Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Robinie Kibb now with Correos the Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
It's Robin and Kipp now with Coreo. It's the podcast.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Today on the radio show not Podcast, we spoke about
touch Shop, Corey took us down memory lane and we've
got a lot of text messages that we actually didn't
get to on the show. So and if ever you
want to be part of the podcast, that's the best
way to do it. You can send us a text
at any time. Four O nine ninety seven three nine
seven three.
Speaker 4 (00:36):
A lot of people have got memories, good memory, good memories.
Speaker 5 (00:40):
Really sugary crap that will never be sold in touch shops.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
Again, terrible food.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
It's sad. Let's do it at halftime.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Ronie kid Now with CoreOS the Podcast. Brisbane's biggest game
of Hide and Seed.
Speaker 6 (00:57):
Is coming mine.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
So Corey has requested a wireless microphone for this break.
We don't know why, but we do know that at
some stage in the next few days we're going to
be taken and hidden somewhere in Brisbane. We don't know when,
we don't know where, but the first person to find
its wins twenty thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
Yes, yeah, and so what are you doing what are
you doing?
Speaker 7 (01:18):
Well, look, you know we want to be found obviously
as fast as possible. And so will you be so
worried just because you don't like hanging around other people people,
you're probably not going to handle me being bored.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
And I like to have my own space.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
I'm happy in here for a few hours, but then
I like to go home and be alone for a bit.
Speaker 8 (01:38):
And autlematic with two children.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
But anyway, that idea.
Speaker 7 (01:41):
And obviously you know I use all new things that
I didn't like, and I think last week you did
this to me.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
I like to make sure that I have protein with
every meal. So I'm just going to have some tuna.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Oh, get that, guys, school for me.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
Just have a little bit of tuna here, just now,
just to just crack the little can.
Speaker 7 (01:57):
Of John Westside. Get that near me.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
There go roight, no American? What's wrong?
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Mate?
Speaker 7 (02:02):
I hate the smell of it.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
Yeah, we didn't realize that you hated tuna that much.
Speaker 5 (02:08):
So now I told you, I think it's going to
be punished.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
Upright, fair enough.
Speaker 7 (02:17):
The one thing I've been telling you is I'm worried
about my stench.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
Yes, yeah, what is that? What have you just done.
Speaker 8 (02:25):
What is that?
Speaker 2 (02:25):
He just bangs something and he's run out.
Speaker 8 (02:27):
Of the room.
Speaker 7 (02:29):
It hasn't gone bang.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
I'm going to see your packet there it looks whoa
Is that a fight bomb? I don't know what is
that clo.
Speaker 7 (02:37):
I'm just trying to help and he's going to use
Is it not working?
Speaker 2 (02:43):
I'm not getting it?
Speaker 7 (02:44):
Are you all right?
Speaker 8 (02:44):
Okay?
Speaker 7 (02:46):
Are you okay?
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Are you getting it?
Speaker 5 (02:48):
Hang on, okay, I've got I've got to go.
Speaker 7 (02:57):
Way worse in the day.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
Sugget you file, your your stage is gonna be a
lot worse than that.
Speaker 4 (03:10):
It's you two.
Speaker 8 (03:12):
You are still going on.
Speaker 5 (03:15):
Jesus dying because they've been touching them and smelling them.
Speaker 8 (03:22):
What happened?
Speaker 9 (03:26):
Oh wait a minute, if you've just joined us, they've
been firing and they had about twenty that didn't work
and the ones just finally worked.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Now the coos the podcast.
Speaker 4 (03:58):
I want to run a quick pole based on maps
last night.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
So let's talk about maps, baby, Let's talk about trash teab, Let's.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Talk about all the good things and the bad things
marriage can be. Let's talk about maths.
Speaker 5 (04:13):
So one of the grooms has done something that has
divided the team in here if we want to know
your opinion and put a poll to it. Thirteen one
oh sixty five. Now let me run through what happened
last night. Intimacy Week continues with sex expert Alessandro setting
the challenge.
