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February 5, 2025 • 114 mins

Marcus has a new toasted sandwich maker and is loving it, Kyle has a new tattoo and is in a bit of pain, and Barb has some questions she's been thinking about since Christmas!

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
You're listening to the Marcus Lush Nights podcast from News Talks.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
I'd be.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Greetings, are welcome people, Good evening. It is Wednesday. It
feels like Friday. I'm not quite sure how we're going
to get around that. Always feel kind of freaked out
by public holidays and the days before public holiays that
make you feel different. By the way, driving to softball
practice today at six o'clock, it was twenty five degrees.
So it's been an extremely nice day month year in

(00:35):
the South. Plenty of motorbikes around the streets. The Bert
Monroe Rally is on. I think it's the Bluff Hill
Climb tomorrow, and then the Beach races on Friday, and
not always worth going to have a look at. So
just there is and look, let's face it, I believe
probably what we are sitting on the cusp of is
let's call it what it is. It's a long weekend.

(00:58):
I think Friday is going to be only a faint
image what a Friday's normally like. I don't think anyone
will be doing anything. No one will be at work,
the schools will be closed. I'll be here just actually
when we are on that too, if you are driving,
does it feel like holiday traffic? If you're going through

(01:20):
walk with Sorry Welsford, is trek is traffic bumped backed up?
Has it been a slow journey north today? I'm just
curious stuff. A lot of people are going away for
the four days. I suspect they probably are. I have
a dim view of people that try and game the
public holiday system and get another day. I mean fear

(01:41):
fair play to them. It's just not how I'd run
out stuff. So anyway, so if you've got the updates
on traffic, that's what I'd like to start with tonight. Oh,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty. I haven't got much
to talk about tonight. I think between lawn mowing rounds
and the hercules, I've sort of done my dash for
the week. But no doubt what happens is something will
come up in the next four hours or three hours

(02:02):
fifty three. But let's start off with the traffic. If
you've got an update on that, would love to hear
from you. I p Alwa's got any exciting plans for
the long weekend. I'd be curious about that. Also, you
might want to mention that if you might are driving summer.
Interesting now, that would be good to hear your report.
Let us know what's going on. By the way, Breaker

(02:23):
is twelve behind Delawarra, they're twenty seven to thirty nine.
There's just a second quarter. It doesn't look good for them.
I will keep you updated. I'm ready for rugby league.
Can't wait for Friday Warriors. It gets Cronulla. Mind you,
you can't tell much from the preseason games, but it's
good to be reminded of who's playing and some of
the faces you haven't seen for while. But anyway, if

(02:45):
you've got a report of the traffic, that's what I'd
like to start off with tonight. Then we will come
up with some other topics throughout the course of the
next As I've said, three hours fifty two minutes. You
can text also if you've got texts. If that's what
you're about, text that through. I imagine probably unlike normal
Wednesday night, slightly more people probably will be partying tonight.

(03:07):
Oh you might be an uberst in the city. Does
it feel like a Friday? Are you at Lampton Key?
Are you at the Strip? Are you at the Viaduct?
Are you at the Octagon? Yeah? Marcus daughter has school
Friday and Central tode On at WTF should be a
teacher only day. I can tell you also that I

(03:31):
have changed. I have gone from a toasted sandwich maker
with one that's compartmentalized. I've gone with one of those
flat grills. G They're good. I suspect people have been
telling me about those for years. I went to Harvey
Norman and said, look, we want one of these, and
we got one, and boy, oh boy, you don't even

(03:53):
have to butter the bread. I was much better because
normally what happens I make the kids toasted sandwiches. I've
just left of plates of kind of crusts and edges. Noel,
it's Marcus. Good evening, and thanks for calling, and a
very warm welcome to you.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
Thanks Marcus. Look, I just heard you wanted a traffic report.
I just thought i'd let you know. I'm just going
through the Dome Valley now. It is definitely like a
holiday weekend. Wow, there's a lot of traffic. There's a
couple of annoying people who hugged the outside line lane

(04:31):
in a ute got down to eighty eight k on
the motorway, which is a bit annoying, and just held
everyone up, but definitely holiday traffic.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
Are you heading north? Because I remember last time I
went north two months ago was Welsford was the punch
point and that took about half an hour to get through.
Have you Are you going north?

Speaker 4 (04:51):
Yes, We've got a place at Lang's Beach, so just
heading north there. So yeah, the Dame Valley's pretty busy though, okay.

Speaker 3 (04:59):
And I take it you're not working on Friday or
you might be retired?

Speaker 4 (05:02):
Are you know I'm saying we retire.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
Okay, So you're not working Friday?

Speaker 4 (05:09):
No, definitely not okay, might be fishing though.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
Brilliant tightlines. By the way, we've got big roadworks on
the Bluff Road with traffic lights. It's going for two weeks.
And I was driving home with Denver yesterday after what
the standage and a guy and a big Ford ranger
I over took us at a huge speed on a

(05:34):
fitty marginal corner and what do you know, then they
got stopped by the traffic light for the roadworks and
I was right behind them. I think, well, you know,
how smarty now and only ween I stuck behind them,
But we went through a whole cycle for about five minutes. Yeah,

(05:55):
and we didn't get through. Then all the cars came
out the other way. They had to wait a whole
nother so we about fifteen minutes. So how silly was
your takeover maneuver? And now when you save no time? Anyway,
we thought that was funny, Marcus. Most of the schools

(06:15):
have a teacher on a down on Friday, our attending
professional development for the new meths curriculum. There's been rushed
into a little to no training. What's the new myths curriculum?
I think the kids are good. I think my kids
are good on myths. I think I'm not too worried
about that. I drummed the timetables into them. Just travel

(06:36):
through Welsford. No traffic, goodness, poor old Welsford. Johnny, it's Marcus.
Good evening, not good.

Speaker 5 (06:45):
Evening, Marcus. How are you on this beautiful summer's evening.

Speaker 3 (06:48):
Yeah, pretty good on this beautiful summer evening, Thanks Johnny.
Well very dangerously.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
Traffic in the Toadong area is pretty good.

Speaker 6 (06:59):
God brouted out.

Speaker 5 (07:00):
This evening on my way home after work and training
and stuff. But I wanted to give you a really
nice news story. I was following a truck the other day,
and the lanes were about to converge in this idiot
and the youth had waited for the truck to actually
pass the end of the dotted line where the lanes
were merging, and then decided to proceed to overtake him.
The truck did a marvelous job pulling off to the

(07:21):
list as much as he could, just keep him calm,
lowing the ute to go around and then further down
the road. No road rage, no retaliation, nothing, just nice
and calm and like you were just saying, you know,
it's been that you. It's just kind of with us
in the heavy traffic the whole way on. But was
really worthy I mentioned, So I rang up that tracking company,
gave him the number plate and said, well done for
that driver. It's a small it'side that helped the day

(07:44):
pass by.

Speaker 4 (07:44):
It so great shout out about a driver and it's
Robert Monk Transport.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
So if there's anyone out there listening that wants to
use a great transport company, get to Robert Monk RMT Transport.
They're a great provider with good safe drivers.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
I imagine if your truck driver, you just have to
be kept in calm. The whole time, otherwise you get
yourself in problems with your blood pressure.

Speaker 5 (08:05):
I absolutely have no I mean, I'm a lot better
at a heap of things than driving, and I'm sure
I'll put some truck drivers under pressure myself at times,
not intentionally, but I think they do a massive job
for New Zealand on the whole and trying to do
their best to kick the heavy loads where they need
to be. So a lot of credit to those to
the truckers out there, they're males and females and in
between us that drive out vehicles. Thank you to those guys.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
I like the way you put things, Johnny, thank you
for that. Sixteen past eight. My name is Marcus, Welcome,
thirty six forty five. The breakers are closing in a
little horror, RANAUI is pumping good Rana we Ah, greetings.

(08:52):
My name is Marcus Welcome. Eight hundred and eighty ten eighty.
What was I going to talk about? I had something? Oh, yes,
the toasted sandwich maker. You're much better one was just
a flat hop. I guess it's a bit like the
George Foreman grill. I sometimes feel I'm about forty years
behind with the latest implements oh, but revolutionized. The toasted
sand was much quicker too. Well, I burnt myself on it.

(09:13):
I touched the edge. I'm glad I did because now
I know that's my take. Anyway, get in touch by
name is Marcus Settled twelve.

Speaker 7 (09:26):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
By the way too, they're looking at the changing foods
we eat. The latest drink that there's going to be
a thing of the past orange juice. If you noticed,
you're drinking it less and less because it's less available. Well,
there is a reason for that. It's on its way out.

(09:52):
I kid, you're not story with orange juice, right. It's
like what happens to everything, like bananas and passion fruit
and all sorts of other plants. But it succumbed to disease. Yeah,

(10:18):
so orange juice ubiquity is coming to an end. The
primary cause of disease called citrus greening. Sillids feed on
orange trees and inject bacteria that flood the tree's veins.
Fruit becomes rancid, misshapen, and discolored, and the treed diyes.

(10:40):
Production in Florida's storied orange groves has dropped by ninety
two percent, and then what little fruits left on the
tree gets blown around by the hurricanes. So your orange
juice is going to be a thing of the past.
So breakfast that we're used to is going to look
much different because eggs are probably get well, what's happening.

(11:04):
Orange juice is becoming shaky, Eggs are becoming shaky with
bird flu, Milks becoming shaky with bird For coffee, that
price is through the roof, Chocolates through the roof, all
of oils through the roof. Lot that you have chocolate
for breakfast. But yes, less and less of those foods
anytime soon. So yeah, for once in a while, people
drink a lot of our glass of orange juice. Not

(11:24):
so much anymore. I suspect probably orange juice wasn't quite
as good for people as they made out at the time,
But sometimes there was some thirst that just orange juice
could kind of quench. Yeah, I don't know what we're
drinking instead, probably water some other damn thing. Here till

(11:47):
midnight tonight, manamers Marcus, welcome, eight hundred and eighty Teddy
and nine two detext Get in touch. I'm going to
check a lot of things at you tonight. People want
to do Shout out to good drivers. I've never starred
triple five to someone to say they're a great drawer,
or rung the boss. Why haven't I done that? It's

(12:09):
probably not the way I roll. I've never rung and
said something negatively either, because I think if you do
ring them, they ask all these details. And Rick sha
Day too many questions. If this break on the way
to the mandal, no traffic, love your show, Aaron, love
you erin. God, it's only eight nineteen and someone's already

(12:35):
texted that they never should have got rid of traffic cops. Marcus. Oh,
here's a great question for you. This is from Kyle.
I just had a medium sized tattoo on my rib
cage here in Auckland North Shore and it's extremely painful.
I use numbing cream. For the first time. It was

(12:56):
okay for twenty minutes, then faded off. Can you ask
your list as they know of any good effective numbing
cream for tattooing or painful areas of the body regards Kyle? Okay,
First off, Kyle, zero sympathy. I mean, if you're going
to go yourself at the tattoo and then complain about

(13:16):
the pain, well that's just that's the way it rolls sometimes. However,
I'm sure there's plenty of people out there that have
had painful tattoos and can talk about the pain and
how they stopped it. I don't know much about pain.
Chew a cloth, they say, well, I don't that's pain
in your mouth. Well, I don't know what you do

(13:39):
for that numbing pain? Yeah, you might just have to
suck it. So Kyle's got for extremely painful tattoo. By
the way, what image is it on your rib cap?
Get a tato on their rib cage? A medium sized tattoo,

(14:00):
but what it is? You might have something to say
about that. To twenty one past eight, I don't mind
a bit of a medical question this time of the night.
You think you would have gone started with a with
a less painful area, like, I don't know. I don't
I haven't got any tattoos. What are the chances I

(14:24):
would get a tattoo? I would say, the chances I
would get a tattoo, uh, almost zero, almost zero. I
can't imagine what would happen for me. I think, gee,
you know what, I might get a tattoo. I don't
know what would have to transpire A lineup for me?

(14:45):
That i'd EMU spiral. I came close to that. I
wouldn't mind getting invisible tattoo just to see what it
feels like, or one that just glows under ultra violet light.
But yeah, I can't really be that. Yeah, I just
don't think it's my thing. But keep those texts coming

(15:07):
to people. Marcus till twelve feels like it doesn't feel
like Friday though. Way easy remedy for Kyle. Don't get
a tattoo, tresh I said there'd be a little sympathy. Actually,
now I feel more sympathetic for your Kyle because people
like Trush coming through with so much judgment. Super Bowls Monday.

