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November 19, 2024 67 mins

Today on the show, Jerry is joined by Manaia Stewart and they go deep into a number of issues... like Bouncer the Golden Lab from Neighbours, and the Mount Rushmore of NZ Fast/Medium Bowlers.

Plus, which well known Kiwis would you want to see enter parliament, and what problems in your life would lead you to Hikoi?

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The heardeche you Breakfast show, whatever you need for your
next job. Bunning's trade is ready to help us.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Entertainment, sports and he's there are available everywhere on the
Heart Radio out Jeremy.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
Wells, gurd Money, Welcome to the Heart Eckie Breakfast this Wednesday,
the twentieth of November twenty twenty four. My name's Jeremy
Wells and this is executive producer Ruda stepping in for
Meshi on the Buttons, who's still got a cold. Yeah,
he does send us a picture yesterday he looked absolutely awful. Well,
you're always going to see the picture of that situation

(00:32):
of looking as awful as you possibly can. I spoke
to Meshi on the phone. Okay, he sounded absolutely terrible. Okay, terrible.
Australian content director Pixie Campbell also called him yesterday and
then called me to tell me how mesh was after
I'd been texting Mesh to ask how mesh was. Yeah, right, Okay,
we're going around and around there, aren't we.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
But yeah, yeah, I mean obviously he's still sick. I
hope he's okay tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (00:55):
Well, let's just say when I first called up Meshi,
he is.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
Very nice. And then as the conversation went on, and
it was about a twenty minute conversation. By the end
of it, he was like that, and.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
He was chatting away and feeling absolutely fine.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
And then I said to him, all right, so will
I be seeing you to Monie is Oh? Nah, many remembered, Oh, sorry, Jerry,
I'm just got Yeah, he just put a character a
little bit by the end of it. Yeah, but look, no,
Meshi not well, he's got a horrific cough. Okay, horrific,

(01:29):
So we don't want that in here. Doesn't have dropsy?
Isn't that what we found out the other Yeah, dropsy.
It's a condition that seems to be affecting millennials all
over the park right now. Fluid retention, fluid on the lungs.
They breakfast already, your former South Island meatwork and mania.
Stuart joins us on the show after six thirty. Ruder,
surely he's on his way. He must be in an uber.

(01:50):
He likes to uber, and doesn't he at this hour?
He does, Well, there's not a huge amount of public
transport operating in Auckland eight minutes past six, is there?
I feel like you can probably get in a bus
from about five point thirty. Okay, yeah, I'm we're How
far away does he live. He lives a wee way away. Okay,
not miles away. A friend of mine once once rented

(02:12):
an apartment. He's doing a little renovation on his house
and they had to get out of their house for
about three months because there was no bathroom, and they
decided to rent a little apartment downtown, and they thought, oh,
this is a reasonable price. And he sort of looked
around and this one was particularly cheap, and he he thought,
and then they went to it and it was really
really nice. They went and had a look at it
in the middle of the day and it was it

(02:33):
was a really really nice apartment. And it just couldn't
work out why it was so cheap. Bugret this this
is fantastic. So rented the apartment and then took a
while before they actually took up the apartment, and then
and then they moved in, and they moved in on
a Saturday, and it was fantastic. And then on the
Monday morning, at five point fifteen, this horrific noise started

(02:58):
up and he was awoken and he realized that he
had rented the apartment exactly above and straight across the
road from the Auckland Downtown bus terminal place where they
start the buses. Ah, every morning, so all every single
bus that leads from Auckland left from underneath their apartment. Yes,

(03:21):
was he locked in long term? He was locked in
for three months. Oh, he said everything. Did he not
realize that? Could he not see it?

Speaker 5 (03:30):
No?

Speaker 3 (03:30):
He said it was an empty lot. Oh. No, So
when he rented the place, it was completely empty, and
he just thought there's some kind of empty and the
only visited in the middle of the day when there
were zero buses. Yeah, And and then he just said
it was every day at five point fifteen more the
sound of more buses than you've ever heard, all exiting
at once. Well, you do get used to sounds like that. Though.

(03:52):
We lived near a train station just before there were
like electric trains, and they were a little bit quieter.
But then at about one am every morning, you'd get
the big freight track up and the whole house would shake.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
Yeah, And probably for the first couple of weeks you
wake up one am, But then slowly that starts to
taper off, and then you just start sleeping through it.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
Yeah, I suppose the same thing happens with main roads.
I've had flats before that have been on main roads,
like proper main roads, And weirdly enough, you get used
to infect Oddly, when you then move into another place
and it's quiet, you wake up in the middle of
the night because you think that something's horrifically wrong because
you're so used to the sound of traffic.

Speaker 4 (04:35):
Yeah, you can't sleep in silence all of a sudden.
That's like a swift to run a fan. And we
have to run a fan in our room during summer
and winter otherwise. My wife and I struggled, Is that right?
You need noise? Yeah, I need white noise. And sometimes
we've gone away and we've been in a place that
doesn't have a fan, and we have to bring up
on YouTube. You can look up twenty four hours of

(04:58):
fans just.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
Going and that really puts me to sleep. So you
need white noise, yeah, like a baby. I'm like a
big bag. You mean white nose like a baby. Now,
I don't need the one that goes Oh, yeah, I
don't need that. I think that's probably driving babies crazy
all around the world.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
The day breakfast with Jeremy Wells on radio.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
I just talking about white noise, and turns out that
executive producer Ruder has to sleep with I didn't know
about this about you. I don't know you had to
sleep with something going on in your room. Otherwise, have
you got tenators? Yeah? I do have.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
Tonightis wow. That's how I pronounce it. I believe I
can actually isolate it to one particular incident wherein it happened.
I play covers music in a bar, and I'll just
turn this music up because it is a sad story.

Speaker 3 (05:50):
Young lady came up to me and I thought she
was just going to say nice performance, because it was
during a break in our set.

Speaker 4 (05:58):
And she came up to me and she said that, and.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
I was like, sorry, I can't hear you. I said,
just come a little closer. I can't hear you. And
she screamed in my ear and my right ear at
the top of her lungs, I love your T shirt.
And from that moment on, I've had a ringing in
my right seriously from her. Seriously.

Speaker 4 (06:24):
I don't know her name, I don't know who she is,
I don't know where she is now, but she has affected.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
My life to that one incident. Oh no, no yellow
T shirt with Tonka on the front that said, I
dig this. It's a very memorable person clearly. Right. So
now you have a ringing in your ear. Yea, oh,
it's a humming sort of sort of around there. Okay,
are you sure there's not something in there? I'm pretty sure.

Speaker 4 (06:51):
I've had them flushed out a few times since then,
so I don't think so.

Speaker 3 (06:54):
I've had a friend before who had a a small
bug into her at a party when we're all having
a good time at a party, and it became the
real focus of the party, that's for sure. We attempted.
Someone said that you put oil in your ear, yes,
and so we had olive oil in there. We were
sort of trying to suck things out of it. There

(07:16):
were people with straws. There was all sorts of things
going on, and I think we ended up doing more
damage to that particularly year than we did. Good did
you get the bug out? Though no one never found
the bug. I think that there may be was never
a bug. Okay, maybe it was just one of those parties.
Then that's my fat. It was definitely one of those parts,
you know what I mean? Coming up later in the show,

(07:36):
let's talk about Bounce of the Dog. You may remember
Bounce of the Dog from Neighbors? How could I forget
Bounce of the Dog from Neighbors?

Speaker 4 (07:44):
In the late eighties early nineties, Neighbors loomed large over
the New Zealand populace.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
Now it certainly did. I don't know why, I don't
know how, but it did well. There was nothing else
on TV, That's what it was. So Bouncer was a
golden Labrador, much like our own Dickxter. Was this one
of the It was on Tuckswonder Dogs. I'm going to
tell you later on how much Bouncer got paid, and
it's going to absolutely shock and surprise you.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
Is your news, sports, entertainment and music that were of
the say, liable everywhere on the right. Here on Radio
Holiday with Jeremy Wells.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
It's six thirty two on the Hrdachey Breakfast. Time for
your latest news headlines. The Treaty Principals Bill Hikoy has
sent its message to the government loud and clear. About
forty two thousand people march to Parliament yesterday. Emergency services
winched a pilot out of the water last night after
ditching their plane and Tasman Bay north of Nelson. The
pilot was the only person on board the light aircraft

(08:40):
and is in Nelson hospital and All Blacks midfielder Jordi
Barrett's test seasons likely over. He came off before halftime
with the knee injury in the last to France and
failed to take an active part in the window of
training seen by media overnight in Turin ahead of Sunday's
tests against Ataly. Just ty to look at what Italy

(09:01):
are paying and what New Zealand are paying in that test.
New Zealand paying one dollar three one dollar three, I
thought it was a dollar two yesterday. The odds are
really blind out because the Jordy Barrett being injured maybe
and Italy paying ten dollars and Cherry, what's the what's
the old man tree?

Speaker 4 (09:18):
If you've got a million bucks, if we put that on,
what's that three thousand or thirty.

Speaker 3 (09:23):
Thousand that we would make?

