1 00:00:00,320 --> 00:00:03,520 Speaker 1: New Zealand's home for trusted news and views. 2 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:07,560 Speaker 2: Ryan Bridge on the Mike Hosking Breakfast with Bailey's real 3 00:00:07,640 --> 00:00:11,320 Speaker 2: Estate finding the buyers others can't use togs HEADBS. 4 00:00:13,720 --> 00:00:16,360 Speaker 3: Seven after six Monday the twenty seventh is January. Great 5 00:00:16,360 --> 00:00:18,759 Speaker 3: to have your company coming up? Why no warning for 6 00:00:18,800 --> 00:00:21,040 Speaker 3: that tornado over the weekend? Peter had done on the 7 00:00:21,079 --> 00:00:24,280 Speaker 3: treaty Billets all kicking off at Parliament today, Senner takes 8 00:00:24,320 --> 00:00:26,880 Speaker 3: all at the Aussie Open. We've got reaction. Richard Arnold 9 00:00:26,880 --> 00:00:30,160 Speaker 3: in the US and Steve Price in Australia and bread 10 00:00:30,200 --> 00:00:35,400 Speaker 3: Brich Russia. How is Russia's economy still holding up? In fact, 11 00:00:35,560 --> 00:00:39,320 Speaker 3: not just holding up. Russia's economy in some ways is thriving. 12 00:00:39,880 --> 00:00:43,960 Speaker 3: It grew faster last year than the United States, faster 13 00:00:44,080 --> 00:00:47,160 Speaker 3: than all European countries, certainly faster than US, so that's 14 00:00:47,200 --> 00:00:50,400 Speaker 3: not hard. Unemployment there is at a record low. And 15 00:00:50,440 --> 00:00:53,840 Speaker 3: this is despite all the sanctions, all the threats, all 16 00:00:53,920 --> 00:00:57,720 Speaker 3: the tariffs, all the ostracizing and the excommunicating and tough 17 00:00:57,800 --> 00:01:02,480 Speaker 3: talk from the West over Ukraine. Russia's economy has basically 18 00:01:02,680 --> 00:01:06,319 Speaker 3: defied expectations. Does that not tell you that there's something 19 00:01:06,760 --> 00:01:09,560 Speaker 3: a bit buggered with the way that we punish rogue 20 00:01:09,560 --> 00:01:13,919 Speaker 3: states like that. Buggered as in, it doesn't work. Russia 21 00:01:13,959 --> 00:01:16,600 Speaker 3: started this war in twenty twenty two, it is twenty 22 00:01:16,640 --> 00:01:20,000 Speaker 3: twenty five. Shouldn't they be a little more wounded economically 23 00:01:20,040 --> 00:01:23,360 Speaker 3: than they are right now? Europe still gets for all 24 00:01:23,360 --> 00:01:27,320 Speaker 3: the blusters, still gets twenty percent of its gas from Russia. 25 00:01:27,360 --> 00:01:30,520 Speaker 3: On oil, China and India have swooped in to take 26 00:01:30,560 --> 00:01:33,679 Speaker 3: it off Russia's hands. Even the Europeans are still buying 27 00:01:33,800 --> 00:01:37,160 Speaker 3: Russian oil by just doing it secondhand through India, where 28 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:40,360 Speaker 3: it's all been refined. This is despite the EU price 29 00:01:40,440 --> 00:01:43,520 Speaker 3: Camp that was designed to prevent this exact thing from happening. 30 00:01:44,040 --> 00:01:48,040 Speaker 3: If Russia can invade a sovereign country, grow its economy 31 00:01:48,040 --> 00:01:50,360 Speaker 3: more than ours, and carry on as if nothing's happened, 32 00:01:50,400 --> 00:01:53,840 Speaker 3: surely that's an indictment on the system itself, right If 33 00:01:53,960 --> 00:01:56,960 Speaker 3: China tried to do something like this, do we expect 34 00:01:56,960 --> 00:01:59,840 Speaker 3: that the system would be able to contain them. The 35 00:02:00,080 --> 00:02:02,280 Speaker 3: problem here, of course, is globalization and the fact that 36 00:02:02,360 --> 00:02:06,520 Speaker 3: we're also interconnected. We rely on each other for raw materials, 37 00:02:06,520 --> 00:02:09,080 Speaker 3: for goods and services, and that's to make our own fortunes, 38 00:02:09,600 --> 00:02:12,320 Speaker 3: and no matter how much we say we're against something 39 00:02:12,480 --> 00:02:16,200 Speaker 3: like war, we're only really against it to a point, 40 00:02:16,280 --> 00:02:18,120 Speaker 3: and that point is keeping the lights on or the 41 00:02:18,120 --> 00:02:21,480 Speaker 3: car running inside our own borders. To be fair, Moscow 42 00:02:21,560 --> 00:02:24,360 Speaker 3: does have some big problems coming. As Trump has been 43 00:02:24,400 --> 00:02:26,400 Speaker 3: saying over the last week. We've been reporting on that. 44 00:02:26,440 --> 00:02:30,280 Speaker 3: Inflation is high, interest rates just hit twenty one percent. 45 00:02:30,800 --> 00:02:33,400 Speaker 3: You thought we had it bad, twenty one percent. They've 46 00:02:33,400 --> 00:02:36,640 Speaker 3: got labor shortages, there's signs of a credit bubble looming, 47 00:02:36,840 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 3: and the fact is that a lot of that growth 48 00:02:39,160 --> 00:02:42,600 Speaker 3: is being jacked up by defense spending. So Putin may 49 00:02:42,680 --> 00:02:45,280 Speaker 3: need to make a deal and come to the table 50 00:02:45,560 --> 00:02:48,840 Speaker 3: sooner rather than later. But how much of that is 51 00:02:48,880 --> 00:02:51,760 Speaker 3: to do with the West's sanctions is debatable. 52 00:02:53,720 --> 00:02:56,799 Speaker 1: News of the World in ninety seconds u. 53 00:02:56,840 --> 00:02:59,000 Speaker 3: N kicking off an emergency meeting. It's all to do 54 00:02:59,040 --> 00:03:02,600 Speaker 3: with the Congo. They've got cut diplomatic ties with Rwanda 55 00:03:02,639 --> 00:03:03,920 Speaker 3: amidst the latest violence. 56 00:03:04,160 --> 00:03:07,559 Speaker 4: It's very difficult to get footage from the outskirts of Goma, 57 00:03:07,600 --> 00:03:10,320 Speaker 4: but the frenzy that we're seeing here in the center 58 00:03:10,360 --> 00:03:13,880 Speaker 4: of Goma does indicate that people are acting on that 59 00:03:14,000 --> 00:03:16,960 Speaker 4: intel they feel that this is a full on invasion 60 00:03:16,960 --> 00:03:18,560 Speaker 4: in an all out war from Miranda. 61 00:03:19,320 --> 00:03:22,680 Speaker 3: Good news from Gaza. The ceasefiers holding Israel now thinks 62 00:03:22,720 --> 00:03:25,760 Speaker 3: Phase two will go ahead. There is a clear potential 63 00:03:25,760 --> 00:03:27,280 Speaker 3: of getting to the second phase. 64 00:03:27,360 --> 00:03:29,600 Speaker 1: There is a desire. 65 00:03:29,200 --> 00:03:30,720 Speaker 5: To get to the second phase. 66 00:03:31,240 --> 00:03:34,000 Speaker 1: We meant it when we signed the agreement. 67 00:03:34,280 --> 00:03:37,160 Speaker 3: In the US and u CII director outlining what Trump 68 00:03:37,240 --> 00:03:39,000 Speaker 3: wants out of his security agencies. 69 00:03:39,160 --> 00:03:43,760 Speaker 6: We have China, Russia, North Korea and Iran cooperating in 70 00:03:43,800 --> 00:03:46,320 Speaker 6: a way that we've never seen before. So we have 71 00:03:46,440 --> 00:03:50,680 Speaker 6: difficult circumstances, great responsibility, and you know President Trump has 72 00:03:50,760 --> 00:03:53,320 Speaker 6: challenged me and the rest of his incoming cabinet to 73 00:03:53,360 --> 00:03:53,880 Speaker 6: do better. 74 00:03:54,120 --> 00:03:56,680 Speaker 3: In the UK, Rachel Reaves, the Chancellor who does the 75 00:03:56,720 --> 00:03:59,640 Speaker 3: media rounds on a Sunday, thinks the Southport murders may 76 00:03:59,680 --> 00:04:02,080 Speaker 3: not havepened if the killer was on a potential tyr. 77 00:04:02,000 --> 00:04:05,200 Speaker 7: List because they didn't think that the killer had an 78 00:04:05,200 --> 00:04:09,440 Speaker 7: ideology that therefore he wasn't at risk in the same 79 00:04:09,480 --> 00:04:14,160 Speaker 7: way that somebody who might have an ideological motive. 80 00:04:14,280 --> 00:04:17,520 Speaker 3: Night and a former Chief Crown Prosecutor, wants the TIRA 81 00:04:17,600 --> 00:04:18,560 Speaker 3: laws to go further. 