(15:29):
Trump's going to be the first president to go to this.
I don't know why presidents haven't been before. I couldn't
be by the reading the article. I just read the headline,
but I don't know if it's been frowned upon or
they haven't been interested or quite why that is, or
maybe it's fake news. Maybe they have been And is
anyone having trouble? Have they noticed the orange juice shortage?

(15:50):
I think there was one guy text to me over
the years that Kerry Orange wasn't as available as has
it once had been, so I'd be interested to hear
about that too. But anything goes tonight if you got
breaking news or something else you want to discuss. I'm
just very happy that I've changed the toasted sandwich maker,
gone to the gone to just a flat grill. Gosh,
it's good. Harden up, tough guy, Kyle, you'll wake up

(16:11):
all good. What can Kyle do to soften the pain
from the Is there one of those things that birthing
mothers get. I they give you like little electric shocks
that caught a ten a ten year.

Speaker 8 (16:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
I'm only remembering digging deep into my anti natal classes.
Well learn all sorts of rubbish, and we pulled a
baby out of a drain like a bend and a
pipe like a bit of spouting. It's what we did.
Quite a special thing, isn't it the old anti natal class?

(16:45):
You think, sure, what's this about? Friends for life? All
of that? Karwa Kawa baime, Karwa Kawa bam available online
made from n z ed Karwa Kaha leaves Joanne Audiwa. Yeah,
but the guy's got pain, now, where's he going to
get the kawa kawa barm if it's online. There must

(17:07):
be some so I don't know. He's going along weekend.
I've got to get a doctor. What's the pain curve
looked like for tattoo? When does it start easing? Could
he pour milk on it or something rub butter into it.
I'm just saying ridiculous things, hoping people not butter. But

(17:30):
it was always one of the great terrible things, like
the worst thing to do for a burn. But it
persisted as a rumor for a long long time. It
never sounds like a good idea to me. Good evening, Judy.
It's Marcus. Hello and welcome.

Speaker 9 (17:44):
Oh hello Marcus. I don't know if it will work,
but I've got a suggestion for the poor chap in pain.
And I think my suggestion is cold will do the trick.
And if he's got a packet of frozen peas or
something in the deep freeze, wrap it up in a
towel and put that on his chest.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
Yeah, okay, it doesn't Just something cold cold and flexible,
a like yeah.

Speaker 9 (18:12):
Okay, yeah, free frozen. You know that's why it suggest
frozen ve. Yeah, don't put the packer on your chest
because it might stick to you. That's why you wrap
it up in the towel first.

Speaker 3 (18:26):
Very sensible, Judy, thank you for the other suggestions that
Kyle is giving us. Kyle's a bad name with the
lack of pain tolerance. I've got cracked ribs at the moment,
and I'm sweet unless I sneeze. Thanks Marcus, Kyle. Marcus,
the cow cow poultice would be good for pain once
protective covering removed. He probably got it glad wrapped atm
that's from Graham. Smoke a joint or have a gummymum

(18:51):
beer panteen Baby's bum cream is good for tattoos. Tell
Kyle to wake himself with a hammer and has grown.
You can't feel pain in two places at once. Don't
put butter on it's too expensive. Do you appeel on it?
Or is that for a lefish? That's from Paul alo Vera.
Cut in half and rub over. Careful of infection with

(19:11):
anything topical though hot orange juice, Marcus, spark up a reefer.
I'll tell you what. The marijuana qure seems to be
the one. Harden up tough guy, Kyle. You'll wake up
all good. Marcus. You would look good with a tatoo
of a train across your chest.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Loll.

Speaker 3 (19:33):
Kyle should get another tatto on his eyelids to take
the pain away from his ribs. Emmy, a cream is
what I use to have tattoo lasered off. It's one
hundred times it's more painful than having a tattoo. It's expensive,
but worth it. Hailey, tell Kyle to put some big
boys pants on. What's the tattoo of Kyle? Let's guess

(19:56):
what it is? Old, soft, softy, old Kyle. What do
you reckon it is? I'm just trying to imagine what
a guy that's quite soft with his tattoo and feeling
the pain pattern. It's medium size, it's not a great statement.
It's not as ribs, so it's not like something across

(20:18):
his forehead. What do people get on the ribs? What
the most common tattoo on the ribs would be? People
have enjoyed it though, people enjoying Kyle's softness. Oh, hang on, Marcus,

(20:46):
the tattoo's done. There is no pain. Now, it's been
and gone. I'm wanting to do my other rib cage
and looking for a good cream for that side. Oh
so I'll read the email again, Marcus, I just had
a medium sized tattoe on my rib cage here in

(21:07):
Orchannell's shore, and it was extremely painful. I used numbing
cream for the first time. It was okay for twenty minutes,
then faded off. Can you ask any of your listeners
if they know of any good effective numbing cream for
tattoos on painful areas of the body. Was a confusing email.
And then he's come back to said Marcus. The tattoo
has done. There is no pain, it's been and gone.
I wanted to do my other ribcage and looking for

(21:28):
a good cream for that side. Oh god, he's not
is he's soft? But but he but he can't learn.
He's wanting to do it again. What about whiskey? It's

(21:48):
if you're not tattooed, it's hard to imagine what it's like, Bob, Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 6 (21:54):
He are you manet the faint surface?

Speaker 10 (22:00):
When the.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
Hang on? Can you talk about clearer, Bob? It's not
great your line.

Speaker 6 (22:07):
Oh sorry, it has.

Speaker 3 (22:10):
Better, Bob, Thank you for caring about that. I appreciate that.

Speaker 6 (22:14):
Sorry, but you know your toaster sales like the old
style toasters where the Eastern came from the from the
birds about a great big trait once.

Speaker 3 (22:23):
That's it. That's what they're looking like now. And it's
even got the it's even got the cables like wrapped
and wire like a spring. It looks like one of
those that's it. Like two flat surfaces.

Speaker 6 (22:35):
They are the best toasters. And there's a whole and
I think you're eats the whole thing.

Speaker 3 (22:40):
Yep, that's it. They're right in there, and I.

Speaker 6 (22:45):
Think you're the tattoo is Chinese writing?

Speaker 11 (22:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (22:53):
I think probably with cultural appropriate appropriation. The Chinese writing
is not so good these days, is it? Mind you
all tattoos are well, so many tattoos about appropriation? Aren't
they someone else's culture? Anyway? Go to wear myself with that?

Speaker 12 (23:15):
Do I?

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Gary Marcus, evening, Welcome Marcas.

Speaker 11 (23:18):
Just one would want to put on your roob cage
in the tattoo? What if I have a parrot or
a budget?

Speaker 3 (23:24):
Why would you put put that on your shoulder?

Speaker 11 (23:26):
Wouldn't you your rib cage just where your boots go?

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Oh yeah yeah, yeah yeah, like the in the cage brilliant?
I thought, might at what be? I've seen tattoos on
the rib cage of the eternal Organs beneath that. I
quite like those text as they come through. Kyle should
have thought of the pain before wasting his money. Maybe
frozen beans. Marcus not sure to remedy for Kyle. But

(23:52):
where's Tony do? Cheers, Dean. I enjoy your evening's Marcus
stretched out of my bed listening till Drippy Island to
take me to the land of nod. Relaxing and funny.
Thank you, Paul. With a name like Kyle, it probably
says suber U. The bet and cream for Ba be
rash twenty dollars the soup market. I've used it for tattoos.
Regards Tracy Marcus nature tattooed my ribs once. It's called shingles.

(24:16):
Kyle's tattooers of Lady Gaga. Marcus barbecue sauce is always
good on ribs. Fred fint Stone at the drive and
would be a good tattoo on the ribs. Poor Paul.
Cream is good for the aftermath and keeping it sanitary.
You have to hurry because it's closing down the body shop.

(24:38):
Marcus is chess tattoo probably says do not resuscitate. Cheers Margaret. Yeah,
I'm thinking about doing redoing my Saint John's course. Speaking
of that, do not resuscitate relearning the old mouth to mouth.
You never know when you're gonna use it. I don't
think many people get to use it at all. Do

(24:59):
they to the rhythm of staying alive? Do do do?

Speaker 5 (25:04):
Do?

Speaker 3 (25:04):
Staying alone? Staying alive, that's the compressions. You don't do
the breaths anymore. I don't think. I always thought you
revived people with CPR, but actually just keeping their brain
alive until they arrive with the good dunk the machine,
the pedals. Now people are sending me, is that it's

(25:27):
not you sending me that to tattoo?

Speaker 7 (25:28):
Is it?

Speaker 13 (25:29):
Kyle?

Speaker 3 (25:31):
Someone sent me a tattoo of a tiger that says,
dig deep within yourself to conquer fears. Neverly want to
bring you down. You've got to keep going. Oh it's
Kyle's tattoo. Well with a lot with a lion. It's
quite a big tattoo, Kyle. I feel bad now saying,

(25:52):
but never let anyone bring it down. I shouldn't. We
shouldn't really be bringing you down, Kyle. What are you
gonna get on the other side? That's my question to you.
Thanks for that. Now we know, what's that thing covering
up your arm? Oh he's got the fall, he's got
the full arms sleeve. Anyway, going on, brilliant, go you.

(26:17):
He sent me a tattoo pain chart. The most pain
is the top of the head, the hands, the inner
part of the arms, the groin, the knees. I'm not
surprised that's the front and the back.

Speaker 13 (26:31):
Is it?

Speaker 3 (26:35):
No experience? Marcus? Can you please pretty please wish my
daughter happy birthday? She's twenty six down a big fan
of yours. Her name is Ella. Thanks for Happy birthday, Ella,
fifth of February. Yes, happy birthday, Ella, twenty six today,
go you. When she born nineteen ninety nine, Marcus eyed

(27:00):
a five hour tattoo season session Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Here it needs to harden up. No pain, no gain,
And as I say, from someone that hasn't had tattoos,
it's free hard to imagine what the pain is like.
And that would be my only thing to get a
tattoo is so I'd have that curious curiosity. Mind, I

(27:22):
don't even know what childbirth's like, so I can't really
work that out, can I. There's not much you can
do for that, but Kyle has sent me. Look at
the tattoo and tattoo of the pain chart and his
other tattoos of a tiger. No, it's a lion. So

(27:44):
one's a tiger and one's a lion. These are on
the ribs. Hi, Frank, it's Marcus. Welcome, good evening, Oh,
good evening, Marcus.

Speaker 14 (27:54):
The first time I call you, I always listen to you.

Speaker 3 (27:57):
Nice to hear from your friend.

Speaker 14 (28:00):
Yeah, is this a tattoo you were talking about? Yeah,
you know, a specific tattoo.

Speaker 3 (28:07):
With the albatross. Is it with an albatross?

Speaker 14 (28:13):
I'm talking about the well, I'm Simon. I'm talking about
Simon tattoo. You see men with the tattoo. Yeah, that
is what you call tattoo. It's no no, out of
no no, or a thing to cure the pain. You
want to feel the pain? You you know nobody. It's

(28:33):
a shameful thing. If you take some sort of a
medication testoo, you know you want to feel a pain.

Speaker 3 (28:40):
I say, I say, that's part of it.

Speaker 14 (28:44):
Yeah, well most not only some hole, but most of
the Pacific tattoo. We don't need any machines or anything
like that. What do you call it? A fake that
you know, if you show me your tattoo in a arm,
it's done by a machine, and mine is a natural tattoo,
come by a real pain and a blood come out.

(29:05):
It's one of you add my the one I got
the painful, or the one you've got to machine. You
don't feel a bloody finger to my tea.

Speaker 3 (29:13):
Yeah, yeah, nice to hear from your friend.

Speaker 15 (29:16):
Up.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
Yeah, well, Seid Marlon Marcus, good evening.

Speaker 16 (29:21):
Yeah, my head's pinion. I don't have any tattoos, but
I'm thinking in my young days in the South Island
Land surveyin you'd have to cut numbers and arrows and
pigs that are really sharp, popping night. So I've got
scars all over my hands, so I don't think that
counts as tattoos. But I've really burnt myself good on
a toasted sandwich maker, just like you. And I've just

(29:44):
come home. I said, oh, I think I should make
a toasted sandwich, and it had me remembering a macho echo.
A sit of Alternative Cafe opened up a lot below
our office, and they, you know, deadlocks and I died
and you know, meet people, but they made the greatest
bread and you just got me pining for the toasted sandwich,

(30:09):
which was calved champagne hand with tomato, you know, garden
grown tomatoes with mushrooms and garlic, and I'm I think
it illgal. I just want that.

