole lot of new problems.
I don't know, we know, just computer generated. Peter.
Speaker 3 (05:07):
You know what Desree said about life, right, she said, life,
Oh life, Oh life, Oh life.
Speaker 4 (05:16):
Do do do.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Doo of do do do do do do dodoo oh right,
similar that slightly day. She also has something about eating
in a park, being in the dark, and watching TV.
So since so much because you're out she said it.
Speaker 6 (05:33):
Well, the hy breakfast aladio.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
We're just talking before about Peter Jackson, Sir Peter Jackson,
and the fact that he's invested ten million dollars in
a company called Colossal Biosciences, which is a genetics and
bioscience sciences company which is trying to bring back animals
like the wily memmoth and the dodo. It's so dodo focused. Well,
I don't know if he's actually focused on the dodo himself.
(05:58):
I think the company itself, Colossal Biosciences, right, which sounds
like a company that started the end of the world. Yes,
it does sound a little bit like that. You know,
people say, remember when Colossal Biosciences started up. Everything went
crap after that when they started bringing back weird animals
and then the other animals died and then it wiped
out humanity. Yeah, it does feel like that. Yeah, two
(06:19):
hundred and thirty five. So they've all got they have
somehow funded, they've somehow managed to raise two hundred and
thirty five million dollars.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
But you see some of the people that have donated.
Tom Brady's there, Tiger Woods is there, Paris Hilton's there,
Chris him Thaws there, Chris Himworth.
Speaker 1 (06:34):
Yeah, I know all those people. Well how much of
these do those people put in?
Speaker 5 (06:37):
Know?
Speaker 1 (06:37):
We don't know.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Someone like Tom Brady could afford a lot more than
ten million bucks.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
Surely, can I just say it's such a rich person's
kind of mentality. Isn't it to be like I've got
enough money that I'm going to throw ten miilbucks at
a I don't know, some animals that don't know what exist.
You would have thot there's a few problems we can
maybe fixed with ten million dollars right now and with
let's bring back the Dodos and Sir Peter.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
No, I don't know if Peter focused on them. They're
so focused on the Dodos. You're right, I don't know
if Pete. I think Pete. I think Peter and Fran
his partner. Oh, people forget about Fran.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
Well, a friend's involved in It's a different thing, isn't it.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
It's not forget about friend. Let's bring friend into the conversation.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
Fran is involved.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
It's welcome friend to the conversation.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
She might be focused on the South Island snipe. No,
she's not focused on the South Island. Which is the
small cryptic bird which is once wide spread across New
Zealand South Island. It fell victim to introduce predators. Maybe
that maybe the laughing owl from New Zealand. So she
might be focused on New Zealand's New Zealand's fauner.
Speaker 4 (07:31):
What about the More? Are they going to bring back
the More?
Speaker 1 (07:34):
Maybe they're focused on the More?
Speaker 2 (07:35):
I mean, how much interest is Tom Brady and the
likes of other such A listers have in the More?
Speaker 1 (07:39):
No, Brady doesn't give a crap about the More.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
I didn't think you'd give a shit about the More.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
Brady doesn't care about the More? But maybe the what
about the chatterm Island raven. Who likes that? I mean
that was extinct, the chatterm Island raven. There were some
good birds, right, yeah, focused on that. Maybe it's not
the Dodo. Okay, well, so what was the moral of
the story of their friends? She's focused on the South
Island sniper friend is actually focused on New Zealand birds.
Perhaps we don't know. I don't know exactly. I don't
(08:04):
think they're actually that keen on the Dodo. So maybe
the wily manmathonos. Julane joins us after six thirty. He's
got a couple of hot takes. He always got some
hot takes to bring in.
Speaker 4 (08:14):
I think it's dangerous.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Yeah, he texted me a couple of things yesterday and
I said, maybe not that one and maybe not that one.
This is the Hurdarchy Breakfast, The.
Speaker 6 (08:26):
D Achy Breakfast with Jeremy Wells al Radiohdarchy coming.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
Up after the six thirty news headlines acc and former
Hurdiarchy here, Glane joins us, are you sure about that?
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Are you sure you want to do that?
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Jerry?
Speaker 2 (08:38):
Look, I know he's a friend of the show. He's
a friend of mine, he's a dear friend of yours.
You went, you've got history, you went to score them.
I'm just not sure if you've thought this through. I
think opening your ways for someone like gu Lane is
a dangerous thing.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Yeah, he was saying to me out of the weekend.
He goes, finally you've got the You've had a Ferrari
in the garage and it's been sitting in the garage
for some time. Finally you're going to let it out
and take it for a blade on the motorway. I
think we've better message.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
DeMeo picked up Gearbage exactly read Joe, the wolfs expired
and anything could possibly happen if you take it out.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
On the road. Sure that sure that Ferrari has been serviced.
I don't think it's been serviced for a while.
Speaker 4 (09:09):
I feel like that DeMeo has also been used in
a ram ray.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
Totally so acc here g Lane is going to ram
raid the show after six thirty, because this is the
Heartarchy Breakfast, the.
Speaker 6 (09:20):
Hood Achy Breakfast with Jeremy Wells available everywhere on the
iHeart ready at already r.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Hodarchy sixty two. Time for the latest news headlines. Fares
for the environment. After a New Zealand Navy ship around
a ground court fight and sank off the coast of
sar Moor. The hm Z S Manawanui was conducting a
survey off shore when it hit the reef. It's the
first time the Navy's lost a ship during peacetime. Okay,
so what was the survey is the first question.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
We need to find out what happened there, because it
obviously drove someone mad and they decided, you know what,
I can't be answering these questions into the reef?
Speaker 1 (09:53):
We go what was the survey? Read it?
Speaker 3 (09:55):
Well, they were just I think they were just surveying
how deep the water was and how far out the
rea was coming.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Not that deep?
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Not that deep, mate, Well they figured it out.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
They've got the answer there it is.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
It was not It was not deep enough by the
look of it. What are you doing, Maha, Nui? Mana, sorry,
Manu and Nui? What do you have to do? God?
Hope everyone's okay. Jesus, I think you've run out. Seventy
five people on board. Yeah, that's caught fire. Why did
it catch fire? We hang on the seventy five people
of the boat. No, the boat. There's a relief, Okay,
sweet have been awful anyway. Apparently accre g Land's got
(10:28):
a hot take on that. Some Upland schools are feeling
the strain as they deal with rising student numbers. The
Ministry of Education says the city schools are growing faster
than anywhere else in the country, no shit. And in sport,
Penrith have secured this status is Australia's greatest league team
since nineteen sixty six, coming their fourth straight premiership fourteen
(10:50):
six over Melbourne in the NRL Grand Final.
Speaker 9 (10:53):
It's all she wrote.
Speaker 10 (10:54):
The Penrith Panthers officially four time premiership winners and your
NRL Grand Champions for twenty twenty four, ousting Craig Bellamy's
Melbourne Storm site fourteen points to six.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
What a great side they are.
Speaker 4 (11:12):
Many are and kezy on the a SEC.
Speaker 3 (11:13):
They had a hot take after that they think the
Warriors are set for four in a row.
Speaker 4 (11:17):
Now that's the start of it.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
On the way I love it. They're not just I'm
just gonna wear make it win four in a row. Wow,
I wonder what the odds of that are and what
that's paying a tab.
Speaker 4 (11:29):
Don't do that to me.
Speaker 6 (11:30):
The breakfast al Radio that's.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
My great pleasure to welcome into the studio one of
the first of a number of guests that are going
to be coming in on the Headache Breakfast over the
next week while. And that is acc here glaneod morning,
very liquid focused. I gotta say I've never seen someone
into a studio with so many fluids. You've you've got
a what it looks like a cup of water. Yep,
you've got a coffee. Limbs up, Oh, you feel a limb.
Speaker 9 (11:57):
I'm going to have to be completely transparent here.
Speaker 11 (12:00):
Not a HANDI after coming back from the beer Garden tour,
I'm still not a handy.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
No, I've got to just say that, neither am I.
Speaker 9 (12:07):
I've got the Bavarian and it's not going anywhere.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
What's wrong with us?
Speaker 9 (12:11):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 11 (12:12):
But it's really hard to explain at home about two
weeks on from coming home from the World's Bigger's bend
it and you're in the middle of school holidays. It's
very hard, very hard to explain, and you're not getting
any sympathy. And I wasn't looking for any but.