82 00:04:19,000 --> 00:04:23,240 Speaker 8: Thweat has changed there are now people in our communities 83 00:04:23,600 --> 00:04:28,080 Speaker 8: in this country globally who are motivated not by those things, 84 00:04:28,720 --> 00:04:31,200 Speaker 8: and very often they're motivated actually by misogyny. 85 00:04:32,480 --> 00:04:35,520 Speaker 3: Voting is underway in Belarus. Surprise, surprise, it'll be a 86 00:04:35,520 --> 00:04:39,080 Speaker 3: clean sweep for Lukashinko, considering his political allies have either 87 00:04:39,080 --> 00:04:40,679 Speaker 3: fled the country or been put in prison. 88 00:04:40,760 --> 00:04:43,200 Speaker 9: Unlike most elections, we don't need to wait until the 89 00:04:43,240 --> 00:04:47,520 Speaker 9: polls closed to find out the result. The incumbent, Alexander Lukashenka, 90 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:51,160 Speaker 9: a man often described as Europe's last dictator, will win 91 00:04:51,240 --> 00:04:54,760 Speaker 9: a seventh term and extend his thirty one years in power. 92 00:04:55,920 --> 00:04:59,760 Speaker 3: Finally, keen Anthropiles and Brooklyn, that is, those who love 93 00:05:03,400 --> 00:05:06,120 Speaker 3: so they're all flocking to the Brooklyn Botanic Flowers to 94 00:05:06,120 --> 00:05:08,479 Speaker 3: get a whip of the worst thing that they've ever smelled. 95 00:05:08,680 --> 00:05:13,919 Speaker 3: It's called the a Morpha Fellas. They're more for Fallaus 96 00:05:13,960 --> 00:05:18,039 Speaker 3: Gigas is a rare plant that arrived from Sumatra in 97 00:05:18,040 --> 00:05:21,000 Speaker 3: twenty eighteen. However, it's only bloomed for the first time 98 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:23,520 Speaker 3: over the weekend, and so people wanted to get photos 99 00:05:23,839 --> 00:05:26,880 Speaker 3: of this big flower and smell. Why it's a relative 100 00:05:26,960 --> 00:05:29,320 Speaker 3: to the corpse flower that's the one we spoke about 101 00:05:29,360 --> 00:05:32,560 Speaker 3: on Friday in Sydney where everybody's been going. The reason 102 00:05:32,800 --> 00:05:36,159 Speaker 3: is because it has an infamously bad smell. Flower lovers 103 00:05:36,160 --> 00:05:40,159 Speaker 3: have described it as smelling like rotting flesh. Quite why 104 00:05:40,200 --> 00:05:42,400 Speaker 3: you would want to go and smell rotting fresh flesh 105 00:05:42,400 --> 00:05:44,920 Speaker 3: and Brooklyn, I'm not entirely sure. 106 00:05:45,000 --> 00:05:47,320 Speaker 10: Also, how many people who are into flowers has smelt 107 00:05:47,440 --> 00:05:50,000 Speaker 10: rotting flesh to make that comparison. 108 00:05:49,520 --> 00:05:53,719 Speaker 3: Well, they obviously all of it. Something psychopathic going on. 109 00:05:53,800 --> 00:05:56,760 Speaker 3: There isn't there anthropiles. I didn't know that was a 110 00:05:56,880 --> 00:05:59,960 Speaker 3: lover of flowers. There we go. You learn something every mon. 111 00:06:00,320 --> 00:06:02,440 Speaker 3: It is twelve after six Business Next. 112 00:06:04,160 --> 00:06:09,039 Speaker 2: The Mike Asking Breakfast Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio powered 113 00:06:09,080 --> 00:06:10,039 Speaker 2: by News TALKSB. 114 00:06:10,920 --> 00:06:13,760 Speaker 3: It is quarter past six News TALKSB. Hi Ryan. This 115 00:06:13,800 --> 00:06:15,520 Speaker 3: is a text from one of our listeners. My wife 116 00:06:15,560 --> 00:06:17,919 Speaker 3: is currently in Russia. She reckons Russia's going great, not 117 00:06:18,040 --> 00:06:21,640 Speaker 3: phased by the ongoing sanctions that don't seem to be 118 00:06:21,640 --> 00:06:24,360 Speaker 3: having much of an effect on their industry. Interesting. Also, 119 00:06:24,400 --> 00:06:27,800 Speaker 3: we were talking about Belarus and this is my home 120 00:06:28,120 --> 00:06:31,400 Speaker 3: means comparable to Belarus, but Slovakia over the week in 121 00:06:31,440 --> 00:06:34,239 Speaker 3: big protests they're about how close they're getting to Russia. 122 00:06:34,480 --> 00:06:36,800 Speaker 3: Their Prime minister apparently took a secret trip to go 123 00:06:36,839 --> 00:06:40,240 Speaker 3: and see Putin at the Kremlin in December, which they're 124 00:06:40,279 --> 00:06:44,280 Speaker 3: not happy about. And Slovakia, unlike Belarus obviously is part 125 00:06:44,320 --> 00:06:46,800 Speaker 3: of NATO, Slovakia is part of the EU. And then 126 00:06:46,839 --> 00:06:49,279 Speaker 3: you've got the leader going and having at a little 127 00:06:49,360 --> 00:06:56,320 Speaker 3: mandate with Putin. Sixteen after six it is Monday morning. 128 00:06:56,400 --> 00:06:59,920 Speaker 3: Dregsmith here devon Funds Management, Greg, Good morning morning, you ride. 129 00:07:00,200 --> 00:07:02,279 Speaker 3: The PMI is a bit of a mixed bag. Stand 130 00:07:02,320 --> 00:07:03,000 Speaker 3: out the US. 131 00:07:03,440 --> 00:07:06,520 Speaker 11: Yeah, absolutely, this is manufacturing and services activity globally, so 132 00:07:06,560 --> 00:07:08,440 Speaker 11: we've seen a number of prints here. So EU US 133 00:07:08,480 --> 00:07:11,000 Speaker 11: is going pretty well. That will will be pleasing to Trump. 134 00:07:11,240 --> 00:07:14,960 Speaker 11: The manufacturing sector that's no longer going backwards. Services sector 135 00:07:15,200 --> 00:07:18,440 Speaker 11: at nine months low, but still an expansion territory. So yeah, 136 00:07:18,680 --> 00:07:20,920 Speaker 11: optimism is pretty high in the US. You know, the 137 00:07:20,960 --> 00:07:24,120 Speaker 11: Trump appears to be wide ranging. If you look at 138 00:07:24,160 --> 00:07:27,160 Speaker 11: the joint services and manufacturing outlock, it's actually the highest 139 00:07:27,200 --> 00:07:31,000 Speaker 11: since May twenty twenty two. So yeah, US based businesses 140 00:07:31,040 --> 00:07:33,200 Speaker 11: have got a positive view of things. A little bit 141 00:07:33,240 --> 00:07:36,440 Speaker 11: of a different story in Europe. This is activity did 142 00:07:36,440 --> 00:07:38,960 Speaker 11: get back to grow for the first time in five months. 143 00:07:39,680 --> 00:07:41,840 Speaker 11: But yeah, bit of a mixed bag. Germany doing well, 144 00:07:42,200 --> 00:07:45,840 Speaker 11: France less so the factory sector still in contraction mode 145 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:47,760 Speaker 11: but a little bit less than it was in the UK. 146 00:07:48,360 --> 00:07:51,480 Speaker 11: Things in positive territory, but again just obviously concerns over 147 00:07:51,520 --> 00:07:53,280 Speaker 11: the budgets still and a bit of a case of 148 00:07:53,360 --> 00:07:58,040 Speaker 11: the manufacturing sector remaining contraction in the services sector expanding more. 149 00:07:58,080 --> 00:07:58,120 Speaker 12: So. 150 00:07:58,160 --> 00:07:59,960 Speaker 11: It's a bit of a theme outside of the US 151 00:08:00,160 --> 00:08:04,960 Speaker 11: generally Japanese factory activity that contracted a bit more, services 152 00:08:04,960 --> 00:08:08,720 Speaker 11: did a bit better than expected. This has given the 153 00:08:08,880 --> 00:08:10,760 Speaker 11: central making a bit more wiggor into raised rates that 154 00:08:10,800 --> 00:08:13,400 Speaker 11: they did so on Friday, increased rates to zero point 155 00:08:13,520 --> 00:08:16,560 Speaker 11: five percent, but that's the highest in seventy years. China 156 00:08:16,600 --> 00:08:19,400 Speaker 11: is still a picture of weakness, particular in the manufacturing sectors. 157 00:08:19,400 --> 00:08:21,200 Speaker 11: That's a little bit of odds of some of the 158 00:08:21,240 --> 00:08:24,800 Speaker 11: positive data that I've seen lately on those stimulus impacts. 159 00:08:25,040 --> 00:08:28,520 Speaker 11: And looking across the Tasman the factory PM in Australia 160 00:08:29,400 --> 00:08:32,760 Speaker 11: contracted lease in January and in fact it's barely contracting 161 00:08:32,760 --> 00:08:36,360 Speaker 11: at all now. Services sector expanded at a slower pace, 162 00:08:36,920 --> 00:08:39,480 Speaker 11: and then we all compare this to a least positive situation. 