Speaker 4 (09:24):
I think thirty okay, got a million bucks mate, that
I could just sporrow.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
No, okay, sadly thirty thousand to risk a million for
thirty three. I mean, look, Italy could win. That's why
they're paying a dollar three. That's why he's paying dollars.
It's a possibility.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
You never know. Last game of the season.

Speaker 3 (09:42):
The All Backs did look tired last week in the
second half. It's tough. Those those four games in a row, well,
three tough games and one less tough game.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
They take it out of you. Yeah, well you say tired.
But I remember on Monday Young in turn Mashy he
said he thinks they were hungover.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
Possibly. Yeah, I know. They had a hu night after
that win in Dublin, as you would fair enough. What
a great game, what a great performance, but it meant
a lot to them.

Speaker 2 (10:13):
The Hurchy Breakfast already.

Speaker 3 (10:15):
Archy former South Island meetworking and I Stuart joins us
on the show this morning.

Speaker 5 (10:19):
Nice to have your weatherus modnight. Good morning, gentlemen. It's
good to be here as well. I've gone shorts in
the office for the first time this summer.

Speaker 3 (10:25):
Oh well done, thank you. It's a big day. That
means it's going to rain now. Good watch it's actually
there's your right you peak. The RDA is going to
be cold too. Alright, it's time for the history of yesterday.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
Today we've Jeremy Jeans drummond dwell, oh yeah, we've kept
the music.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
We've got to keep the drumming bass going, just to
keep them, just to keep the vibe up. So in
eighteen twenty, on this day, the whaling ship Essex was
attacked and sunk via sperm whale in the South Pacific. Ironic, Yeah, ironic.
I mean the whaling ship is it's was attacked by
a spermi So what were they doing? What was the
ship is extering? Was that attempting to it was a

(11:05):
whale watching?

Speaker 5 (11:06):
Yeah, like I've made some stuff ups at work, but
going back to my boss and telling them that my
whale hunting ship got sunk by a whale.

Speaker 3 (11:14):
Only eight of the twenty crew eventually survived. It's the
inspiration for the novel Maybe Dick.

Speaker 5 (11:21):
Yeah, I see say, I've never read that, but I'll
get the gist.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
I think there's a multi character on Moby Dick, Isn't there?
Is there? Yeah? Jeez, yeah, I'm going to come back
to you on that one. I will read it, but
I'm pretty sure there is. And nineteen fifty eight, American
puppeteers Jim and Jane Henson established the muppets known as
the Jim Henson company. It's the Muppet job.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Bloom large over my childhood does yeah?

Speaker 3 (11:51):
Oh no, might as well, Joe.

Speaker 5 (11:52):
I think this is this long reach in the Muppets. Jeez,
Jane got scrubbed out of the history books, didn't you. Yeah,
poor old Jane.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
It's really an interesting story. Sorry, because obviously Jim Henson
when he started it was quite it was quite subversive
the Muppets, right, Even the commercial version that we saw
in the nineteen seventies was subversive, but the original sixties
version was pretty weird. Hel On quite blue, right, Yeah.
And then Jim Henson was a I mean he was

(12:21):
a genius, yes, and then the interesting part came at
the end when he died, and then his kids sold
it and then they ended up, and then the company
that bought it ended up going it's up, I think,
and then they brought it back for absolutely nothing, and
then they built it back up and now it's with
heaps again.

Speaker 5 (12:40):
I mean, genius, but also insane, because how you come
up with Gonzo, how you come up with Beaker the chef?

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Oh yeah, the Swedish Swedish chef.

Speaker 3 (12:50):
You've got to be DUTs. Oh I know, great new Zealander.
In nineteen ninety two, Queen Elizabeth's home, Windsor Castle catches fire.

Speaker 5 (12:57):
I've been there before. I've actually the story about winds Castle.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
We probably don't have time for it now, but sounds sixy.

Speaker 5 (13:06):
I had a gun drawn on me at Winsor Castle.

Speaker 3 (13:08):
Oh wow, okay. Twenty nineteen, Staying with the Royals, Prince
Andrew announces that he's stepping back from public duties after
a absolutely disastrous in the view on his friendship with
Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 4 (13:23):
Virginia Roberts has made allegations against you.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
She described dancing with you. I'm you profusely sweating. There's
a slight problem with with with with with.

Speaker 6 (13:34):
The sweating, because I have a peculiar medical condition, which
is that I don't sweat, or I didn't sweat at
the time, and that was because I had suffered what
I would describe as an overdose of adrenaline in the
Falklands War when I was shot at it was it
was it was almost impossible for me to sweat.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
Wow, that's called That's called protesting too much and planning
way too much and creating something that's clearly not true.
The Falklands War. Wow, doesn't he sound like a dude
who's been court cheating. Oh well, look out of him there.

Speaker 5 (14:10):
I don't actually sweat because of my heroic actions.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
In the Falklands War. Handy Handy, So update on update
on Handy Andy of course, not getting on well with
the King, his brother, who thought brother doesn't rate him.
Brother knows what a massive liability is and there's a
feud going on there. He's trying to get him kicked
out of his place at the moment as royal residents,

(14:32):
and he's trying to move him into frog More. And
also he's he's apparently got rid of his one million
pounds a year allowance. One million pounds a year.

Speaker 5 (14:42):
Yeah, that's just the Kardashians, aren't they million.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
Pounds a year. Yeah, so it's his living a million
pound living allowance. Charles has chopped it. He's like, why
would I pay for you? Yeah? You do nothing for anyone.
Birthdays Today ninety seventy one, Denash Great New Zealander, Happy Birthday,
thirty two Tests, ninety three wickets, Rape Bowler Chorus, Harris
New Zealand or a Rounder twenty three Tests. More of

(15:06):
a One Day Player nineteen forty two. Joe Biden was
born in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He's eighty two today.

Speaker 5 (15:12):
I'll just watch some walk off from the Amazon forest
this morning. Have you seen that video? He gave a
speech on climate change, then just turned around and walked
off stage in his mind and just into the jungle somewhere.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
All right. I think they're still looking for him. That's
what he does nowadays. See three pos off stage and
that is today, yesterday, in history, Today's tomorrow. Oh God,
bless you all. That's good.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Let's go let the world, let's get it done. The
hood Acky Breakfast with Jeremy Wells al Radio.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
Hodarchy, former South Island meet working and I shirt joines
us on the show this morning and just earlier on
when I were talking about today, Yesterday, Today in rest,
Today's history, tomorrow. Yes. And in nineteen ninety two, Queen
Elizabeth's home, Windsor Castle, caught fire. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (15:57):
I didn't know that that was her home until I
went over there to the UK and we were somewhere
in the north. We're driving to somewhere in the South,
and I punched and tourist attractions on the way and
Windsor Castle came up.

Speaker 3 (16:07):
So what's that.

Speaker 5 (16:08):
Apparently that's where Liz lived, right, Oh, plug that into
my GPS. Now I'm driving down the highway whatever one
it was. My friend may have been partaking in a
bit of medicinal which I was told at the time
was legal in that country for the purposes of this story, yep,
and I might have caught a contact off said passengers.

Speaker 3 (16:29):
Yeah, the windows rolled up.

Speaker 5 (16:31):
Oh yeah, we're talking about a three skinner.

Speaker 3 (16:34):
Probably sows youre going to have the windows up when
you're traveling like that down and mayor way. Otherwise it
goes makes that noise.

Speaker 5 (16:41):
That's right, And so in the interest of passenger safety,
I kept the windows up and then I plugged in
Windsor Castle into my GPS. Now by this stage, my
frame rate and my vision had dropped significantly tunnel vision.
I could only see the GPS and about three feet
in front of my front bumper as I'm driving. So
I'm following this GPS through. All of a sudden it

(17:01):
slows down. We're obviously in a town, but I'm still
looking three feet in front of the bumper. Then my
mate next to me just starts making these weird I
was like, come down, mate, he's having a freak out.
I look up. We're on the drawbridge. It wins a
cart and one of the armed guards is running over
towards me with his armor. He's holding a machine gun

(17:23):
across his He's not pointing it or brandishing it at all,
but he is holding it. And that is the first
time that I had ever seen a policeman with a gun,
and he's running.

Speaker 3 (17:31):
Towards me other thing like Jesus.

Speaker 5 (17:34):
So I jam it in reverse, take off and just
shoot down the first street that I come across. But
of course it's an old medieval village. They weren't designed
for cars, so we got wedged in there. Cops had
to move a couple of cars to get us.

Speaker 3 (17:46):
Yeah. No, by the stage had the smell of the
fucking manas dispersed inside of a car. It couldn't have.
There's no way. There's no way it could have. But
my god, my heart rate went through the roof. I bit.

Speaker 5 (17:59):
And so once we got out of range, we just
pulled over on the side of the road and I
just went and sat on the verge for like half
an hour.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
Just okay, So did you visit Windsor Castle in the end?
Never get to see it. Oh really, I still haven't
seen Windsor Castle. Okay, I know exactly the drawbridge you're
talking about.

Speaker 5 (18:15):
Yeah, yeah, it's not one of those ones that can
lift up and down.

Speaker 3 (18:17):
I reckon. At one point it probably could have. But yeah,
so I was just sitting on the drawbage, I know,
and you never got to see it.