Speaker 10 (04:30):
After my intimacy workshop with the ladies, I asked them
to create their ultimate fantasy night and share that with
their husbands. I just signed this exercise to help empower
the women of this experiment, and it was my hope
that their husbands would be enthusiastic about fulfilling their partner's desires.
Speaker 5 (04:48):
We talked about this a lot yesterday and they did
varying things from going into sex shops to buying sexy
lingerie to recreating their wedding dance. But it was now
the time to find out whether the grooms enjoyed it,
and again a really mixed bag. Paul the Frenchman loved it.
Speaker 11 (05:07):
That's not you know, it was it was electric and
there honestly, it was great. And the thing is because
I know this is something that she's not used to,
and I could see she was being a little bit
shy and then you know, a little bit hesitant, but
I could see she was, you know, she did her
best and she and she went all in and that
was really Yeah, that was awesome.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
Yeah, it comes up from Paul.
Speaker 7 (05:25):
He's a good guy.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Paul.
Speaker 5 (05:26):
Sorry, Yes, thumbs up from Paul. Billy the Englishman though,
was pretty uncomfortable.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
It was really really nice.
Speaker 10 (05:32):
It was.
Speaker 1 (05:35):
We didn't have like have sex or anything last night because.
Speaker 8 (05:38):
I was awkward.
Speaker 7 (05:40):
I can tell you right now that's what she wasn't.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
Yeah, she did just from watching it.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (05:47):
Those two were the ones with the lingerie and the Okay,
so she went.
Speaker 7 (05:52):
She had oil and she's like, yeah, I'm not going
to go into it massaging and grabbing harder and yeah,
all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
He just wasn't into it, okay.
Speaker 4 (06:00):
And then there was Ryan.
Speaker 5 (06:02):
And this is what we want your opinion on because Ryan,
who calls himself a warrior but behaves like an absolute tosser.
Speaker 12 (06:10):
I didn't go the way either of us wanted. But
I've got to say, like she gives she has awesome, say.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Like that blows yep.
Speaker 5 (06:20):
Okay, so we are let me if you didn't watch maths, right,
they're in this room of men and one woman who's
the sex expert, which is fine, but to say that
to a group of men.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
I want to know, was that a compliment or did
it cross the line?
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Thirteen one sixty five to a quick poll, Because I mean,
it is a it is a positive thing that it is,
not like you said, she's terrible at it?
Speaker 8 (06:45):
Okay, great.
Speaker 7 (06:46):
I think it's it's a line.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
You think it's a cross line.
Speaker 8 (06:51):
So you hang on.
Speaker 5 (06:51):
You're an ex footballer, you're in locker rooms all the time.
That the basis of somewhere where I think I.
Speaker 7 (06:58):
Was never okay with that sort of stuff. I was
a pretty private guy. I don't really like saying that
because I always say to the boy, you never know
if she's going to be your long term partner, right,
and then like what if that happens?
Speaker 4 (07:12):
So did other other guys would have done it?
Speaker 7 (07:14):
There's over the years, you know, you've had some people
talk about like certain things. But to be honest, I
don't normal.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
Was it never about their long term partners though? Or
sometimes about that?
Speaker 7 (07:23):
No, not any I can remember. It's I usually don't
like being in those conversations.
Speaker 5 (07:29):
That's no, it's it's crossing the line from you, Kip,
it is crossing the line.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Yeah, especially where I mean that's supposed to be his wife.
Speaker 7 (07:38):
He's on TV my wife.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
You know what I mean. If it was, if it
was a hookup or whatever else, that's fine.
Speaker 5 (07:43):
Okay, let me put it in reverse because it doesn't
actually just have to be male to female. Here, if
Naomi were to be saying tell her friends that about
her girlfriends, about you, I.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
Would be thrilled. I would love that.