163 00:08:39,520 --> 00:08:41,160 Speaker 11: Of course, New Zealand we talked about that last week. 164 00:08:41,240 --> 00:08:44,600 Speaker 11: Manufacturing sector year in contraction for twenty two consecutive amonths. 165 00:08:44,600 --> 00:08:48,000 Speaker 11: Services sector is a bit of a standout amongst their partners, 166 00:08:48,040 --> 00:08:49,960 Speaker 11: but in a bad way, and that it's still going 167 00:08:50,000 --> 00:08:52,520 Speaker 11: backwards for ten months now. So let's get those rate 168 00:08:52,600 --> 00:08:53,200 Speaker 11: cats going. 169 00:08:53,080 --> 00:08:58,679 Speaker 3: On I'm speaking my language berbery. Their demand is up 170 00:08:58,760 --> 00:09:01,000 Speaker 3: for their goods and their share price has jumped as well. 171 00:09:01,040 --> 00:09:04,200 Speaker 3: Obviously the husk has been busy on his holiday clearly 172 00:09:04,320 --> 00:09:04,719 Speaker 3: has been. 173 00:09:04,800 --> 00:09:08,480 Speaker 11: Yes, she's a ten percent there on Friday year back 174 00:09:08,480 --> 00:09:10,000 Speaker 11: back in vogue. It's had a bit of a checkered 175 00:09:10,040 --> 00:09:12,400 Speaker 11: time of it over the last year or so. But 176 00:09:12,880 --> 00:09:15,520 Speaker 11: sales in three months to decend but they declined four percent, 177 00:09:15,640 --> 00:09:18,240 Speaker 11: but they had forecast to a decline of twelve percent, 178 00:09:18,400 --> 00:09:20,760 Speaker 11: so that was a lot better than expected. The festive 179 00:09:20,760 --> 00:09:24,239 Speaker 11: shopping period went pretty well, and again I suppose, consistent 180 00:09:24,320 --> 00:09:26,880 Speaker 11: with some of the avadad and just talked about sales 181 00:09:26,920 --> 00:09:27,920 Speaker 11: ticked up in America. 182 00:09:28,080 --> 00:09:28,520 Speaker 3: America. 183 00:09:29,240 --> 00:09:31,400 Speaker 11: This is a bit of a resurgency here across the 184 00:09:31,480 --> 00:09:33,640 Speaker 11: luxury goods set down. As a view that you know 185 00:09:33,640 --> 00:09:36,520 Speaker 11: Trump's initials will keep that spending go. I mean, when 186 00:09:36,559 --> 00:09:39,560 Speaker 11: we look at Bary in particular, it's had four CEOs 187 00:09:39,600 --> 00:09:41,480 Speaker 11: of the past decade, literally been around for in the 188 00:09:41,840 --> 00:09:44,959 Speaker 11: nearly one hundred and seventy years, so they've got another 189 00:09:45,000 --> 00:09:47,520 Speaker 11: CEO having a crack at trying to reinvigorate things. I mean, 190 00:09:47,960 --> 00:09:50,040 Speaker 11: of course, very much an iconic brand, but it did 191 00:09:50,080 --> 00:09:52,120 Speaker 11: get dealt a bit of a blow to its image 192 00:09:52,320 --> 00:09:55,160 Speaker 11: as the working class sort of got into the check 193 00:09:55,200 --> 00:09:58,280 Speaker 11: and stuff in nineties and two thousands. But they're looking 194 00:09:58,559 --> 00:10:01,640 Speaker 11: to appeal to wider market. Seams, are lowering pricing, they're 195 00:10:01,640 --> 00:10:04,000 Speaker 11: focusing on promoting quality in the heritage. 196 00:10:03,640 --> 00:10:05,280 Speaker 3: Of its products. So we'll see how that goes. 197 00:10:05,320 --> 00:10:07,319 Speaker 11: But generally the actually a good sector. RYND appears to 198 00:10:07,360 --> 00:10:10,760 Speaker 11: be turning around here Cartiown and Richmond also have the 199 00:10:10,840 --> 00:10:14,080 Speaker 11: highest quarterly sales ever, so yeah, things are turning around 200 00:10:14,080 --> 00:10:14,480 Speaker 11: a bit. 201 00:10:14,679 --> 00:10:18,720 Speaker 3: Interesting back home, things looking up for the red meat sector. Yeah, 202 00:10:18,720 --> 00:10:19,120 Speaker 3: that's right. 203 00:10:19,160 --> 00:10:21,520 Speaker 11: So yeah, we know that pricing is going pretty well 204 00:10:21,559 --> 00:10:24,440 Speaker 11: in the dairy sector, but it's also looking up for 205 00:10:24,559 --> 00:10:28,040 Speaker 11: red meats. This is Rubbobanks twenty twenty five Global Animal 206 00:10:28,120 --> 00:10:31,200 Speaker 11: Protein Outlook, and it's just talked about pricing picking up 207 00:10:31,240 --> 00:10:34,480 Speaker 11: on a lot of production. Smaller herds sees beef production 208 00:10:34,600 --> 00:10:37,360 Speaker 11: declining six percent, and twenty twenty five points out that 209 00:10:37,400 --> 00:10:39,760 Speaker 11: beef was a money maker for New Zealand red meat 210 00:10:40,080 --> 00:10:44,920 Speaker 11: exports last year. Farm gate returns climb to twenty percent 211 00:10:45,600 --> 00:10:49,160 Speaker 11: above five yearverages. It's on tractor remain there this year. 212 00:10:49,200 --> 00:10:51,360 Speaker 11: There's some mostual drivers here to production in the US 213 00:10:51,400 --> 00:10:54,440 Speaker 11: that's contracting, also slowing the likes of Brazil and Chinas. 214 00:10:54,440 --> 00:10:56,400 Speaker 11: That's good news for our red meat farmer is going 215 00:10:56,440 --> 00:10:56,880 Speaker 11: to help them. 216 00:10:56,880 --> 00:10:58,079 Speaker 3: On a little bit of a different story. 217 00:10:58,120 --> 00:11:01,800 Speaker 11: For sheep, meat returns were down seven percent last year 218 00:11:01,840 --> 00:11:04,920 Speaker 11: despite volumes being up. Prices at are cyclical low. In fact, 219 00:11:04,920 --> 00:11:07,520 Speaker 11: there are as much as twenty percent below five averages. 220 00:11:07,559 --> 00:11:10,280 Speaker 11: But yeah, good news here as well. Ryan pricing has 221 00:11:10,280 --> 00:11:13,560 Speaker 11: improved recently, and we've also got higher volumes going to 222 00:11:13,600 --> 00:11:18,040 Speaker 11: markets outside of China, particularly the US, Europe and the UK. 223 00:11:18,600 --> 00:11:21,160 Speaker 11: And also we've got declining cheap numbers as well, so 224 00:11:21,200 --> 00:11:24,240 Speaker 11: that's sort of flying through to pricing. They also point 225 00:11:24,280 --> 00:11:27,000 Speaker 11: out that animal production animal protein production overall this year 226 00:11:27,040 --> 00:11:30,280 Speaker 11: set to grow, driven by poultry also a bit of 227 00:11:30,320 --> 00:11:32,679 Speaker 11: a rebound in seafood, and he guess a week of 228 00:11:32,720 --> 00:11:36,040 Speaker 11: Kiwi dollar is also good news for our exporters. The 229 00:11:36,080 --> 00:11:38,000 Speaker 11: wild card and all this. You know, what does Trump 230 00:11:38,040 --> 00:11:40,400 Speaker 11: do and what have had a protections measures play out? Well, 231 00:11:40,440 --> 00:11:41,559 Speaker 11: I guess we have to wait and see there. 232 00:11:41,720 --> 00:11:43,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, we'll take the good news for now, though, won't we. 233 00:11:43,600 --> 00:11:45,280 Speaker 3: Let's take a look at the numbers green. 234 00:11:45,760 --> 00:11:48,520 Speaker 11: Yeah, so the use markets paused on Friday in terms 235 00:11:48,559 --> 00:11:50,040 Speaker 11: of the rally, but you had a good week back 236 00:11:50,040 --> 00:11:53,080 Speaker 11: to back weekly gains. So downdown point three percent, forty 237 00:11:53,080 --> 00:11:55,360 Speaker 11: four four to two four s and P five hundred 238 00:11:55,360 --> 00:11:58,520 Speaker 11: also down point three percent. Now's that down half percent? 