Speaker 5 (18:23):
Never got to see Windsor Castle.

Speaker 3 (18:25):
That's what happens when you when you smoke fucking manas
and you're heading somewhere, it always throws a cat amongst
the pigeons. Yeah, lesson learned. Coming up after seven o'clock
a huge announcement regarding the Black Clash. There is a
person who, let's just say, as a little hint, they
played an oval ball sport and they are playing four

(18:46):
team cricket.

Speaker 5 (18:47):
I've seen this. I'm very excited about this.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
Yeah, pretty cool. I be interested to see how this
player what this player is like, actually great athlete, athletic, athletic,
But what's their hand eye like when it comes to
bats and balls?

Speaker 5 (18:58):
How much cricket have they plate?

Speaker 1 (19:00):
This is the hierarchy Breakfast.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
The Hururarchy. Breakfast with Jeremy Wells on Radio Hurdarchy, news, entertainment,
sport and music. There ares available everywhere on the old
heart radio app Jeremy Wells on Radio.

Speaker 3 (19:24):
It's Wednesday, the twentieth of November twenty twenty four.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
Welcome along to the Hierarchy Breakfast.

Speaker 3 (19:29):
My name's Jeremy Wells, Executive producer Rooters on the buttons today.
He's in for.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
Mash morning guys. I say guys because man I Stuart's
in here as well.

Speaker 3 (19:38):
Good morning fellas. How is young Mashi this morning? Is he?
Is he surviving well? I spoke to him yesterday and
when I when I called him, he answered the phones.
He was very, very sound, a dodgy. After ten minutes
of talking to him, he sounded just like me and
you now I came right today, miraculous. He's sort of
forgotten by the end of it. But then there was

(20:00):
some horrific coughs while I was shedding time.

Speaker 5 (20:02):
Well because his partner works with me over the other
side of the building and she was sick on Monday
as well, but she was at the gym.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
Yesterday at six thirty in the mornings ast. Why was
she wonderful?

Speaker 5 (20:11):
How I feel like women bounce back better from illness
than Mendo yeap.

Speaker 3 (20:15):
Oftentimes we like to wallow a little bit oftentimes, but
me sent a photo through of himself sort of lying sideways.
Made sure he's got some terrible lighting.

Speaker 4 (20:23):
And it's going to show you that photo now and
then Now if you want to just describe that for
the radio hurdecue listeners.

Speaker 5 (20:28):
Oh okay, that's terrifying. Red eyes, he's in a hoodie,
he's smiling. I don't like the smile and entirely nude.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (20:39):
I could have cropped that photo. I don't think we
needed full body to prove the illness.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
Yeah, one part of him looks to be working very well.
It was not absolutely working well. He is twenty five.

Speaker 5 (20:53):
Yeah, well this is that, isn't it.

Speaker 3 (20:55):
I remember when it used to work like that. Those
are the days. And he's just brought the trimmer. He's
got an amazing new trimmer.

Speaker 2 (21:04):
They breakfast with Jeremy Wells on Radio.

Speaker 3 (21:07):
Archy, former South arl I meet work and Manyah. Stuart
joins us on the show today, and of course we're
heading to Hagley Overland, christ Church next year on the
eighteenth of January for the Hot Spring Spars T twenty
Black Flash and association with Wolfbrock.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
And we'd like you to join us.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
It's under lights and we're giving the chance to win
a trip of a lifetime on an eight flying to
christ Church, all thanks to any New Zealand's grab seet.
That is, unless you live within driving distance of christ Church.

Speaker 5 (21:34):
Well, if I live in christ Church, could I drive
somewhere else and then be flown to crush Church And.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
We possibly arranged that night.

Speaker 3 (21:40):
But I think that there's going to be some people
that are going to be worrying about your your cabin
footprint if you're doing that sort of thing. We've got
to think about cabin footprints nowadays, minight. So you'd be
staying at the Novtel Cathedral Square unless you live in
christ Church, in which you can still stay at the
Novatich surely, surely, and then you can enjoy some epic
christ Church experiences, that is, unless you live in Cross

(22:01):
such unless you probably won't want to be enjoying those
yp experiences like going on a tram.

Speaker 5 (22:05):
You say that I went on the tram at the
start of this year. It's great. I thought for the
longest time it's just for tourists. I was born in
Cross and I was like, on the tram, it's one
hundred meter tram. It's not it's longer than that, and
it's beautiful. It's like a time capsule as well. You
get to go sit in the tram, you know, transported
back into the olden days my whole life. I'd never
been on there, and then as a thirty two year

(22:27):
old man, I got on. Had the time my life.

Speaker 3 (22:30):
Really okay, I'd rather not. And you can go and
relax in the New Brighton hot pools, which is a
good time. See that's more my sort of thing. Plus,
then you get tickets to the acc Export Ultra Parti
zone and during the first innings you get to sit
in the best seats in the house. And those seats
are inside of a hot spring.

Speaker 5 (22:50):
Spa where Mashi tried to take a famous catch but
he dropped it. He jumped out of the spar pool
and like we've always said, the knock on Mash, great guy,
the knock on him slow out of the spa.

Speaker 3 (23:01):
He always has been I know. So I think in
this situation, not only did you get this in the
spar but you get handed your very own acc Export
Ultra thong.

Speaker 5 (23:10):
Oh wow, really I don't think they make that. We're
gonna have to make those.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
I've just made it up now, so apparently you do
enter it hodache dot co, dot and z and while
you're there, grab your tickets and now this is the
here we go. This is the piece of information that
we've been handed this morning. Confirmed as the wild card
for Team Cricket. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Black

(23:39):
Clash for the first time.

Speaker 1 (23:41):
Shawnee Jyshawn Johnson.

Speaker 5 (23:43):
Wow, this is huge, this is huge free shore playing
for the Kiwis you just retired from the NRL as well?
I see it quote here he says he followed cricket
a bit, but never played it all, growing happy, played
the odd game of batdown.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
Does that count well?

Speaker 5 (23:57):
Interestingly, the biggest problem at the Clash with these retired
athletes is fielding. Yeah, the fielding is atrocious. You need
an athlete out there in the field, and that I
think is what Shawn Johnson is going to bring.

Speaker 7 (24:07):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Absolutely, he's got pace. He's a proper athlete. Still. Yeah, yeah,
And you only need about four or five years away
from professional sports and people are still eating the way
that they'd be professional sports. People and things go to
the pack.

Speaker 4 (24:21):
How doses quad though, Jiro, I know you were massive
on Shorney Jay's quad last year. Is it still going okay?
There was a camera on it at one point.

Speaker 3 (24:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (24:28):
I know.

Speaker 1 (24:28):
There's a lot of interest in Shure.

Speaker 3 (24:29):
It's the most it was the most talked about quad
in world sport there for a while, Shorney Jay's quad. Yeah,
the quote a twenty twenty four they were calling it yep.
But I'm pretty sure it seemed okay. It seems okay.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
So he also.

Speaker 3 (24:41):
Said a few years ago he did a promo with
the black Caps and he faced Tim Salvey in the nets,
and he said that it was one of the most
terrifying experiences of his life. I can understand that when
he was padding up, he was shaking, and the thing
was Tim Salvey. And I know Tim Saudi reasonably well.
He would not hold back in that situation. He would

(25:03):
make you even more scared, yes, than He's not going
to make you feel comfortable that way.

Speaker 5 (25:07):
And for Suan Johnson, who runs a one hundred and
twenty kilo props for a job true to be terrified,
it says a lot.

Speaker 3 (25:13):
Something about a ball coming at you at one hundred
and thirty k's an hour. That's quite scary, you know.
I ultimately he can get you in the neck.

Speaker 5 (25:21):
But imagine watching sewn jo Sewan Johnson bowling at Chris Gail.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Yeah, I wonder what he bowls.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
I imagine little drifting leg spinners.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
The Hurdarchy, Breakfast All Radio Hurdarchy, former South Arla meet
workhom and I swore it. Joins us on the show
this morning, and news came out last week. You would
have seen this, no doubt Mini that incoming President Donald
Trump has put billionaire Elon Musk in charge of a
new Department of Government Efficiency, the do.

Speaker 5 (25:50):
Ge, the doge or Dodge or Dodge or doggy or doggy.

Speaker 3 (25:55):
He's put him in Doggie. So apparently the usb an
elect said Musk would dismantle government bureaucracy, slash excess regulations,
cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure federal agencies. All of that
in four years in the States, not an easy thing
to do, although he does have both houses and are Republicans,

(26:19):
so this is the first time for a while that
everything is leaning Republicans, so you can do some stuff
in theory.

Speaker 5 (26:24):
But then also Trump just says stuff. So, yeah, it's
going to make him the minister of something.

Speaker 3 (26:28):
I don't know. I like him, so he can.

Speaker 5 (26:30):
Be in So I thought, what if we took that
same approach to politics in New Zealand. If we're just
like Margaret, they don't have to be a politician.

Speaker 3 (26:37):
We'll just put whoever.

Speaker 5 (26:38):
We're just put random New Zealanders who are good at
something and then put them in charge of that portfolio
in parliament.