Speaker 8 (07:56):
See this is the thing.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
But I mean I would walk into I'd walk into
the next barbecue with all my friends and I'd be like, hey, guys,
you know about me.
Speaker 5 (08:14):
So the question remains thirteen one O six five. If
your partner is telling their friends about how good you are,
is that a compliment or is it crossing the line.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
I want to get your opinion next too, Let's do it.
Thirty one A six.
Speaker 1 (08:30):
Five ro now Vicorios the podcast.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
Talking about maps and Ryan, who got himself into trouble
last night when he said this in front of Alessandra
and the rest of the blokes talking about his wife
didn't go the way.
Speaker 12 (08:47):
Either of us wanted. But I've got to say she
gives she is awesome.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
Kisses, yes, more than kisses.
Speaker 5 (08:58):
I'm just but it's really interesting because our bigger team,
our producers and so, and we've been divided on this
all morning as to whether that is actually a compliment
or did it cross the line. I mean, I think
in Ryan's situation, it absolutely crossed the line because it
was super disrespectful in that moment for him. In that moment,
he was being an absolute tosser. However, in our own lives,
(09:20):
in our own relationship, I would like to think that
my partner, if they're talking me up, that that would
be a nice thing done respectfully.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
Is there any way of saying that you're good at
that particular thing doing it respectful?
Speaker 5 (09:35):
There's a way of saying we had a great night.
It's I think that's a compliment. So if we're asking,
as in general, who doesn't want to be known, who
doesn't want to be known within a friendship group, that
you are someone that satisfies.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
Your partner time and place, Okay, go on.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
I'm just wondering, do you thin I think it's because
it seems to be on because we were just saying,
how if for us, for Corey and I, if our
partner said that about us and we found out, we'd
be thrilled, right, is it because particularly that act requires
a lot of practice, and maybe and maybe she's that's
why it's disrespectful, because it says, hey, you've been doing
(10:20):
this a lot, and that's why she's great at it.
Speaker 8 (10:23):
Oh wow, you've thought about this a lot.
Speaker 7 (10:26):
That is a way that like, that's why I think
it's so bad because of that.
Speaker 5 (10:29):
See, I'm not getting into the I'm not getting into
the details. I'm more saying about if you are going
to discuss your intimate relationships with your friends, then do.
Speaker 4 (10:42):
It in a positive way that talks up your partners.
Speaker 5 (10:45):
So I haven't thought about So you're assuming that if
that happens in a group of men, men would think
that you're actually with someone who's done that.
Speaker 2 (10:54):
A lot of practice.
Speaker 3 (10:55):
And that's the offense, is that that's why she might
be upset is because he's he's suggesting that she's quite
a professional at it.
Speaker 5 (11:02):
Man, it's a difference in the in the in the
gender divide A thirteen one O six five.
Speaker 8 (11:08):
I want to know what you.
Speaker 2 (11:09):
Guys think, Chris out of chirmside your thoughts.
Speaker 13 (11:13):
I think what he did last night was probably a
bit disrespectful how he went about it.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Yes, so the line.
Speaker 13 (11:21):
Yeah, I think he did just like especially to everyone,
and he no one needs to know all that.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Like he could.
Speaker 13 (11:29):
Have done it in a way like, oh, you know,
we had a good night. I agree with that.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Yeah, so no details, just positive.
Speaker 5 (11:35):
Don't we want to feel like we're satisfying.
Speaker 7 (11:38):
Yeah said we like that pretty so much. Sums up
what happened.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
Yeah, you could.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
Assume Jacob Augustine heights. What do you think I did.
Speaker 6 (11:47):
I believe it's a double edged sword at the moment,
so what he said was disrespectful in terms.
Speaker 14 (11:54):
Of saying it online television, but in a group of mates.
You know, be positive about your partner is great, but
you're only going to do yourself some more problems if
your whole friend group knows how.
Speaker 11 (12:07):
Good she is.
Speaker 5 (12:09):
You mean, seriously, you got the places, that's what point
she had.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
No women have called to all.
