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September 6, 2024 23 mins

Our favourite moments from the show this week - why are divorces among people over 50 becoming more common and we hear the drama funerals have caused in your families!

0:00 Family Funeral Drama
7:10 Dame Lisa Carington Chats About Her New Book
13:45 Why Are Divorces Over 50 Increasing
20:15 Sam’s Weak News

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to Tony Jason Sam's Best show Moments podcast, the
very Best of Coasts Feel Good Breakfast this week.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Third September Today, that's sad all the time. Exactly fifteen
years ago today, third September two thousand and nine. It
was the day that we laid Michael Jackson to rest.
His funeral was months after he died in June. You
know the reason why it took so.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Long, swubbling over family, I'm guessing.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's exactly it. Janet Jackson wouldn't allow it to go
ahead until his estate repaid her forty thousand dollars that
she had to pay to secure a spot for him
at the Forest Lawn Cemetery. So she ponied up the
cash and she's like, hold on, I want my money back, face.
Can you release it from the estate. And it took ages,
and that's why the funeral took so long.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
Forty thousand dollars with Michael Jackson's estate seems like an
awfully small amount of money. I know, when you didn't
think about what those sort of sums that are dealing with.

Speaker 5 (00:48):
I had to show you a lot around funerals. Billion
dollar catalog.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
Isn't it to tay you what dramas around death and
funerals is absolutely a thing, And if you've eva had
someone die close to you you'll know exactly what I mean.
People act strangely and selfishly, But listen to this. This
is an obit that was put in the paper by
a daughter whose mother had died. Right you would assume
a very sad time. Well, this is what the obit says.

(01:15):
Florence Flow Harrelson, sixty five, formerly of Chelsea, died on
February the twenty second, twenty twenty four, without family by
her side, due to burnt bridges and a wake of
destruction left in her path. Florence did not want an
obituary or anyone, including family, to know she died. That's
because even in death, she wanted those she terrorized to
still be living in fear and looking over their shoulders.

(01:37):
So this isn't so much as an obit, but more
of a public service announcement.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Her daughter wrote there, yes.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
Yes she did what Apparently she hadn't spoken to her
mother in ten years, and this she also went on
to say, and Facebook punctuated it with a line saying,
the Wizard of oz Ding Dong Witch is dead, so
we it kept getting more scathing, so obviously didn't have
a happy arrangement.

Speaker 5 (02:00):
No, it's an honest review, isn't it.

Speaker 6 (02:03):
I mean, I guess the problem was with speaking all
of the dead is that they have no rebuttal you know,
so you know, and that's probably the case with this
is probably well, there might be two sides to the story.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 5 (02:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
My take on it is it's it's poor taste because
even if you felt that way towards your mother, like
you said, Sammy and death, it's like they have nothing.
They can't say anything.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
Back, and I know who gains from there. I think,
you know, just stay classy. I mean, she may have
wronged you whatever. You know that that chapter is now open.

Speaker 6 (02:33):
Yeah, but can I read you a famous quote from
Anne Lammett, who famously said, if people want you to
write warmly about them, they should have behaved better in life.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
Yeah, you don't have to write warmly about them, though,
don't do you?

Speaker 3 (02:45):
You could not write at all.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
I just put the begin down.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
No, anyway, no one needs to see.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
It has got us talking about family dramas around death
and funerals and how people come out of the wood
work and behave in usual ways. And we want to
know your stories. What went down in your family. We've
heard it from Jannet Jackson.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
We've heard it about flow.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
What about you? Eight hundred double o four coasts our
phone level. You can figure no names if you don't
want you, that's fine. Fliets sext to two six nine nine.
It won't be easy to drift away to sleep. Tonight's
on rugged weather on the way across the country. According
to weather man Sam thunderbolts and lightning, very very frightening
and a Panelty's dream today be Keith.

Speaker 6 (03:22):
Yeah, Hey, don't you love a radio audience because you
ask a question and you kind of wonder what's.

Speaker 5 (03:27):
Going to come back? And you haven't disappointed this morning.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
No, this is good.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
So this is in response to dramas that have happened
around the funeral or in death, because we just read
out a scathing obituary that a daughter wrote about her mother,
and it included things like.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
Teck Dong the witch is dead, King Gong.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
Witch is dead.