239 00:11:58,600 --> 00:12:01,120 Speaker 11: Foot Sea down points seven percent percent, The nick A 240 00:12:01,360 --> 00:12:04,079 Speaker 11: was down point one percent in Japan, the ASEX two 241 00:12:04,160 --> 00:12:07,240 Speaker 11: hundred was down point four percent. Across the Tasman INSX 242 00:12:07,280 --> 00:12:10,200 Speaker 11: fifty we were down point three percent thirteen zero two four. 243 00:12:10,320 --> 00:12:13,160 Speaker 11: Notable Movie was similarly it was up nineteen percent. Back 244 00:12:13,200 --> 00:12:16,599 Speaker 11: to profitability, it seems. And the commodities market's goal is 245 00:12:16,679 --> 00:12:19,120 Speaker 11: up fifteen dollars twenty seven hundred and seventy and ounce 246 00:12:19,360 --> 00:12:22,520 Speaker 11: oil flat seventy four spots sixty six a barrel. Just 247 00:12:22,520 --> 00:12:24,360 Speaker 11: in the currency market, it's the key. We was up 248 00:12:24,600 --> 00:12:27,280 Speaker 11: against the US fifty seven point one, also up against 249 00:12:27,320 --> 00:12:30,760 Speaker 11: Ozzie ninety point four, and against stealing. We're down half 250 00:12:30,760 --> 00:12:33,240 Speaker 11: percent forty five point seven. This week, plenty going on. 251 00:12:33,440 --> 00:12:36,920 Speaker 11: We've got trade data, business consume conference reads. It's naturally. 252 00:12:36,920 --> 00:12:40,760 Speaker 11: We've got OS inflation, US inflation, European g GDP. We've 253 00:12:40,800 --> 00:12:42,640 Speaker 11: got the ECB rate decision. Of course, we've got the 254 00:12:42,679 --> 00:12:45,160 Speaker 11: FED meeting as well, and you look at earnings. Lots 255 00:12:45,280 --> 00:12:48,880 Speaker 11: going on in big tech thereon. We've got numbers from Microsoft, Meta, 256 00:12:49,120 --> 00:12:50,600 Speaker 11: Tesla and Apple. 257 00:12:50,480 --> 00:12:52,439 Speaker 3: All the big ones. Thanks so much, Greg, Greg Smith, 258 00:12:52,480 --> 00:12:55,120 Speaker 3: Devins Funds Management. Just gone twenty two minutes after six. 259 00:12:55,160 --> 00:12:57,720 Speaker 3: Coming up, I'll tell you what the CIA reckons about 260 00:12:57,760 --> 00:13:01,320 Speaker 3: the COVID outbreak and where it came from. 261 00:13:01,480 --> 00:13:05,960 Speaker 2: The Mike Hosking Breakfast Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio powered 262 00:13:06,000 --> 00:13:07,000 Speaker 2: by News Talks at b. 263 00:13:07,600 --> 00:13:10,120 Speaker 3: Twenty five after six. All kicks off at Parliament today. 264 00:13:10,160 --> 00:13:12,400 Speaker 3: This is the Treaty Principal's Bill. It's going before the 265 00:13:12,440 --> 00:13:15,000 Speaker 3: Select Committee and the public will have their say. It 266 00:13:15,040 --> 00:13:17,520 Speaker 3: is oral submissions. Guests who submitted Number one is going 267 00:13:17,559 --> 00:13:21,120 Speaker 3: to be David Seymour. Yeah, the guy who came up 268 00:13:21,160 --> 00:13:23,120 Speaker 3: with the whole thing. He's the first one to submit, 269 00:13:23,520 --> 00:13:25,000 Speaker 3: So we'll talk to Peter Dunn about that. 270 00:13:25,080 --> 00:13:27,120 Speaker 1: After seven trending. 271 00:13:27,400 --> 00:13:31,720 Speaker 2: Now we're chemist wells keeping Kiwi's healthy all year round. 272 00:13:31,840 --> 00:13:34,400 Speaker 3: It was way back in nineteen ninety nine that Tony Hawk, 273 00:13:34,480 --> 00:13:37,480 Speaker 3: you know, the skateboarder, put himself into legend status when 274 00:13:37,480 --> 00:13:39,719 Speaker 3: he pulled off the first ever nine hundred wat's a 275 00:13:39,800 --> 00:13:42,880 Speaker 3: nine hundred two and a half spins on a skateboard 276 00:13:42,880 --> 00:13:46,480 Speaker 3: on the half pipe. And people credit that moment with 277 00:13:46,679 --> 00:13:50,240 Speaker 3: changing the X Games and its history. Since then, athletes 278 00:13:50,240 --> 00:13:53,200 Speaker 3: and all X game sports have been pushing themselves. They've 279 00:13:53,240 --> 00:13:55,600 Speaker 3: created big air and big ramp competitions to all our 280 00:13:55,640 --> 00:13:57,840 Speaker 3: athletes to go higher and to spin more. And that's 281 00:13:57,920 --> 00:14:00,680 Speaker 3: exactly what happened over the weekend, from Tony Hawk's nine 282 00:14:00,720 --> 00:14:03,160 Speaker 3: hundred and nineteen ninety nine to the first ever two 283 00:14:03,120 --> 00:14:05,359 Speaker 3: to three point forty in any sport. 284 00:14:05,360 --> 00:14:15,000 Speaker 1: Take off three here, how was it twenty three forty? 285 00:14:15,920 --> 00:14:18,600 Speaker 10: That was six and a half full times round? 286 00:14:20,480 --> 00:14:20,880 Speaker 1: How do you? 287 00:14:21,240 --> 00:14:22,680 Speaker 13: How do you create. 288 00:14:22,520 --> 00:14:24,960 Speaker 1: History and then go up there and do it again? 289 00:14:25,160 --> 00:14:25,880 Speaker 1: How do you do that? 290 00:14:25,960 --> 00:14:28,880 Speaker 14: Brando's ninety seven point three. 291 00:14:28,800 --> 00:14:31,880 Speaker 3: Three very exciting that was the X Games and Aspen 292 00:14:31,920 --> 00:14:34,480 Speaker 3: over the weekend and New Zealand's Rucker Jamison actually got 293 00:14:34,520 --> 00:14:38,880 Speaker 3: the bronze medal in that event. Lots of history being made, 294 00:14:39,000 --> 00:14:42,520 Speaker 3: pretty impressive stuff. Twenty six minutes after six, I struggled 295 00:14:42,560 --> 00:14:44,360 Speaker 3: just to go in a straight line down the mountain, 296 00:14:45,200 --> 00:14:46,760 Speaker 3: Skiz personally on the skis. 297 00:14:47,040 --> 00:14:49,800 Speaker 10: I've gone on straight line down the mountain often my skis. 298 00:14:51,320 --> 00:14:53,240 Speaker 3: Let alone on a board. I find that very difficult 299 00:14:53,280 --> 00:14:55,440 Speaker 3: to twenty seven after six News talks. 300 00:14:55,160 --> 00:14:55,560 Speaker 15: Have been. 301 00:15:07,320 --> 00:15:10,040 Speaker 1: Setting the agenda and talking the big issues. 302 00:15:10,480 --> 00:15:14,080 Speaker 2: Ryan Bridge on the mic Hosking Breakfast with al Vida 303 00:15:14,160 --> 00:15:17,560 Speaker 2: Retirement Communities, Life Your Way news talk said. 304 00:15:17,680 --> 00:15:19,960 Speaker 3: Good morning, twenty four away from seven. Micha will be 305 00:15:20,040 --> 00:15:22,680 Speaker 3: back with you tomorrow. Today's public holiday in Auckland. For 306 00:15:22,720 --> 00:15:24,680 Speaker 3: those of you around the rest of the country. The 307 00:15:24,840 --> 00:15:27,480 Speaker 3: Danes are pulling their hair out this morning in Copenhagen. 308 00:15:27,480 --> 00:15:30,720 Speaker 3: They're having full meltdown. They had a call. This is 309 00:15:30,760 --> 00:15:34,080 Speaker 3: the Danish Prime Minister, met Friedrichson. She had a call 310 00:15:34,160 --> 00:15:36,800 Speaker 3: with Trump, had him on the blower over the weekend 311 00:15:37,400 --> 00:15:40,320 Speaker 3: and apparently didn't go very well at all. She's a 312 00:15:40,320 --> 00:15:42,680 Speaker 3: social Democrat, so she's you know, the other side of 313 00:15:42,720 --> 00:15:45,280 Speaker 3: politics to Trump. Can you just imagine how that call went. 314 00:15:46,200 --> 00:15:50,160 Speaker 3: He rings and says I'm buying Greenland. Now she says 315 00:15:50,360 --> 00:15:54,960 Speaker 3: no or actually no in Denmark and Danish's NG, so 316 00:15:55,000 --> 00:15:59,560 Speaker 3: it would have gone yes ng yes, ng yes NG 317 00:15:59,640 --> 00:16:02,400 Speaker 3: back if they go. The Financial Times reporting that, according 318 00:16:02,440 --> 00:16:05,600 Speaker 3: to five current and formulat former senior European officials have 319 00:16:05,600 --> 00:16:08,240 Speaker 3: been briefed on the call, the conversation was quote horrendous. 320 00:16:09,080 --> 00:16:11,840 Speaker 3: One person said he was very firm. It was a 321 00:16:11,840 --> 00:16:14,600 Speaker 3: cold shower before. It was hard to take it seriously, 322 00:16:14,640 --> 00:16:17,560 Speaker 3: but I do think it is serious and potentially very dangerous. 323 00:16:17,560 --> 00:16:19,720 Speaker 3: Another person briefed on the call said the intent was 324 00:16:19,840 --> 00:16:22,680 Speaker 3: very clear. They want it. The Danes are now in 325 00:16:22,760 --> 00:16:25,520 Speaker 3: crisis mode. The Danes are utterly freaked out by this. 326 00:16:26,000 --> 00:16:26,160 Speaker 16: Yeah. 327 00:16:26,200 --> 00:16:28,040 Speaker 10: I don't know about you, though, Ryan, I don't really 328 00:16:28,120 --> 00:16:29,000 Speaker 10: like talking on the phone. 