Speaker 9 (12:26):
No, it's a really real thin ice.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
No, I'm the same. I can't explain it. To people,
but I'm getting no sympathy. But all I want is
patience and understanding. I'm not looking for sympathy.
Speaker 11 (12:40):
Just maybe a little bit of understanding and caring. Maybe
a hug, just a hug.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Yeah, I haven't had a hug. Actually, maybe that's the problem.
Speaker 9 (12:48):
Yeah, maybe a little bit more.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
But maybe when we were rooming together. Maybe when we
were rooming together, we should have been we should have
been embracing each other. We should have been each other.
Speaker 11 (12:57):
But I mean, look, just full disclosure. She I don't
know if you have room with a few people, but
when you with someone and they take photos of you
while you're asleep, should you be concerned?
Speaker 2 (13:08):
I mean, this is what you're in the little radio
g lane, I mean, this is what happens.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
Jerry is very photo focused.
Speaker 2 (13:14):
I mean good like following a slip next him on
a plane without there being just a full documentation online
of the way you sleep, the way your mouth hangs,
the way you catch flies. I know it's a disgrace
and I'm sorry you have to go through that because
you don't deserve that.
Speaker 11 (13:25):
I look quite cute when you took that photo. I
was quite happy with this. Really are photos kind of like.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
I would not say that at all. You look like you,
you look like angry. You're an angry sleeper.
Speaker 11 (13:37):
Okay, well, look to be fair, I have had a
put of work done on my face over the past
few years, and part of my face is frozen up
and part of it relaxes, so it makes it makes
my facial features look distorted when I sleep.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Yeah, it's a game of two halves, your face halves.
Speaker 4 (13:56):
See what you've done.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
But I should say, there's no Wrenkles up top, that's
for sure. There's no rankles. You're never going to have
a w renkll. So I'm told that you're coming in
with a couple of hot takes this morning.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
Yep, yeah, really, I'm going to Are you.
Speaker 9 (14:10):
Sure that's any way to do it, isn't it?
Speaker 2 (14:12):
I mean, I guess you didn't want to save those
for Tuesday Wednesday. Maybe you want to get those all
over on Monday.
Speaker 9 (14:16):
Start with the Navy ship mate.
Speaker 4 (14:18):
You should see what he say for.
Speaker 6 (14:19):
Tuesday, the breakfast with Jeremy Wells already.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
So last week we sent mad off in style. Friday
was a big day. Friday Night was a huge night.
Didn't need that after those seven days at beer Fist.
Speaker 9 (14:33):
Still still had to be done.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
Actually, did you have to be done? I actually, no,
we're here, Juleanna. We've got you.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
We were you on Friday night. So we after the show,
we went out for a celebratory couple of drinks. We
went up to Prago and then you were there for
the lunch from memory and then you had to pop off,
didn't you.
Speaker 9 (14:47):
Yeah, what's birthday?
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Oh you want birthday? Look?
Speaker 11 (14:50):
I mean, like I said to Mad at the time,
I love you, Matt, I love my wife more as
you should.
Speaker 9 (14:54):
And I left.
Speaker 11 (14:55):
So since I'd abandoned her for two weeks during school
holiday to go on what would only be described as
a massive pastor.
Speaker 4 (15:03):
No, No, it was work, man, it was a work.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
Related Well, it's pretty.
Speaker 11 (15:08):
You can't go down that route anymore. You can't go
down there on working. Oh yeah, I was finding the social.
Speaker 9 (15:13):
Media pretty hard. That's the problem with our industry. The
social media makes it look like it's the worst of us.
Speaker 11 (15:20):
It's like, you know, when you see Instagram people who
travel around on their Instagram, or you know, you live
such a girl. That's our problem when we go on
this because all it is are smashing beers, dancing on tables,
doing snuff.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
We'll talk about this dynamic on the show before, haven't we.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
Because when when you go on away on a work
trip in radio, you've got to spend about the two
to three weeks prior making sure that your partner is
very aware of the fact that you don't want to
go and you don't want to be there. So did
you put that shift in beforehand?
Speaker 1 (15:45):
It very clear that it was no excited. No, this
is your problem. You just can't. You struggle. You're an
honest man. You struggle to you struggle to lie. Whereas
I was running a line the whole I was running
about a month long line about not wanting to guard.
It's going to be intense, is we're going to have
to be. We're hosting a lot of people. It's going
to be tough with the jet lag, et cetera, et cetera.
(16:08):
And so, but I wonder whether it's a self fulfilling
prophecy you start when he actually got away, and then
you start to believe it. You've got to be very
careful with that.
Speaker 11 (16:16):
I can't I can't rely that because I've done that
before and gone on that line and then at the end,
my love, really, you know, no, it's gonna be amazing.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
This is a problem. So anyway, we signed off. We
gave him a big, big send off on Friday, and
of course we had a number of messages from different people.
One of them was from Dan Vatory, former.
Speaker 9 (16:42):
Black Cat, former friend of mine.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Yeah, well, my friend, you need to explain what he said.
What what does he mean by what he said? At
the end of his message's Davatory here.
Speaker 12 (16:51):
I just want to say how sad I was to
hear that Matt was leaving the show. Notice that as
my wife who started crying, which falls a little bit
over the top. But anyway, I always loved the interviews,
love being.
Speaker 8 (17:05):
Involved at the Blacklash. Matt. You're a huge part of it,
and hopefully we'll get to see you there again this year.
I know it's another huge event.
Speaker 12 (17:14):
All the best for the future, but I will need
some assurances that Lane is not taking over from your.
Speaker 8 (17:20):
Role, because that will that'll ruin my mornings.
Speaker 9 (17:25):
Well, consider you a morning ruin.
Speaker 13 (17:28):
Sorry crap, Well, heart, take number one the Hurdy breakfast already,
your darchy.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Coming up after seven o'clock. We've got five hundred dollars
up for grabs this morning from our gig a little fun.
So when you hear the sound of a roaring crowd,
just call oh eight hundred Hidachy and that cash could
be yours. Also, I want to talk about how effective
blowing on a pie is. Actually it was not so
much blowing on a pie. It was actually two minute noodles.
I had a realization over the weekend when I was
(18:00):
blowing on some ter minute noodles, and I thought to myself,
as its actually doing anything, what's science behind us? G Lane,
you want to bring up a hot take that you've
got on the Manuui?
Speaker 9 (18:12):
Yes, yeah, I do.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
And what was it done in conducting a survey? Mess
reckons that the survey was how deep is it here?
Not deep enough for the Manunui?
Speaker 9 (18:21):
Well, I reckon, see that was how close we can
get the boat to a reef?
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Very close. It turns out, well, I understand the running
a ground thing. You don't want your navy vessel running
a ground but catching on fire.
Speaker 11 (18:31):
But yeah, so I've got another hot take because I've
I readden article that it's got bunks for fifty five,
but there were seventy one on board.
Speaker 9 (18:37):
So and ac Company gifts.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
Oh okay, relect working its way through the islands. Interesting. Also,
Mania Stewart from the ACC joins us to break down
the NRL final and Glane. You've also got a guide
to calling Matt on new Stook sid B. Yeah, I'm
looking forward to that.
Speaker 4 (18:54):
That's a bad idea.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
This is the hard Achy Breakfast.
Speaker 6 (19:06):
The hold at You Breakfast with Jeremy Wells on radio,
The Hold at You Breakfast on radio.
Speaker 14 (19:17):
And a C C.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
G Lanes with us this morning. Mash here as well,
Ruder here. Welcome everyone, good morning. Yeah, it's a full
it's a full party.
Speaker 4 (19:25):
Full sausagem tangled up on G Lane's laptop cord here.
Speaker 9 (19:28):
Real sausages.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
You stem down this morning with more drinks than I've
seen anybody. It was like we're in a bar situation.
Speaker 11 (19:35):
Wow, look limb sip because I'm obviously struggling still from
the Bavarians that We've all got a water, some bircher musically,
and some yogurt and a coffee.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
Whoa Lane, coffee is pretty cold. Now you're halfway through
and oh no it's still tipping.
Speaker 9 (19:52):
I'll just tip that into the musically.
Speaker 4 (19:53):
Okay, good idea not into the water.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
All you're missing is an export ultra. Thanks for the rain,
I know, it's just I know it wouldn't take much
for you to get stuck into one of those, that's
for sure.