Speaker 14 (30:22):
I want that.

Speaker 3 (30:23):
Are they still open?

Speaker 9 (30:25):
Oh?

Speaker 16 (30:26):
I know this is in the early eighties, are long.

Speaker 3 (30:28):
Gone, but what happened to that?

Speaker 11 (30:30):
I don't know.

Speaker 16 (30:32):
They should still be well, they probably still are there
because you know, Mochreek is still that kind of place.

Speaker 3 (30:37):
What was it called?

Speaker 16 (30:41):
Oh ring another? I don't want to but they, you know,
they were. I think everyone looks sideways and then they
started tasting the food is really good.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
Well, because not often the hang on malon, it's not
often you get a toasted sandwich from a place where
they make their own bread. That's next level.

Speaker 16 (30:58):
Well it wasn't. I'm not joking. I can taste the
whole ensemble right now.

Speaker 3 (31:04):
A good toasted sandwich will do that. I can remember
the one at Arthur's Point in Little Caravan, and that
one and now and picked in. I can remember the feel,
the crunch of the bread, the then surrendering to the
oh flip, it was good.

Speaker 16 (31:21):
Yeah, you got to you've got to have a toasted
sandwich maker somewhere in the.

Speaker 3 (31:28):
Show, I reckon probably next time we do the bus
trip one long day on the inter city, I think
we'll take the toasted I think, actually, I'll tell you
what's hard work having kids on the road, because all
they want to do is eat. And when you're on
the road, you can't really eat because you haven't got
stuff with you because we just I just had a
chemist warehouse bare. We don't have much stuff at all.

(31:49):
But next time, certainly taking the toasted samp because most
of the time that's all the kids wanted was toasted sandwiches.
But then you've got to go to toasted sandwich kef,
you know, and then that's They vary wildly in quality
and price. But basically Vanessa said, you take the toast.
I say, be ridiculous, but clearly it was probably one

(32:11):
of the great suggestions. Never travel again without it. Won't
even take a generator next time, get that go and
get the toasted sandwiche. I mean, that's what kids seemed
to want at the moment. Anyway, Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 10 (32:29):
Go.

Speaker 3 (32:30):
Figure what wout that guy with his cheese and his
fruits underneath the bridge last night? What a gooldman. He
was fifty nine eighty two. Why do you even bother
with the breakers? I know I shouldn't say that, but
g she's been a hard watch. Can they finally call

(32:53):
Hungry Jack's Burger king, please? I'm sick of seeing that.
That was a pretty good hour. Actually, I wasn't expecting much.
Hopes were very low, talking about tattoo and pain, legendary
toasted sandwiches of cafes from the past. I'm thinking mainly

(33:18):
of that cafe in Motueka Field, mushrooms and the likes.
But you know, because that's the thing about places don't
ever last about ten years in they're gone, then something
else comes along, don't they. You might have some legendary
one you want to reminiscence about. So that's also something

(33:38):
we can talk about. There's no limit to what we
could talk about today. Well it's Wednesday, but it feels
like Friday. Orange juice on the way out. All the
trees are succumbing to a sillid, which I think, what's
the banana passion fruit? And so the passion fruit and
the tree tomatoes succumbed to as a sialid. So yeah,

(34:03):
Florida's orange juice is down like ninety percent something. So
that's why I know one that's why orange juice is
not as available as it once was, although I think
tastes have probably changed. I don't know when the last
time I was ad that glass of orange juice. I'd
prefer a glass of grapefruit juice. Something quite specially about

(34:25):
a grapefruit something sort of undiscovered. Also to the Aga
Khan died today, who I've always been slightly fascinated by,
but don't really know much about. I mean, mainly I
knew the Aga Khan from the Peda Sarsted song. Your

(34:46):
name is hood in high places, you know the Aga Khan.
He sent you a race horse for Christmas and you
kept it just for fun, for a laugh, ha ha.
I'm quite sure what happened to Sasted, one of the
great singers. I think he developed a stemmer and was
no good after that. I think that's the legend of him.

(35:08):
It was a great song. Anyhow. My name is Marcus.
Welcome Hitdal twelve o'clock. If you want to talk about
those topics or anything else, the ear waves are yours.
Eight hundred and eighty ten eighty nine nine two detects.
Looking forward to what you've got to say, and if
there is something else brilliant, I am up. If you've
got breaking news also, that'd be great love to hear

(35:32):
you talk about. That might be a whale stranding, might
be shark sidings, might have seen a rogue wallaby anything.
I don't feel free to get in touch here till twelve,
looking forward to hearing from you. Ooh, anyway, we have

(35:54):
a multi use sandwich maker with interchangeable plates. Oh, now
you tell me where did you get that from? We
have taken up using the waffle plates to make toasted sandwiches,
completely changed the product. Could you send me a picture
a multi use toasted, multi use sandwich made with interchangeable plates.

(36:15):
I'm I'm going to highlight that, but then google it. Yeah,
I knew I should have preshopped it that more cheapers.
That's a great thing to say, a multi use sandwich
made with interchangeable plates. I'll copy and paste that into
my Google and see what I come up with. Good evening,

(36:37):
Trina at Marcus, welcome, Hi Marcus.

Speaker 7 (36:40):
When are you going to change that song?

Speaker 3 (36:43):
Never?

Speaker 13 (36:45):
Oh my god, let's have a vote.

Speaker 3 (36:49):
But yeah, you know him with voting. Now you'd be
running a phone tree. You'd be bringing your frieze. They vote,
get rid of that song. It's not going to be and.

Speaker 7 (36:56):
You turn it and you turn it off, just just
through that last screech.

Speaker 3 (37:01):
Well, I don't turn it off. I don't turn it
off because the producer turns it off. And it does
say after that says I am your lady, which would
seem weird, wouldn't it.

Speaker 7 (37:09):
Yeah, yeah, it does. It is a little weird.

Speaker 11 (37:13):
Guys.

Speaker 7 (37:14):
Anyway, orange trees, yes, well, orange trees, like lots of trees,
need rotation. They need and they need They only reproduce
for so many years that all they need to be replaced,
like every other tree.

Speaker 3 (37:29):
I think the orchidists would be aware of this, Trina. Yeah,
that's not why they're dying out. It's not because they're
not rotating. Because they've got some rus a sillard.

Speaker 7 (37:46):
Okay, do you know what that is that the soils
are to acid it?

Speaker 3 (37:53):
No, it's a sillid. It's a disease. Okay, it's a
bio It's a disease known as citrus greening. Hard to
control insects called Asian citrus sillids feed on the orange tree.

(38:14):
Then they inject bacteria that floods the tree's veins. Oh,
the fruits become rancid, misshapen and discolored, and within a
few years the tree dies.

Speaker 7 (38:25):
Yeah, okay, we must, we will have to start planting.
There's these bacteria resistant orange trees.

Speaker 3 (38:36):
Well, I think they probably have tried, wouldn't they.

Speaker 15 (38:38):
Yeah, I would.

Speaker 7 (38:39):
I think they have too. Maybe they're not resistance to us.

Speaker 3 (38:43):
Yeah, I mean they're in problems. It's and it could
be done with with change of climate too. But the
production in Florida is down ninety two percent, so it's
a disaster.

Speaker 7 (38:53):
That's huge.

Speaker 13 (38:55):
Yeah, it's huge.

Speaker 7 (38:57):
I'm going to have.

Speaker 3 (38:57):
But I don't like you because you're song critical tree.
I mean, I don't like you. But you know, it's
a bad start. How am I supposed to get on
with you?

Speaker 7 (39:06):
See? Oh that's the song, isn't it. Sorry, I'm upset you.

Speaker 3 (39:10):
Well, you don't upset me. But I'm not looking for battles.

Speaker 7 (39:14):
No, they neither. No, that's sad about the orangees. Are
it here yet?

Speaker 5 (39:22):
No?

Speaker 3 (39:23):
But we don't grow that many. But most of ours
was just an important pulp from South America, wasn't it.

Speaker 7 (39:29):
Yeah, I'm not up terry Terry. They grow a lot
of citrus.

Speaker 3 (39:32):
Yeah, I don't think when you get your carry orange,
you don't think it comes from care. I think it's
built in giant bags of pulp that they just remix.

Speaker 7 (39:40):
Yeah, yeah, I think.

Speaker 3 (39:42):
I mean it's always been a bit of a wraught
the oranges industry. Someone might know more about that, but
thank you. Get in touch people, Marcus Still twelve oh,
eight hundred and eighty ten eighty. Be a part of it.
If you do want to talk. There's something else you
want to mention oranges, toasted sandwich and makers. The one
with the exchange will grill. Someone's always got a update

(40:07):
you or out compet you with what they've got, don't
they like in case anyone an exchangeable grill text and
everything would be nice to hear from you. Tonight, hit'll
twelve o'clock. The breaker is down by seventeen, it's seventy
seven to ninety four. It's the way they're going. I

(40:34):
think the season's pretty well over. Someone says, we don't
drink Florida or orange juice. Yes, but like everything, there's
a whole. That's how they dictate the price, So they'll
be importing their oranges from somewhere else now and that

(40:54):
will send the price up, and it's a global commodity
that's traded. Idiot, Johnny Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 17 (41:02):
Well, good evening. Marcus talking about legendary sandwich makers rather
than the cafes. I heard you before the news. Are
you taking a generator? Run your sandwich makeup when you
next go? Keemping tempted because because we had one in
the day, which was you stick it in the fire.
It was a three type one with a couple of big, long,

(41:23):
long handles with the wooden at the end and year. Yeah,
you had the square bed. Of course you had crusts.

Speaker 3 (41:32):
They did have. They did have round one to those
for a tank loafe, which I always thought was cute.

Speaker 17 (41:37):
Yeah, this was three flat round ones like you know.

Speaker 18 (41:40):
Try Yeah, another big.

Speaker 17 (41:42):
Long, big long handled said yeah, so you don't need
to generate it, mate.

Speaker 3 (41:47):
They call those a jeffyl in Australia. You know that.

Speaker 17 (41:51):
Well, I don't know where it came from. It was
made of some kind.

Speaker 13 (41:55):
Of alloy, so it's probably toxic.

Speaker 17 (41:57):
Anyway these days. But yeah, it wasn't cast iron.

Speaker 3 (42:00):
Well I think it hasn't got tiffton.

Speaker 18 (42:03):
I don't think it probably is, didn't might they're acceptable?

Speaker 3 (42:08):
Yeah, I'm just mad about teflon. I'm just mad about teflon.
Barb Marcus.

Speaker 12 (42:14):
Hello, Hello Marcus. There's something that's been bugging me since Christmas.
And it was such a nice, relaxed Christmas and all
the lights were going and it all looked lovely. But
I've never been able to understand where electricity actually comes from.

(42:35):
We've got dams and it comes from water. Is it through?
How does it come from water? I don't think it's
a silly question, but then I might be wrong.

Speaker 3 (42:49):
How's it generated? The water comes down, shoots and turns.
Turbines have electric magnets in it, and you've got magnets turning.
If you've got electric magnets turning, movement with another magnets,
that generates electricity.

Speaker 8 (43:11):
Oh do you go?

Speaker 12 (43:13):
Is that like on the old school bikes?

Speaker 19 (43:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (43:17):
Pretty much pretty much, because.

Speaker 12 (43:20):
They made the lights go so it's early in the morning. Yeah, yeah, okay, Yeah,
I've never been able to understand it. And the lakes
and everything look absolutely lovely, but how do we get
electricity from that? That makes a lot of thing, and I.

Speaker 3 (43:34):
Believe, I believe it's the same way that probably wind
turbines work.

Speaker 12 (43:40):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And the other thing is, do you
know helicopter rotor blades? Do they go blunt? Do they
have to be sharpened? Or what happens with them? I
see the I'm in Dunedina, and I see the helicopters
going over, the rescue helicopters going over, and I think,

(44:03):
I wonder what happens such the blades of them? Did
they they wouldn't go blunt or anything.

Speaker 3 (44:08):
Well, the way your mind works, it's practical stuff.

Speaker 19 (44:13):
I like it.