Speaker 5 (12:20):
I actually don't spend a huge amount of time talking
about that with my girlfriends. I feel like that's my stuff,
whereas you guys puff your chests up and go whoa, no, no.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
No, I don't.
Speaker 3 (12:32):
I don't tell my friends about anything to do with
Miami in the bedroom. But I wouldn't mind if she
talked about me.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
That's the difference.
Speaker 7 (12:38):
That's so weird.
Speaker 5 (12:39):
So when she gets in with a group of girlfriends
and they start side eye.
Speaker 15 (12:43):
Knew, Yes, this is me walking into the party with
my handguns, Sabrina. It's Robin and now with CoreOS on
Kiss ninety seven three.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
Now with the past.
Speaker 3 (13:11):
Halfway through the podcast. So, yeah, we thought we'd covered
all the terrible things that we used to be allowed
to tear as kids. Well, they weren't healthy, amazing, Yeah,
they were very It was all brown and beige.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
There was no colors. There was no vegetables.
Speaker 8 (13:24):
Oh no, train bun had white jam.
Speaker 15 (13:28):
Right, there was the red of jam, sugary jam apples.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
It was bright ora yeah, true, yeah, artificial colors.
Speaker 2 (13:37):
Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (13:39):
We had some great messages came through from us. Now,
this one from Sally Am was bizarre.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
Tuck shop.
Speaker 3 (13:44):
We used to get a packet of salt and vinegar
chips and ask the tuck shop lady to open them
up and squirt in tomato sauce.
Speaker 8 (13:51):
Why why would you do that?
Speaker 2 (13:53):
That's weird, that's.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Too much, It is too much, and how filthy you
get all that sauce your hands?
Speaker 4 (14:01):
And I don't know who this is.
Speaker 8 (14:02):
I think cream horns. Cream horn.
Speaker 5 (14:05):
I don't think I've seen a cream horn in a
bakery for at least a decade.
Speaker 8 (14:09):
I don't know them.
Speaker 5 (14:09):
Okay, so there were pastry, but like croissant and filled.
Sometimes it was custed right at the tip of the
horn and then it would come out it was just
full of cream.
Speaker 4 (14:20):
Yeah, okay, so like a canal.
Speaker 5 (14:24):
Yeah, but like crappy, weird gray bit like and more pastry,
more pastry and school.
Speaker 7 (14:34):
Actually we used to jelly cups and.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
Jelly on top, like made fresh.
Speaker 7 (14:42):
Jelly cups made and custard on the top.
Speaker 4 (14:48):
And Stacy said, do you remember space bars?
Speaker 7 (14:51):
I remember?
Speaker 8 (14:52):
I remember space bars.
Speaker 5 (14:54):
They were like there came in either caramel or chocolate,
and they were a bit like a kit cat where
you broke it in half, and it was I think
it was a red and blue packaging and they were
a bit chewy, like they're not chocolate.
Speaker 8 (15:05):
They were, yes, yeah, they're quite thin.
Speaker 5 (15:08):
Yeah they were thin little ones, but they were quite
thick in density.
Speaker 8 (15:13):
Yeah, but they were delicious.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Space They were the.
Speaker 8 (15:17):
First like protein bars.
Speaker 5 (15:18):
Like my mum used to say, if you're hungry, have
a space, but have a space bar because it'll, you know,
give you a peck you up for some energy and
it wasn't a lolly.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
I'm sure my mom this is how little she knew
about nutrition.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
I'm sure she used to give me cherry ripes as
like a healthy alternity.
Speaker 5 (15:34):
Yeah, well they had fruit and cherry apple.
Speaker 7 (15:43):
You're just you're taking a healthy fruit and.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
Caramel now.
Speaker 3 (15:56):
Podcast thirteen one six five is our number forever you
want to get involved with the show. I think Corey
is going to need you for this because he's he's
going down memory lane.
Speaker 7 (16:06):
Yeah, it just takes me back to the good old days.