Speaker 6 (20:06):
The breakfast with Jeremy Wells already two lanes.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
And this morning, so the Navy ship h m z
is Manawanui has sunk off the coast of Summer after
running a ground on a reef. And normally we wouldn't
want to make light of things like this, but seeing
as nobody's died, I think it's an opportunity to say
whatever we want about it, because apparently it was conducting
a survey, a hydrographic survey, which I imagine.
Speaker 11 (20:32):
Is not underneath the service, not like a door to
door survey, not like no one.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
There's got a lot of doors down there around those reefs.
If they were conducting a door to door survey, they
are in the wrong place. Put it that way. But
they actually it's a hydrographic service, so they're exploring the
sea floor. So there's an irony here that you're exploring
the sea floor on what's going on, and then you
run a ground on a reef like wouldn't you turn
on the navman?
Speaker 9 (20:55):
Well, yeah, yeah, I don't know. We haven't got the
full story. I don't know what what's happened there were
they Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
Drunk. Are you saying drunk? That's your first thing that
you think is.
Speaker 9 (21:07):
The rum, the navy prick rum. You want to stay
away from that. It's about seventy percent.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
So the good news is seventy five passengers and crew evacuated.
So that's fine. Although one boat did flip on the
way getting everybody off. But then then I think some
people could just found out that they could just stand
on the reef.
Speaker 11 (21:23):
And they walk from the reef to the land. But
it was in the middle of the night. You would
have filled your undies a little bit.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Hang on.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
Three in the morning, there was a boat that ran
a ground and then there was a boat that came
and rescued them.
Speaker 9 (21:35):
They knew where they were going.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
But that one, then that one that still found a
way to flip itself challenging sea conditions. So I'm looking
here at the photos and it doesn't look like there's
massive swells.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
Could the other boat maybe have given the rescue bitter
heads up that there was a reef there. I think
that might have been a bitter idea. I think you know,
they should have seen that coming at that point.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
It feels a little bit like dumb and dumber. But
i'm I'm, I don't want to speak out of it's
a navy vessels.
Speaker 9 (22:00):
It's stumpy. It's if you've gone back on if you've
seen stumpy.
Speaker 11 (22:03):
Oh, it's the choad boat. Yeah, the choad boat. It's
the one that's like the back chopped off it. It's
got a helicopter repair in the front. Looks like a
small chade. It was converted.
Speaker 9 (22:13):
It was converted from a commercial dive boat into a
navy boat.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
Oh is that right?
Speaker 9 (22:16):
It's worth one hundred mil. Yeah, got a bit of
kit on it.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
I mean that did have Are they running some are
they running some long lines off the back of that?
Speaker 15 (22:22):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (22:22):
One hundred and thirty million dollars? How much that showed?
Boat's with one hundred and thirty millions an expensive d
It's a bloody expensive chode. It's a bloody expensive chode
to end up sideways on a reef on fire.
Speaker 3 (22:35):
Can I give it a positive spin here? Because, as
you said, seventy five guys men and women had to
walk across the reef in the middle of the night.
Speaker 9 (22:42):
Not all of them. There's one rescue boat. Oh okay,
three rescue boats got away.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
It looks like because a lot of them are standing
on the beach afterwards. It looks like a really good
team building exercise. It's a very expensive team building exercise,
but it brought them all together, and that's probably the
most important thing if you're thinking about a team building exercise.
Speaker 2 (22:57):
I mean, well, that is a good point. And thank
you for the optimistic view. I want to come at
it from more slightly more pessimistic view maybe and insid
we just need to give up on these things. I mean,
we can't. We can't do tech and vehicles very well.
I mean the plain situation that we've had to deal
with for about the last two years here with our
government playing there's an absolute disaster, and then now we're
(23:19):
wheeling out navy boats and we can't and they're running
in the ground. Maybe we should just leave it to
the Aussies or something like that. Do you fellas think
we should maybe just call it quites When it comes
to this other thing.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
I think we've got to have a Navy. Yeah, that
seems the problem we seem to have is anything gray.
Speaker 11 (23:32):
Yeah, I think it just maybe a fleet of five
meters ray glasses.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
Yeah, that's a great idea. Maybe a couple of Maritimos, yes,
patrolling with.
Speaker 9 (23:43):
Some shirtless wankers on the back.
Speaker 1 (23:46):
That'll keep people away.
Speaker 2 (23:47):
A couple of pels in.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
Hands, breakfast already, ju lanes and meshes here, roots here
as well. You've got a school holiday hack that you
want to share with us to rain?
Speaker 9 (23:58):
Yeah, listen, school holidays.
Speaker 11 (24:00):
I mean, for those who have got kids, it's the
most wounding time of the year. It happens three times
a year. And look, I've got a real bone to
pick with anti natal classes, those wounders who have to
go to anti natal classes and pretend that you like
the people you're worth and you the best part of
it is the kind of snacks in between.
Speaker 9 (24:18):
Anyway, I'm going to say.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
I'm landing on the shovel for this one.
Speaker 2 (24:21):
Already. You come out of the gates foreign here.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
You wait, mesh, you're not the anti natal classes. They suck?
Speaker 9 (24:28):
Yeah, suck suck.
Speaker 11 (24:30):
Especially the VHS water birth video. How can you not
laugh at that? Especially when the little the goldfish net
comes out to scoop up the bits.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
It's seriously, it sucks. And Gelane makes a good point.
The birth is the birth, all right, it's the bit afterwards, Yeah,
that you need to worry about. Forget about the birth.
The birth, you know, with all due respect, the birth
obviously a crucial part of everything, and goodness knows, I
wouldn't necessarily want to go through that myself. However, I'm
looking for you for saying that I'd be work the
next day though you would be. You probably would be it,
(25:00):
but you'd be there with an export ultra anyway, you
definitely wouldn't. But it's the bit had just the difficult
back because the birth's gonna whatever's gonna happen with the
birth is going to happen.
Speaker 11 (25:12):
It's like a long haul flight. It's over and it's over.
You forget about it. What the bone I've got to
pack around school holidays is they don't brief you the
fact that your child is going to get once it
gets to five, it's going to have ten weeks of
school holidays a year. You're going to have four. Work
it out, see you ladder work it out. Yeah, see
you Lader. Well, yeah, you're right.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
The discrepancy there is the problem, isn't it. So I've
come thought about it on such clear terms before you've
really you've really nailed back. You've thought about it quite
a lot.
Speaker 11 (25:40):
Really pissed me off that they went through all the
water births and all the different types of births and everything.
Speaker 4 (25:43):
I mean, Edmund, yeah, Edmund. But when it comes to.
Speaker 11 (25:48):
School holidays, it's the struggles real when you've got two
working parents and you've both got four weeks holiday and
your kids have got between ten and twelve anyway, So
I've got a few hacks because obviously both of us
got to work. One idea I had which I came
back costly in a while, and that was booking in
an escape room for the day you chuck the kids
in it.
Speaker 1 (26:07):
Okay, so what's an escape room room?
Speaker 11 (26:08):
Oh, it's one of those things, those team building things.
Will you go into a room and you've got to
solve all these clues to get the code to get
out of the room, and usually it takes a couple
of hours. But if you give the guy enough money
so the clues don't work eight hours, throw them some
food and water and stuff.
Speaker 4 (26:24):
I'm not mean.
Speaker 11 (26:25):
Yeah, but then I started to become expensive, so I
started I created my own escape room and my garage,
which basically involved me just locking the garage door.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
That's that's quite good.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
It's fantastic.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
Period. So the escape room was in the So what
are they doing? How do they get out?
Speaker 9 (26:43):
There's various clothes and stuff. I get out when I
get home.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
Right, So hang, okay, so you I don't know day three?
God did Why are we going back into the garage
for the third day in a row? Dead, Like, come on,
we've got out of here the last year. So you've
taken you've taken the kids back into the garage about
what seven thirty in the morning.
Speaker 9 (26:59):
Oh no, not about in the morning.
Speaker 11 (27:01):
You take the kids in there this morning, very early
this morning there at six am.
Speaker 9 (27:06):
That's on you. That's on you, guys. Wow, it's a
long day for them in the escape room.
Speaker 4 (27:10):
What do you for the next three days?
Speaker 1 (27:12):
Well?