Speaker 4 (03:43):
She's she's died without a family because of the wake
of destruction she left in her path, and that because
even in death she wanted those she terrorized to still
be living in fear looking over their shoulders. And it
turns out this isn't so far fetched. It's happening closer
to home.

Speaker 2 (03:57):
A lot of texts. On two sixth nine nine, when
my mom passed away, our stepfather sold everything of theirs
and gave it all the way, even precious family things.
He then told us don't expect anythin because I'll be
spending it all. This was after our mum saying he
would look after us.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
Oh, that's actually so sad, And that is so that
is why we bang on so often about making sure
you've got your will sewing up, so it's all specified,
because that can happen.

Speaker 5 (04:20):
What about this morning?

Speaker 6 (04:21):
My great aunt lived in Portugal and when she died,
she left her two million pounds estate to her cats
and the equivalent of their specia of the.

Speaker 4 (04:32):
How close for you to be your great arms?

Speaker 3 (04:35):
Wow, that's that's interesting, isn't that Okay?

Speaker 2 (04:40):
What what does the cat do with it?

Speaker 7 (04:42):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (04:42):
I don't think the cat going I'm going to put
it somewhere. I don't think the ESPA takes care of it.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
Are you ready? This is quite possibly the worst thing
I've read my sister wanted and took a necklace from
my mother when she was wearing it in the casket.

Speaker 3 (04:57):
She took she reached into the casket and took it
off her bare neck.

Speaker 4 (05:00):
Yes, wow, that is that is some greedy stuff right there,
sas it's fine.

Speaker 8 (05:05):
Well no not.

Speaker 6 (05:06):
All I'm saying is that could could that have been
her one momentor you know, like, is it more important
than it goes it's buried and cremated, or is it
better that someone holds on to that and has that
memory with them.

Speaker 5 (05:17):
I don't know. I think there's two sides to that.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
I might be wrong. Well, you might have a point,
you know, maybe it's something that gets passed down through
the family, I suppose afterwards. But if the sister wanted it, I.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Want that, And yeah, it should be a conversation.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
Yeah, maybe mum gave it to you. And if Mum
didn't give it to you, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
Around this one here while we're on and it all
seems to be relationships with women at the moment, it's
mother's mother in law's mother daughters. I'm fifty six and
I haven't spoken to my mother since I was thirty two.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
She won't tell me who my father is.

Speaker 9 (05:48):
Oh wow, what.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
The conversation you at least she genuinely doesn't know.

Speaker 4 (05:56):
Well, wouldn't you say that if you didn't genuinely know,
or if you know and it's something that you really
don't want to get out, it might be.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
The worst game we can play right now? You won't
say that's fun? What about those I didn't mean to
that came out? You don't know where the teeth came from.
But what about those movies you see like that the
mysterious stranger shows up at the car at the funeral
and sending of the casket holding a black umbrella dressed
in black, you know those ones, and it stands.

Speaker 5 (06:26):
Behind the funeral watching on.

Speaker 9 (06:28):
Yeah, slightly behind them.

Speaker 6 (06:31):
Showed it on a foggy day and there's a horn
blowing in the distance given the black character drive out?

Speaker 5 (06:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (06:36):
What about?

Speaker 4 (06:37):
What about when you know Jim dies and suddenly Jennifer
and Lisa and Molly will tune up and no one
knows who they are and the wife's going, who the
hell are you three?

Speaker 2 (06:46):
And this is what is stress? And second life? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (06:50):
I can't defend it from the grave.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
Can you live a life? Now you're not going to
agree when people start talking smack about you afterwards.

Speaker 5 (06:57):
That's probably the best thing.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
Thanks for listening to the Best Show Moments podcast. This
week's very Best from Costs, Tony Street, Jace Reeves and
Sam Wallas.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
Dame Lisa Marie Carrington born in Totonger and raised in
a Hoppie, She's New Zealand's most decorated Olympian of all time.
She's so good she once won three consecutive.

Speaker 10 (07:21):
Gold medals in a row, because that's what consecutive means.
She did that of a three separate Olympic competitions, as
well as owning the World Championship title several times since
twenty eleven. Growing up, she played netball and wanted to
be a silver firm, but soon turned her attention away

(07:42):
for the netball court to the relief of women on
courts all over the country and she became the goat
in a boat, the greatest in the world. Dame Lisa
has been so dominant on the water she's won the
Hellberg Award for Sportswoman of the Year a phenomenal six times,
as the Supreme Award three times.