Speaker 3 (44:17):
What I mean, for the helicopter blades to get blunt,
they would need to go through something to blunt them.
M hm, that we have to cause friction. Well, the
year is not going to do that.

Speaker 12 (44:32):
No, but what could fog and smog and all the
wee bits and pieces in the in the atmosphere could
they blunt blunt them at all? Round them off a
wee better? But we but like a shaver, I suppose,
But then they're not shaving things like a.

Speaker 3 (44:51):
It's not a sharp edge. It's a blunt edge, isn't it. Okay, Yeah,
that's my understanding. Someone might have a better explanation for that.

Speaker 12 (45:02):
Yeah, it's been those two things have been on my
mind since Christmas. And I'm glad you explained about the
electricity because I could trace it back to the water,
but I'm standing on the water's edge and I couldn't
go any further with it. But that does make a
lot of sense. Yeah, well, thank you for that, Marcus.
I like the way your mind works. And I knew
I waited till you came back on because I don't

(45:24):
I wasn't sure who else would sort of appreciate the question.

Speaker 3 (45:30):
Oh, I'm pleased that you think I'd appreciate that.

Speaker 16 (45:33):
Hmm.

Speaker 12 (45:35):
It's interesting all the things that we that you come
up with, and you'll think, oh, yeah, I thought about that,
but I didn't realize that you know that it worked
that way or affected so many people, or how it
affected people, whatever it is.

Speaker 3 (45:49):
Yeah, Well, if you've got movement in an electric field
or a magnetic field, then you get electricity gets generated
from that. That's pretty much. So you need to turn
that big coil of wire within that magnetic field. That's
how it works, or you might be tuning the magnet
within the core. I forget which is which, But thank
you for that, Barb. You filled my bucket. Twenty one

(46:12):
past nine, Hettel twe anyone got any questions? They were answered.
Ask the audience, Marcus, my interchangeable plate machine is in
fact a waffle maker. Why can't coffee beans be grown

(46:36):
in the Pacific? I used to have butter chicken filling
in my toasted sandwich. Great if you get cold, sometimes
with a glass of red Sonia from Karaka. She's living
her best life. Marcus had my first tattoo last year
and went straight for half a sleep. Felt pretty painful
the time, but I was all right until I left

(46:57):
this shop, fell a bit woozy, and then as soon
as I got home, power chucked. Apparently I had ink
poisoning nine twenty four. Alex is inspired by Barbara Alex
good evening. You're there, Alex phone box?

Speaker 5 (47:18):
Sorry, can you hear?

Speaker 2 (47:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (47:19):
Alex receiving beautiful, beautiful?

Speaker 14 (47:22):
Hell?

Speaker 3 (47:22):
Are you god? Ten out of ten?

Speaker 2 (47:25):
Yes, your last caller. She was talking about helicopter blood.
Fascinating A fascinating topic there. But they're not they're not sharp,
they're blunt. Any reason I know that we did a
job last year The Department of conservations on Marna Island,
re roofing and doing some work from the three houses

(47:45):
they've got there, and we had the helicopter all our
materials over both ota. They have a good look at
the helicopter and they're not they're not sharp. People think
they're probably sharp because they've been such a rotation as
they're cutting your things that goes in between them.

Speaker 3 (48:01):
Yeah, and they're still worth keeping out of your they're
still worth avoiding.

Speaker 16 (48:06):
M y.

Speaker 15 (48:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (48:08):
They tell you to duck your head when you get
an allow on.

Speaker 13 (48:10):
It's for good reason.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
Well, I think they're always weary if you were in
a hat, because your head will fly off and you
put your hand up to grab your haad and they'll
chop your arm off.

Speaker 2 (48:17):
Ah, this is why you're doing the radio show.

Speaker 19 (48:21):
Market it's not me brilliant.

Speaker 3 (48:23):
I think that's right anyway, Alex Alistair Hello.

Speaker 13 (48:27):
Marcus, Yeah, yeah, I enjoyed those two calls about the
rotor blades. Yes, they a lot a lot of operators
actually put tape on those blades to stop them from
getting eroded by weather and sand and what have you,
so that they call it blade tape, and and they
will put it on the leading edge.

Speaker 3 (48:45):
I hadn't thought about sand Yeah.

Speaker 13 (48:48):
Yeah, because they're you know, they were finally built a
piece of gear and they're expensive. They want them to
last as long as they can. Yes, so they they
often will put blade tape, especially on the outer part
of the diameter where it spins a whole lot quicker
than the inside.

Speaker 3 (49:00):
Yes. Yeah, the other court, what's the cost blade taped
a set of blades or.

Speaker 13 (49:10):
I'd be guessing, but it would be yeah, no, I'd
be guessing. G Yeah. But the other caller that was
talking about sharpening them, the the F one O four
Starfighter that was a supersonic interceptor. They ground crew actually
did sharpen the leading edges and the trailing edges of
those wings. After each flight, they'd inspect them and if

(49:33):
they had dings or cuts or anything, they would actually
file them sharp again for performance.

Speaker 15 (49:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (49:39):
Performance, Yeah, basically being a super sonic wing they were
that was required, and they had to put five class
covers on them because if you glanced up against one,
you would cut yourself open on these on these wings, Yeah,
and then to a certain point after that fire them
enough they had to replace the leading edge, so they
were they draw the rivets, out rivet and leading edge
and then put another another sharp edge on it.

Speaker 3 (50:03):
Did you say if one four or something? Is it
what it was?

Speaker 12 (50:05):
Yeah?

Speaker 13 (50:05):
Lucky starf Yeah. I saw one in the museum and
in the States, and they had leading edge covers on
it was their outdoor museum. And me being me, I
was able to slice anine and a half on the
leading edge of this jet.

Speaker 3 (50:20):
Had quite short wings, didn't They really tiny wings compete
to the fuselage with kind of like missile looking things
at the end of the wings.

Speaker 13 (50:27):
That's right. Yeah, yeah, they're almost a solid wing. They are,
I think twenty something fitting in wingspan. Yeah, and yeah,
like I say, they would have to because they couldn't
put fuel inside the wings, they would put external tanks
on them. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (50:41):
Are their tanks at the end?

Speaker 10 (50:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 13 (50:42):
Okay, yeah, yeah, I think the wingrou it was about
two inches deep, it was. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (50:51):
Where was the museum that was there? The Starfighter?

Speaker 13 (50:55):
It was in California, Chino, in California? Yeah, yeah, no.

Speaker 3 (51:01):
But was it used during Vietnam or late more recent
than that? The Lockheed star Fighter.

Speaker 13 (51:08):
I think they sort of came out in mid fifties.
Isn't an interceptor yeah, just a missile with a man
on the front.

Speaker 3 (51:14):
Really yeah, and there was just one.

Speaker 13 (51:19):
So yeah, with them was the was a single seater.
And in the early days when they because it was
a high I had a high tail or a t tail,
they weren't with the ejection seat. They weren't confident that
every ejection would miss the tail. So they actually made
the ejection seat go out through the floor, which was

(51:40):
which was not good if you had an engine failure
shortly after take off, because it would it would rock
it into the ground.

Speaker 3 (51:46):
So it was so quickly an ejected then that you'd
be hit by the tail. You wouldn't get high quicker.

Speaker 13 (51:50):
Well, yeah, that's what they were worried about with those
early ejection seats. Yeah, the performance of the seat might
you might end up on the tail. So yeah, so
they went out through the floor instead and short in
the in the early days.

Speaker 3 (52:03):
It's fascinating. Would that be the only one with a
rejector stinct that went downwards?

Speaker 13 (52:08):
I think so yeah. Yeah. So if they had an
engine trailer after take orf, they had to roll it
upside down and so that they would eject away from
the ground. So yeah, yeah, I.

Speaker 3 (52:19):
Found that fast dating alistair brilliant. I appreciate it. Thank you.
Everything leads to something, don't it. Everything leads to something.
Barbara and Fan Jan could probably brainstorm new technology. dB Marcus, Hello,
I like.

Speaker 13 (52:38):
Your description of how to make electricity, so I'll try
to keep my helicopter description to the same level. If
you take what most people visualize as a wing, like
on the end of a Cessna or even a Jenny aircraft,
they're sort of lumpier on the top and flat on
the bottom, but they're blunt at the front. You then

(53:03):
take that when and you drag it through the air
fast enough for it to generate lift. So far, so good. Yes,
With a helicopter, their rotors are the same shape as
a Cessna's wing. Give will take a bit, but stretched
out long and thin rather than short and study, and

(53:24):
to generate the air over them, you spin the wing
or the rotor, hence why they're called rotary wing aircraft.
But it's still a wing shape, but it's instead of
going laterally through the air normally, they surround and round

(53:45):
and create the air over the wing to make them lift.
How's that grab you?

Speaker 3 (53:51):
I don't know how it's grabbing. Who that's listening. But
she wondered if they got blunt, Well.

Speaker 13 (53:58):
They can get dented, but they're already blunt. They look
like a standard aeroplane wing. There's just that they're very
long and thin, but they're still fat at the front
fin of the back. I can get into cord lines
and stuff like that, and I won't bother. They look
like an if you cut on and off or you
look just look the end on, they look like a

(54:20):
wing because that's what they are. And then you spin
them around really really fast and they generate lift.

Speaker 18 (54:27):
Do you know?

Speaker 3 (54:28):
Do you know where the word helicopter comes from?

Speaker 13 (54:32):
Sounds Greek to me?

Speaker 3 (54:34):
What what's it? No one knows this?

Speaker 13 (54:39):
Or was it the guy who first invented him? What's
his name?

Speaker 3 (54:42):
It's pretty this is this is pretty interesting.

Speaker 13 (54:46):
I'll go on, hit me.

Speaker 3 (54:49):
Helly Coe, So it's not helicopter, it's Helli Coe.

Speaker 13 (54:58):
Right, yep, yep, it's what's his name?

Speaker 3 (55:04):
And then patere helico is helx, which is spiral yep,
and piture means wing like peterodectyl.

Speaker 13 (55:21):
The I think leonnatted evidently sounds like he was involved
with this because he designed a helicopter, which was a helical.

Speaker 3 (55:30):
Yeah, it's helico. It's not heli copter. It's Helico patere.

Speaker 13 (55:37):
Helico.

Speaker 3 (55:39):
P P T E R meaning wings like pterodactyl paterodectyl. Yeah, excellent,
that's surprising, isn't it.

Speaker 13 (55:50):
I like that?

Speaker 3 (55:51):
Yeah, why is that not on the chase? That's so
it's helico patere.

Speaker 13 (55:57):
Yeah, but you don't need like, you don't need a
motor to drive one of these rotary wings. Gyrocopters have
no the wing. The rotary pad has not driven. It's
just driven past by the air moving over it, causing
it to rotate, which makes it make lift, which makes
it rotate faster, which makes it.

Speaker 3 (56:17):
More Look, I think I know that helicopters, when the
engines go, they can glide to the earth.

Speaker 13 (56:24):
Absolutely, they auto rotate, just like a leaf falling from
a tree will spin and fall slowly.

Speaker 3 (56:32):
So the gyrocopter has no engine apart from the tail
wrote at the tail propeller.

Speaker 13 (56:37):
Yeah, the gyro coppers pushed themselves through the air, but
the the rotor spins in auto gyration. Oh that's what technical.

Speaker 3 (56:49):
Any earthquakes, I wouldn't it's yeah, like that helicopatur I
can't believe I remember that helicopatur Anyho, Hello Carrio, it's Marcus.
Wellcome so bad button push hike Harrietshi Marcus.

Speaker 8 (57:13):
Yeah, welcome, it's very good evening.

Speaker 14 (57:16):
Marcus.

Speaker 8 (57:16):
Hey, you you buggered me? Break up all this toasty
pie pork I was. I was looking forward to having
my wrap that we made earlier on in the afternoon,
and now I've got to spend ten dollars lady on
a toasty pie from BP with sixty one people in there.

Speaker 3 (57:33):
What was your wraps?

Speaker 8 (57:37):
His chicken and salad and bit some pieces on it
that my wife's made up this afternoon.

Speaker 3 (57:42):
Oh yeah, wow yea.

Speaker 8 (57:44):
Now it's just going to have to wait from the
second break.

Speaker 3 (57:47):
So what's a toast? What's a toasted sandwich?

Speaker 8 (57:52):
Well? They actually at BP the chicken ones and I say,
the chicken and the and the aprilcot cream in there
as well. It was quite quite nice apricot with the
with the chicken.