329 00:16:30,800 --> 00:16:34,280 Speaker 3: If you're a prime minister or president sort of a prerequisite, 330 00:16:34,280 --> 00:16:36,080 Speaker 3: isn't it. You can't always be faced? 331 00:16:36,120 --> 00:16:37,840 Speaker 10: Is that why I'm not a prime minister or a president? 332 00:16:37,920 --> 00:16:41,160 Speaker 3: Potentially, and for a radio guy, surely you'd spent a 333 00:16:41,200 --> 00:16:46,400 Speaker 3: lot of time on the phone. Glenn. Anyway, the reason 334 00:16:46,440 --> 00:16:49,440 Speaker 3: he wants Greenland is Greenland, by the way, is a 335 00:16:49,480 --> 00:16:53,040 Speaker 3: bit like Scotland. It's an autonomous region, but it's politics, 336 00:16:52,840 --> 00:16:56,400 Speaker 3: it's foreign affairs, et cetera. All run out of Denmark, 337 00:16:56,440 --> 00:16:59,880 Speaker 3: out of Copenhagen, a lot of oil, lot of gas lord, 338 00:17:00,000 --> 00:17:02,080 Speaker 3: a lot of raw minerals, a lot of raw minerals 339 00:17:02,160 --> 00:17:05,359 Speaker 3: for green tech as well. Which actually, the more I 340 00:17:05,480 --> 00:17:07,320 Speaker 3: talk about that, the more I think it actually sounds 341 00:17:07,359 --> 00:17:09,120 Speaker 3: a little bit like New Zealand, just that we don't 342 00:17:09,119 --> 00:17:11,560 Speaker 3: get the minerals out of the ground. Maybe Trump will 343 00:17:11,560 --> 00:17:13,920 Speaker 3: want to buy us. Maybe we should put a full 344 00:17:13,960 --> 00:17:16,639 Speaker 3: sale sign on our country twenty two away from seven. 345 00:17:16,840 --> 00:17:22,720 Speaker 3: It's the gust of living, right, Yes, it is the 346 00:17:22,720 --> 00:17:26,199 Speaker 3: cost of living. Dairy becoming more expensive for consumers. This 347 00:17:26,400 --> 00:17:29,080 Speaker 3: as the global dairy trade auction increase the last week 348 00:17:29,119 --> 00:17:31,479 Speaker 3: one point four percent. The whole milk powder was up 349 00:17:31,480 --> 00:17:34,280 Speaker 3: five percent. We told you about that. Farmer payouts are 350 00:17:34,400 --> 00:17:38,000 Speaker 3: expected to be up massively. As it stands, a three 351 00:17:38,080 --> 00:17:39,720 Speaker 3: liter bottle of milk will cost you and I at 352 00:17:39,760 --> 00:17:43,480 Speaker 3: the supermarket almost seven dollars, butter and yoga at ten bucks. 353 00:17:44,040 --> 00:17:47,280 Speaker 3: Why other prices continue to trend up? Brad Olson Informetrics 354 00:17:47,359 --> 00:17:50,639 Speaker 3: principal economists. Good morning, Brad, Good morning. What do you 355 00:17:50,640 --> 00:17:51,840 Speaker 3: reckon about selling New Zealand. 356 00:17:53,240 --> 00:17:55,399 Speaker 17: Well, I think there's two parts going on to this. 357 00:17:55,520 --> 00:17:57,720 Speaker 17: You've got both supply and demand, which is of course 358 00:17:57,760 --> 00:18:01,600 Speaker 17: the classic economist response. On the supply side, you look 359 00:18:01,640 --> 00:18:04,159 Speaker 17: around the world and the likes of the US and 360 00:18:04,160 --> 00:18:07,480 Speaker 17: the Europeans aren't producing quite as much milk, certainly not 361 00:18:07,520 --> 00:18:10,040 Speaker 17: as much as they might have been expecting or hoping for, 362 00:18:10,240 --> 00:18:13,760 Speaker 17: so there's less going into the production cycle. But at 363 00:18:13,760 --> 00:18:16,760 Speaker 17: the same time, on the demand side, there's still quite 364 00:18:16,760 --> 00:18:18,720 Speaker 17: a bit of demand out there. People are wanting to 365 00:18:18,760 --> 00:18:22,200 Speaker 17: buy this stuff, and in particular, I mean it's across 366 00:18:22,240 --> 00:18:24,800 Speaker 17: the entire dairy chain, but you look particularly at some 367 00:18:24,920 --> 00:18:27,840 Speaker 17: of the sort of fattier options, your butters and the 368 00:18:27,960 --> 00:18:31,240 Speaker 17: lake quite a bit more demands to those over time. 369 00:18:31,400 --> 00:18:33,080 Speaker 18: Even China, which hadn't. 370 00:18:32,760 --> 00:18:35,840 Speaker 17: Been all of that strong of a buyer through parts 371 00:18:35,880 --> 00:18:38,760 Speaker 17: of last year, have been coming back a bit more recently, 372 00:18:38,800 --> 00:18:40,680 Speaker 17: and so all of a sudden you've got this position 373 00:18:40,760 --> 00:18:44,200 Speaker 17: globally where everyone wants more dairy is not necessarily a 374 00:18:44,280 --> 00:18:47,080 Speaker 17: huge amount more dairy, and that's pushing prices. 375 00:18:46,760 --> 00:18:48,840 Speaker 18: Up now for New Zealand, farmers. 376 00:18:49,040 --> 00:18:51,440 Speaker 17: That's actually sort of the best position that we can 377 00:18:51,480 --> 00:18:54,160 Speaker 17: find ourselves in at the moment, because our dairy production 378 00:18:54,440 --> 00:18:58,240 Speaker 17: is up one point three percent over the last twelve months, 379 00:18:58,280 --> 00:19:01,119 Speaker 17: so we've got more product we can start to send 380 00:19:01,119 --> 00:19:01,480 Speaker 17: the way. 381 00:19:01,720 --> 00:19:03,400 Speaker 18: We've got a lower exchange. 382 00:19:03,000 --> 00:19:05,840 Speaker 17: Rate, which means that effectively we're able to make a 383 00:19:05,840 --> 00:19:08,600 Speaker 17: bit more money as we go forward. All of that 384 00:19:08,680 --> 00:19:11,920 Speaker 17: means that payouts delivering. I think it's close to three 385 00:19:11,920 --> 00:19:15,480 Speaker 17: point four three point five billion dollars more than last 386 00:19:15,520 --> 00:19:18,359 Speaker 17: season's payouts over the year head. I mean, that's good 387 00:19:18,400 --> 00:19:21,600 Speaker 17: for producers, it's good for farmers. But at the flip side, 388 00:19:21,600 --> 00:19:24,600 Speaker 17: the double edged sword here is that, as you've been highlighting, 389 00:19:24,640 --> 00:19:26,240 Speaker 17: consumers are wearing that as well. 390 00:19:26,280 --> 00:19:27,960 Speaker 18: So it's a tricky balance here. 391 00:19:28,119 --> 00:19:30,320 Speaker 3: Yeah, we just pay the world price, don't we. I mean, 392 00:19:30,359 --> 00:19:32,359 Speaker 3: we don't get special treatment here in New Zealand, and 393 00:19:32,960 --> 00:19:34,680 Speaker 3: nor should we. 394 00:19:34,680 --> 00:19:37,560 Speaker 18: Well, it's difficult. I mean, if we did get special treatment, 395 00:19:37,600 --> 00:19:37,879 Speaker 18: you'd be. 396 00:19:37,880 --> 00:19:40,880 Speaker 17: Saying to farmers, please leave some pretty seriously good money 397 00:19:40,920 --> 00:19:43,240 Speaker 17: on the table and sell it for cheap in New Zealand. 398 00:19:43,280 --> 00:19:45,159 Speaker 17: I mean, you're not going to double exports like that. 399 00:19:45,359 --> 00:19:48,760 Speaker 17: So but I think as well, what you do generally 400 00:19:48,800 --> 00:19:51,280 Speaker 17: see is that there's different types of products that go 401 00:19:51,320 --> 00:19:53,920 Speaker 17: into different types of markets. But yeah, the New Zealand 402 00:19:54,280 --> 00:19:58,439 Speaker 17: price is tasted to a degree by that international price, 403 00:19:58,720 --> 00:20:00,800 Speaker 17: making sure there's not too much much of a big 404 00:20:00,840 --> 00:20:03,120 Speaker 17: gap that starts to come through, because if there did 405 00:20:03,160 --> 00:20:05,280 Speaker 17: start to be that big gap, that's where you start 406 00:20:05,359 --> 00:20:07,800 Speaker 17: to see effectively New Zealand give up some of those 407 00:20:07,880 --> 00:20:08,720 Speaker 17: international gains. 