Wasn't that long ago for me?
Speaker 2 (16:11):
Where did you? Where did you go to school?
Speaker 7 (16:13):
Ball?
Speaker 2 (16:15):
How many people were in your school?
Speaker 7 (16:17):
One hundred and fifty hundred and third.
Speaker 8 (16:19):
That's more than I was.
Speaker 7 (16:23):
Grade ten? I think grade twelve. I don't think indication
was that good back I stopped at year ten. Well, yeah,
probably weren't too confident to go those last couple of years.
Speaker 4 (16:32):
No one else wanted to go that went back on it's.
Speaker 7 (16:35):
A big farm yeah, okayah, a big farm town or
small farm towns.
Speaker 4 (16:39):
If they were serious, they would have gone to boarding.
Speaker 7 (16:41):
School, right, like every sport I think was there cricket, golf, everything, netball, right,
all that.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
Was there was crazy cool.
Speaker 7 (16:50):
But the talk shop, boh, it's amazing. Just yeah it was.
I felt like touch was a reward.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
How would you get it once a week or something?
Speaker 7 (17:05):
Oh, mum used to probably do the days. I used
to get a couple more time.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Oh she was working.
Speaker 7 (17:09):
Yeah, okay, you didn't pat me lunch today. So some pies.
Speaker 5 (17:16):
We used to have this thing where you could put
a sausage roll into a bread roll or a schnitzel
a cheese schnitzel into a bread roll.
Speaker 8 (17:23):
With layered of cheese and.
Speaker 5 (17:25):
Tomato cells, and then they'd put it in the microwave
and melted for you. It was the most delicious thing
you've ever eaten, followed up by either a custard tartar
or a cream bar.
Speaker 8 (17:37):
And if you.
Speaker 5 (17:37):
Really had the extra cash, you then get a can
of lemonade.
Speaker 7 (17:41):
How much cash talking like twenty.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
That's like an entire adult calorie calories for a day.
That that is so much.
Speaker 8 (17:51):
If you don't care.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
When you're a kid, you're running around.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
We used to I used to get this thing that
they were called chicken corn rolls and they were basically
a schnitzel, basically a chicken schnitzel had little bits of
corn in its trunkle like said, there was vegetables.
Speaker 7 (18:03):
Remember that.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
Yeah, you did just basically have a shitty.
Speaker 11 (18:06):
Chicken ch.
Speaker 7 (18:11):
And then we had to shop at petrol station. We
had the pizza pockets.
Speaker 3 (18:18):
Yeah, six fives our number.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
What would you go to? Yeah, because it's all gone.
Speaker 5 (18:24):
Yeah, Conn, I'm really interested in hearing from you because
I know when my kids went like, the best thing,
you know, the most kind of sweet induced thing was
if one of the wonderful Touch Shop people had made cupcakes.
That was That was the pikelets. Where the other thing,
(18:45):
Oh my god, we've lost Cory. It's over in the corner,
just reminiscing about his previous.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Life, dreaming pie, Robin and Kip. Now with Coryot's and
Kiss ninety seven three.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Now with the pod.
Speaker 3 (19:06):
Because we're talking about Touch Shop Nostolgia wise, because it's
changed so much. What what the kids are getting now
at Touch Shop? I mean, there's so many fruit options
that I don't think you don't Apple, I don't think.
Speaker 5 (19:19):
Yeah, the Apples would know what someone would get an
apple that have been there for a week and use
it as a football.
Speaker 3 (19:23):
Yeah right, yes, I know rap Now at the moment
he gets they have a brain break or whatever. I
guess that's their morning tea, the brain break and so
and every day his mum cuts up this little container
of fruit for him. And every day I pour that
container of fruit into the bin. He never touches, not
one slice of apples.
Speaker 7 (19:42):
Gets in the car and huck. He goes that Monty,
you got fruit? Big fella just smacks it, does he love?