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Yeah. Well, that's the thing you can do in the
States is that you can choose your cabinet and they
don't have to be elected officials, whereas, of course in
New Zealand we an MP. To be the minister of something,
you have to be elected as an MP for either
a list MP or for an area for an elector
so if you could just pick anyone. Yeah, it's an
interesting thing they have in the States there because theoretically

(27:06):
that the call goes out from the President. I'd like
you to.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
And when the president asks you to do something.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
In the States, it takes a lot to turn the
president down because they love it. They really hold the
office of the President in high regard, which is amazing.
Why Trump is in charge of the country it's ridiculous
because if Luxon called me right now for twenty bucks,
I probably wouldn't give it to me. That's right.

Speaker 5 (27:27):
So if you could put any random in, I reckon
Suzan Paul, Minister for Advertising. Oh yeah, who knows more
about advertising than Suzan Paul?

Speaker 3 (27:36):
I couldn't think of anything.

Speaker 5 (27:37):
Plus, also, how hilarious would it be for her to
stand up and deliver bills in Parliament like an advertorial?

Speaker 3 (27:42):
Yeah, it would be entertaining.

Speaker 5 (27:44):
Thousands of luminous spheres on this bill.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
Yeah. If there was a Minister of Sport, first thing
that comes to mind for me would be Jeff Wilson,
mainly because obviously he plays rugby, played Raby for the
orb actually played cricket for the Black Collaps back Caps.
He's got a golfing handicap of two. He apparently could
have played basketball for New Zealand. Heard that his his

(28:06):
wife a Dean Wilson formerly a Dean Harper, a silver fern,
a great silver fan silver. Apparently all of his children
are amazing sports.

Speaker 4 (28:14):
But we had Goldie on the show last week and
he was actually over in Canberra because his son was
in school's basketball tournament over there.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
So he was just over there hanging out with the son.

Speaker 5 (28:23):
They called him the Susan Paul of Sport done.

Speaker 3 (28:25):
Is that what they did? That's what they call it. Similar, Yeah,
they do probably call him. I watched a video they
clupp the other day of his of his debut against
Scotland for the black Caps for No. Four for the
black Caps, for the All Blacks. Yeah, and I'm pretty
sure it was his debut. He scored three tries and
kicked a kicked a conversion.

Speaker 5 (28:45):
Yes, and he debuted for the black Caps in the
same year and beat Australia. Yeah, I had a hole
in one and yeah, three way, I think what I heard.
But what about Willie Uppiata for Minister of Defense?

Speaker 3 (28:59):
Oh absolutely, I mean everybody would follow that guy into battle.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
And then I don't know if you could put a
minister underneath him, but Dan Hooker, if he could be
his adviser, it's not a bad idea.

Speaker 3 (29:10):
I think there's also if you're looking for some efficiencies,
this is following on from the Musk situation. If you're
looking for some efficiencies, it would be good to get
a person who can do multiple things much. Yeah, Jeff
Wilson could do play multiple sports. And if you wanted
someone to say deal with police and foreign affairs and
maybe health, Philip Pulkinghorn would be an ideal candidate. Oh yeah, police, yeah,

(29:36):
police obviously Hell is a doctor, yep. And foreign affairs
because of his medicine Ashton situation there with that foreign
affair that Australian high class prostitute that he was seeing.
Good to get some efficiencies anyway, three four eight three
oh eight hundred, Hudack, you'd be interesting to hear some
suggestions for who you would have as your ministers, if
you could pick them. In New Zealand refast.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Jeremy Wells, a radio.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
Archy former South Oul and meet work of an I Short,
joins us on the show. We're just talking about Trump
organizing his cabinet. Of course, in the States you can
choose whoever you want to be to look after portfolios.
And he's decided to bring Elon Musk into the why
not why wouldn't you as the department as the head
of the Department of Government Efficiency a new area that

(30:24):
he's starting to he's starting to crank up, which dismantles
government bureaucracy, slashes excess regulations, cuss cuts, wasteful expenditures and
restructures federal agencies.

Speaker 1 (30:36):
Very difficult to do in the States, very big country.

Speaker 5 (30:39):
So very Wishy was like, how do you know if
he's done it or not?

Speaker 3 (30:42):
Yeah, KPI, he does get stuff done, Elon, he does, Yes,
that will be interesting.

Speaker 5 (30:48):
A should be a minister for putting dudes on the
moon and making more electric cars.

Speaker 3 (30:51):
I mean, he's got his fingers in every area, Elon,
doesn't he in terms of technology with the AI then
he's obviously got the.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
Cars going on, He's got the space stuff going on.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
He's involved in defense of what's happening in Ukraine, and
the fact that of the.

Speaker 5 (31:06):
Starlink he's got about twenty seven kids to about fourteen
different women.

Speaker 3 (31:11):
He's an information because of X Yep, it's amazing. Anyway,
in New Zealand, obviously you've got to be elected as
an MP, so you can't just you know, Chris Lucks
and the promise you can't just bring people in. It
doesn't work like that. You can bring people as advisors
and officials, and I understand that a lot of advice
is taken from outside, but anyway.

Speaker 5 (31:33):
But if you could just bring in any old Tom
Dick and Harry off the Street to be part of
your cabinet.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Who would you bring? Yeah, So someone suggested that Raybon
Can Raybon Khan would be a great Ministry of Education.

Speaker 1 (31:45):
He does actually seem to be.

Speaker 3 (31:47):
If ever, there's a TV show where it's either spelling
or maths, Raybon always seems to win.

Speaker 5 (31:54):
And I would say, I don't know if you've seen
the spelling of gen Z's these days.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
Jerry awful, terrible, really terrible. So we need that, Yeah,
we do. The Minister of Asthma Wheezy Kesey from The
Big Show a suggestion on three for three.

Speaker 5 (32:08):
Yeah, Minister of Asthma, now, yeah he's got the ventilin
in his golf bag.

Speaker 3 (32:14):
Yeah. Minister for Police Jake the Mass, that'd be an
interesting ministry. Susie Cato for Ministry of Education as a
suggestion here on three for it three. That makes a
lot of sense. David Bain can double up as the
Minister of Justice and Minister of the Family. Look, I
can see what you've done there.

Speaker 5 (32:36):
I don't think there is a family Minister, No, there isn't.

Speaker 3 (32:39):
Richie mccaor Minister for Aviation and Sports is another good doubler.

Speaker 5 (32:42):
Yeah, where do you have to share the portfolio with
Jeff Wilson.

Speaker 3 (32:45):
I'd say so. Look, I'd have Jeff Wilson in there.

Speaker 5 (32:48):
Yeah, myself and let Richie focus on aviation.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
Richie not a bad.

Speaker 3 (32:52):
Left armboler, Yes, but he's got nothing on Goldie. Doctor
Chris Warner for Minister of Health. I imagine imagine the
affairs going on there that people would go missing, people
would die, I mean, how many why he's had seven wives,
Chris Warner.

Speaker 5 (33:06):
And if a strangler got on the loose, that would
be would be Oh can you imagine It'll be up
shit strect And this.

Speaker 3 (33:11):
This one here finally on three four three, very specific
Lynn Brown, the minister of the nati Fata room. I'm
not sure that's a ministry and I'm not sure how
nati Fata would feel about that either.

Speaker 8 (33:23):
Your complete New Zealand Today, This Sport Jeremie Wells available
everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (33:29):
Pheus Entertainment, Sports on Music, the.

Speaker 8 (33:31):
Rocks, exclusively on Radio Hodaki.

Speaker 3 (33:34):
It's seven thirty one on the Hiddie Briefast. Time for
your latest news headlines. A diver has died in the
Chedham Islands after being attacked by what's sought to have
been a great white shark. Expert Clinton Duffy says the
Chathams is one of the world's hot spots for the sharks.
A man's been arrested after a high powered laser was
pointed at the Otago rescue helicopter while it traveled over

(33:56):
North Wamrou on Monday night. The crew guide police helping
them arrest the thirty nine year old at a service station.

Speaker 5 (34:04):
But it's unpack the thirty nine. He's thirty nine and
he's pointing a laser to helicopter. Also, this is the
kind of thing that happens in North Momoro. That's how
boring it is that at thirty nine you're like, God,
what is it to do? I'm going to shoot a
laser to rescue helicopter.

Speaker 3 (34:19):
What happens in South Omoro compared to North Homoro. Oh,
that's a hell. It's a big south hell.

Speaker 5 (34:23):
So you don't really go up there from where possible
unless you're heading down to Dunedin, right awful part of
the country.

Speaker 3 (34:30):
Wamadou I wind hear a bad word, MANI it said
about Oamado. I know it's just because you've got some tea,
you've got some Waimati bias going on. Yeah, well, I
went to high school there.

Speaker 5 (34:40):
Omoro just awful, awful part of the country.

Speaker 3 (34:44):
One of my favorite parts of the country.

Speaker 5 (34:45):
When you read that headline, I knew exactly where it
would have happened. They're a Rashburton and.