Speaker 14 (58:05):
They're quite big too.

Speaker 8 (58:06):
For the price I must say.

Speaker 3 (58:08):
They make, don't make them for they're already in the
in the grilla.

Speaker 8 (58:11):
Yeah, they're al ready to go. Yeah, they already go
you just warmed them up, takes them a couple of
minutes or whatever it is. But they're really nice. Quite cunchy,
but quite a bit of oil comes out of them both,
you know when you eat those loss at the Yeah,
sort of bit like that. So a little bit of
a put off, but they are they are They are tasty.

Speaker 3 (58:30):
What's what's your what are you are you driving or
what are you doing all night?

Speaker 6 (58:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (58:33):
I'm on that driver driver on the city driver markets.
Come on?

Speaker 3 (58:39):
Yeah, have I told you about my holiday on the
ind of city?

Speaker 8 (58:43):
Well, actually down and we don't operate down there as
far as transit goes. But yeah, so was that down
in the south?

Speaker 3 (58:52):
It was from fun to in Vocao?

Speaker 8 (58:56):
Oh yeah, okay, how'd that go?

Speaker 3 (59:00):
I'll tell you what that that bus German underneath sky
City that gets a bit sketchy some still somewhere and
to see the video photos to see who it studies
on the bus to Gisbone where that went off?

Speaker 11 (59:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (59:15):
No, the way the way we normally do it, way
I do it is basically wait till everybody's off and
then you open the locker a get the bags out.
Seem to be a good way of doing it.

Speaker 3 (59:24):
Yeah, yeah, that was pretty interesting. The bus break from
Hamilton to New Plymouth. The bus bus broke down after
about ten minutes.

Speaker 8 (59:32):
Okay, she a good drive.

Speaker 3 (59:34):
What was her name, Lynde or something. She was good
and then we got another bus to New Plymouth. It
was good.

Speaker 8 (59:39):
Well, no, you want to come on me makers, come
on the night runs there to change your.

Speaker 3 (59:43):
Life from where where you run all.

Speaker 8 (59:45):
Closed Warrington talkland, Warrington awkland, and you might have to
kind of open your pairs a bit more or what
I should say, and specially out for a gold seat
down the bottom. Only nine people down the bottom plus yourself.
That's ten two five upstairs.

Speaker 3 (01:00:06):
How many upstairs?

Speaker 8 (01:00:08):
Fifty five upstairs in about ten ten down the bottom.

Speaker 3 (01:00:12):
So they're all on seats upstairs.

Speaker 8 (01:00:14):
Ye're all on seats standard seats, and you'll be down
the stairs on a leather seat. You'll feel like you'll
feel like the King.

Speaker 3 (01:00:21):
Does a seat recline right away.

Speaker 8 (01:00:23):
Yep, yeah, probably on just over a forty five, I suppose,
but you've got plenty of leg room. And yeah, it's
just a way to do it rather, you know, like
on a long long distance make us say, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:00:36):
Wouldn't you rather be. Wouldn't you rather be upstairs? I
suppose not a lot because it's dark.

Speaker 8 (01:00:41):
Wow upstairs during the day of course. Yeah, but yeah, yeah,
so Carrie, did most people sleep? Yeah they do? Actually, Yeah,
most people sleep. Get out of parme and I turned
my head up a bit and they all go to
sleep and pull a little bit of eight eleven to
or through the through the air con and yeah that

(01:01:01):
sends them off the Sleepay.

Speaker 3 (01:01:04):
We had struggles with the air con. I did, but yeah,
it came out of it. It always seemed a bit unreliable.

Speaker 8 (01:01:11):
Yeah, that's the thing with econs. They's just in large vehicles.
You know, they're going all the time. You know. It's
like you tell you might get in your car and
go down the dairy and you don't need giricon. But
with a bus, the econ goes on all the time.

Speaker 14 (01:01:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:01:22):
So as an ongo maintenance we try to keep them
pretty good. Ah, but I can't always get it right there.

Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
So you swap over.

Speaker 8 (01:01:31):
Do you?

Speaker 9 (01:01:32):
Nah?

Speaker 8 (01:01:32):
No, And I actually do the actually it's the main
run that we do, and we run the good buses
on the night run. So yeah, no, swap over. I
don't like swapping.

Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
Over you said you do Wellington Auckland. You didn't you
push back when I said Orkland Wellington both ways.

Speaker 8 (01:01:51):
So I do four days, four nights on and four
days off, so from Warrington Auckland and then stay in
the motel and then come back and then you know,
stay stay down in Warrington and then drive back up
and down again. So yeah, so what was your question?

Speaker 3 (01:02:06):
I don't know, but nice to hear from you.

Speaker 13 (01:02:09):
Hi.

Speaker 3 (01:02:10):
Someone has said, oh no, I didn't want to mention that.
What was I going to tell you? Buses? Planes, power? Yeah, anyway,
getting touches lines free if you want to talk pretty

(01:02:32):
interesting about helicopter helicopter And there's some school of thoughts.
Since you call it terrad act or you don't pronounce
the PA, you probably shouldn't pronounce the PA, and helicopters
that should be helicoata am I right? Always wondered how

(01:02:57):
the sound, always wondered how the sun gives us light
and heat? Well there you go. Why would it be
one or the other. But a light bulb gives your
heat and light, doesn't it? Twelve away from ten, My

(01:03:19):
name is Marcus. Here till midnight, Mokey bibbin along from twelve.
It feels like a Friday night, Am I right? I
had no idea that tomorrow was a holiday. Great things
planned and imagine what the new plan is will be
getting the children motivated and inspired to help with the firewood.

(01:03:46):
I think they're up front and I imagine they'll be
good for ninety minutes. I think the thing about parenting
is children are good with a task as long as
it doesn't go on forever. Mind you when a child,
when your child, every task seems to go on for reaver,

(01:04:06):
doesn't it? Oh, roads seem good. I didn't ask Kirie
where he was getting the old toasted sandwich at BP.
I wonder which he end? His wife said it made
him the wrap? Would she at the Auckland end or
the Willington end? Said he stayed at a motel in Auckland,

(01:04:29):
didn't he Well, I couldn't understand is I was talking
to him. Why would anyone pay extra to go from
Auckland to Wellington on the night bus in a luxury seat.
Surely you just fly, wouldn't you. I think Trump has

(01:04:58):
seen dollar signs in Gaza. I think his son in
law said it's great real estate. Yeah, good evening, Conorance Marcus, welcome,
Hi Connor.

Speaker 20 (01:05:13):
Good evening, Marcus, Happy New Year.

Speaker 3 (01:05:16):
And happy New Year to you too, Connor. Thank you
for that.

Speaker 20 (01:05:19):
Hey, talking about a toasted sandwich.

Speaker 14 (01:05:24):
The White Lady.

Speaker 20 (01:05:26):
Over the years, you know, over the last thirty five years,
when I visit Auckland, a ham, cheese and onion toasted
sandwich to die for, especially at that time in the morning.
Always I've got.

Speaker 3 (01:05:44):
To agree with you. There always good God, and I
am I right in thinking that they have three bits
of bread.

Speaker 20 (01:05:54):
Oh no, not on that one, okay, But the old
school I reckon that's the best. Yeah, you know, just
like you know, be true caramelized onions, beautiful beef in

(01:06:15):
a nice nicely done always just we're an old school,
but we tasted twenty five thirty years ago.

Speaker 21 (01:06:26):
You know.

Speaker 20 (01:06:26):
The flavors must be in yah, those plates or something,
because there's something special about it, let's for sure.

Speaker 11 (01:06:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:06:37):
I agree, I agree with you entirely.

Speaker 20 (01:06:39):
I never dipped in the equality.

Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
And I always think to Their burgers have always been
pretty spectacular too, haven't they always taste like an old
school Yeah, the way they toast the buns or something.

Speaker 20 (01:06:52):
Well, the toasted sandwiches are just got the gate.

Speaker 3 (01:06:57):
Yeah, I agree with Tarley Connor. Make us all hungry.
Now get in touch. My name's Marcus. Welcome. Sorry about coughing,
then coughing attack, run to toast the sandwiches of all things,
Marcus have taken overnight bus of the past and likely

(01:07:17):
again two points of view. No problems sleeping, one night,
free accommodation. Well that's a good point, but you could.
I guess it suppens if you're yeah, okay, yeah, fair enough, Yeah,
good evening, Gerard, Marcus welcome.

Speaker 21 (01:07:40):
Oh hey, Marcus, you know, just throw it up. I
used to work at the way Lady. In my family,
they have a long history working for the original owner.

Speaker 5 (01:07:50):
Yes, and my mum and aunt.

Speaker 21 (01:07:52):
He's worked for the son.

Speaker 12 (01:07:54):
Yes.

Speaker 21 (01:07:55):
When it comes to toast sandwiches, there's never three pieces
of bread. Okay, but but yeah two one toasted sandwich.
That one of the owners you can never beat is that,
you know, you meade, if you've been working there, you're
having eating everything, but it's like you have just ham
and the hot mustard and on the outside pieces of

(01:08:17):
the bread your lads are in butter. And yeah, you
just can't beat at the end of a eleven twelve
hour shift. That ham with with hot mustard, It's always
tastes great. And the other thing that the only peter
washer he always said he can't beat, is just toast

(01:08:37):
a slice of bread, toast with butter and tomatoes, salt
and pepper. Yeah, those are the two ones that you know,
he he he thought were the best. You know, I
kind of agreed with him, because you know, when we
were there, would be working in a lot of different foods,
all the other foods, but those ones, you know, they
was a good one was.

Speaker 3 (01:08:56):
The ham and mustard available? Could you order that? No?

Speaker 21 (01:09:00):
It wasn't, So it was kind of sot, kind of rest.
I just thought of bring up all.

Speaker 3 (01:09:07):
Oh yeah, look, yeah, yeah, I see they've got a tape,
they've got a they've got like a restaurant now up
in Kadang a Happy Road. I saw there's actually a
place you can sit down now a white lady.

Speaker 21 (01:09:18):
I've never been there, nor have I in my time,
but I see I drive pass through k Road a lot.
I always wonder and I think it's me to be
the same recipe, you know, the same well as the
same family.

Speaker 3 (01:09:30):
Mike have to go next time, Jared, thank you. We're
just coming up towards the news people. I hope it's
good where you are. So suddenly a lot of people
are texting me traffic reports. It's interesting, I asked earlier.
Here's what people are saying. I left cal Kop at five.
Marcus just got to Nataki. It's not a place I know.
Not a bad run really up to up sixteen, of course,

(01:09:51):
heaps of boats and caravans, but everyone was well by.
Have good run the Pukanui Pacific. Look busy. Here we
go heading north on why Cuttle Expressway, quite busy, hitting
both directions. Nice rund Hampton downs landfall for call out

(01:10:12):
four hours aukrom CBD to rustling cluing the car faery.
Cheers Marcus Mtaylor. That's a situation with the traffic, so
that's good. Get in touching on talking. My name is Marcus.
Welcome traffic, helicopters. Orange juice, toasted sandwiches, eight past ten,

(01:10:35):
Philip's Marcus good Evening.

Speaker 22 (01:10:38):
Marcus Good Evening. A song called Frozen Orange Juice was
the B side of a one hit wonder hit from
nineteen sixty nine, which I am recalling tonight because of
the death of the Aga Khan.

Speaker 3 (01:11:04):
I mentioned that earlier. Phil, I'm sorry, I just I've
pleased you have mentioned that.

Speaker 22 (01:11:14):
So the death of the Khan, the reference to the
Arga Khan was made. Do you know what the A
side of that hit was, Well, the the.

Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
Reference to Aga Khan wasn't where do you go to,
my lovely Yes, your name is? Your name is hood
and high places. You know, the Aga Khan. He sent
you a racecourse for Christmas and you keep it just
for fun, for a.

Speaker 22 (01:11:37):
Laugh, hahaha, Peter sasted, that's right.

Speaker 3 (01:11:44):
Yeah, what happened to.

Speaker 22 (01:11:46):
Him, glad? Peter Sasted? Yeah, he died in twenty seventeen.

Speaker 3 (01:11:54):
But what happened to his music career?

Speaker 22 (01:11:58):
Well, he was always rated as a good songwriter. I
sense not much else was accomplished after that particular single.

Speaker 3 (01:12:16):
I think I think he developed some illness or something
that means he couldn't perform, Is that right?