Speaker 4 (19:48):
He's so good.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
We want your we want your touch shop memories, Melissa
of Logan.
Speaker 12 (19:53):
What you got?
Speaker 2 (19:56):
Oh hanging you're on this week?
Speaker 16 (19:57):
He is sorry? Are you to get pork riblets on
a soft bread roll with barbecue sauce? That was so good?
But I used to actually spend my bus money and
have to lie to the bus man to get onto
the buck alllets and I turn a really big chicken
(20:17):
stole my money, so I really need to get home.
But I did it like three times a week.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
There's a number.
Speaker 5 (20:28):
There's a number of the text line too, four nine
nine seven three nine seven three. Charmaine says, I used
to make a stir fry with rice for school lunches
for my two daughters.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
I'm not goodness you are?
Speaker 5 (20:40):
So you are that mum, charmaine and chilled fruit and
fruit juice, vanilla sponge for recess.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
Oh wow, yeah, so that's not coming back in the lunch.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
Box sponge and two Now two talks to us a
lot on the text line.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
He owns a bakery.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
Okay, so he says, my customers get a curry meat
pie into a long bread with tomato.
Speaker 8 (21:01):
Sauce like a sloppy Joe.
Speaker 5 (21:02):
That's pretty.
Speaker 4 (21:03):
Wouldn't it be terrible to own a bakery?
Speaker 1 (21:04):
Man?
Speaker 8 (21:05):
I would just eat my way through the customer vanilla license.
Speaker 7 (21:11):
I have the worst I'll just eat.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Yeah, that smell the bakery man, the smell of a bakery.
Speaker 3 (21:20):
I don't know it's something in our in our DNA
from hundreds of years.
Speaker 7 (21:23):
Or way about cream dinaic in. All right, let's move.
Speaker 8 (21:27):
On, Billy Joel.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
It's Robinie Kipp now with Coreo as a Kids ninety
seven to three.
Speaker 1 (21:35):
Ronie kid Now with Coos the Podcast.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
The big story over the last couple of days is
President Donald Trump has has called a war on paper straws.
Speaker 7 (21:49):
On occasion, they break, they explode if something's hot. They
don't last very long, like a matter of minutes, sometimes
a matter of seconds. It's a ridiculous sense.
Speaker 2 (22:00):
So and it's gone through.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
He's now saying that paper straws are done, plastic straws
are back for the USA.
Speaker 5 (22:06):
It is so short sighted, so short sighted.
Speaker 8 (22:09):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 5 (22:10):
I mean, straws may be dumb, but like plastic, dude,
they're killing the oceans we now have like it's something
some ridiculous one pound of plastic for every three pounds
of fish in the oceans by twenty twenty five.
Speaker 4 (22:24):
And plastic straws are not recyclable.
Speaker 2 (22:27):
Well they should be recyclable, that would be the first thing.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
But paper straws are that bad that I don't think
whatever the solution, this is not the The paper straw
is not the solution.
Speaker 2 (22:37):
They're so useless.
Speaker 7 (22:38):
There's got to be something else. I don't want the
plastic to come back and destraw I don't want that,
but I don't want paper straws. There has to be something.
Speaker 5 (22:46):
They're like bamboo straws, they're metal straw No one does it.
Speaker 3 (22:49):
Like if the big big places like macas and seven
eleven weeks and I've got a slushy with raft the
other day and that thing was like it hurts your mouth,
it gets rough.
Speaker 8 (22:59):
It doesn't.
Speaker 5 (23:00):
In Australia, Brisbane was the first city and state to
get rid of single use plastics in our supermarkets.
Speaker 4 (23:06):
And we all were up in arms. Can't do it
now we just.
Speaker 5 (23:10):
Have the bags in the back of our car. We
go and do a grocery shop. Straws are tiny. You
have little cup holders in your car.
Speaker 8 (23:16):
Put your straws in.