Speaker 3 (34:51):
Came when the Amison's proven the best of the black
Cats in action. On the opening day of round two
and the Plunks shield. He made sixty for Northern Districts
out of two hundred and sixty eight against Auckland and Hamilton,
first first match since recovering from a groin injury. The
visitors are twenty four with out lost. Canterbury are seventeen
with that loss and replied to CDs two O two

(35:11):
and Nelson and Wellington are three hundred and thirty nine
for six against Otago in doned and lots of numbers there.
You're just looking at that Wellington scoreboard. Their captain Kelley
one hundred and fifty four not out, Logan van Beek
sixty eight and Sam Mike Cock thirty two. Sorry Sam
Mike Cock. The opener m y cooc k oh Sam.

(35:35):
I heard sand Sam sam Mi Cock, tragic news out
of chatter, my Linds. Goodness, gracious me. I was just
looking up how many great white fatalities there have been
since well since records started in fifteen eighty, three hundred
and fifty unprovoked bytes and fifty nine fatalities great whites.

Speaker 5 (35:56):
I suppose it's hard to record if you just never
find them again.

Speaker 3 (36:00):
No, well, I no record. Yeah I suppose, yeah, not
a lot though. Fifty nine no so shocking. It is
shocking like it is a wolf. Terrible. Sorry you said, dumb.
How many provoked attacks the provoked attacks haven't been recorded? Okay, yeah,
three hundred and fifty under provoked attacks. Sorry, unprovoked, the

(36:21):
unprovoked at texts? They make the black Caps? My god,
do you reckon? Hopefully? I'd love to see my cock
in the black Caps.

Speaker 2 (36:31):
The Day Breakfast with Jeremy Wells, al.

Speaker 3 (36:34):
Radio Darchy, former South Under meet Workman I Stuart joins
us on the show. I was a bit bored yesterday
and just started gurgling some stuff and ended up gurgling
about Bouncer the dog and neighbors. What you remember Bouncer
the Golden Lab. I had Neighbors. I just yeah, I
started thinking about Bouncer, and then all of a sudden

(36:55):
I went down to bouncer hole, and it turns out
I was absolutely shock that Bouncer was paid between one
hundred and two hundred thousand dollars a year to appear
on Neighbors. God. Yeah, what kind of dog was bouncer?
Golden Lab?

Speaker 5 (37:11):
Now what kind of overheads does a Golden Lab have
that he needs one hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (37:15):
It's quite like he was paid more than some of
the actors. That would make me.

Speaker 5 (37:20):
Could you imagine showing up to sit every day and
there's a dog in the corner of the room is
getting paid double what you're getting paid.

Speaker 3 (37:25):
Imagine that. So Bouncer first appeared in nineteen eighty seven
and he was on the show for six years. Well,
it did really well. He was played by the same
so it was the same Golden Lab. Like nobody would
have known if they had bought different dogs in and out,
But Bouncer was such a great actor that they thought

(37:46):
they'd keep them well.

Speaker 5 (37:46):
And that's I guess way. He commands such a big
paypack because you've worked.

Speaker 3 (37:52):
With animals, I presume before Jerry.

Speaker 5 (37:53):
Yeah, you got to use multiple animals because you never
know what they're gonna bloody do, they're entire, they get hungry, whatever.
So you could pay five different Golden Labs, or evidently
he could pay Bouncer and he'll do it all himself.

Speaker 3 (38:04):
Yeah, I mean I thought maybe fifty maybe fifty. I
thought maybe fifty grand a year for Bouncer.

Speaker 5 (38:09):
Mind you, this is in the early nineties and late eighties.
That's a lot of money.

Speaker 3 (38:13):
That was a huge amount of money, like a massive
amount of money, and some of the actors wouldn't work.
So Guy Pearce, who was on the show, he didn't
like working. He doesn't like dogs, so he refused to
work with Bouncer. Memento. Yeah, Neighbors, Yeah, that's restarted. Yeah,
he was on Neighbors. Wow, so Bounces. So during Bounce's
time on Neighbors, he lived at three addresses. He survived

(38:34):
road exodents, he got lost, he survived a house fire,
he was poisoned by some magic mushrooms, he got high
on magic mushrooms. And interestingly, they had fan cards for
all the different cars members and Bounce of the dog
from Neighbors, the Golden Lab were the most popular fan

(38:56):
cards of any of anything on Neighbors.

Speaker 5 (39:00):
What they put we snout into something and then dip
it onto the cat.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
More more more famous than Missus Missus mangle, Missus Mangle,
more famous than Tody, oh honey, more famous than Tody.
Tody was on Neighbors for you. Wasn't he still on it?
Right to the inn? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (39:20):
He had the week go tea. I think he might
have been a teacher or something. He looked like a
teacher anyway. So all of those things happened to the
dog and the shows. And when they ran, when the
writers ran out of ideas, they were like, should we
like Bouncer on fire? Should we poison them with magic?

Speaker 3 (39:35):
Well? I don't know if Bouncer ever got caught on fire,
but he did get poisoned by magic mushrooms. So Bouncer
died of cancer tragically at seven, I mean, taken too soon,
too soon, bouncer. And so Bouncer was on the show
for what six six six years and I died the
next year. So from a puppy Bouncer. Yeah, And when

(39:57):
Bouncer died, there were more two were more cards and
gifts that were sent to neighbors than from any cast
member taken off fairness. Isn't that amazing?

Speaker 5 (40:07):
That's a plus for a bouncer. Amazing short short seven years.
But he racked in what one point four million dollars?

Speaker 3 (40:14):
Are Yeah? I think no, I think nearly a million.
Entitled has started at one hundred and then rose to
two hundred because it's so popular. I mean at the
point when bouncer was charging like two hundred grand a
year and bounces owners, you'd just say, look, we're going
We're going to get another dog. Couldn't You just couldn't.
It's a rap bouncer and your bank balance impressive? Everybody

(40:36):
needs good name.

Speaker 2 (40:40):
The Hurdarchy Breakfast al Radio Hurdarchy.

Speaker 3 (40:44):
From Elephant. That is the white stripes on a Hudarchy Breakfast.
There's ten to eight.

Speaker 5 (40:49):
Found out a very interesting fact about that album yesterday, Jeremy,
what's that the white Stripes album Elephant? If you look
up right now, google the cover for the album. Yes,
there's a picture on their red background. You got Jack
and what is his name?

Speaker 3 (41:05):
Meg?

Speaker 1 (41:05):
Meg, Jack and Meg. They're sitting there.

Speaker 3 (41:06):
Meg's in the white dress there, Jackson in the red
sort of cowboy outfit.

Speaker 5 (41:11):
Yes, Now Jack is holding something in his hand.

Speaker 3 (41:14):
Ah, yes, he is. He was holding a cricket bat.
He is holding a cricket bat in his hand.

Speaker 5 (41:18):
Now it's been the photo has been edited to sort
of overexpose it so it's just white.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
But that was actually a cooka bar of bat in
his hand.

Speaker 5 (41:26):
And that is because his tour manager was a key
Keywi Block by the name of John Baker.

Speaker 3 (41:30):
Yeah, and he was the.

Speaker 5 (41:33):
Tour manager around the States. When he was back in
New Zealand over summer, he was playing a bit of
byc ended up with the bataness position.

Speaker 3 (41:40):
That bat ended up.

Speaker 5 (41:40):
Back in the studio in Detroit when they were recording
that album. The most popular album as well, two thousand
and three came out four million copies sold worldwide.

Speaker 3 (41:48):
That song's huge, sive national because the song's enormously said.
That's right. He left the bat lying around.

Speaker 5 (41:53):
Jack thought it was a hilarious looking piece of sporting equipment.
He's American, He's never seen it before, and so he
picked it up and it was the of the elephant.
That's what it's supposed to represent on the cover. The
person who John Baker was playing cricket with that he
stole their bat. Yeh was Kane Williamson. What that Kane
Williams a that cousins.

Speaker 3 (42:15):
I know John Baker, Yes, I know John Baker. Will Yeah,
that's Kane Williamson's bat. That is Kane Williamson's bats.

Speaker 5 (42:22):
A few years ago, John Baker wrote an article about
how it ended up to be that Caine Williamson's bat,
a twelve year old Kane Williamson. His bat ended up
on the cover of the most successful rock album, probably
A two thousand and three, certainly of the White Stripes.

Speaker 3 (42:39):
Okay, this has made that bat. So I mean, firstly,
the bat as a famous bat now right, Yeah, I
wonder where it is now? Do we know?

Speaker 5 (42:49):
Well, I reckon he'll still have it because Jack Whitter
did a bit of research. He owns a baseball bat company.
It's called Warstick because he loves baseball and they make
baseball bats.

Speaker 3 (42:59):
I wonder if he would ever make a cricket bat. Well,
oh my god. So that's not only is that now
an incredibly famous beat because it's on the cover of
Elephant Yeah, the most successful White Strikes album, but also
the fact now that came Williamson, the most successful new
Zealand batsman of all time, one of the greatest batsmen

(43:19):
in the world ever, and that's actually his childhood. This
is that's insane. How much would that bat be worth? Now?
That bat's worth a bit of money.

Speaker 5 (43:28):
Now there's no amount they couldn't charge you for that
that I could see it in.

Speaker 3 (43:31):
Your eye that we should have it in the studio.
I want that bat.