Speaker 22 (01:12:23):
I did actually see a more recent video, not sure
where it was taken, of him performing that particular song.

Speaker 3 (01:12:32):
It's a great song. Yeah, indeed, it's a great song.

Speaker 22 (01:12:38):
And so the clip side of it was called frozen
orangetroduce to link to your other topic.

Speaker 3 (01:12:46):
Oh, very good point, Phil, Thank you, I quite worked
that out, Tory. That's great, so great. It was also
in that movie, The with Anderson film The Dajing Limited
featured that song, one of the very good songs, Alec,

(01:13:07):
it's Marcus welcome.

Speaker 10 (01:13:09):
Yeah, how do you do? I there was a plane
that flew over about nineteen forty three, I guess, and
it was a Gloucester Metia. It was one of the
first jet planes I saw. It was like a fighter.
What year, I'll be nineteen forties, about mid nineteen forties.

(01:13:31):
I suppose I was just a small kid at school
at that time.

Speaker 3 (01:13:35):
This is a New Zealand.

Speaker 10 (01:13:37):
Yes, the Eden flew over a Carrie school. What it
was doing here, I don't know, but I was quite
impressive because it flew down and it was really low
when it came across.

Speaker 3 (01:13:50):
What type of plane did you say?

Speaker 10 (01:13:51):
It was Gloucester Metia.

Speaker 3 (01:13:58):
Oh, yeah, it'll be an effort to bring them to
New Zealand, wouldn't it.

Speaker 10 (01:14:06):
I suppose it would have been. But you know, I
was only a small school kid, and I know I
was quite impressed with seeing this thing come down lower
over the school.

Speaker 3 (01:14:15):
Must have been borrowed for the Royal Air Force. Is
that right?

Speaker 10 (01:14:19):
I don't know, but it certainly was a glass to
meet you.

Speaker 3 (01:14:23):
Okay, well, I'll look up for an image of that ALC.
Thank you, amazing looking plane, Laurie Marcus, welcome here.

Speaker 15 (01:14:34):
I imagine that probably would have been post war, before
they had the early British stets say so it must
be forty six or forty seven.

Speaker 3 (01:14:41):
Perhaps I did say forty six.

Speaker 20 (01:14:43):
Yep.

Speaker 15 (01:14:44):
Here the I was in a helicopter that we actually
had a bird strike of a down the Antarctic. We
hit a one of those school yeah when we're landing,
and it made a hell of a bang. You know,

(01:15:08):
the bird had sort of been protecting there was nests nearby,
so it's sort of been above us and flown down through.
So given the they we had work to do at
the spot. But they had to shut the helicopter down
and went through a conducted a very prolonged search of
the wings looking for things, because you know, there's something

(01:15:30):
by that could have actually unbalanced the whole set up,
and you know, you get vibrations which would be quite
dangerous for flying back to McMurdo. But what they did
find it didn't seem to be enough.

Speaker 4 (01:15:47):
To bother them.

Speaker 15 (01:15:47):
They fired it up again later on and it was
did the job all right, but strange enough, it didn't
kill the skewer the bigger tap as old boots.

Speaker 3 (01:16:03):
A helicopter blade in motion.

Speaker 15 (01:16:06):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. There was one of the Huey's too,
the big you know, the great, big heavy wing and
it flown at quite a distance and it sort of
crumpled up sort of a heap, and we didn't think,
you know, that was thought that was the end of that.
But then after been there for a while, this little
pile of bones and feathers sort of started moving back

(01:16:26):
and with a vengeance, eventually crawled over it and took
its started picking at the skin on the helicopter, get
one last strike, and hey, but they're a tough bird.
But the the the helicopter, the rotors. There was another

(01:16:50):
chopper halfway between the coast and Lake vander American, one
of the old Sekorski's, I think H thirty four, that
had crashed and it was left laying there for quite
a while, and it had was a four bladed one,
and the staff at the what used to be vendor
station recently no one as vandals that actually come down

(01:17:14):
and script everything that the key whists could get out,
except the blades was still there. It was sitting at
an angle you know where actually you could climb up
on them and jump up and down like it was
like a diving board. Hey, and it would have made
quite a good spring board for a pool. Yeah. They eventually,
did you know, they had a bit of a cleanup

(01:17:35):
in the Vlley's late seventies and took all those crashed
choppers away.

Speaker 10 (01:17:40):
But the.

Speaker 15 (01:17:43):
Slightly different to you know, we're talking about the plane
where the plane propeller, the house sharp they Now I've
been as a client for I've been asked to sort
of while we're waiting to take off with the CISNA
pilot asked me to get the get the fat pasted

(01:18:05):
file out and file if you're they're operating off a
runway where there's you know, small stones, they can get
little chips on the on the blade and with the
they're sort of an alloway. So if you can get
a file out and you just smooth smooth the edges
off and the whole thing works a lot better. Basically

(01:18:25):
cutting through the year that at the time it was
a bit rich asking the.

Speaker 3 (01:18:31):
Yeah, they've got files, they've got files on the planes
to do that, have.

Speaker 15 (01:18:34):
They Well I don't think it's not recommended now, but
I think the old but yeah, they could, especially the
guys that were operating off you know strips, you know,
with the small stones on that round here. I'm pretty
certain that you wouldn't find them, you know, normal guys
carrying them around these days because they cost so much
to set up and finally balanced.

Speaker 3 (01:18:58):
Nice to you from below a bit of run, but
thank you. Jeanette Marcus. Hello, Hi Jeanette, are you talking
to me?

Speaker 23 (01:19:05):
Marc?

Speaker 19 (01:19:06):
Yeah, Jeanette, Oh hi, lovey.

Speaker 24 (01:19:10):
I've been waiting for somebody to mention about that jet.
I was at Mount Helper Primary even nineteen forty six,
forty seven, and the whole school was allowed to go
outside and watch this jet fly over.

Speaker 3 (01:19:27):
Wow.

Speaker 24 (01:19:29):
And I've never forgotten it. So, you know how you've
been talking about all these different planes, nobody's ever brought
it up. And then that gentleman, I've never ever heard
what it was called, but I've never forgotten it.

Speaker 23 (01:19:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:19:46):
Yeah, it was the meteor. It must have been between
to and around New Zealand.

Speaker 24 (01:19:51):
Yeah, it did.

Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
Yeah, first of March to the ninth of May during
nineteen forty six.

Speaker 24 (01:19:57):
Oh there you go.

Speaker 3 (01:19:59):
Wow, how did it make Do you remember the noise
was coming over?

Speaker 24 (01:20:05):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely. Oh it just whizdoverst We've
never seen anything like it. Yeah, yeah, just amazing. And
I've been waiting for somebody to mention it.

Speaker 3 (01:20:19):
Yeah, I can't. It must have been a training. It
must have been a publicy. They must have trained some
of the key we pilots to fly jet. I guess
we might find out some more about that. We've seen.
Plain nostalgia seems to be what we're big on at
the moment. Marcus on route to Otamatata from christ Easy
run out of traffic, nelo its and Andrews brilliant. Marcus
first time text to hear the ham and cheese toasting

(01:20:40):
on the WAGGI fairy is sensational. I was hung over and
I highly recommend evening. Frank. Yeah, I think I probably
had one or two of those in my time on
the ferry. And yeah, I probably pig upshit for that one.
By the way, John Peel, the DJ, he said that

(01:21:01):
the song where do You Go to My Lovely he
told the enemy that he can to be the worst,
the worst song of all time. Shortt to Marcus, Hello
and welcome, good evening.

Speaker 11 (01:21:12):
That aeroplane would have been a vampire jet. I remember
flying over when we were living out at Wana, who
just south of want.

Speaker 18 (01:21:23):
Any sure, and.

Speaker 11 (01:21:28):
Those kinds of things were, you know, quite significant in
those days.

Speaker 3 (01:21:32):
Yeah, what when? When was that?

Speaker 11 (01:21:35):
It'd be about nineteen forty six, give or take a
year or two. It's a long time ago, but it had.
It was a double bodied jet with twin tails. And
I can remember quite clearly. And what did you say
it was a vampire jet?

Speaker 3 (01:21:57):
Okay, well, because I think people have said it was
a Gloucester meteor.

Speaker 11 (01:22:03):
Oh, I don't, don't think. It doesn't matter. It was
a very early model aeroplane. And just for the dickens
of it. Nineteen forty five, I stood next to General
Freiburg Wow, And it was the subject of a discussion

(01:22:29):
a couple of years later, and the headmaster was I
had to stand off with him.

Speaker 12 (01:22:35):
And.

Speaker 11 (01:22:37):
He was adamant that I was making it up. And
I was equally certain that I was standing next to him,
because he stood and addressed the people that wanted to
he from the steps in front of the library. Anyway,
went home that night, asked one gcgh that's right, and
just to make sure she rang the wrong in your chronicle,

(01:22:57):
and the one in your chronicle ran a little article
for the benefit of a certain hit Master General Freiberg
wasn't wanting an attempted nineteen forty five. And I forget
the reason why he came through, but I imagine that
they came home from the war, landed in Norkland and
was on his way through to Wellington. I think to

(01:23:21):
raise something for the war effort or whatever. But anyway,
and when that came out on the paper, head master
climbed into me a weebit. It took me a rewhile
to wake up to what he was doing. And then oh,
I didn't know she was going to ring the newspaper.
But anyway, those days we used to do the janitor work.

(01:23:43):
Might tend to through the four and put the desks
away and whatever. And I missed the school bus. And
as long as I live, that headmaster did that deliberately,
because there's only fifteen kids on that bus. They learned
that lessons are hard way sometimes.

Speaker 3 (01:24:01):
Nice to hear from your Sean. I think probably the
probably both those stories were probably right. I think probably
the Glosster meat Hea did do a fly around New
Zealand and forty six. I think then the Air Force
did embark and had a number of Vampires from nineteen
forty six onwards. I think that was a plane of choice.

(01:24:24):
The iraniny If operated more vampires than in the other
aircraft after World War two, fifty eight in total between
fifty one and seventy two. Gorgeous looking plane with that
double tail. Their amazing looking plane. Marcus. I did my
annual Cambridge to Auckland inter city bus on Christmas Day.

(01:24:45):
Beats driving the car by far superb driver, hardly touched
the brake pedal of smooth drive. He was planning way
ahead as they should. Came back five days later and
booked a single gold class seat downstairs. Well worth it.
By the way, tell you what, the one thing went

(01:25:07):
into the city more often than not the seat belts
didn't work. I don't know what that's about. Yes, Well,
when our bus broke down Hamilton and then we got
the new bus, well that was quite a long time
for the woman to learn how to drive the new bus.
She wasn't confident, but actually once she got into the groove,
went well of about messenger. She got the hang of it.

(01:25:32):
Quite quite an old bus, actually like a nineteen sixties bus.
I was just happy to get another bus. I thought
the whole I thought it had all gone bad after
the bus broke down so quickly. Marcus tried to board
the inter city bus and orkand the bus was stationary,
but the driver refused to open the door and then
proceeded to drive forward into my mother in law who

(01:25:52):
was sitting in front of the bus trying to get
the driver's attention. Completely unnecessary aggression and made me think,
imagine if this was a tourist. Marcus was watching on
archives news in and on YouTube the other night. Was
interesting to watch the Vulcan land supported by the Arians,
yet they have vampires. Were then cheerly informed the Vulcan

(01:26:14):
crashed on return flight, killing all but the Vice Admirable
of the Aria of Bombering. Thank you. I'm sure there's
some got to know where the best footage is for
aviation on YouTube. Someone probably will let me know, but
there's so much to watch on YouTube. The algorithm served
me up a video today that went for twenty minutes.

(01:26:37):
And it was a man, an American man with a
restaurant in Vietnam, and he cooked an ostrich whole. He
brined it for about twenty four hours and wine and
salt and stuff like that. Then he smoked it for
two hours. Then he no, then he seid it for

(01:26:59):
two hours, and then smoked it for sixteen hours. They
said it tastes like beef. The giant Ostrich was a
massive I don't think I don't even know what you're
supposed to do with ostridge, meete. I'm surprised they ate it,
and I don't think they loved it. That was seemed to

(01:27:21):
be my impression. Good evening, Henry, good evening.

Speaker 19 (01:27:26):
Who much we can do?

Speaker 3 (01:27:27):
Marcus?

Speaker 19 (01:27:29):
Marcus, good evening? Am I?