Speaker 11 (27:12):
Look, yeah, yeah, and look, escape room is just a
friendly term for you know, a cellar.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
So this garage escape room. So what does it look like?
Speaker 2 (27:21):
Have you had to see anything up for yeah, escape
room or have you just running into a raw garret.
Speaker 9 (27:25):
No, no, no, no, Yeah, you've got to You've got to play
the game.
Speaker 11 (27:27):
Have clues all around the room, make pro activities, food
and water obviously, you don't want them to starve.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
All letter tray, what are you doing with around ablutions bucket?
Speaker 9 (27:39):
But listen they You've got to make it fun. You've
got to make it fun. There's some balloons in there.
There's a balloon challenge.
Speaker 11 (27:46):
There's a puzzle challenge that releases the next challenge.
Speaker 9 (27:52):
And then and me and I unlocked the door.
Speaker 4 (27:56):
At five pm, Father of the Year. Lock it.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Okay, if you want your.
Speaker 9 (28:03):
Own home escape room, get in touch. I'll give you
the details.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Sounds like a lot of work setting up the challenges,
to be.
Speaker 9 (28:09):
Honest, Yeah, a little bit.
Speaker 14 (28:11):
Fritzel as well, you breakfast already we're talking about school
holiday hacks, dealing with how you've got your kids at
home for weeks and weeks on end and what to do.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
It gets problematic for me. Week number two, Yes, Week ones, all.
Speaker 9 (28:30):
Right, yeah, you can, you can muddle through.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Yeah. Week two. Your hack there, g Lane was to
create an escape room at home, which is essentially just
a garage. And he was with the mind at nine
and then they get out at five. Yeah, you lock the.
Speaker 9 (28:40):
Door, like you just got to put some challenges in there.
Speaker 11 (28:44):
Like I'm not saying it's going to mean there's some
fun stuff in there, you know.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
Like a puzzle. Yeah, okay, so you do your puzzle.
Speaker 11 (28:52):
Snakes and ladders, some balloon games, maybe a lego challenge
in there.
Speaker 9 (28:59):
So it's not all it's not all Fritz all in there.
It's you know, it's a bit of fun.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
It's not easy to work out what to do, actually,
because obviously that you can thinking money wise, you could
run a movie marathon day. Yeah, it's not a bad
thing to do nowadays. I mean like a full Netflix.
So you sit down, you turn it into something exciting,
get all of the bedding beds all into the lounge
(29:25):
and so right, everybody gets one movie. But the problem
is nowadays kids can't watch a movie. Now, I don't
know about your kids, but my kids cannot concentrate on
a movie. They an hour and a half. There's too
much time for them to sit in one play that
they have to be on their phone or something else
has to happen.
Speaker 9 (29:38):
They've ticked off their face off.
Speaker 11 (29:39):
That's why I've ticked, took their face off with ten
second fifteen second bites.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
Yeah, what about a TikTok marathon? So just all day
talking all day?
Speaker 9 (29:49):
Yeah, that'll do.
Speaker 11 (29:50):
Microwave in there, just check them a bunch of pre
cooked popcorn.
Speaker 9 (29:55):
I always found parents who don't work. They're quite helpful
and score holidays because you just shift kids over there.
Speaker 3 (30:02):
I've got this text through on three four eight three.
Someone says I got away with this one. Once dropped
the two young ones at the in laws for a
few hours while I went to work.
Speaker 9 (30:10):
That's a good one.
Speaker 3 (30:10):
I stayed there for about eight hours, ignored my phone,
picked up the kids later and said, oh, that day really.
Speaker 4 (30:15):
Got away on me there.
Speaker 9 (30:16):
Yep, that's a good one. That's a good one.
Speaker 11 (30:18):
Yeah, the grand parental drop off, elongated drop off.
Speaker 9 (30:22):
I've just got to go do a pooh, can you
look after the kids? And you come back eight hours later.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
Sometimes you get that with friends. I've had a couple
of people over the years who have dropped off for
a play date and then the pickup time would be
discussed maybe three or four hours later, and then on
texting the reply hasn't been replied to. So you text
them and say all right, kids, ready to go. Now
I've got to go out, and just nothing nothing, nothing, nothing,
(30:49):
nothing nothing.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
Have either of you had the situation where I mean,
it always happened to me growing up, since my parents
were school teachers. They were always at home on the holidays,
and there.
Speaker 9 (30:58):
Was just a lot of paring a lot about you.
Speaker 16 (31:00):
Yeah, okay, oh okay, guys, really that's what happened to you.
So there was a lot of people that were knocking
on our door come school holiday time, okay, and there
was always that, but there's a lot of appearents that
didn't want to deal with the confrontation or the conflict
of of you know, organizing the administration of sending the
(31:20):
kid around to their house, so that just sending their
kids around to knock on our door to make it
look like some kind of spontaneous playdate situation, like a
pop 'am, yeah, that's the And then I think at
some point my mum and my dad would be like, hey,
what are you appearance up to today, and that'd always
be like, well there, you know, hang on what.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
So there's a lot of that going on as well.
I think just kind of sending your kids around to
our house knowing that it's going to be some parents.
You're just hoping that they get let through the door.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
Yeah, you see why New Zealanders go so much for
the camping situation, because if you go away camping to
a campground, problem is you can't not necessarily great time
to do it October, July, school holidays and hope. But
a camp camping is just essentially like going away and
then free range kids, you know, and you know that
they're going to go from that tent to that tent,
(32:03):
to that tent to that tint to that tent. But
you're going to drown on the estuary. And yeah, you've
got to be here, doesn't matter. All you need to
do is be That's easy. Yeah, being there's easy.
Speaker 9 (32:12):
It doesn't help with work, though, is it. Well, you
can work well nowadays, I suppose, you know, you've got
to kind of be in the office. But look, if
someone can come up with a better idea than a
garage with a lock on it, then, let me.
Speaker 1 (32:24):
Know, certainly a lot cheaper than anything else that I've
heard of so far. Coming up after seven point thirty,
a crime was committed in a plane that I was
on on Friday and evolved someone we all know.
Speaker 9 (32:37):
I can I know who this is.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
Yeah, and I just it's not the first time this
has happened.
Speaker 9 (32:41):
I can already smell it.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
I know it was next level. I wonder, I think
there's a problem that needs to be addressed. I think
this person has a problem. This is the hard to
keep breakfast.
Speaker 6 (32:57):
Entertain the Sports Rocks available everywhere on the radio. Out
Johnny Wells on Radio.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
Seven thirty times for your latest news headlines and search
for answers Over the sinking of the h m z
S h m n Z S Manuanui off the southern
coast of sal More. The one hundred and thirty million
dollar naval ship was running a survey of the area
when it hit a reef, caught fire, and sank. That's
the worst possible thing that could happen, really, when you're
(33:27):
running a survey of the area.
Speaker 11 (33:29):
Yeah, what's what's the through the risk assessment document, what's
the worst possible scenario here?
Speaker 9 (33:35):
Hit a reef, catch fire, sink.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
Do you think they didn't have the depth sounder on
or something.
Speaker 11 (33:40):
Yeah, yeah, because I've got a deep sounder and I've
got a little inflatable dinghy, I know how deep it is.
Speaker 9 (33:47):
It wasn't an euphemism, by the way.
Speaker 4 (33:49):
It's like a little fish finder.
Speaker 1 (33:51):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (33:51):
Did they need that on the big Navy ship?
Speaker 1 (33:53):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (33:53):
Was that the problem.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
It's the first thing you learn when you do a
captain's course is that they say, whatever you do, don't
hit the bob them. Yeah, that was what they taught me.
They were like, just so if you're dang into another boat.
Boats are okay with that. They're designed to hit jetties
and all sorts of things. That's okay the sides of
the boat. What you don't want to do is run
aground because you've got propellers under there. You've got the
(34:16):
bottom of your but it's not designed to run aground,
especially not a reef.
Speaker 9 (34:19):
Sandbars are okay, you can get away with sandbars.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
Ideally, if you're going to run aground, you want to
run around on a sandbar. It seems like this running
ground on a reef and that will wrap the bottom
of your Hell.
Speaker 9 (34:31):
Was it an Autopilot's that? The issue here? Was the
inter island fairry dude on there.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
I don't know, but it just doesn't seem good.