Speaker 4 (43:34):
Pexy Campbell, Australian content director, can get some cash and
by that bat.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
I want that bat, but I don't think I'll be
able to afford that bat for some reason. So it's
a cocker bar.

Speaker 5 (43:43):
It's a Crooker Barry. Yeah, it won't be full size.
I don't think he's twelve.

Speaker 3 (43:47):
No, we can't quite see on the actual cover. It's
just been blown out, hasn't it too white? Were sort
of balances out Meg's white dress.

Speaker 5 (43:54):
Yeah, and to look a bit more like a tusk.
But yeah, Tam Williamson's bat. How's that for some pub trivia?

Speaker 4 (44:00):
How's that Goodwe there's that's the best story I've heard
for a long long time, and I'm very impressive.

Speaker 2 (44:07):
The hod Achy Breakfast with Jeremy Wells on Radio Hdarchy
News entertainment, sport and music. There ares available everywhere on
the old Heart radio app. Jeremy Wells on Radio.

Speaker 3 (44:22):
Hurdarchy NIC's debut with us this morning, Wednesday, the twentieth
of November twenty twenty four, Monday, Jeremy Wells, Rud's pushing
the buttons because man, she's still sick.

Speaker 4 (44:32):
I'm still struggling to get them all. Comeback, Mashi, come
back tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (44:37):
No, what are you talking about? Rudy doing great job
and former South Island meat workingman, I still it joins
us on the show Morning Fellers.

Speaker 5 (44:42):
Thank you very much for having me through honor and
a privilege to be in here again.

Speaker 3 (44:45):
Earlier on you shared an amazing story about Kay Williamson's bat,
which just happens to be on the cover of the
White Stripes Elephant album, the most successful album from two
thousand and four three thousand and three.

Speaker 5 (44:57):
It's the one with seven Nation Army on it. Yup
and yeah, came Williamson's bat is on the front of that.

Speaker 3 (45:02):
Who would have thought not came Williamson's bat from because
obviously you're thinking about two thousand and three they.

Speaker 5 (45:08):
Didn't score a ton against India with this bat. No,
this was a bat that he was playing on the
beach with a Crooko Barrough and actually found out the
name of the bat. It's a Cooko Borrough fighter, not fish.

Speaker 3 (45:17):
It okay, yea Crooker Borrough fighter. Okay. Do we know
the whereabouts of this bat?

Speaker 5 (45:21):
I've found the whereabouts of this bat? Yeah, funnily enough,
in the same story that I was reading the rest
of the information, and it's at a venue in Tidani
called Daddy Long Legs. They've got the bat Daddy Long
Legs Ddy Long.

Speaker 3 (45:35):
I haven't heard of it, ruder, I've never been there.
I've been to Daddy Short Legs Heaps, but never been
a Deady long Legs.

Speaker 1 (45:41):
Daddy long Legs.

Speaker 3 (45:42):
What is that? What is it?

Speaker 5 (45:43):
I think it's like a record store slash music menu.
We might need to take a trip out there, make
them an offer. They could probably refuse this.

Speaker 1 (45:51):
Good point up neck.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
Should we talk about what you would hikui for?

Speaker 5 (45:55):
Yes, we've seen the power of it over the last
couple of days. I reckon it could fix a few
my under inconveniences as well.

Speaker 2 (46:01):
The Ducky Breakfast with Jeremy Wells alreadyo.

Speaker 3 (46:04):
Hdarcky, former South la and meet workmen. I Stewart joins
us in the studio today and I see him in
Forty two thousand people march to Parliament yesterday marching against
the Treaty Principles Bill, David Seymore's Treaty Principles Bill.

Speaker 1 (46:18):
Apparently all of.

Speaker 3 (46:20):
Parliament was full, Like you couldn't have put more people
in Parliament's grounds. It was packed out. It was packed out,
but people only stayed for the day. It wasn't like
that was that last year or the year before when
when the occupation of Parliament went on and people were
growing crops, People were growing crops in Parliament. Yeah, that
was crazy, was that.

Speaker 5 (46:40):
I love that we've got something like a hikoy that's
like our own national way of protesting and demonstrating because
everyone does this around the world and it's a great
way of letting people in the country and the world
know that you're pissed off about something, you don't agree
with something. Yeah, but I think that we don't use
it enough and we could be using it to solve
some of the everyday inconveniences that really piss you off.

Speaker 3 (47:01):
That so you've got to mobilize people for an everyday issue,
that's right now.

Speaker 5 (47:04):
It would take a very specific sort of everyday issue
to mobilize that many people. I think I've got one
two factor authentication or passwords in general.

Speaker 3 (47:15):
No, mate.

Speaker 5 (47:15):
I try and log into my bloody account at work,
my emails and it's like, okay, we'll open up your phone. Now,
we're going to send you a text. Then you're going
to put the text into the email thing. It didn't work, na,
you get to reset your password. We'll send it to
another email where you've forgotten the password to that bloody email.
And then I get an email the other day from
IAD saying all your data has been leaked. I was like, okay, fine,
I'm fine with my data being leaked. I'm okay with it.

(47:37):
Take the password off my account then, because you're not
protecting it anyway, so take your password off the account.
So passwords, two factor authentication, all that stuff. I would
organize a hequoy for that.

Speaker 3 (47:47):
Yeah, I know exactly how you feel about that. And look,
when you get to my age, very hard to remember
because there's more and more things. It's not like if
there were four, Yeah I could, I'd be fine with it.
But because there are I.

Speaker 5 (48:00):
Have so many subscriptions now and then they ask you
to change it, I can't think of any more passwords.

Speaker 3 (48:05):
Yeah, I know.

Speaker 5 (48:06):
Also, you're the one that wants me to have a password,
So you figure it out.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
You guys, not just use the same password for everything.
I try to.

Speaker 5 (48:12):
But then when it asks you to update it, like
at work every month, you get a bloody chain.

Speaker 3 (48:17):
It works, it works. The worst one work is absolutely
the worst, because I've got some bizarre thing now that
I'm going through numbers within with mashes thing in there
and all sorts of harder case. The worst one is
the one where it asks you to go upper case,
lower case plus gets symbols and numbers Egyptian hieroglyphics. No,
I can't do it. I can't do this anymore.

Speaker 5 (48:37):
I have no more passwords than me. And if you
feel the same, then meet me at the harbor of
bridge tomorrow looking ahco against pass.

Speaker 3 (48:45):
Now, I reckon, that's quite good. I think there'd be
a lot of people around around road rules. I've got
a thing about people not indicating coming off roundabout. Yes,
I mean, for goodness, Actually, the other day we were
speaking to someone from from the police and Mark's explaining
how how to go around and roundabout properly because a
lot of people don't quite know how to approach because

(49:07):
obviously you go into the roundabout. Let's just say it's
got three exits. Let's say you're going straight, so you're
going straight, you go you when you when you enter
into the roundabout, Yes, you don't indicate if you're indicating
you know, you're not turning, but when you when you
come when you go past the first exit on your left,
once you've gone past there, then you indicate left to
go straight ahead.

Speaker 5 (49:28):
Because you're indicating to other drivers, I'm about to turn.
If you're indicating left when you enter into a roundabout
and you're going straight, you're gonna cause the crowd.

Speaker 3 (49:35):
No, that's not good.

Speaker 4 (49:36):
Someone has told me that if you're going straight then
you need to indicate right and then when you get
indicate left, which was stupid.

Speaker 3 (49:43):
No, No, you don't do that because that means to
the person that's coming straight at you. Yes, what you
indication is your signal of intent. Yes, so if you're
going straight ahead, you're going straight ahead, that's fine, but
then you signal to exit the roundabout once you exit
the roundabout.

Speaker 5 (49:56):
Because if I'm opposite you and you're going straight, but
you indicate right and then lift. The last time I
looked at you, you were indicating right. Now you're indicting lift.

Speaker 3 (50:04):
I can't keep it. No, No, that's hopeless. So I
would be marching on Parliament. In fact, I'd occupy Parliament
grounds on that one. I'd be growing crops.

Speaker 5 (50:10):
You'd be growing crops about the roundabout roles absolutely one.

Speaker 3 (50:13):
I'll tell you the winner on the day yesterday with
that hikoy, the Wellington weather, there's no better place to
have ahikoy for flags and Wellington boy, those flags were
flying in the breeze. Let's say you can't beat it.
Oh it was. I just thought Wellington perfect place to
have flags going. There were millions of flags as well.

Speaker 2 (50:32):
The Hurdarchy Breakfast already r Hurdarchy, former South Island Meet Workingmen,
I stow it joins us on the show this morning.

Speaker 3 (50:38):
Was talking about the he coy yesterday, forty two thousand
people marching on Parliament, a lot of passion, a lot
of feeling against the Treaty Principal's Bill. And you were saying,
when I what could we do it? Seems that there's
a lot of passion, a lot of feeling. What other
issues would people be pretended? Would people be prepared to
hekhoy for?

Speaker 5 (50:59):
Or again, we've seen the power of it, the way
it can bring attention to the forefront of everyone's minds,
and we can really get some change. I said, passwords
on computers.

Speaker 3 (51:08):
Do my head in? Yeah, I'm all about road rules yep.
Any kind of situation where we can get people to
actually use their indicators, I'd be fine with that. And
I saw a text come through saying that someone's going
to start a.