Speaker 3 (01:27:32):
Who Am I? Who you wanted to talk to?

Speaker 19 (01:27:35):
Yes, most certainly we would. You were discussing the jetplane?

Speaker 3 (01:27:39):
Yes, now.

Speaker 19 (01:27:40):
I lived at a Hacker Aerodrome from nineteen thirty nine
till September nineteen forty seven, and in June of nineteen
forty seven, the first jet plane to come to New Zealand,
AGSTA Media or Mark two, flown by Squadron leader Mackay,
was due to arrive at a hack eerodroom about one o'clock.
So we traped up and we parked ourselves outside the

(01:28:03):
number one hanger on the tarmac, waiting for this thing.
And as it turned out, it nearly killed me. Well,
I stood there and got tired of standing waiting, and
I sat down on the concrete and I ended up
in the palms from North Hospital w pneumonia nearly passed away.

(01:28:23):
But that was in June of nineteen forty seven, Roost
the media or Mark two, flown by Squadron Leader Mackay.

Speaker 3 (01:28:31):
And and that's that's the dates.

Speaker 19 (01:28:34):
That was the first touchdown of project plane that come
direct from Australia.

Speaker 3 (01:28:38):
Okay, wow, and what gave you the pneumonia?

Speaker 19 (01:28:44):
Sitting on the cold concrete in the middle of the window?

Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
Okay? Say did you say? Did you say? Who was
who was the squadron leader who flew the plane?

Speaker 19 (01:28:59):
Squadron Leeder Mackay, Robert Maxwell Mackay. He flew the first
that was Mark two, gloss the medial.

Speaker 3 (01:29:06):
Yeah, I don't want to quibble. I don't want to
quibble with you. But on the Air Force Museum website
it does say it was eleventh of February nineteen forty six.

Speaker 19 (01:29:15):
Yeah, I'm pretty sure that's wrong.

Speaker 3 (01:29:19):
Okay, that wouldn't be the first time. Yeah, was your
did you did your father? Was he at the base?

Speaker 19 (01:29:28):
My father was in charge or the ground machinery to
her aerodrome during the Second World War?

Speaker 3 (01:29:32):
Okay.

Speaker 19 (01:29:33):
It was with an output called a WMU, which was
the words maintenance unit, which was prior to the public works,
which in turn was prior to the Ministry works.

Speaker 3 (01:29:42):
Okay. Were there many children living there?

Speaker 19 (01:29:45):
It was about I think it was about ten or twelve,
So there wasn't a school there. No, we went to
our Hackey School and the Bulls School Hackey School.

Speaker 3 (01:29:59):
And during World War two were there was there a
lot of I mean, obviously the war was half a
world away. Was there a lot of action at Ahaker
in those years?

Speaker 8 (01:30:11):
Oh?

Speaker 19 (01:30:11):
Yeah, there was. There was. There were sixteen hundred men
on the airport at the time. And where they're building
that big combomration for the helicopters down on what we
used to know was Siberia. There was a there was
a satellite camp there, three hundred, all in individual huts.

Speaker 3 (01:30:33):
And were they made was it? Were they mainly training.

Speaker 19 (01:30:37):
Yeah, they were. They were all well, I mean there
were a lot of maintenance people as well, and where
you've got machinery, you've got to have maintenance from the aircraft.
They had, you know, all the different people that involved
with the maintenance of the aircraft. And there were quite
a lot of aircraft here in those days. When we
first went there, there was biplanes, Goodness, Paukaheins and Vincent's

(01:30:58):
that's all that was there. And then became the American
Curtis stutt p forty, kitty Hawks and Warhawks some course
heirs and Grummer Avengers that were they were later Grummer Avengers.
In fact, was Captain Fred Ladd. Yes, do you remember him.

Speaker 3 (01:31:16):
I read his book. He was a he's what i'd
call a self pathologize you like to talk about it.
He liked to sort of create the legion around himself,
didn't he a little bit?

Speaker 5 (01:31:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 19 (01:31:25):
Yeah, he called himself the poetic Pilot.

Speaker 16 (01:31:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 19 (01:31:28):
But when he arrived, and he was later in the
term and seventy five Squadron didn't want anything to do
with him because they were the elite. So they poked
him away over on the outskirts of the airfield near
my right beside my father's workshops, and every time I
walked past, he used to call out to me and
so would you like to come for a flight?

Speaker 12 (01:31:49):
Boy?

Speaker 8 (01:31:51):
No?

Speaker 19 (01:31:51):
Thanks?

Speaker 8 (01:31:52):
He is a character.

Speaker 3 (01:31:53):
Is a character?

Speaker 14 (01:31:55):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
He was that. I think the box called a puff
of spray and arm Away or something like that. He
read an autobiography. Yeah, I've got that.

Speaker 19 (01:32:04):
A couple of X Air Force gentlemen have spent something
like twenty five years in the Air Force, have opened
a little museum in the older hockey hall which was
at the back of the hockey Eradroone on tam Milana Road,
corner of Anson Ryner and Team Mayna Road. And the

(01:32:25):
man of Too District Council gave him the keys to
the hall. So it's got a bit of upkeep. I
think they've got it for you know.

Speaker 3 (01:32:36):
Are you used to in that area, Henry.

Speaker 19 (01:32:39):
No, I'm a woman who want a great town.

Speaker 3 (01:32:41):
There is it's the beast town of the country at
the moment.

Speaker 19 (01:32:44):
Yeah, it's going on an old man now, No, not really,
are you. I'm more on ninety next birthday.

Speaker 3 (01:32:52):
Brilliant nice to hear from. You're going to run, but
good stuff here. We thank you. Hello, Ted, that's Marcus. Welcome,
good evening.

Speaker 23 (01:32:59):
Oh yes, hello, Marcus says. Earlier on you were talking
about jets flying over schools, and I remember in nineteen
fifty eight, I think I was a pupil at the
Port Levy School on VACKX financially and the schoolteacher's wife
was a member of the Woman's Air Force or WHACK

(01:33:20):
or whatever they called it in RAF in England, YEP.
And when the Falcon bomber came out to New Zealand,
I don't know who she spoke to, but she got
it diverted from its original course to fly up the
four mile bay of Port Levy, and the school was
only a few hundred meters from the head of the bay,

(01:33:42):
and it was at extremely low level, and we knew
when it was coming, and we're all standing out there,
about twenty five pupils, and this massive bomber threw over
the Port Levy School at just a few hundred feet
and then just hauled itself up and over the saddle
to Little River. I'll never forget it.

Speaker 3 (01:34:00):
Goodness, knowing the geography that that would be fairly impressive.

Speaker 23 (01:34:03):
As it came up the valley, it was just amazing.
It's amazing. There were huge planes and I think the
same one had a little bit of trouble later on
in its tour of New Zealand.

Speaker 3 (01:34:13):
Yeah, I think one of them I remember talking about that.
There was some extident went off the runway at I think.

Speaker 23 (01:34:19):
I tried to land in Wellington and couldn't or something
and had to go somewhere else there. But it was
a moment that I'll never forget in my life. Yeah.
I don't know who this teacher's wife spoke to, but
she must have had a little bit of sway.

Speaker 3 (01:34:35):
Was your family farming in Port Levi.

Speaker 23 (01:34:39):
Yes, we were, we were, Yes, our son's still there.

Speaker 3 (01:34:42):
Steep country to farm in it.

Speaker 23 (01:34:45):
It is really steep, Yes it is. Yes, you need
one leg longer than the other.

Speaker 3 (01:34:52):
Really, what's your son running? He's not running sheep, is he?

Speaker 23 (01:34:56):
Yeah? He's got sheep and cattle.

Speaker 14 (01:34:57):
Yes, is it right for him?

Speaker 23 (01:35:01):
It's picked up in the last in the last perhaps
six months, really, lamb schedules lifted and beefs quite strong.
So hopefully Donald doesn't upset the Apple card. But at
the moment it's looking quite promising. Just need wall to
lift a weaver, but we've had a weaver, but of

(01:35:21):
good news about that too lately?

Speaker 3 (01:35:23):
Have we have they found a use for it?

Speaker 12 (01:35:25):
Oh?

Speaker 23 (01:35:25):
With the tianger or whatever they did, they decide to
all the new government buildings are perhaps going to the wall.
Will have an opportunity to corvet all those buildings.

Speaker 3 (01:35:40):
Yeah, there must be a you wonder about insulation or something.
There must be There must still be some great useful wall.
I can't work it out, but I mean.

Speaker 23 (01:35:47):
I'm sure it's such an amazing product, is isn't it?

Speaker 13 (01:35:51):
Well, and all that.

Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
Ice break and all that marino stuff seems to be
so popular, and it seems you know, there must be.

Speaker 23 (01:35:59):
You just know when you put a woolen jersey on,
you get instant warms, don't you, Yes, but you know.

Speaker 3 (01:36:04):
They haven't managed to find a way to make woolen
jur You know that you can't pay people to take
the wool away, but they still haven't managed to make
woolen jerseys that compete with the out.

Speaker 13 (01:36:13):
I can't work it out.

Speaker 23 (01:36:15):
Yeah, No, that is the trouble with the woolen carpets.
Very synthetic. They're just a weave it bearing.

Speaker 3 (01:36:20):
Yes, Yeah, Well, I enjoy talking to you ten. That's
nice to talk about Portland for those that don't know.
That's on the Banks Peninsula. That's one of the north
facing on north north west of the facing Big Bays.

Speaker 12 (01:36:33):
There.

Speaker 3 (01:36:34):
You wouldn't want to be farming there where you would
want it? Well, I don't know, but she's Tiger country.
Well they're handed to christ I suppose you're not that isolated.
I get in touch of you want to talk sixteen
to eleven Hittell twelve. Some of might want to talk
about Peter Sarstik. Where do you go to? My Lovely?
It's a good song. I only mention that because I
mentioned the Aga Khan who died today. He's a billionaire

(01:36:58):
through kind of his faith. People give ten percent. Marcus.
Young men were sent to a pig during the water
loom to fly and mostly Lancaster bomb as my dad
was one. Ginny Marcus driving from christ Church to the
Sounds tonight, all quite on the roads, just driving through

(01:37:21):
Sudden looking forward to TOASTI is it pickton? My favorite
is the sauerkraut one. Samantha, Yeah, I reckon, you might
be right about that. I didn't try that one though
next time now, I think we're not going to get

(01:37:45):
the news updates tonight from the local news things. I
think everyone's taken off for the long weekend. The international
news is all about Trump. Well, of course that's not
going to happen. He's not going to take over the
gars a strip because you can't just take over a place.

(01:38:09):
And she united pretty much everyone against him, Turkey, Iran, Plo, China,
the lot. So, yeah, he's the human headline flood the zone.
That's what you do. Come up with as many things
as possible, and the reporters can't keep up. Some of

(01:38:30):
the stuff will happen, some of the stuff won't happen,
but there are all sorts of things happening in the margins.
In the meantime, Elon Musk's pretty much taken over. Oh boy,
here's a press release from the Breakers, Breakers fall short again.
Must be hard to write those press releases. The wind

(01:38:54):
for the Hawk secured them for top spot on the
ladder with just one game still to go. Yeah, I
thought they were celebrating a lot. I thought they're actually
over celebrating. I don't know what's wrong with the Break
is the import that very tall guy seemed to get
injured quite a lot, didn't he He was good. But
he's tall. I reckon, he can't even drive. I don't

(01:39:17):
know how he gets anywhere. Too tall for car. Let's
just lie down on the back. And what about orange
juice going to be a thing of the past. I
can't make it anymore. They can't grow the oranges because
of disease. They're not say with olive oil, same with coffee,

(01:39:39):
same with eggs, same with milk. Interesting times, Hey, Mary Marcus, welcome.

Speaker 25 (01:39:49):
Hello there. Hello. This ised my mom today, and she's
nearly one hundred and three. And I asked her if
she remembered the Napier earthquake, and she said, oh, yes,
very that the whole school she went to Manchester Street
school building, and the whole school left the building and

(01:40:10):
went and stood at the middle of the road and
they watched the power lines swaying violently.

Speaker 20 (01:40:19):
Wow.

Speaker 25 (01:40:19):
And she said, she said that she thinks in those
days the earthquakes were more violent than they are today.

Speaker 3 (01:40:28):
Yeah, maybe she's right. I guess it depends which ones
you've experience. Experienced absolutely, I guess the building. And she's
good at one hundred and three, is she marry?