Speaker 9 (34:39):
We've got a bed run on big, large boats.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
This is what I've been saying, Tulane. We suck at
the big boat, at the transport game. That the planes,
the boats, We're not good at any of it.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
We need to give up there. It's not good for
our just national site. It's not good for how we
feel about ourselves. It's national ego on the line here.
The planes don't work, the the Navy runs aground, the
fairy goes into a bank.
Speaker 2 (35:04):
I mean, perception is everything, isn't it?
Speaker 1 (35:05):
Really? Perception is reality?
Speaker 2 (35:07):
Like I don't I don't need people waking up and
Assie today reading about the things that we just keep
falling short on.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
I can't handle that idea. They should have they should
have kept this one quiet. The state of emergency has
been lifted for Dunedin. The city was inundated by rain
from Friday, causing floods, evacuations, road closures and water issues,
and so John Kerlan believes the time has come to
confirm Dalton Papali as the heir to Sam Kaine's number
seven jersey. With the All Black Squad announcement for the
(35:33):
Northern Tour jew at two pm. That is that an
announcement that you do you get Dalton Popoliti down on
one knee and someone turns up with a Richie mccaugh
probably with the sword and put it on either side
of them, or maybe a rugby ball, just blowing them
on the head with it.
Speaker 11 (35:48):
Well, what happens when they when they do bing them
on the head, doing on the top of the head,
on the or maybe Brandom, maybe Brandon with a seven
on the back, so you know, like kind of Yellowstone styles.
Speaker 1 (36:00):
Yeah that's good, yeah something. So there we go. So
that Northern announcement two pm this afternoon.
Speaker 9 (36:09):
It'll be pretty missionary, oig I reckon, Yeah, super missionary.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
They've been trying to jush them up recently. Yeah, they've
been getting kids involved in all sorts of stuff.
Speaker 9 (36:20):
My bloody kids. You're going along to the garage, not
going along? Couldn't be bothered.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
The garage. Your kids are doing a ten thousand piece
puzzle in the garage somewhere in the dark, lugging.
Speaker 6 (36:30):
The breakfast aladyo.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Over the weekend, I was making myself some instant noodles,
the Madgie ones, you know, the ones that come in
the polystyrene pot. What are you doing?
Speaker 9 (36:44):
What are you twelve?
Speaker 1 (36:45):
I did feel. I thought of my past us. You thought,
am I too old to eat instant noodles? You are?
You know he's not. I think you are as well.
Speaker 9 (36:53):
I was hungover, Okay, that's right.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
I was hungover.
Speaker 9 (36:56):
You don't anything you're excuse I had dead element.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
I couldn't be bothered making anything. Something about when you
hang over, you make terrible food choices the next day.
Speaker 11 (37:06):
Well, you look at you're searching. You're in search of something.
You're in search of something to make yourself feel better.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
That's why. Yeah, but if you eat something decent, you
feel so much better. But you can't be bothered making
yourself anything decent, so you just end up making instant
noodles in my situation, or just eating a whole block
of chocolate. But that's another story. So I'm making the
instant noodles. I'm on the chicken. The madgisg Yep, not
enough flavor. You've got you with the chicken. I went
(37:32):
for chicken, not beef. No, there was only chicken. Okay,
so there was only left there. I think they were
bordering on weavil zone.
Speaker 2 (37:40):
No one mentioned the other flavor, okay. Mesh is a
huge fan of the other flavor well, oriental. Yep, you
cannot say that, Jerry, what's.
Speaker 1 (37:47):
Wrong with the oriental?
Speaker 9 (37:48):
It's a flavor.
Speaker 2 (37:49):
You can't see that.
Speaker 4 (37:49):
Mash loves the oriental.
Speaker 1 (37:51):
You cannot sing wrong with the oriental.
Speaker 2 (37:53):
Anyway.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
You're eating a chicken noodle, which is basically beef and
chicken combined, isn't it oriental? So I've got the two
bits of each. So I'm making the noodles, and I'm
not happy with the amount of flavoring. Firstly in the Magic,
much better with the fantastic. So I'm on the maggy,
I'm on the check and it's not enough. I've put
the top on it, yes, and then to cock. I've
(38:17):
left it there for two minutes, which turns out not enough,
and then I've lifted it up. Finally I've given them
a bit of a stir and I'm ready to go.
And I realized I pulled the noodles up with the
fork and then blow on the noodles, and then I
ate it still burning hot, And I thought to myself, obviously,
when you blow on the noodles, it releases steam because
(38:39):
you've got the steam coming off the back of it.
But does it actually cool it down. Well, does it
actually are you saying that bit of breath that you're
doing there with the blowing? Yes, I thought I always
do this, But does it actually do anything? That's a
good question.
Speaker 9 (38:53):
You're a smart man.
Speaker 1 (38:54):
You're a smart man, U.
Speaker 11 (38:55):
Surely you know that, because if you blow on it,
your breath is cooler than the steam coming off it
and the heat transfer. So you're replacing that, yeah, with
your breath, which is about I don't know, it's not hot.
Speaker 1 (39:07):
How many degrees is your breath?
Speaker 9 (39:09):
Oh, kind of fifty sixty degrees, was it?
Speaker 1 (39:12):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (39:13):
Yeah, you wouldn't want a soner in it.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
Actually, hold on the herder you blow the colder it is.
Speaker 9 (39:18):
Yeah, so there you go. So you're replacing that heat transfer.
So of course it makes it you know, of course
it does.
Speaker 1 (39:24):
What isn't that second that it only makes it that
much cooler?
Speaker 9 (39:27):
Not that much cooler. But you know, I found it works.
Speaker 2 (39:31):
I found some hard numbers here, boys, just out of curiosity.
Thirty seven degrees is the temperature of your breath. The
average person's breath about thirty seven when you start blowing on.
Speaker 1 (39:39):
That's the that's the temperature of a person.
Speaker 2 (39:42):
Yes, so your breath is the same temperature apparently, And
like Gulane said, incredible common sense from your Gulane. I've
known you for six years and it's the first time
I've actually seen that, and it does not suit you
in any.
Speaker 1 (39:51):
Way, shape or form. But thirty seven degrees you're a
spot on.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
Yeah, it evens it out, so the cooler air will
hit the hot surface and eventually it is going to
bring that closer to the ear that you've just blown
on it. But I think is what this article that
I'm reading here is saying on something means Health Wounding
dot Com is that you are going to have to
blow it for quite a while if you actually want
some kind of affect.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
Well, that's what I mean, the one single blow. I
think of myself. I always go with the blow and
then I ad but I'm not sure that it actually
does a huge amount.
Speaker 9 (40:19):
Oh, that wouldn't do much at all. You've got to
you got to keep on blowing. Every every hobby deserves
a blowy.
Speaker 2 (40:25):
Excuse me get that printed on a T shirt.
Speaker 6 (40:28):
The hold Act you breakfast with Jeremy Wells on radio Hodarchy,
The hod Act you breakfast on radio.
Speaker 1 (40:38):
It's nice to have you with us this morning on
the hard Ache Breakfast g Lane's and attendant Morning Morning.
Now she's here. Good morning, Jerry, the word is here
as well.
Speaker 4 (40:47):
Morning Jeremy Wells.
Speaker 1 (40:48):
Lots coming up this morning, and and I ae too.
It's going to be joining us in just a few
moments to talk about the NRL Grand Final last night.
Speaker 9 (40:54):
The Night of Knights.
Speaker 11 (40:55):
So, if you're a rugby league fan, the biggest build
up in world sport other then Super Bowl.
Speaker 9 (41:01):
Yeah, it was on and on and on, but potentially
the worst halftime show.
Speaker 4 (41:07):
Really.
Speaker 1 (41:07):
Have you ever been to a Grand Final?
Speaker 9 (41:09):
No, I haven't. I've been to a State of Origin
and that was good. When there was a pregame concert
for that was great.
Speaker 1 (41:17):
Who was it at the time?
Speaker 2 (41:18):
Can you remember?
Speaker 9 (41:18):
I had no idea You didn't.
Speaker 2 (41:19):
I didn't think you'd remember by that time. You've been
what four or five trays at that point.
Speaker 5 (41:24):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (41:24):
Yeah, it's normally the Fanzi or Barnze, isn't it.
Speaker 9 (41:26):
YEA, Well, that's what I was thinking.