Speaker 5 (51:17):
Hecy to get me off this show. That seems I
might join at these sex thirty months to kill you.

Speaker 3 (51:24):
Let's go to David from christ Juge. Good morning, David.
What would you hikoy for? What sort of hikoy would
you create?

Speaker 7 (51:31):
I reckon a pothole hecky would be an ideal thing
because at the moment they've just walked from the far
North all the way down to Wellington. Just imagine how
many potholes they could have fixed them the way down.

Speaker 3 (51:42):
Okay, so it's a he couy against potholes, but also
fixing pothole holes as you go.

Speaker 7 (51:48):
Yeah, just give everybody a shovel and bitamin truck along
with it. Yesod have done the country a favor.

Speaker 3 (51:58):
That is very good. David, what a useful. Yeah, that's
that's a good idea. I can just see the truck
just moving up the back. Yeah. Yeah, actually has some
kind of there's a if you've seen the pothole squad
that goes around, there's an Auckland pothole squad. What do
they do? They actually go they fixed potholes, apparently, like
because there's a pothole hot line that you can call

(52:18):
now pot line. Yeah, a pot line and you different
and then you call up the pothole hot line and yeah.
They they are like a squad, a hot squad, and
they go around and they they reckon. They can fix
it in forty eight hours.

Speaker 5 (52:32):
But you'd only need one part of the country.

Speaker 3 (52:34):
You'd be done. Yeah, kue against potholes, these guys and
they do it in about in about two hours. They've
they've sorted out a pothole and then they moved to
the next one.

Speaker 5 (52:42):
Get on them, because I saw some vigilante going around
spraying CMBs around the all the potholes.

Speaker 3 (52:47):
Try and draw attention to it. It's like, well, you're
already out there, that's it. Yeah, And I like that
idea of the pothole that's got something.

Speaker 4 (52:53):
It's quite a few texts coming through. On three four
eight three, someone says they would hicke away over the
price of a pint. They should all be five dollars
government enforced and.

Speaker 3 (53:04):
Subsidized. Yeap, oh, yeah, this is an interesting one. This
is saying that we need a hikui about all the
Aussie meat and supermarkets. I haven't had a decent steak
and ages and account afford Jeri's elders butcher cuts what
butcher again? I'm not going to a butcher, straight to
the supermarket. I'm with either someone else here.

Speaker 4 (53:25):
On three four eight three, number enning in three to
one hiccue against the five day work week. Yeah, give
me a three day weekend.

Speaker 3 (53:33):
Well, more time for hequoys as well. If that's a
good point. I only working four days a week while
we're still working five days a week.

Speaker 5 (53:38):
It makes no sense. Our productivity has gone through the
roof in the last hundred years. We're still working forty
hours a week.

Speaker 3 (53:46):
Don't understand that. Surely we should have more.

Speaker 1 (53:48):
Should be a bit of balance going on there.

Speaker 3 (53:51):
Oh much for that.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
The hurdarchy breakfast already, hurdarchy.

Speaker 3 (53:55):
We've been asking you to tell us what every day inconvenience?
Would you hiding a lot of texts coming in those
text here he called to get rid of social media influences.

Speaker 1 (54:06):
Sure, he called.

Speaker 3 (54:09):
To bring back the butter conditioner. That's been a real
backward step in terms of refrigeration. That's a great point. Yeah,
and this one here is good. I would hekuy if
they try to change the recipe for Greg's steak sauce again. Right, Okay,
I didn't know that that's been changed. I'll tell you
what i'd for. That's just reminded me where if tingy

(54:31):
fruit's gone? Ah, what has happened? Do you remember the
ones that the lollies that came in the pottle? Yes,
they used to get at at movie theaters. And why
did they get rid of those?

Speaker 5 (54:43):
I think the WAYMDI Regent Theater was the last place
you could still buy them because they went out of commission,
but they had a backlog.

Speaker 3 (54:49):
You could throw them at the projectionist. I stopped the
movie ones day, Oh man, the best ones were the
ones that were getting close to their use by date,
and they got softer and softer a little bit. Like
the best k bars were always the ones that were
close to the use by date where they had the
soft kind of crust around the outside of it, so
you could get you could get rid of that before
you got onto the hard stuff.

Speaker 5 (55:10):
I still had its integrity inside there.

Speaker 3 (55:12):
But yeah, why tangy fruits? Why he could have bring back?

Speaker 4 (55:15):
Could you even buy tangy fruits anywhere apart from a
movie theater?

Speaker 3 (55:18):
Or is that just me making that out? You could
get them, You could get them somewhere else where else?
Could I? I? I remember I got a few potles in
different places, but movie theaters. I go through an entire
potle of those, and you just you just had the
last one, just as the as the credits.

Speaker 5 (55:35):
Are roller, if you've timed it. I hadn't been throwing
them at your mates throughout the whole movie. But the
thing is, you don't want to be walking around with
the poddle of tangy fruits. You can't put it in
your pocket. It's a real sit down snack, oh man,
tangy fruits and old he could to bring it back.

Speaker 3 (55:48):
I get them so coming up after the eight thirty
news headlines was talking about the Mount Rushmore of New
Zealand fast bowlers to sow he's retiring from cricket. Who
would be on the mount Rushman only four?

Speaker 5 (56:00):
Yeah, but you are allowed any four as well.

Speaker 3 (56:03):
Yep. They don't have to be the highest wikt takers.
They don't have to have the best averages. No, should
we say fast bowlers to make it nice?

Speaker 1 (56:11):
Can simple?

Speaker 3 (56:12):
Because otherwise otherwise you're comparing apples and oranges. Yeah, it's
a little bit difficult.

Speaker 8 (56:16):
Your complete New Zealand Today this morning breakfast.

Speaker 2 (56:20):
But hearing me Wells.

Speaker 8 (56:21):
Available everywhere on the iHeartRadio entertainment and the music their
Rocks exclusively on radio.

Speaker 3 (56:28):
Actually thirty two on the Heiderky Breakfast. Time for your
latest news headlines. A new report argues that the government
could save millions by building more roads out of concrete.
Researched by Concrete New Zealand, It's maintenance costs on roads
using the material are up to sixty two percent lower. Yeah,
I reckon, I reckon. They did find that, didn't they.
There we go big concrete as it can't be that simple?

(56:52):
What it won't be that simple. Just built them out
of concrete? Or is it, Jerry? Are we're in the
pocket a big bitumen? I love that thing. I mean
all this time? Okay. Repairs to State Highway one will
come at a good time for freight companies, but not
great for holiday travelers. The Desert Road or Dessert roaders,
it's known, will close between Tudoingy and Woudu from January

(57:13):
sixth until the end of February. The detail will add
half an hour and an extra fifty k's to people's journey. Yeah, well,
I don't know. Do you need to be on their oath?
There's not much on there? Is there? Dees it right?
Does it? Roady? He don't even need the road fart
around the outside. And a jury has heard allegations at
former Australian cricket to Stuart McGill's drug dealer once brought

(57:33):
him an expensive bottle of bourbon and allowed him to
rack up significant debts before orchestrating a deal that would
lead to his kidnapping. What okay? The girl is accused
of facilitating the supply of one kilogram of cocaine during
a meeting of the Sydney restaurant in April twenty twenty one.
The fifty three year old has pleaded not guilty to

(57:53):
one count of taking part in the supply of a
prohibited drug.

Speaker 5 (57:57):
So they bought him an expensive bottle of bourbon allowed
him to rack up significant debts before orchestrating a deal
that would lead to his kidnapping. It sounds like a
buddy what's his name, guy Richie movie does, doesn't it?

Speaker 3 (58:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (58:09):
Lock stock and two smoking leg spinners.

Speaker 3 (58:12):
Yeah, wow, Okay, there's so much fair. There's so much
going on. Expensive bottle of bourbon.

Speaker 5 (58:18):
I see Matt heads in the pocket of big Bourbon.

Speaker 3 (58:21):
I saw that. I saw that.

Speaker 5 (58:22):
Jeez, watch out.

Speaker 3 (58:23):
He might be getting kidnapped the future. Oh yeah, Jo
and MC girl played second fiddle to warning for so long.
He's always going to drive you crazy, wasn't it The.

Speaker 2 (58:34):
Hurchy Breakfast Aladio dy So.

Speaker 3 (58:37):
The news came out last week the Tim Souvey like
cap fast bowlers retiring from Test cricket at the end
of the England series, which is starting next week. I
believe Thursday is Yeah, that's right. Goodness, that's going to
be an exciting series. Is so much isn't it. I
mean England now the turring team that we kind of

(58:58):
look forward to the most start with Australia obviously, but
even more so England because beas McCallum coaches him now.

Speaker 1 (59:04):
So there's a little bit of extraducing it.

Speaker 5 (59:06):
Yeah, there's the bass ball of it all. There was
that obviously, that Test at the Basin and Wellington a
couple of years ago, the Wagner ball right.

Speaker 3 (59:12):
At the end there. We always have close We always
have close series against England.

Speaker 5 (59:16):
They're exciting, they're a big team to watch play Test cricket.