Speaker 2 (08:04):
Lisa is so good. She has streets named after her,
and one of the first things Charles that when he
became king, was demanded dame hood for her. Rumor has
it that Elvis Presley was once a psychic and asked
his new wife to change her name because he knew
that one day the names Lisa and Marie would be
known all over the world. Dame Lisa Marie Carrington. Can

(08:28):
I have said? Do you know how nerve wrecking that is?
Hearing there thinking herself the woman herself could fact check
me right now.

Speaker 4 (08:35):
It just becomes your hype intro if you even need that,
you know before and Lisa, where he hit out, We
ort to.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Chant you in a couple of minutes about this incredible
new book, Lisa Carrington Chases a Champion, starring yourself, of course,
and your wonderful dog Colin.

Speaker 11 (08:47):
Yeah, yeah, he's he features what we said, He features.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Quite prominently through there.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
He's a gorgeously thing too. But I love, I love
the messaging in this book. I'm already looking about how
you dealt with failure and I think this is going
to be a book everyone leads in this country for
the kids.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
Well, you and a friend could wing your way to
New York spreading. It's a chance to be in this
draw the four half our states to keep us thing
right now though Dane Lisa Carrington is with us. Who
You've been to New York?

Speaker 5 (09:15):
I have?

Speaker 9 (09:16):
I loved it amazing?

Speaker 12 (09:17):
A yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
What was the.

Speaker 4 (09:18):
Best thing about New York? Because I've never been, so
I'm non mute to this.

Speaker 11 (09:23):
I think we went to the Brooklyn Bridge and that
was really amazing. And just the restaurants, the food is delicious.
Anything any place you walk into amazing.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
I've just got that vibe.

Speaker 2 (09:33):
Yeah, when you fly in and you drive over that
bridge and you look into Manhattan, it's everything you see
in the movies and on Six in the City and everything. A.

Speaker 4 (09:39):
Yeah, it's one of Jace's favorite Six in the City as.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
Anyway, it's not about me, it's about this book based
on an eight year old Lisa. So apparently this idea
has been sort of rattling around since Lockdown after Tokyo?

Speaker 5 (09:55):
Is that right?

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 11 (09:58):
I spoke to the public who here, and just after
Tokyo and m i Q, they approached me just.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
Like, do you want to do a book?

Speaker 11 (10:07):
And at that stage it was any kind of book,
but for me, a kid's book has always been on
my mind, and so we decided it would be this
Lisa Carrington Chase as a champion.

Speaker 5 (10:18):
What was important for you? What message did you want
to pass on to the kids?

Speaker 11 (10:22):
I think there's that's a hard thing. There's so many messages,
so you know, I had to sit down, really work
out and kind of tease through some really simple messages.
And so this book, I guess it talks about, you
know myself for eight year old Lisa, going through a
journey of under figuring out how to achieve your dreams

(10:45):
or a goal, and then there's a little challenge that happens.
So it's really a great way for I don't know,
Lisa had to work out how to come back to that.

Speaker 6 (10:54):
Well, what I've gotten down here is you've got in
the book there's vision boards, there's training for results, and
I really like those aspects for my kids.

Speaker 11 (11:03):
Yeah, I mean those are the things that's sticking with
something when it doesn't go right. And I think in
there there's lots of little techniques. I think every time
you'll read it you'll find new things and double meanings
or what's behind the words and that type of thing.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
And the pactures are also. The illustrations have beautiful as well.

Speaker 4 (11:20):
They really speak to me, the illustrations because you see
little Colin in every book, but the messaging I think too.
And it's also a long book because last night I
was reading to my little boy and he goes, that
wasn't very long.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
Yeah, I like that.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
It's actually got a bit of duration in it. But
can I just take you to this one part and
you're competing in Surf Life Saving here, which I love
that it's a nod to your background and surf club,
and you fall out and then you say, my UM's
not really sore. Mum and Dad don't say anything. They
just listen. Since I tipped, I'm scared to paddle again.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
What if I fail?