408 00:20:08,720 --> 00:20:10,280 Speaker 3: There was a lot of talk about this at the weekend, 409 00:20:10,320 --> 00:20:12,680 Speaker 3: but other number is actually that bad. So one kilo 410 00:20:12,760 --> 00:20:16,120 Speaker 3: block of mild cheddar was up from ten dollars twelve 411 00:20:16,600 --> 00:20:21,440 Speaker 3: to This was December twenty twenty three versus December twenty 412 00:20:21,520 --> 00:20:25,119 Speaker 3: twenty four. So cheddar from ten dollars twelve to eleven 413 00:20:25,200 --> 00:20:29,840 Speaker 3: dollars and one cent butter from four dollars forty eight 414 00:20:29,840 --> 00:20:33,240 Speaker 3: to six dollars sixty six, and yoga a six pack 415 00:20:33,240 --> 00:20:36,920 Speaker 3: of yogat from seven dollars sixty nine to seven dollars 416 00:20:37,000 --> 00:20:39,760 Speaker 3: seventy four. I mean is that is that is, you know, 417 00:20:39,800 --> 00:20:42,399 Speaker 3: when you consider the price of everything else that went. 418 00:20:42,359 --> 00:20:46,359 Speaker 17: Up well, and that's so I think the important comparison. 419 00:20:46,359 --> 00:20:48,040 Speaker 18: You're right that in general, for. 420 00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:51,800 Speaker 17: Most products in the dairy space, they haven't increased over 421 00:20:51,840 --> 00:20:54,280 Speaker 17: the sort of a longer period of time as much 422 00:20:54,320 --> 00:20:57,840 Speaker 17: as inflation more generally has pitched up. Now that's of 423 00:20:57,840 --> 00:21:00,280 Speaker 17: course cold comfort when people are going, Yeah, but I'm 424 00:21:00,280 --> 00:21:02,480 Speaker 17: still paying more for my bottle of milk, my butter, 425 00:21:02,600 --> 00:21:05,080 Speaker 17: my cheese, and everything else. And of course there's a 426 00:21:05,119 --> 00:21:06,280 Speaker 17: lot of variation. 427 00:21:06,040 --> 00:21:06,920 Speaker 18: In those prices. 428 00:21:06,960 --> 00:21:09,280 Speaker 17: You'll get some brands that cost more or less, You'll 429 00:21:09,320 --> 00:21:12,119 Speaker 17: get different parts of the country with different prices. So 430 00:21:12,640 --> 00:21:14,880 Speaker 17: I think, you know, for households, it still doesn't I mean, 431 00:21:14,920 --> 00:21:18,080 Speaker 17: even if you make a good economic explanation, it doesn't 432 00:21:18,320 --> 00:21:21,080 Speaker 17: make going and doing your shopping any easier. But I 433 00:21:21,119 --> 00:21:24,760 Speaker 17: think here there are you know, clear global competition pieces 434 00:21:24,760 --> 00:21:27,880 Speaker 17: that have come through, and looking through some of those prices, 435 00:21:27,920 --> 00:21:30,080 Speaker 17: it seems clear that you should shop around. 436 00:21:29,760 --> 00:21:31,240 Speaker 18: A bit if you're able to. 437 00:21:31,320 --> 00:21:33,159 Speaker 17: If you're doing a huge amount of baking and you 438 00:21:33,240 --> 00:21:35,399 Speaker 17: need a whole lot of butter all at once, you know, 439 00:21:35,560 --> 00:21:37,520 Speaker 17: it is probably worth checking out when the deals are 440 00:21:37,560 --> 00:21:40,560 Speaker 17: coming through rather than just buying whatever's first there, because 441 00:21:40,600 --> 00:21:43,240 Speaker 17: there are there is quite a bit of variation. 442 00:21:42,960 --> 00:21:43,600 Speaker 18: Around the traps. 443 00:21:43,680 --> 00:21:46,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, good on your Brad brad Elson informtric's principal economists. 444 00:21:46,520 --> 00:21:48,399 Speaker 3: Thanks so much for your time this morning, seventeen minutes 445 00:21:48,440 --> 00:21:50,399 Speaker 3: away from seven News Talk, said B. We'll get to 446 00:21:50,480 --> 00:21:54,879 Speaker 3: Richard Arnold in the US. 447 00:21:53,119 --> 00:21:57,159 Speaker 2: The Mic Hosking Breakfast All Show podcast on Ihard Radio, 448 00:21:57,400 --> 00:21:58,400 Speaker 2: how By News. 449 00:21:58,240 --> 00:22:01,280 Speaker 3: Talks B News Talks d be fourteen minutes away from 450 00:22:01,440 --> 00:22:04,520 Speaker 3: seven the I'm surprised a number of people who are 451 00:22:04,520 --> 00:22:08,080 Speaker 3: texting and saying, morning Ryan. Maybe we should get preferential 452 00:22:08,119 --> 00:22:10,880 Speaker 3: treatment from the farmers when it comes to dairy, Ryan, 453 00:22:10,920 --> 00:22:13,600 Speaker 3: shouldn't we get special treatment because it's our country and 454 00:22:13,680 --> 00:22:16,639 Speaker 3: we're working to produce the dairy products that have been 455 00:22:16,680 --> 00:22:20,040 Speaker 3: sold overseas. We of course pay the international price because 456 00:22:20,320 --> 00:22:23,639 Speaker 3: we are a country of traders. We sell our commodity overseas. 457 00:22:24,640 --> 00:22:27,360 Speaker 3: If we were to offer a domestic price, we would 458 00:22:27,480 --> 00:22:29,919 Speaker 3: essentially be cutting into the profits of all of our 459 00:22:30,000 --> 00:22:34,000 Speaker 3: dairy companies, shaving their profits. That would make us less productive. 460 00:22:34,119 --> 00:22:37,040 Speaker 3: It would make us less competitive overseas, which undermines the 461 00:22:37,040 --> 00:22:39,600 Speaker 3: point of us selling there in the first place. I 462 00:22:39,600 --> 00:22:40,920 Speaker 3: would have thought fourteen. 463 00:22:40,640 --> 00:22:45,320 Speaker 19: To seven International correspondence with ends and eye Insurance, Peace 464 00:22:45,320 --> 00:22:47,200 Speaker 19: of mind for New Zealand business. 465 00:22:47,280 --> 00:22:49,560 Speaker 3: Richard Arnold in the US with us this morning, Richard, 466 00:22:49,560 --> 00:22:52,560 Speaker 3: good morning, and good morning Ryan. Trump's first week down 467 00:22:52,840 --> 00:22:55,440 Speaker 3: California may become independent. 468 00:22:57,359 --> 00:22:59,720 Speaker 20: This is a proposal of what it's been a furious 469 00:23:00,200 --> 00:23:03,159 Speaker 20: to Trump two point zero with no end to the 470 00:23:03,160 --> 00:23:07,399 Speaker 20: presidential orders and presidential proposals, anything that comes out of 471 00:23:07,400 --> 00:23:09,040 Speaker 20: the man's mind, I guess, and that is leading to 472 00:23:09,119 --> 00:23:11,760 Speaker 20: much the same political divisions that feature during the election. 473 00:23:12,520 --> 00:23:15,280 Speaker 20: California Secretary of State has just approved yes, an effort 474 00:23:15,280 --> 00:23:18,760 Speaker 20: to gather signatures for a vote in twenty twenty eight 475 00:23:18,800 --> 00:23:21,480 Speaker 20: on whether the state should leave the US and become 476 00:23:21,520 --> 00:23:24,560 Speaker 20: an independent country. So what is it? Greenland, inn California 477 00:23:24,600 --> 00:23:27,600 Speaker 20: out Both Extremely unlikely, I would have to say, but 478 00:23:27,640 --> 00:23:30,240 Speaker 20: it shows the ongoing divisions. There was just a poll 479 00:23:30,320 --> 00:23:33,440 Speaker 20: done in swing states and one Republican voter in Ohio says, 480 00:23:33,520 --> 00:23:36,879 Speaker 20: quote Trump is being bold and thinking big, while a 481 00:23:36,920 --> 00:23:40,560 Speaker 20: Democrat in Wisconsin says, quote, the man is unhinged. Some 482 00:23:40,640 --> 00:23:43,159 Speaker 20: of the initial Trump moves have even his own party 483 00:23:43,160 --> 00:23:47,560 Speaker 20: reps squirming a little bit. Leading among them are those 484 00:23:47,640 --> 00:23:50,439 Speaker 20: pardons for the fifteen hundred from the January the six riots, 485 00:23:50,480 --> 00:23:52,760 Speaker 20: including some of those who beat the police. One of 486 00:23:52,760 --> 00:23:55,800 Speaker 20: those riot planners, the boss of the Oathkeepers group. Stuart 487 00:23:55,880 --> 00:23:59,520 Speaker 20: Rhodes was in prison for eighteen years for seditious conspiracy 488 00:23:59,560 --> 00:24:01,800 Speaker 20: when he was freed by Trump with all the others. 489 00:24:02,040 --> 00:24:04,320 Speaker 20: He says he was convicted only on a show trial. 