Speaker 3 (59:19):
They are. But it's going to be Timselthy's last Test series.
He needs fifteen wickets to get to four hundred Test wickets.

Speaker 1 (59:30):
Is that possible?

Speaker 3 (59:31):
Do you recommend? I can you? So? It's two and
a half wickets and innings. Yeah, if he plays an
all three Tests.

Speaker 5 (59:36):
That's that's a big ass to just go out there
and do that in a Test match against England.

Speaker 3 (59:40):
I'll tell you what.

Speaker 5 (59:40):
A hat trick and his first over would go along
way to helping the odds.

Speaker 3 (59:44):
If he's gonna get them, he's going to get them
in Hagley and or Hamilton Basin I reckon we'll get
them in Hamilton. Well maybe I haven't actually seen his
record at Hamilton, but just on those two pitches, you know,
you win the tiss at the basin gold first, get
a little bit of assistance there also Hagley screen off
and to start a little bit of extra bounce.

Speaker 5 (01:00:03):
But as a great point he is, We're looking at
the list of most Test wickets and there three outy
five and then there's a massive gap and then Richard
Hadley four thirty one.

Speaker 3 (01:00:14):
Yeah, still four thirty one, ridiculous, sir Richard from eighty
six Tests and that impressive average of twenty two point
eight nine.

Speaker 5 (01:00:21):
So got us thinking who would be I mean, obviously
he's first ballot Hall of Famer. Who would be in
your mount rushmore of bowlers? We talked about this on
the Agenda podcast available were all good podcasts as sold,
but I wanted to run this one past you, Jared.
Obviously Hadley would be in there.

Speaker 3 (01:00:37):
Yes, well, Hadley's your George Washington. Yes, you know he's
the You've always said that. Yeah, Handley's very much the
George Washington and New Zealand bowlers is no doubt about that.
In terms of the next amount of wickets Test wickets
saw these next on three eighty five Trent Bolts obviously

(01:01:00):
in the conversation Shane Bond a different sort of situation,
but Shane Bond obviously changed cricket.

Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
I don't think he played a whole lot of Tests.

Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
In fact, I reckon he only played eight how many
eighteen Tests? Took eighty seven wickets twenty two point h nine.

Speaker 5 (01:01:16):
And that's the thing when you're talking about the Mount
Rushmore the greatest of all time? Is it the peak
or the body of work? Because his peak is as
high as any of them, because bear in mind he's
playing against like the best Australian cricket team probably of
all time.

Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
To point. Yeah, and the highlights, the Shane Bond highlights reel,
if you've ever seen it on YouTube, which I've showed
my twelve year old.

Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Son, excellent.

Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
The amount of in swinging York is that cleaned up,
really really good batsman on that reel cartwheeld stumps. Yeah,
I mean, his strike rate's super impressive. His strike rate
is thirty eight point seventy five, so he took a
wicket every thirty eight point seven five balls. That's the
best strike rate by any bowler who's taken over fifty wickets.

Speaker 5 (01:02:00):
So is he on your rushmore? I would put him
on my rushmore controversial, cab, but then how many wickets
do you need to get on the rushmore? Because Kyle
Jamison's interesting.

Speaker 3 (01:02:10):
He's got the best average of anybody who's taken over
fifty wickets. He's taken eighty wickets at nineteen point seventy three.

Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
I think you gotta let his career play out. You
can't put him on until he's retired. Okay, So you
got Hedley, You've got Bond, I've got Bond. Are you
gonna round it out with Bolton Sousey?

Speaker 3 (01:02:28):
I personally would round it out with Bolton Southy. Yeah.
But the men you're talking then you've got obviously Neil
Wagner's knocking on the door. Chris Martin. He just sold
out Eden Park.

Speaker 1 (01:02:40):
The alb Oh.

Speaker 3 (01:02:41):
Yeah, he was impressive, showy. I actually saw a photo
the other day Dave our cameraman from seven Sharp, he
had a photo of his son on Chris Martin the
cricketers shoulders watching Chris Martin. He goes, here's Chris, Here's
Chris Martin. Watching Chris Martin, I was like, Wow, that's impressive.
For three oh eight hundred Hidachy. I'd love to hear

(01:03:02):
we're locking the the Mount Rushmore of New Zealand. Welds
sounds like something else that needs to do here on
the Hierarchy Breakfast, four of them. That's the Hierarchy Breakfast.

Speaker 2 (01:03:14):
The Hurdarchy Breakfast with Jeremy Wells, al.

Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
Radio Hdarchy, former South Isla meetwork and when I Stuart
joins us on the Hidicky Breakfast this morning, we're trying
to find the Mount Rushmore of New Zealand. Fast Bowlers
is a couple of texts that have come through. Yes,
already getting stuck into me for Tory maps.

Speaker 5 (01:03:32):
Well we're going fast bowlers, aren't we? Yeah, because I
think everyone's in the grants. He's probably the second name
etched into the mountain if we're going overall bowlers.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
Yeah. While he's taken three hundred and sixty one Test
wickets and he's the second highest wicket taker in all
games Dan Vatory six hundred and ninety six.

Speaker 5 (01:03:51):
Also, I don't think it can be overstated the cultural
impact of a player that warrants there being on Mount Rushmore.
You know, and I think that's why Shane on for
you it gets the tech because when you you know,
the length of the career wasn't enormous, but the vibe was, hey,
we've got a bowler that's as fast or faster than yours,
and he's as accurate or more accurate than yours.

Speaker 3 (01:04:13):
When he came along in two thousand and two thousand
and one that this sounds really tragic, but it actually
changed my life. Yeah, we finally had a guy, yes,
who could actually scare opposition batsman, because all my life
we had Sir Richard Hadley, and then after Sir Richard Hadley,
if we had D Day Danny Morrison. But d Day
just slid it through, skittered it through, and nobody was

(01:04:35):
here really that scared of him because he was so
dangerously short. But then finally a guy Shane by One
who was bowling in the one hundred and forties and
it came out with the speed Radar in Australian. That
was his first series as well, was in Australia.

Speaker 4 (01:04:47):
So he never really got excited with the likes of
Richard du Grand for instance, in the early nineties, I.

Speaker 3 (01:04:51):
Got excited about him for different reasons. But I liked
I liked the cravat that he used to wear.

Speaker 4 (01:04:57):
Murphy Sewer never did it for me, Willie Watson or
hot No.

Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
So people have been texting and furiously they reckon. There's
a lot of support for Kyle Mills.

Speaker 3 (01:05:12):
Yeah, oh yeah, great New Zealander. But any bowler that
I can have for three consecutive fours, I don't think.
I don't think should be on that list. Wow, shots fired.

Speaker 1 (01:05:23):
I don't think that person.

Speaker 3 (01:05:23):
Shall be on that list.

Speaker 5 (01:05:24):
You'll hold that over him forever, won't You.

Speaker 3 (01:05:26):
Are absolutely you can watch that online if you like
you Obviously it's ball got faster and faster each four. Yeah,
Chatfield A lot of suggestions to Chatfield at Chatfield was
a good bowler and a good foil for Richard Hadley,
but I wouldn't say that he'd end up on Mount Rushmore.

Speaker 5 (01:05:47):
If Hadley wasn't going around when Chatfield was, you probably
wouldn't have him in his higher regard, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:05:52):
And I think it's fair to say and that you
and Chatfield, if he was bowling into today's Cracker, would
get absolutely smashed because howling the same pace and bowling
the same ball all the time. Chris Kens. Great player,
Chris Kins, great bowler on his day, and bowl with
good pace at times and good bounce. But I wouldn't

(01:06:15):
have him up there though. A good thing, though, is
if part of his face broke off the mountain, it'd
be nice and easy to fix, so it would be nice.
I see what you've done there, thank you. I see
what you've done me? Uh so so definitely Handley, we're
there right, Hadley, yep, Bond, Bond, Trent Bolt, Trent Bolt,

(01:06:37):
definitely does some sow they make it? I say, yes,
it is Chris Harris's birthday?

Speaker 4 (01:06:42):
Can he is he? What are we saying? Fast medium,
Chris Harris, We're not going to birthday.

Speaker 5 (01:06:48):
I don't think you're allowed to say what kind of
bowler he was anymore?

Speaker 3 (01:06:51):
Chris Harris. Ah, dibly doubley, definitely dibly doubly doubly double
left armor dibly doubley.

Speaker 5 (01:07:00):
No, boy, he's not a pace bowler, so he's not
on there. If we just go on pace, I think
we've got it. I think we've binned it out.

Speaker 3 (01:07:05):
Thank you, Richard, Hadley, Trent Bolt, Shamee Bond, TG Solby
tg Soalby. Well, there it is. Wasn't that hard? Was
what a groundbreaking new segment. We put four people who
are the best at something. We should do that every Wednesday.
I'd never do it on a Tuesday. I'll tell you what.

Speaker 5 (01:07:26):
Thang for coming in today, Maniah, thanks for having me,
Thanks for listening.

Speaker 1 (01:07:30):
Everybody. We'll see you again tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (01:07:32):
Have a lovely day.

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Podcast out at eleven am wherever you get your pods.

Speaker 8 (01:07:38):
The Hodarchy Breakfast thanks to Bunning's Trade. Load up on
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