Speaker 11 (41:27):
Surely you just rotate Fanzie one year, Barnsey the other
Fansie one year and but they've gone for the kid
l Roy for the halftime and regularly didn't go down.
Speaker 9 (41:36):
Well, oh really didn't go down.
Speaker 11 (41:38):
Well look, Katie Perry did the AFL final and there
was a lot of naysayers, but she kicked it.
Speaker 1 (41:44):
Out of the park.
Speaker 9 (41:45):
People loved it. They said it was worth the money.
Not so much Kidler Roy.
Speaker 1 (41:49):
Yeah, maybe it's just time to go back to the
old marching band. But they used to have here in
New Zealand.
Speaker 6 (41:54):
They breakfast alradioess.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
A horrific crime on a plan on Friday, an involved
person that we all know, yes, who used to actually
where you're sitting there.
Speaker 11 (42:07):
That's why I thought I could smell it already before
you even start the story.
Speaker 1 (42:11):
Oh remember years ago we were down in Duneda for
the Dunedin Craft Beer and Food Festival.
Speaker 9 (42:16):
Yeah, the swin a side yep.
Speaker 1 (42:18):
And well it turns out, yeah, I could really tell them.
You know, when I tell the story, you can really
work out how pork works on this particular person's bow
because we'd eaten all that pork we'd had that weekend
of a lot of lager, a lot of booze, and
the combination of pork and booze definitely does something to
the guts. So we're flying out of Dunedin and we're
(42:43):
in the KORW lounge beforehand for quite some time, we'd
arrived at the airport too early. Is this a couple
of years ago. This is a couple of years ago,
and so I would have assumed it's the morning. So
I'm assuming that you just do your morning ablutions, whatever
you need to do, visit the bathroom and the Cordo
lounge and you know, destroy the toilet there. What are
you going to do? And then get on the flight
(43:05):
and the way you go, because she's a two hour
flight out at an end.
Speaker 9 (43:07):
That's what a normal person would do.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Yeah, I would have thought so. But the former host
of this show, Leslie Heath, he waited until the plane
took off and then as soon as that seat belt
signed went off, he made his way. We were sitting,
I believe in row twelve. He made his way up
to the front of the plane.
Speaker 9 (43:29):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (43:30):
He then did what he needed to do in the bathroom,
and then it took forever he was you know, we've
just about made it over the cock strait. By the
time he did what he needed to do, there was
a queue of people.
Speaker 9 (43:41):
He created a queue curiously long time in the toilet, and.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
Then he exited and opened and with the door opening,
this stench came down the plane.
Speaker 11 (43:53):
But also, you know, when you over and done you've
done something terrible, you really over compensate with confidence.
Speaker 9 (43:58):
You chested out likehing's happened. That's, you know, you're kind
of thing to see here. That was his attitude.
Speaker 11 (44:04):
He came out with this little stupid grin on his face,
puffed his chest out and almost marched back down the
plane in a sign that I've done nothing wrong.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
Yeah, well, with him marching with him was the stench,
and he bought it. He dragged it all the way down.
I'm not joking, this is not a joke. In Row
twelve you could smell what had occurred. It was horrific.
Oh man.
Speaker 11 (44:27):
It was like the wake of a large boat just
came down and eventually hit everyone.
Speaker 1 (44:33):
It was terrible.
Speaker 2 (44:33):
Now, the first question that comes to my mind is
you to have been around Leslie Heath a lot in
your time, so maybe you've become a little more sensitive
to the smell that he is capable of producing. Do
you think other people on the aircraft from Rose twelve
up to the front smelled this as well?
Speaker 1 (44:48):
On PSI holding their noses. It was it was shocking.
I think they were considering turning the plane around. Unfortunately
we've got over halfway by that. It's because it's taken
them so long. But they were thinking about be aboarding
the flight and landing in Wellington. And so I think
they thought there'd been sometimes spillagious.
Speaker 9 (45:06):
Because I had heard of flights. Flights have been diverted
due to a strange smell carrying on the plane. Usually
it's electrical, yeah.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
Or sometimes it was that person who who released their
bows on the down the aisle and they had to
turn that plane around. This may as well, the amount
of fecal particles in the year, you may as well
have he may as well have released something on the ground.
It was seriously, I'm not joking again.
Speaker 9 (45:27):
Did it happen again?
Speaker 1 (45:29):
Well, this is the thing. I mean, we've we've been
talking for too long now explaining the old story.
Speaker 17 (45:34):
But let me come back after this, after this, because
because could it be more booze, I reckon what happened.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
What happened this time was even worse.
Speaker 6 (45:47):
They breakfast with Jeremy Wells.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
Already g Lane's in this morning, Mashi's here as well
Ruds here. So we're just talking about Matt and his
past crimes on planes. Well documented, yes, and obviously even
better documented than what I imagine because on a flight
(46:10):
out of the other day, out of christ Church on Friday,
we've been down there in a hot spring sparpole than
on Friday morning, Thursday morning, Thursday morning morning, and so
we're flying out, must have been actually Thursday when we're
coming out, Thursday lunchtime, and he had an opportunity again.
We're in the corry lunch for another hour before the flight,
another opportunity for Matt to do what he needed to do.
(46:32):
It's the morning again. We've got on that flight, we've
taken off, and I've seen him. I was sitting in
a slightly different part of the plane this time. I
was sitting in row three with the with the HOYPELOI
with the fancy.
Speaker 9 (46:42):
People, with the politicians.
Speaker 1 (46:43):
Yeah, well that we all know. It's a meritocracy. An
New Zealand flight. Most important people are at the front. Actually, no,
first the first row by the door of the not
that important people, but then the one back more important
than then less important. As you go towards the back
of the plane I was rode twenty six. If you're wondering,
by the way, exactly that's where you should be. So
(47:04):
I'm sitting there road three and then Matt comes past me,
and I thought, oh, this will be interesting. This is
the seat belt sign again. Just goes back. Next thing,
you know, he's the first one up, and there he's gone.
He's gone, and he's spent about fifteen minutes in there again,
and I was keeping an eye on this one. I thought,
not again. Surely you're not going to do this again.
Everybody knows what you've done in the past. Then two
(47:26):
people queue up behind him, so people are ready to go,
and he opens it up. Fifteen minutes later, immediately the
wash comes back. I'm in row three, so it's not
as bad, I think, as the last time where it
was dragged all the way back to row twelve. So
walks past this guy and the guy says to him,
oh god, it's not another one of your crimes.
Speaker 8 (47:45):
Like you.
Speaker 1 (47:48):
He knew about the past crime. I mean, what kind
of person are you that you're doing this? Let you
do it once? Okay, that's fine. It's well documentary and
how bad that was for all of those people that
are sitting on those rows. But who does it again?
What is it some kind of sick power thing that
(48:09):
he's got he wants to do that to people?
Speaker 9 (48:12):
Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 11 (48:13):
I think deep down that's what it is. It's like
I am going to leave my mark on this plane.
I am the most dominant being on this plane, and
the best way of doing that is to leave your leavings.
Speaker 2 (48:22):
I mean, Glane, some of the things you consume in
your diet results in some serious bowel or related crimes
in defensive Medie here? Do you think that there is
a chance that there could it could just be a coincidence.
Do you know as a man that when you've got
a crook gut, you can you can go, you can
still go on, you can still have a little bit
of control.
Speaker 1 (48:41):
Over your bell.
Speaker 2 (48:41):
Do you think this is just a mistake for Meddie
and he's been unlucky twice now, No.
Speaker 9 (48:45):
Of course you can. Of course you can control it.
Speaker 11 (48:46):
And I've heard a rumor he's obviously moved to Boomerville
up at z B and a former colleague up at
z B by.
Speaker 9 (48:54):
The name of Layton Smith.
Speaker 11 (48:55):
Yes, Now, I don't know if few people are familiar
with Layton Smith tuning into his podcast if you want
some right lunacy anyway, he what he would do, what
he would do now, Zidby, they are in the ivory
tower above all of us. HOYPOLOI now Layton Smith at
ten point thirty every morning would walk down the stairs
and a blute in our toilets.
Speaker 9 (49:16):
That's what he'd do.
Speaker 11 (49:17):
It was like a way of him saying I'm more
powerful than you, I'm more important than you, that I
will not even a blue in my own area.
Speaker 9 (49:25):
I will a blute in your area. Now I've heard
a rumor that Matt is looking.