490 00:24:04,640 --> 00:24:06,800 Speaker 20: He's still barred by the courts from going anywhere near 491 00:24:06,800 --> 00:24:09,240 Speaker 20: the US capital, but he turned up last night in 492 00:24:09,280 --> 00:24:12,360 Speaker 20: Las Vegas at a Trump rally, leading Republican Senator Lindsay 493 00:24:12,400 --> 00:24:15,560 Speaker 20: Graham to say this, I don't. 494 00:24:15,400 --> 00:24:17,680 Speaker 12: Think there's a restriction on him being there. 495 00:24:17,760 --> 00:24:19,800 Speaker 1: I don't like this. He says. 496 00:24:19,840 --> 00:24:22,680 Speaker 20: He thinks Trump pardoning violent January the sixth defendants was 497 00:24:22,720 --> 00:24:26,200 Speaker 20: a mistake. Another small presidential order that has drawn I 498 00:24:26,200 --> 00:24:28,680 Speaker 20: guess little attention in the rush of scenes is that 499 00:24:28,720 --> 00:24:32,000 Speaker 20: Trump ordered to remove a diversity program in the military 500 00:24:32,040 --> 00:24:35,159 Speaker 20: here where recruits would be shown videos of military history, 501 00:24:35,560 --> 00:24:39,440 Speaker 20: including female pilots and African American pilots in the Air Force. 502 00:24:39,480 --> 00:24:41,800 Speaker 20: So no videos to be shown of the Tuskegee em 503 00:24:41,880 --> 00:24:44,600 Speaker 20: And now these were the famed Black aviators four hundred 504 00:24:44,600 --> 00:24:46,960 Speaker 20: and fifty African American pilots who fought in World War 505 00:24:47,000 --> 00:24:50,600 Speaker 20: Two in segregated units, and their combat successes at the 506 00:24:50,640 --> 00:24:53,560 Speaker 20: time led Truman back in nineteen forty eight. We're talking 507 00:24:53,600 --> 00:24:56,280 Speaker 20: to serve equally in the American military. Now that story 508 00:24:56,760 --> 00:24:59,199 Speaker 20: is not to be told. No videos in basic training 509 00:24:59,240 --> 00:25:02,639 Speaker 20: now of Black Malie history. I mean, seriously, folks. President 510 00:25:02,680 --> 00:25:05,160 Speaker 20: Trump now says he wants to quote clean out Gaza 511 00:25:05,200 --> 00:25:08,040 Speaker 20: as well, that is, removed Palestinians from the area, and 512 00:25:08,080 --> 00:25:12,320 Speaker 20: I guess seed the territory to Israel with Jordan and 513 00:25:12,359 --> 00:25:16,000 Speaker 20: Egypt taking the Palestinians. There is no indication zip that 514 00:25:16,040 --> 00:25:18,600 Speaker 20: Egypt and Jordan would ever endorse such a thing. In fact, 515 00:25:18,960 --> 00:25:22,359 Speaker 20: history suggests the exact opposite. Senator Graham says he doesn't 516 00:25:22,359 --> 00:25:24,639 Speaker 20: know what Trump is talking about with that. Meantime, Trump 517 00:25:24,920 --> 00:25:27,520 Speaker 20: has ended the Biden ban on two thousand pound US 518 00:25:27,560 --> 00:25:30,439 Speaker 20: bunker busting bombs to Israel. Most of the weapons Israel 519 00:25:30,480 --> 00:25:35,480 Speaker 20: has used in that catastrophic fighting were American made, but 520 00:25:35,520 --> 00:25:38,720 Speaker 20: Biden drew a line on those most powerful bombs, and 521 00:25:38,760 --> 00:25:42,160 Speaker 20: now President Trump is allowing them in again. The confirmation 522 00:25:42,240 --> 00:25:44,480 Speaker 20: hearings for the Trump Cabinet will continue this week after 523 00:25:44,520 --> 00:25:48,840 Speaker 20: Peter Hegsath Pete Heigsath scraped in as Defense Secretary despite 524 00:25:48,920 --> 00:25:52,399 Speaker 20: having no experience of leading any large organization and having 525 00:25:52,880 --> 00:25:56,199 Speaker 20: his history as we know rellegid sexual and alcohol abuse, 526 00:25:56,240 --> 00:25:59,200 Speaker 20: including stories about him having on one occasion three Gin 527 00:25:59,240 --> 00:26:00,200 Speaker 20: and Tonics for breakfas. 528 00:26:00,240 --> 00:26:00,800 Speaker 16: But there you go. 529 00:26:01,080 --> 00:26:04,000 Speaker 20: Chelsey Gabbard has her nomination hearing coming up soon. She 530 00:26:04,080 --> 00:26:08,000 Speaker 20: met with Syria's assade before Syrian people finally dumped the dictator, 531 00:26:08,840 --> 00:26:12,760 Speaker 20: and she's voiced pro Russian sentiments on foreign policy, which 532 00:26:12,760 --> 00:26:15,720 Speaker 20: have raised doubts about her being chosen as National Intelligence Director. 533 00:26:15,800 --> 00:26:18,320 Speaker 20: So we'll see on that. President Trump is returning from 534 00:26:18,320 --> 00:26:21,280 Speaker 20: his California trip, where he said there would be federal 535 00:26:21,280 --> 00:26:25,639 Speaker 20: support for fire recovery with the natural disasters that the 536 00:26:25,640 --> 00:26:27,480 Speaker 20: state has seen, but he said this would all be 537 00:26:27,520 --> 00:26:30,600 Speaker 20: contingent on California putting in a voter id system. Now 538 00:26:30,640 --> 00:26:33,600 Speaker 20: that's been pressed by some Republican politicos who think it 539 00:26:33,640 --> 00:26:36,760 Speaker 20: would increase the Republican Party vote. So that's the backdrop 540 00:26:36,800 --> 00:26:40,280 Speaker 20: to the California independence idea, with some Dems saying if 541 00:26:40,320 --> 00:26:44,760 Speaker 20: the federal government wants to tie political strings to disaster aid, 542 00:26:45,080 --> 00:26:48,240 Speaker 20: maybe California could go it alone since California provides so 543 00:26:48,440 --> 00:26:51,280 Speaker 20: much of the tax money that the federal government deals. 544 00:26:51,119 --> 00:26:54,919 Speaker 3: With goodness in massive day for NFL conference, championship day 545 00:26:54,960 --> 00:26:55,240 Speaker 3: to day. 546 00:26:55,680 --> 00:26:57,800 Speaker 20: Yeah, it's going to be huge in football. The final 547 00:26:57,840 --> 00:26:59,640 Speaker 20: playoffs before the Super Bowl in a couple of weeks. 548 00:26:59,680 --> 00:27:02,480 Speaker 20: The Caner City Chiefs are looking for a three peter 549 00:27:02,560 --> 00:27:05,919 Speaker 20: third successive Super Bowl. They're matched against the Buffalo Bills, 550 00:27:05,920 --> 00:27:09,960 Speaker 20: Go Bills. Well, the Washington Commanders, where they're amazing. Rookie 551 00:27:10,000 --> 00:27:12,800 Speaker 20: quarterback Jade and Daniels are hoping to create some history 552 00:27:13,359 --> 00:27:15,840 Speaker 20: with him being becoming the first rookie QB to make 553 00:27:15,880 --> 00:27:18,280 Speaker 20: the Super Bowl. Some of the Commanders have taken over 554 00:27:18,320 --> 00:27:22,320 Speaker 20: a Philly Hard Rock Cafes Philadelphia weather game's being played 555 00:27:22,359 --> 00:27:30,720 Speaker 20: today as the Eagles have been chanting for their team. Yeah, well, 556 00:27:30,760 --> 00:27:33,960 Speaker 20: at least they did better than their own city's mayor, 557 00:27:34,400 --> 00:27:38,320 Speaker 20: Cherrell Parker, who tried to do this chat for. 558 00:27:39,080 --> 00:27:40,200 Speaker 3: Supporters the other day. 559 00:27:41,920 --> 00:27:51,720 Speaker 20: Oh let's go bird, You get that elgk Es. 560 00:27:52,200 --> 00:27:53,919 Speaker 3: I don't know what kind of birds you was thinking of. 561 00:27:54,960 --> 00:27:57,920 Speaker 3: Brilliant Richard, Thank you for that. Richard Arnold, US correspondent 562 00:27:57,960 --> 00:28:00,560 Speaker 3: with us this morning, just gone eight away from seven 563 00:28:00,600 --> 00:28:03,000 Speaker 3: on your Monday morning. Coming up next, Boeing. We just 564 00:28:03,000 --> 00:28:05,439 Speaker 3: spoke about them a lot last year and they've released 565 00:28:05,480 --> 00:28:10,000 Speaker 3: their report. There what am I talking about. They've released 566 00:28:10,000 --> 00:28:12,560 Speaker 3: their financial report for the year. We'll have the numbers 567 00:28:12,560 --> 00:28:13,040 Speaker 3: for you next. 568 00:28:13,119 --> 00:28:17,320 Speaker 2: Even Bryan Bridge on the Mic Hosking Breakfast with a 569 00:28:17,520 --> 00:28:20,040 Speaker 2: Vida Retirement Communities News Talks had b. 570 00:28:20,480 --> 00:28:22,199 Speaker 3: Yes, News Talks WD been great to have you at 571 00:28:22,200 --> 00:28:24,600 Speaker 3: five to seven. Where did COVID come from? And how 572 00:28:24,640 --> 00:28:26,400 Speaker 3: on earth do we not know where it came from? 573 00:28:26,440 --> 00:28:26,640 Speaker 16: Yet? 574 00:28:26,640 --> 00:28:29,000 Speaker 3: Don't you find that strange? We can find the origin 575 00:28:29,000 --> 00:28:31,320 Speaker 3: of black holes out in the universe, but not know 576 00:28:31,359 --> 00:28:34,119 Speaker 3: where COVID came from, despite all the scientists in the 577 00:28:34,119 --> 00:28:37,880 Speaker 3: world looking for it. The CIA over the weekend has 578 00:28:37,920 --> 00:28:41,040 Speaker 3: said that they think, although they're not one hundred percent certain, 579 00:28:41,440 --> 00:28:43,920 Speaker 3: they think it's most likely it was a lab leak, 580 00:28:44,080 --> 00:28:47,640 Speaker 3: rather than from some bat in a Wuhan animal market. 