Speaker 4 (11:53):
And I feel like that's such a good lesson because
I do think with a lot of kids, and I
coach a lot of kids sport these days, you know
they're not good at a sport and they go, oh,
it's not for me. I'm going to try something else, because.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
Even grown ups like that too long.

Speaker 4 (12:04):
Yeah, So, and all of these things genuinely happen to you, right.

Speaker 11 (12:09):
Yeah, I mean I think that's it. It's sticking with something.
And it's also in there like it's what my mum
says there, you know, like it's like she pulls me
in close and says something like your best is good enough.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
You're a better peddler than you were a few years ago.
Sometimes you just need to be kind to yourself and
say my best is good enough.

Speaker 8 (12:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (12:28):
So I think he's like, that's kind of being honest,
knowing that you know that your parents are there to listen,
to accept, and you know, so you see, it's just
sticking at it and then the turn over and back
into it.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
She's pumping weights again.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
So many great messages in this is called Lisa Carrington
Chases a Champion. It's twenty seven dollars at paper plus,
by the way, and so again, is there anything you
can't do? Congratulations on everything well book.

Speaker 6 (12:56):
And I just said this struggling to keep up with demand,
which I also added never happened with Dougie the Buggy.

Speaker 2 (13:01):
So really you wonder, don't.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
Don't go with the bargain bim books. Okay, you're you're good.
This is a new book. Also, just want to say
though it's also been written in tedal so it's a
really nice nod to your heritage too.

Speaker 11 (13:19):
Absolutely, and I want to make sure that every child
or somebody key in New Zealand gets to read this book.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
It's such a good read. Thank you so very much.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Yeah, more from Tony Street try we need to talk
Tony's Health and Lifestyle podcast. Now back to Tony Jason
Sam's Best Show Moments podcast was.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
As much a slow hand but a fast exit. Yesterday,
John Travolta flew his private jet out of Queenstown yesterday.

Speaker 5 (13:45):
Apparently he's been here since Friday.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
I saw that.

Speaker 5 (13:47):
Did you say that yet? The guy owns that's just
one of the main.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
How gangster is it to own it and then also
be the pilot?

Speaker 6 (13:53):
Yeah, but do you want to be the pilot and
have to then do an international flight?

Speaker 5 (13:56):
It's kind of like working.

Speaker 3 (13:57):
Well, it's abby, it's what he loves.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
How this house is basically a joint hangar, and he's
got like a seven four to seven parked up there
at seven three seven. It's private jets. He's loving it.

Speaker 5 (14:05):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Some people are falling out of love not just with
their jets but with each other.

Speaker 13 (14:13):
Hugging barns flowers, So.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
They're calling out the silver separations, the great divorce is
on the rise in New Zealand, a massive increase in
couples over fifty.

Speaker 5 (14:23):
Pulling the pin. Why do you reckon this is?

Speaker 3 (14:25):
I think these are a possible number of reasons. I
take myself to that. We need to talk podcast and
we've talked a.

Speaker 4 (14:31):
Bit about menopausal symptoms bringing about the divorce. You know,
women go through that change and if it affects relationships
in a big way, lack of understanding on the male
part and irrational behavior until you get it sorted from
on the woman's part, so that could be effected.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
Do you know that the stats on this is amazing
as well? In ninety percent of the time it's the
woman up and leaves and the guy's completely blindsided.

Speaker 4 (14:54):
And this is happening at around the age of fifty.
So I go, okay, what am I doing in ten years?
And ten years? My eldest is in her twenties, my
youngest is nearly finished school. So the children are leaving,
and I wonder if that's got something to do about it.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
You looking at each other like, what are we about now?

Speaker 6 (15:11):
When they interviewed some of the women, they were saying
they felt unheard and that the males were just terrible
communicators and just didn't they were boring, but effectively they
didn't feel maybe they're having a good time.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
Once the kids leave on the old men syndrome, that's it.
Once the kids leave home, you're thinking, well, now it's
just me and this person. Do we have anything in
common anymore? Do you even talk to each other anymore?
To want to hang out with this person for the rest.

Speaker 4 (15:31):
Of my life kind of makes you think when you're okay,
so this is happening at fifty right, or in your fifties. Yeah,
so it kind of makes you think, well, when you're
hitting your sort of late forties, maybe you should like
go to a marriage counselor and just sort it out
before you hit that pack.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
Yeah, hey, I remember it on my list.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
Actually, I remember once you got a few years.