Speaker 11 (49:28):
To follow the footsteps of the late great Layton Smith
and only a blue on our floor.
Speaker 1 (49:34):
If he comes down here in the blots in the floor,
I'll be ready to throw things at him. There's no
way he's not leaving his leavings down here.
Speaker 9 (49:41):
I've got a plan. Oh good, Yeah, you can turn
the lights out and lock the door.
Speaker 1 (49:45):
Oh really, escape rope you breakfast.
Speaker 6 (49:48):
With Jeremy Wells al Radio.
Speaker 1 (49:51):
So it could have seized debut. A League season kicks
off against the Brisbane raw at Go Media Stadium on Saturday,
October nineteen it's currently Monday, October seven, So a couple of.
Speaker 9 (50:05):
Weeks yeah, couple of weeks away. That's going to be
a biggie. That is going to be history.
Speaker 8 (50:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (50:08):
Down there at Go Go Media looking for a sold
out Go Media.
Speaker 1 (50:12):
You get your tickets now, because I see tickets are
selling out fast. Actually, and so Radio Haddick is teaming
up with Auckland FC and we're giving you the chance
to win five thousand dollars with the Radio Hurdicke double team.
Here's how the double team works.
Speaker 9 (50:26):
And I had double teams work.
Speaker 1 (50:27):
This is slightly different sort of Well I've.
Speaker 9 (50:30):
Ever been paid five grand for a double team. I'll
give you that.
Speaker 1 (50:32):
Now. You normally paid money for exact the normally endeabit five.
So it's you and it's you and a mate end
goal with the Auckland f C striker. They attempt to
get the bill passed you your goalie. Yep, you're you
and a mate. Two goalies, yeah, two goalies. And every
time that you defend a goal, yes, you get one
(50:56):
thousand dollars and there's five ten they get five cacks
at you. So you can win five thousand dollars.
Speaker 9 (51:01):
Okay, So you need a massive mate.
Speaker 1 (51:03):
Well that's in.
Speaker 11 (51:05):
You need a notorious pantsman Joel Harrison kind of six
foot five job.
Speaker 1 (51:09):
Yeah. And the other question is how do you defend it,
because we're talking a little bit about it you the
other day. Obviously you want to cover as much of
the goal as you can, but if you're both on
exactly the same line and you dive the same way,
you're risking your head clash. Yeah, okay, I suppose it's
worth a thousand dollars.
Speaker 9 (51:27):
Oh yeah, I was thinking of a distraction policy as well.
Just do it full nude.
Speaker 1 (51:34):
I'm just looking here at the teas and c's. It
doesn't say anything about not being able to do it
for nude.
Speaker 11 (51:38):
So if you're a striker for the Auckland Lift C
you'd be like, who are these barik shows?
Speaker 9 (51:42):
Especially if one of you is.
Speaker 1 (51:44):
What you got to inverted downstairs.
Speaker 11 (51:47):
Yea, or just a bit excited to be there, you'd
be like, I'm I'm not shooting the ball of these
massive six pists.
Speaker 1 (51:54):
You can inter now at Hardeche Dot Coton and Z
and we'll be calling the winner this Friday, coming up
after the eight thirty news headlines. Manic Stewart joins us
to talk about the NRL Grand Final last night.
Speaker 6 (52:14):
The Hodarchy Breakfast with Jeremy Wells available everywhere on the
iHeartRadio at all Radio Darchy.
Speaker 1 (52:21):
It's a thirty on the Hudicke Breakfast. Time for the
latest news headlines. There are still many questions over the
h m n z S Manawanui ship which sank off
some More's coast after catching fire. The one hundred million
dollars navy vessel had a reef while surveying the area.
Real Defense Minister Judith Colins says, we have some insurance cover,
but the vessel's twenty years old.
Speaker 9 (52:42):
Only got third party. I've only got third party.
Speaker 1 (52:45):
This is the problem.
Speaker 11 (52:46):
They were relying on another ship from another country hitting
it and then they could have claimed on the plane
it's dead.
Speaker 9 (52:52):
Yes, it's dead, it's driver era.
Speaker 1 (52:54):
What's the what's the excesig? A bit of a navy
toad shipperd What do we have to pay for this
one hundred and thirty million dollars? What it's worth?
Speaker 9 (53:00):
Just maybe a fleet of ray glasses?
Speaker 1 (53:03):
This is your solution. I like a solution.
Speaker 11 (53:06):
Get all the ray glasses, paint them gray fill some
shirtless wounders on the back, drink and.
Speaker 1 (53:10):
Pals, and we'll get them to survey the reefs.
Speaker 9 (53:14):
That's just patrolling the fishing areas, some sort of Korean
fishing boat. They'll be like, what the hell is this.
Speaker 1 (53:19):
It's a pretty a pretty rubbish survey that they conducted
off some More's coast. You've got to say it's a
reef down.
Speaker 9 (53:25):
Oh well they found it. I certainly found it.
Speaker 1 (53:32):
It's not good. Google hairs written to blow up New
Zealand's news agreements, like literally Search Engine says it will
remove any ability to find New Zealand news on Google.
Of the Fair Digital News Bargaining Bill passes, I have
to switch to bing.
Speaker 2 (53:48):
Can someone explain to me what on earth that means?
Speaker 8 (53:53):
No?
Speaker 12 (53:53):
What is it?
Speaker 1 (53:55):
What is that the digital digital news bargaining about. I
think it's got something to do with it. Fact that
news organizations in New Zealand costs obviously to gather news.
So you spend all that money and then Google just
take it and then they'll put their ads on it.
And so if you Google anything then they'll they've put
an ad on it. And basically they're using their news
(54:17):
our news to make money off.
Speaker 11 (54:18):
Here's my suggestion if you if you want some news,
just download the Herald app or the like and just
use the app instead of going through Google.
Speaker 1 (54:26):
Yep, that's lazy. That's a good option. And so John
Cowan says he would leave t J. Pettinada out of
the All Blacks Northern Tour squad. Coach Scott Robertson's due
to name a thirty six strong group for the trip
to Japan and Europe at two pm. Kuhan believes cam
Royguard Courtztma and Noah Hoton need more caps.
Speaker 9 (54:44):
I agree with that.
Speaker 1 (54:46):
Why have they not got any caps? Can you just
buy them some caps?
Speaker 9 (54:50):
Can't buy an all black cap. You can't buy all
black cap anyway. Did someone ask John Cowan did he
just put a press release out?
Speaker 1 (54:56):
He did?
Speaker 6 (54:57):
Okay, you breakfast with Jeremy Wells Alradiocky.
Speaker 1 (55:03):
So the Penrith Panthers won a fourth straight premiership last
night fourteen to six.
Speaker 9 (55:08):
It's all, she wrote.
Speaker 10 (55:09):
The Penrith Panthers officially four time premiership winners and your
NRL Grand Champions for twenty twenty four, austing Craig Bellamy's
Melbourne Storm site fourteen points to six.
Speaker 1 (55:24):
Yeah, and Ivan Cleariys so I became the first team
in six decades to win four straight Premierships, running in
three tries to one, and my nice Stewart joins us
on the show Morty Ma and I a.
Speaker 4 (55:37):
Morning you win.
Speaker 9 (55:38):
Has it all going good?
Speaker 1 (55:39):
She was tired at halftime It was looking like a classic.
Speaker 8 (55:43):
Yeah, it was a real armory.
Speaker 18 (55:44):
So I think we all knew that it was going
to be a real tight, tenth turgid affair going into it.
But then Leam Martin scored that try right on halftime
and it sort of blew the whole thing open. Now
the storm were dudded by the bunker.
Speaker 1 (55:58):
I think.
Speaker 18 (56:00):
I know there's more replays going around of that try
no try this morning, but watching it in real time,
that was a try. It got us good to see
another team that's not the Warriors.
Speaker 9 (56:11):
I was thinking it as well, Mini, as as the
exact same thing.
Speaker 11 (56:13):
I was like, now the people of Melbourne will be
on our side when we come to mating about the bunker.
But yeah, you could have actually, thanks very much, man,
I you could have actually told me it was going
to be a torrid affair because the amount of Maltese.
I had spread on four or five try scorers, and
I think I had about seven malties on the go
all paying at least sixty dollars each, and then none
(56:35):
of them came off. But a little bit of controversy though,
better bitey bye, he going on, Yeah.