Speaker 25 (01:40:40):
She's brilliant.

Speaker 3 (01:40:42):
In her own house.

Speaker 25 (01:40:45):
No, No, she's she's in her in a village. Yes,
but I know she still plays bowls and you know
she's got all the marbles, as she says.

Speaker 3 (01:40:56):
You, well, that's unbelievable. So she wasn't right in the
middle of the quake. Fielding was a bit of a
distance away, wasn't it.

Speaker 12 (01:41:02):
Oh?

Speaker 25 (01:41:03):
Yes, but she said it was still quite violent.

Speaker 3 (01:41:05):
Yeah, okay, how would have she? I think was nineteen
thirty one, so she would have been born in nineteen
twenty two, so she would have been nine. I guess
when that happens, so she wouldn't remember it?

Speaker 25 (01:41:16):
Well, I guess absolutely.

Speaker 3 (01:41:20):
Sheep has one hundred and three.

Speaker 25 (01:41:24):
I know, I know I've got good geens, haven't you.

Speaker 3 (01:41:28):
Is she the oldest there? Yes, but I wonder what
feels like being the oldest in a home like that,
or you'd feel amazing, wouldn't you.

Speaker 25 (01:41:40):
Well, she says it's quite sad really because all her
friends have died.

Speaker 3 (01:41:44):
Yeah, that would be Has she been there a while?
Has she?

Speaker 25 (01:41:47):
Ah, she's been there twelve years.

Speaker 3 (01:41:49):
Oh wow, cheepers. Goodness. Okay, So nice to hear from you, Mary,
Thank you. I won what's going to happen with the
ben dead breakers, with there having such a bad season
and everyone feeling the love for the Auckland FC. I
think that'll die down, they won't it. What did experience

(01:42:10):
without hype when I was in Auckland. I see that's
not really my team, but yep, I still see them again.
Good numbers turn up for that. So some of the topics.
For someone sent me an email about when Anger de
Ordaney died. I wonder why they've done that. Angil died
twenty two thousand and two tomorrow, sixth of feb that's

(01:42:32):
gone fast. For those that don't know, angiw de Ordaney
was a broadcast and I think she did some stuff
on ZB. I think she was a fillin host and you.
I think that's the way it worked. I don't know
if she had a regular slot, but I imagine that's

(01:42:53):
something that some of you will know. Also, today as
World Natala Day. There never used to be such a
thing as Natella. Then it was everywhere. I don't know
when the Natalla invasion started. It's full of sugar like
it's ninety percent with a couple of hazel nuts. Anyway,
it's Natella Day. But it's genius and marketing they make it.

(01:43:16):
It's all nuts but anything. But it should be called Sugarrella,
not Natella. But you do see it more and more
in New Zealand. Now I don't know why. I don't
know where the hazel nuts come from. Other if they
grow hazel nuts lily, they must. You might have something

(01:43:39):
to say about Natella. It's kind of sneaking its way
into New Zealanders and I don't know how I feel
about it. It kind of feels but yeah, it's not
quite Yeah, I sort of feel abo xenophobic of Natella.
In all that sugar, you won't have an interesting Natella

(01:43:59):
story or you might not. Oh that's what I was
saying about the stories, wasn't it about the teller and
everything else? Now let me think well of some of
the other stuff that might prompt you to call.

Speaker 24 (01:44:13):
Ah.

Speaker 3 (01:44:16):
So, orange juice is looking like it's going to become
more expensive and harder to get. So I'm just warning you.
The apple harvest is early. Apple picking is underway in
hawks Bay. The earliest harvest during one growers thirty years

(01:44:37):
in the industry, and a Hawk's Bay they grow about
two thirds of the country's apples, So I guess that's
a good thing there. Early are they they're picking. The
variety they're picking is gem Hello, Gary, welcome.

Speaker 18 (01:44:58):
Teller.

Speaker 13 (01:44:59):
Yeah, sorry, Marcus just.

Speaker 18 (01:45:04):
He's a I think it's a I think it's called
the China Report. It took forty years about health in
that and apparently they reckon mattella is the worst thing
you can eat.

Speaker 5 (01:45:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:45:22):
Another one, don't believe it.

Speaker 7 (01:45:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 18 (01:45:25):
And the other one is maple syrup. Really, it's just
it's just sugar too.

Speaker 3 (01:45:33):
Think about maple syrup doesn't even taste very good.

Speaker 18 (01:45:37):
It comes from corn. They make it because over in
America they subsidize all the corn, the farmer's corn they subsidize,
they get a subsidy for it, and they turn it
all into maple syrup.

Speaker 3 (01:45:50):
I think the real maple syrup doesn't come from corn.
The real maple syrup comes from trees.

Speaker 18 (01:45:55):
Oh right, Yeah, but I know that nutella is terrible
and they put it inside. You know, you can get
a bun and you think it's chocolates that nattella on
that inside. Things like that terrible.

Speaker 3 (01:46:09):
What's the report?

Speaker 17 (01:46:11):
It's called the China Studies.

Speaker 18 (01:46:13):
It took about forty years. That goes through all the
foods and that that are bad for you and things
like that. But they reckon tella.

Speaker 3 (01:46:22):
Where did you say this, Gary?

Speaker 18 (01:46:25):
You've got a copy of it from a friends and
read it. You can get it through the internet. I think.

Speaker 3 (01:46:32):
It's called the China Report on Food.

Speaker 18 (01:46:36):
Yes, I'm pretty sure you know either the China Study
or the China Report.

Speaker 3 (01:46:41):
China Study probably is.

Speaker 18 (01:46:44):
But you know what market is very interesting reading because
of diabetes. Now, if you look after yourself, you can
reverse all of these diseases. Yep, yeah, yeah, probably. They
give me about nutella though, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:47:03):
How old are you?

Speaker 18 (01:47:06):
I'm seventeen?

Speaker 3 (01:47:06):
Now when did you When did you first become aware
of natella?

Speaker 18 (01:47:12):
About two thousand and sixteen, seventeen.

Speaker 3 (01:47:15):
I think you might be right about that.

Speaker 18 (01:47:18):
Yeah, it goes through all the food Dave. But sugar
is you know, you deadly, you know, like they've done
study on rats and that you know, they addicted them
to cocaine and things like that. But we're in a
few weeks and they put the sugar down a they
were off the cocaine and into the sugar. Addicted to
the sugar, right, things like that.

Speaker 3 (01:47:39):
Yeah, when did you first become aware of Natella?

Speaker 18 (01:47:46):
When I read that report, you just baby said in
the supermarkets. Now people are saying they put it in
your sandwiches for their kids, and I went, oh my god. Yeah,
but when I read that report, Yeah, it's not a
very good thing at all. Basically what you said, market's
just all sugar.

Speaker 3 (01:48:06):
Sixty percent sugar or something.

Speaker 12 (01:48:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (01:48:11):
Where are you?

Speaker 5 (01:48:12):
What?

Speaker 7 (01:48:14):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:48:14):
What city you?

Speaker 18 (01:48:16):
I'm Wellington City?

Speaker 3 (01:48:18):
Really didn't I hate you?

Speaker 18 (01:48:21):
Yeah? On top of Cuba Street, just on Web Street there.

Speaker 3 (01:48:24):
Oh, yeah, be a good place to live years.

Speaker 18 (01:48:28):
And you to the gardens and you can up to
the gardens and then about tenants. Lad, you're back in
the heart of the city. And about five minutes later
back over to the beach.

Speaker 3 (01:48:37):
And that I'll be busy in Willington. It'll be busy
in Willington tomorrow. I would imagine pretty happening in Cuba Street. Yeah.

Speaker 18 (01:48:45):
And what Tonguey Park there opposite Chapin's New Rule. They
have a concert every White Tongue day there.

Speaker 3 (01:48:52):
Oh who's playing?

Speaker 1 (01:48:52):
Do you know?

Speaker 12 (01:48:54):
No?

Speaker 18 (01:48:55):
I was hoping that since that, you know, they's a
concert on the wall. They called it one the other
just like they're anyway. What was it called home growing
though it was year homegrown? Yeah, by singing. I remember
that one. They had the barge in order to parade
that day and blam blam blame and all that played age.
There was a brilliant concert.

Speaker 3 (01:49:17):
Yeah really I remember that. What year would that be?

Speaker 18 (01:49:23):
That barde would have been about eighty one eighty two. Yeah,
they had some big names there. I remember blam blam
blam and yeah they were the main acts. But they
had a barge broaked out with the fountainers and they
had the bands on there.

Speaker 3 (01:49:38):
Only do it once?

Speaker 18 (01:49:41):
Bring something like that back?

Speaker 12 (01:49:43):
Do they do?

Speaker 18 (01:49:43):
They only do that once, ADM.

Speaker 3 (01:49:47):
I've never heard of that. They only do it once.

Speaker 18 (01:49:50):
Yeah, they just done it once.

Speaker 12 (01:49:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 18 (01:49:53):
There was an old d D smash and all them
we're around you know, yeah, you know the mockers and all.

Speaker 10 (01:49:59):
That that that that era.

Speaker 3 (01:50:01):
How far off shore was the barge just right about
with a fl and was yep, okay.

Speaker 18 (01:50:09):
People in boats and all. Yeah, there was a bust
people sitting on top of the bus, you know, a
big tourists like camping bus and that aid. There's heaps
of people. I remember that concept was a good one.

Speaker 3 (01:50:20):
I've never seen an article about that since because normally
those things they cover the classic content like that.

Speaker 18 (01:50:26):
Yeah, but I do remember brand By see they were
good as one of the great bands. Yes, I stay
away from that market.

Speaker 3 (01:50:38):
Hang on, I want to found some information about that.

Speaker 18 (01:50:43):
Yeah, it's quite good. A'm from the first eating today
fishes the process stuff here very deeply.

Speaker 3 (01:50:49):
You're right, I'm not going to eat no, tell I'm not.
I'm not mad.

Speaker 13 (01:50:54):
Yeah, but the.

Speaker 18 (01:50:56):
Same as there were where were you want to make
the syrup everything? Oh yeah, yeah, you have one.

Speaker 14 (01:51:07):
You have a good day.

Speaker 18 (01:51:08):
Hang on, hang on, Yeah, I've.

Speaker 3 (01:51:13):
Just found some stuff about that concert on the on
the I just can't find where in the article it is.
Oh yes, here's an article on Doug Hodd. He must
have must have been one of his bands was there
as well. I'm just trying to trying to skim through

(01:51:36):
the article and see what it says about it. Oh yes,
you had a good memory though, eh.

Speaker 18 (01:51:47):
Yeah, and that day, well does each people come home
from the heart and boats and they're all parked out
there in the boats on that Yeah, things like that.

Speaker 6 (01:51:59):
That was pretty full on.

Speaker 3 (01:52:03):
I'm just trying to go through this whole article and
see what it says about it. It's a longer article
than I thought it would be. Actually, I've never ever
seen any pictures of the concert on the barge.

Speaker 18 (01:52:25):
Um music was really writing. Why at that stage that's it?
I think you had had, Yeah, a lot of good
groups bend.

Speaker 2 (01:52:31):
Then.

Speaker 3 (01:52:34):
I don't think I'll be able to find the article.
Damn it all. Okay, a better play commercial, but thank
you for that. Nice to hear from you, Gary. No
one seems to have noticed the shortage of orange juice.
I had a guy that was texting every night about
the one leter bottles of carry juice. He's gone. He
was ahead of the curve. He picked that before anyone
else did. Classic night Tonight, bit of aviation, bit of traffic,

(01:53:00):
bit of jets Marcus. At least if you have jam
on your toast, you know it's sugar. Natala has an
element of dishonesty. Why can't work out who let it
in the country was nowhere than thought it was everywhere.

(01:53:22):
Met a farmer on a plane on Sunday, and the
USA price of hazel nuts is crashed. A lot of
nuts also grown in Turkey, you can see on Google
Earth the trees. Marcus, please stop saying farmers can't get

(01:53:42):
rid of their wool. Crossbread will is still worth between
two and fret dollars a kilo. Our grandkids call natlla
chocolate mayonnaise, Marcus, what is worse, natella or RaRo? Many
boomers still drink RaRo. Rara is no different to quench cordial.

Speaker 1 (01:54:01):
For more from Marcus lash Nights, listen live to news
talks there'd be from eight pm weekdays, or follow the
podcast on iHeartRadio
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