Speaker 7 (15:46):
Left in the article.

Speaker 6 (15:47):
In the article that I read, it was basically the
men had stopped living, stopped having fun.

Speaker 5 (15:51):
They were happy with bears.

Speaker 6 (15:52):
And cung pow prawns and sitting at home watching TV,
where the woman wanted to get on with their lives
and enjoy and experience the world, and rightly so, grumpy
old men.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
Yeah, so if your man likes beer in prawns, you
learned for it.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
Just watch out specificly though, FRAU one, you're fine, But
what do you think of this? What are your thoughts
on this? Why do you reckon? This is happening so
much in New Zealand? I wait one hundred double O
four coast to phone No, but we'd love to see
your text thoughts. Is this so TXT two six nine nine.
I cannot wait for the summer nights to arrive. We're

(16:25):
in spring already, roll on summer and for some people
that is going to be the silver separation. That's where
we're at the season silver separations.

Speaker 6 (16:36):
Flowers, the silver servi receiparation thing. I heard something from
my kids for the first time year today were we're
talking about hair color and Aspett, three year old color
my hearers and she said silver, Oh, you don't even.

Speaker 3 (16:54):
Only have a few silver heres.

Speaker 5 (16:55):
Well, apparently, according to her.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
Do you don't want to avoid the silver separation? Just
are you here? Get a good old die.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
Job whether it becomes a brown. Yeah, So that's the
great divorce they calling it. Apparently we're in the midst
of it in New Zealand. Right now, a lot of
people in the fifties more than ever, are pulling the
pen on their marriages. Matthew Wadi riginally is.

Speaker 13 (17:17):
I can tell you it all boils down to a
decline in sexual activities between the spouses.

Speaker 5 (17:26):
You know.

Speaker 13 (17:27):
Yeah, when you're in your fifties, chex becomes very routine,
a very predictable, so you know what your partner is doing,
your partner know what you're going to do next, and
you know, it becomes very boring. And I can tell
you a lot of these uh spouses, be the wife
or the husband, no, they want to look at alternative
options out there. So that's when trouble begins, and before

(17:52):
you know it, you know, the divorce letters start flying around.

Speaker 4 (17:56):
Are you are you speaking from personal experience towards this
happened amongst you?

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Free or where are you getting?

Speaker 7 (18:03):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Okay, that's always.

Speaker 13 (18:07):
Looking for when you were adventures, something more exciting, nothing predictable,
nothing boring.

Speaker 5 (18:13):
You know.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
Okay, what good typs of If you sitting there thinking
of yourself and stale, maybe there's an the events from Matthew,
spice it up. Maybe, Wendy, what do you think of
the reason is?

Speaker 12 (18:24):
Yeah, I think a lot of it's got to do
with kids moving out of home or growing up so
you're no longer having to take care of them twenty
four to seven some things.

Speaker 7 (18:35):
And yeah, the woman, once they've gone, don't have to
do all that homeless stuff. Want to get out and
enjoy life a little bit, you know, go traveling, And
the man maybe doesn't want to do that so much
because you know, they haven't been stuck in the home much. Yeah,
like I'm fusty, Fusty passed and yeah, I've.

Speaker 12 (18:59):
Been in a relationship now six years and you know,
I guess meeting at that time, and we're out doing
stuff together now and it's really good.

Speaker 3 (19:08):
It's all new and exciting.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
I like that.

Speaker 2 (19:11):
On the text on two six niney nine, guys, my
lawyer told me that the three main reasons to divorce
are sex, money, or booze or lack.

Speaker 4 (19:19):
Of Yeah, and the one thing they didn't put on
there was kids, right, and that can be a catalyst
in a lot of ways too.

Speaker 6 (19:26):
Imagine starting as a guy though, like you, Literally when
I was reading this, I was like, God, I actually
need to make sure that I'm doing everything to make
sure that my partner isn't going on, the.

Speaker 4 (19:37):
Crucial part of the stat is in most cases it's
the woman leaving the man.

Speaker 6 (19:41):
Yeah, yeah, it is like ninety percent. And when you
think about it, our last call was actually right. And
the fact that you know Sarah for instances at home,
getting the kids off to school and everything. I've come
to work, I've socialized, I've been around with people.