Speaker 18 (56:41):
This one's always an A few won.
Speaker 8 (56:43):
So there's a player on the ground who's made the tackle.
Speaker 18 (56:46):
He's got his arm in the mouth of camp munster
or is it calling him this morning cam muncher? And
it's always one of those like was he pushing into
the mouth of the guy or did the guy bite down.
I think when he pulled away he could sort of see.
Chris likened it to when you're binding into a piece
of KC and you pull it away.
Speaker 8 (57:06):
There's a little bit of tension there and you can
tell that it was a bite.
Speaker 18 (57:10):
I just want to check the Warriors' schedule for the
start of next year because if he gets suspended, hopefully
we face the Melbourne Storm in the first couple of weeks.
Speaker 1 (57:17):
Not in there, oh yeah, well, I'm actually looking at
the NRL Grand Final winner for twenty twenty five. Here
the odds already the storm of three seventy five Penrith
Panthers at four point fifty Oh really and twelve equal
the favorites the Warriors at forty one bus Yeah.
Speaker 18 (57:37):
I spose the Panthers through loads of you drum lei leaves.
Speaker 8 (57:40):
They don't want to be wingers going And.
Speaker 18 (57:42):
James Fisher Harris has come into the wires off the
back of a four piece.
Speaker 8 (57:47):
Could he do it again?
Speaker 18 (57:48):
Could he bring the knowledge of how to win four
straight championships with them to the one New Zealand Warriors?
Speaker 1 (57:53):
Yeah? Would he do that? Or just realize that he's
already won four and this is like a nice retirement option.
Speaker 9 (57:59):
He's just in the departure lounge.
Speaker 8 (58:01):
Yeah, you think it's it's the rhyme and healthcare of
the NRL.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
Well what would you do? Min I chuck it.
Speaker 8 (58:07):
Into the neutral?
Speaker 9 (58:11):
You already got it a neutral the nice year.
Speaker 8 (58:13):
So yeah, that's a good point.
Speaker 18 (58:15):
I have got a neutral and I'll never won anything.
Speaker 1 (58:18):
Thanks for your time this morning. The nice set appreciate that.
Here we go, so yeah, I'm looking down here. Moronco
is paying eight bucks eight fifty rabbinos fifteen bucks, forty
one bucks. Some good eating there on the Warriors, Some
good eating.
Speaker 9 (58:33):
I don't think I'm going to eat that. I want
to eat that.
Speaker 11 (58:36):
But the Melbourne Storm they'll come back with a fairly
similar team next year. So whereas the Panthers, as men
I said, they're losing a lot of players. So I
think your good money is on Melbourne.
Speaker 1 (58:46):
Coming up after the break your guide to calling Matt Heath,
Yes and his first news Talks B show, which is
airing today at twelve o'clock on his Talks a bit.
Speaker 9 (58:55):
That's right, they had a derail a talkback show one
on one.
Speaker 1 (58:58):
I'm looking forward to this breakfast. That's a power.
Speaker 6 (59:13):
The Day breakfast all Radio.
Speaker 1 (59:16):
Ge Lane in this morning. Nice to have you on
the show. G Lane.
Speaker 9 (59:19):
Great to be here.
Speaker 11 (59:20):
What a great Monday morning it's been. It's that great
Monday morning. But hey, someone's starting their new job today.
If you didn't know, Matthew, Peter, Paul, Henry Heath is
starting up stairs at ZB at midday.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
I believe that it must be mid day to four,
mid day.
Speaker 11 (59:37):
To four leading into fair and path duplas Allen in
the ZB Drive and listen.
Speaker 9 (59:43):
I've had a number of.
Speaker 11 (59:45):
Calls into into the News Talk ZB into other talk
stations over the years. Obviously none of them serious, mainly
just pranking mainly in my twenties during university in the light.
But there is a way you can, you know, slightly
de railer show. And I don't want to derail Matt's
first ever show. Maybe do it later on in the
week when he's got his feet under the under the desk.
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
No, I think the first show is the perfect show.
I think the first show is exactly the one. Look
he's left us and he's left us on the look.
Speaker 9 (01:00:15):
Okay, there you go.
Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
Okay, this is what you do.
Speaker 11 (01:00:16):
So and on on kind of those talk backstations have
they talk for a bit, they have a few interviews
and they open the lines for about twenty minutes usually
between kind of you know, the last twenty minutes of
the hour. You'll open it up before they go into
the news, and they open the lines and look if
the topic isn't you know, isn't heading a nerve?
Speaker 9 (01:00:36):
There are very few callers.
Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
Well, I can tell you most topics struggle to get
callers now as it's not as easy as it used
to be. Now.
Speaker 9 (01:00:43):
This is where you can help. This is where the
Hodaki faithfool can help. Okay, where you can you know,
tune in and whatever. No out of the topic.
Speaker 11 (01:00:51):
You can get involved. Okay, And there is a technique
called the burly technique. Okay, this is an old fashioned
kind of talk radio session. So what the burie, What
the burly technique is is you want to ring up
and really get involved in the topic. Pretend like you
know what you're doing, preteen, like you care, like you're
shaking that burly bag.
Speaker 9 (01:01:11):
The fish guts going everywhere, the first are coming.
Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
This is good. Yeah, that's good.
Speaker 11 (01:01:15):
You love talking about this, and then you hit them now.
One of the greatest proponents of that's was Mary Deka.
He used to he used to fall for the burly
technique a lot when he used to work at Radio Sport.
Now here's an example of the burly technique that I'll
give you.
Speaker 9 (01:01:29):
Here you goes.
Speaker 15 (01:01:29):
I think I was watching the game last night. Had
more position during the second half they may have too,
And the first half I reckon they played real well
all blacks.
Speaker 9 (01:01:41):
But keep shaking sick enough.
Speaker 15 (01:01:42):
They are lacked because they had a few sons you
know and stuff when they made the changes.
Speaker 7 (01:01:48):
Given you quite right, just tarting to lose z edge
but there was one other point about the amount of
position in Australia head. On one occasion they had twelve
phases in a row and go anywhere.
Speaker 9 (01:02:00):
I think if you've got no feeding it's then.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
You're right.
Speaker 15 (01:02:06):
You're definitely right on that. And I'm just saying you're
a bug.
Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
I'm going to try that.
Speaker 11 (01:02:13):
Listen to your voice mate, You're a bald sea next Tuesday,
and you just heading with the spear gun. So you're mashing,
you're mashing, you're mashing the burly and then the spear
gun at the end there. Then again there's another technique,
which is the repetition technique. Now you'll be familiar with
the repetition technique. This is just going straight for straight annoyance.
(01:02:34):
This one here, you probably want to give it a
couple of weeks on the show before you get her
of that. But this is this one here is a
great example of how many tenkotos can you get into
one call.
Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
We're going to go straight to the page and take
a call from Oorkland and say good evening to John.
Speaker 8 (01:02:49):
Can I go too?
Speaker 5 (01:02:56):
I go to go to.
Speaker 9 (01:03:19):
A lot of a lot of believe eighteen, Yeah, there
you go. So that's the repetition. That's that's almost that's
a hammer blow. That the repetition one. But I would
suggest the burly technique into the spear gun.
Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
Yeah, I think that. I remember that Coto challenge and
we we actually we challenged every single talkback station across
New Zealand, including that was Southland TV, who used to
run television talk back.
Speaker 9 (01:03:46):
I could recognize.
Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
And I think there might be some audio of me
calling out Michael Laws actually and trying the Coto challenge.
Speaker 8 (01:03:54):
Good morning to you, Michael, to go to dinn go
too too, Okay, see you later, stupid man.
Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Ah, here we go later, stupid man.
Speaker 9 (01:04:17):
I want to mid day to day.
Speaker 4 (01:04:18):
I want to hear me, of course, I want a
stupid man today.
Speaker 1 (01:04:20):
I want to hear it. It's out there, the confidence
to hang up on someone our.
Speaker 9 (01:04:25):
Eight hundred eighty ten eighty Yeah, we all.
Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
Know the number, that's for sure. Hey, thanks for listening
to The Hidache Breakfast. This morning podcast is going to
be able to eleven am this morning. Thanks Julie. Thanks,
we'll see you again tomorrow morning.
Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
Yeah right nearly The Holicky Breakfast thanks to Bunning's trade
load up on landscaping with Bunning's trade