Speaker 3 (23:18):
Have a look at what Ali, our boss right now
has got a plastic It.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
Was like an iced coffee.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
It's in a huge plastic cup with a plastic lid
and a tiny paper straw. What's the point?
Speaker 9 (23:28):
Like you have officially a Trump supporters experience.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
The cup is recyclable, okay, So then is the answer.
We just got to make the straws recyclable. They can't.
Speaker 4 (23:39):
They're too little the way that they're made.
Speaker 5 (23:41):
I looked into this when you guys, when I realized
what you were talking about. And Americans use a million
of single use plastic.
Speaker 8 (23:47):
Straws every day.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
You do love a straw.
Speaker 5 (23:50):
These straws are not recyclable, and they end it's the
seventh most common item found on beaches worldwide.
Speaker 3 (24:00):
That's but here's the thing, like if I remember being
in America, I remember being in America, right, And you
go to a restaurant and they bring your water at
the table, and every time a fresh straw wrapped in paper,
a plastic straw wrapped in paper, and you would go
through seven straws during a meal. So they're out of control.
I get that, but we don't.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
We shouldn't have to pay for their stupidity, Like we
don't use that many straws.
Speaker 8 (24:22):
The paper straws suck.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
Okay, we'll just get it, except they don't suck.
Speaker 8 (24:26):
You can't suck.
Speaker 5 (24:28):
Won't you use like a bamboo straw? Why won't you
take care of your own straw like you do your own.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
Bad because then you leave it in your car and
then it's sitting somewhere on the side thing and it's
so wealthy, and then you put it in your mouth to.
Speaker 7 (24:39):
Say it as a coffee cup, like you just just
take it with you, it with you, it's not hot water,
rinse it out it was and then get home, wash it.
Speaker 4 (24:48):
Er erin of erin of thorn lands.
Speaker 6 (24:51):
What would you like to say, Hey, I was just
on a cruise over the holidays and they provided edible
straw with all of our cocktails.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
Did they work as a straw?
Speaker 14 (25:04):
They were amazing? They were sweet. There was three different
flavors like a vanilla strawberry and cream and a chocolate
and when you finished, they didn't dissolve nothing like that.
They actually taste really nice as you were using them.
Speaker 7 (25:20):
And then we have the technology.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
That's what's so annoying.
Speaker 3 (25:22):
We have the we have the better option than the paper.
What we should what we need to do is band
plastic straws and banded paper straws and then they have
to bring in the edible one.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
What's a cruise? Was this by the way, you having
edible straws?
Speaker 12 (25:33):
Oh?
Speaker 14 (25:34):
It was just the Carnival Illuminosa cruise.
Speaker 7 (25:39):
If they can do it, why can't we?
Speaker 2 (25:40):
Yes, but can do it on a cruise edible straws.
Speaker 7 (25:42):
I've done it before, Yeah, just one time. I ate
the straw before I finished with drink. That's the problem.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Now with the.
Speaker 5 (25:59):
Podcast, I didn't realize that this was going to be
quite the controversial topic that it is.
Speaker 8 (26:05):
But thanks to the Castle.
Speaker 5 (26:09):
Right, So I got sent from one of my best ies, Heidi.
She sends me comedic bits all the time. She loves comedy.
And there is this great I think he's American, maybe
he's Canadian, guy called Nate.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
Nate bar Ganzi him. He's great, right, excellent.
Speaker 5 (26:24):
Okay, Well this was a little piece that he did
recently about hole digging.
Speaker 12 (26:29):
I don't know if you've ever dug a hole before,
but it's maybe the hardest thing you're ever do in
your life. You see it and movies and.
Speaker 10 (26:36):
It's like, I'll just dig this hole real fast, and
then you do it in real life.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
It's like, I guess it's all cgi because it's impossible.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
It's so hard that it made me realize this is.
Speaker 12 (26:45):
Why so many people get caught when they kill someone
with a shallow grape.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Even if you're digging the most important.