Speaker 3 (19:52):
She's got a lot of too long time to go though.

Speaker 4 (19:54):
You've still got preschoolers, right, you can get out and
about it more when they go to schoo.

Speaker 9 (19:58):
She's got another fifty used to get sick of me.

Speaker 5 (20:03):
I don't know it.

Speaker 2 (20:07):
That just here the thing make them feel appreciated. I reckon,
you don't know what you got to you lose.

Speaker 5 (20:12):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
That's it right now there, it's time for Sam's week
news weekly news, weekly news.

Speaker 5 (20:19):
The other thing we do every week.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
We stop correcting them because our boss has given us a.

Speaker 9 (20:24):
We started the week on the back foot because we
lost the footy.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
So Scott Robinson, was it a try?

Speaker 5 (20:29):
I saw what you saw. We saw what you saw,
so I can't we don't see any more way into
danger therey if you start to doing bettery freeze and stuff.

Speaker 3 (20:38):
I kind of love that diplomatic guard.

Speaker 6 (20:40):
So we kind of lost the match, but we won
the press conference there, didn't we And the story that
divided the nation and the ultimate act of stupidity.

Speaker 8 (20:48):
You're getting a cheeky bit of electrical work done in
the roof of your house and tucked away in the
insulation you find five dusty bricks of cash, vacuum sealed
and plastic more than two hundred and thirty thousand dollars
with the police know about the roof treasure because the
couple reported the fines to them.

Speaker 9 (21:05):
What are you doing anyway?

Speaker 6 (21:06):
They called a sparky ended up costing them two hundred
and thirty two thousand dollars, which sounds about right these dudes, You.

Speaker 5 (21:13):
Just turret tell the police listen.

Speaker 9 (21:14):
Then Australian breakdancer Raygun fronts the media.

Speaker 7 (21:18):
Do you genuinely think you are the best female breaker
in Australia?

Speaker 3 (21:22):
Well, I think my record speaks to that. No, it
doesn't record where you called three zero.

Speaker 9 (21:30):
I've been to a year one disco that had better breakdancing.

Speaker 6 (21:33):
And for Tony's friend Mellow who did the caterpillar and
her lounge and lost the tooth.

Speaker 5 (21:38):
I'd say it is a bit of breakdancer.

Speaker 6 (21:40):
Australian pack gets a new girlfriend, Elton john gets an
iron fiction, Robbie William ditches his wife and kids at
the back of the plane while he sits in first class,
And Johnny dipp gets new teeth.

Speaker 9 (21:54):
Have you seen Johnny Depp's teeth?

Speaker 6 (21:56):
He's gone Hollywood on the teeth, He's gone.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
You've seen something about her?

Speaker 5 (22:04):
Stop her?

Speaker 9 (22:05):
And el McPherson beats breast cancer with komb butcher.

Speaker 11 (22:08):
Australian supermodel El McPherson has been blasted by medical experts
as irresponsible after revealing she refused chemotherapy for breast cancer.

Speaker 3 (22:16):
And opted for what she called a holistic approach.

Speaker 6 (22:19):
A holistic approach that also included surgeons removing the tumor,
which doesn't really sound completely holistic to me.

Speaker 5 (22:25):
Does that what happened?

Speaker 9 (22:26):
They are surgeon involved, they removed the tumor and.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
She's gone on to.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
Yeah, I hope people don't take like that is the
way forward.

Speaker 6 (22:35):
It's a big, big platform to be preaching that from
it and the penalty for misusing disability parks jumps to
seven hundred and fifty dollars one.

Speaker 3 (22:44):
Hundred and fifty dollars.

Speaker 14 (22:45):
At the moment, I don't think is a significant deterrance
because a twenty sixteen survey Joe that a third of
the people parking and disabled car parks and didn't have
a mobility label.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
First, you can still run that good.

Speaker 6 (22:59):
I tell you what those people are monsters if you're
really in a hurry and there are no parks, that's
what the PRAM parking is.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Tony Jason, Sam's Best Show Moments podcast. If you enjoyed
this podcast, click to share with family or friends. Catch
more from Tony Street, Jays Reeves, and Sam Wallace. Listen
five till nine weekday mornings on COASTFM, or check out
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