Speaker 8 (26:52):
Hole of your life, you hit a point.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
I'm just like, all right, that's good. Never right there.
Speaker 2 (26:57):
He's from Tennessee.
Speaker 5 (27:00):
Yeah, so I've never done a hole.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
I can't believe you've never dug a hole.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
To be fair, like, I've done little things with what's
the little.
Speaker 5 (27:08):
Like a little hand trail, like I've done I'm talking
like a massive Yeah.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
Like I've put in I've put in a like a
you know, four meter palm tree. So that requires a
proper hole.
Speaker 4 (27:20):
You've never done that? Yeah, So I want to know,
is it really that hard?
Speaker 7 (27:24):
Not with a crowbar?
Speaker 2 (27:26):
It depends on the soil. Don't reckon like sometimes.
Speaker 7 (27:30):
You're clay, You're that's what you're going. That's enough. Like, yeah,
it's impossible whether it's dry or where. You need a
proper digger for that. But look, if it's soil and
like you know, probably you know that sort of sf
it's pretty easy. It's not that bad.
Speaker 5 (27:44):
Do you like dig holes big enough for like wheelbarrow
size dirt that you have to take away? Because yeah,
what do you build a hot But what do you
dig a hole like that?
Speaker 7 (27:55):
Look when you got when you got, when you got
room and you got hacktaar or acreage. You just find
stuff to do.
Speaker 8 (28:01):
How many bodies are you burying in a.
Speaker 7 (28:02):
Couple trench trench from Yeah, just for the water. I
was sick of the water just dropping down and on
the grass and making the money when I made so
I just got probably a fifteen.
Speaker 2 (28:15):
Meter trench by hand. You do that by head.
Speaker 7 (28:18):
Yeah, with the shovels and the crowbars.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
Okay, that's more than I've done. Yeah, that's that's proper digging.
Speaker 7 (28:24):
Yeah, it was not fun.
Speaker 8 (28:25):
Is that why you wear shirts?
Speaker 3 (28:27):
Sleevelessh that's why you've got You've got whole digging arms.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
That's what you got.
Speaker 7 (28:31):
Look, yeah, a lot of shirts. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (28:34):
Well is there any Is there anything in my life
do I need? I've got to this point without digging
a whole. I think I can probably get for the
rest of it without worrying about it. Nothing that I
have to achieve as a human.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
No, I mean, like maybe at the end of this
hidden experiment when we've playing a big hide and seek,
if you lose it and you need to bury one
of us, then it would be handy.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Yeah, other than that gory six five, So it's a
nightmare whole.
Speaker 7 (28:58):
He's like trying to bury a horra.
Speaker 5 (29:02):
He's ready to do it, like in the Westerns where
you make them dig their own grass.
Speaker 2 (29:06):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 4 (29:07):
So you get you put them in it, they dig
it out and then head.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
Or at the beach, so you can dig.
Speaker 7 (29:14):
In sands on an army camp once. I remember we
had big holes with spoons.
Speaker 2 (29:18):
Spoons.
Speaker 7 (29:19):
Yeah, they made us. That was one of our things.
At midnight. They woke us up after about an hour's sleep,
ran down to this field, did a few other things,
and then one of them was we had to I
think bury two or three jerry cans.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Yeah, there's big petrol cans.
Speaker 7 (29:32):
Yeah, so big. And they had to be under the ground,
under the whole way, so the top couldn't.
Speaker 8 (29:37):
Be on level, and you dug that whole yeah, and
all the.
Speaker 7 (29:41):
Boys started running to the tents getting hammers and like
just because it was going.
Speaker 4 (29:45):
To taste so yeah, how long did it take you?
Speaker 7 (29:47):
I think an hour in the end, But they thought
it was going to take us all morning because they
only gave us like four spoons.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
And then when you when you're going as deep as
a jerry can.
Speaker 7 (29:57):
She get hard. That's end up getting like yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
And you could lose renaout in that hole as well.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
Rowing in here now with Correos the podcast