581 00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:49,560 Speaker 3: It was more of a lab leak, though they're not 582 00:28:49,680 --> 00:28:51,880 Speaker 3: very certain. I just think find it strange that we 583 00:28:51,920 --> 00:28:54,600 Speaker 3: still don't really know. You know, we've got every scientist 584 00:28:54,720 --> 00:28:56,520 Speaker 3: in the world looking for the answer. 585 00:28:56,680 --> 00:28:58,640 Speaker 10: Do we know where all the other diseases came from? 586 00:28:58,640 --> 00:29:02,880 Speaker 3: Though, monkeys, all sorts of animals, I mean, sometimes from 587 00:29:02,920 --> 00:29:05,880 Speaker 3: a lab. But this one, this one the one that 588 00:29:05,920 --> 00:29:09,560 Speaker 3: matters most. We have no idea really do we It 589 00:29:09,640 --> 00:29:11,960 Speaker 3: is four to seven, all. 590 00:29:11,800 --> 00:29:13,080 Speaker 1: The ins and the ouse. 591 00:29:13,400 --> 00:29:17,520 Speaker 2: It's the fizz with business favor take your business productivity 592 00:29:17,600 --> 00:29:18,600 Speaker 2: to the next level. 593 00:29:19,360 --> 00:29:23,120 Speaker 3: New year, Same old problems for Boeing. First off, they've 594 00:29:23,160 --> 00:29:25,600 Speaker 3: said that they are most likely because all the companies 595 00:29:25,640 --> 00:29:27,720 Speaker 3: are doing their quarterfall results at the moment and their 596 00:29:27,760 --> 00:29:31,040 Speaker 3: expectations for the year ahead, et cetera. Boeing says that 597 00:29:31,080 --> 00:29:34,280 Speaker 3: they've likely lost about seven billion New Zealand dollars. This 598 00:29:34,360 --> 00:29:37,160 Speaker 3: is for the fourth quarter alone. They expect revenue to 599 00:29:37,200 --> 00:29:40,240 Speaker 3: be twenty six billion New Zealand dollars, which is well 600 00:29:40,280 --> 00:29:43,800 Speaker 3: down on the analyst expectations, and they've managed to burn 601 00:29:43,880 --> 00:29:47,280 Speaker 3: through more than six billion dollars in cash reserves. What 602 00:29:47,320 --> 00:29:50,120 Speaker 3: does it all mean, Well, the biggest plane manufacturing company 603 00:29:50,160 --> 00:29:53,520 Speaker 3: in the world will again not post a profit. They 604 00:29:53,560 --> 00:29:57,200 Speaker 3: haven't done so since twenty eighteen. They currently have negative 605 00:29:57,240 --> 00:30:00,680 Speaker 3: operating margins forty four percent. And that tells you how 606 00:30:00,760 --> 00:30:04,320 Speaker 3: much room for era they've got. I e. Not much. 607 00:30:04,680 --> 00:30:07,880 Speaker 3: They'll be hoping for no more strikes, having solved the 608 00:30:08,240 --> 00:30:10,480 Speaker 3: major one in late November last year. 609 00:30:13,840 --> 00:30:16,800 Speaker 1: The Breakfast show Kiwi's trust to stay in the know. 610 00:30:17,440 --> 00:30:21,280 Speaker 2: Bryan Bridge on the mic asking breakfast with the range Rover, 611 00:30:21,360 --> 00:30:24,080 Speaker 2: the LA designed to intrigue and use. 612 00:30:24,000 --> 00:30:26,760 Speaker 3: Togs d B seven past seven, Good morning, Welcome to 613 00:30:26,800 --> 00:30:29,760 Speaker 3: your Monday. Big cleanup happening in Munga Fire this after 614 00:30:29,800 --> 00:30:32,400 Speaker 3: the what they think was a tornado ripped through Sunday 615 00:30:32,440 --> 00:30:36,680 Speaker 3: morning about three o'clock. Two people seriously injured. Around fifty 616 00:30:36,720 --> 00:30:40,360 Speaker 3: homes and buildings damaged. We party Henwod's Fire and Emergency 617 00:30:40,440 --> 00:30:47,080 Speaker 3: Northern District Manager, Good morning, Good morning. Any damage overnight, 618 00:30:47,160 --> 00:30:49,640 Speaker 3: any rain to existing damage. 619 00:30:49,840 --> 00:30:56,120 Speaker 12: Yeah, a couple of showers overnight, but I think I 620 00:30:56,160 --> 00:30:59,040 Speaker 12: don't think it worsens anything much. You know, for the 621 00:30:59,080 --> 00:31:00,520 Speaker 12: current state of some of those properties. 622 00:31:01,120 --> 00:31:03,080 Speaker 3: How did that woman get sucked out of her home? 623 00:31:03,120 --> 00:31:04,400 Speaker 3: It was an incredible story. 624 00:31:06,840 --> 00:31:07,040 Speaker 21: Yeah. 625 00:31:07,080 --> 00:31:10,440 Speaker 12: I mean I wasn't there at the time, but obviously 626 00:31:11,160 --> 00:31:13,400 Speaker 12: our crews when they arrived there, you know, she had 627 00:31:13,400 --> 00:31:18,719 Speaker 12: some considerable injuries. So I don't disagree with what happened. 628 00:31:18,720 --> 00:31:22,120 Speaker 12: And if you looked at the house, you know it's 629 00:31:22,160 --> 00:31:26,160 Speaker 12: been totally devastated. So if it was a tornado, then 630 00:31:26,440 --> 00:31:31,080 Speaker 12: you know, I'm not disagreeing. But yeah, there was carnage 631 00:31:31,800 --> 00:31:34,880 Speaker 12: on her property and the neighboring properties did you. 632 00:31:34,800 --> 00:31:38,320 Speaker 3: Guys expect the tornado? Were you expecting bad weather? I've 633 00:31:38,320 --> 00:31:40,160 Speaker 3: had a look at the met Service reports and there 634 00:31:40,200 --> 00:31:43,800 Speaker 3: was nothing mentioning, you know, severe thunderstorms from what I 635 00:31:43,800 --> 00:31:44,480 Speaker 3: could see. 636 00:31:45,320 --> 00:31:49,160 Speaker 12: Yeah, no, I mean we will always monitor the weather. 637 00:31:49,480 --> 00:31:53,240 Speaker 12: And I suppose that's the one fickle thing about thunderstorms, 638 00:31:53,400 --> 00:31:57,320 Speaker 12: you know, you can never determine the location or the 639 00:31:57,360 --> 00:32:01,640 Speaker 12: in intensity. Yeah, it was out of the ordinary and 640 00:32:01,720 --> 00:32:03,600 Speaker 12: definitely cooked this part of the community. 641 00:32:04,040 --> 00:32:05,280 Speaker 3: Did you have enough staff. 642 00:32:05,040 --> 00:32:10,680 Speaker 12: On so initially when now, when we started getting the call, 643 00:32:10,840 --> 00:32:13,120 Speaker 12: so you know, shortly after three o'clock in the morning, 644 00:32:15,080 --> 00:32:19,160 Speaker 12: it wasn't how many staff it was getting staff to 645 00:32:18,720 --> 00:32:24,920 Speaker 12: the to the residents. So for an example, mung A 646 00:32:24,920 --> 00:32:29,000 Speaker 12: fire station got the first call. The chief of us 647 00:32:29,080 --> 00:32:31,560 Speaker 12: was deming there waiting for his people are tune up 648 00:32:31,560 --> 00:32:35,040 Speaker 12: and they couldn't get there. And so our common in 649 00:32:35,680 --> 00:32:39,840 Speaker 12: realized that straightaway he started sending appliances from all other 650 00:32:39,920 --> 00:32:44,560 Speaker 12: locations from around the district to help respond so they 651 00:32:44,600 --> 00:32:49,280 Speaker 12: could actually gain access, so from kaiwaker monitor to walk 652 00:32:49,320 --> 00:32:52,600 Speaker 12: work in hs but to try and to try different 653 00:32:52,680 --> 00:32:55,720 Speaker 12: alternate routes and so yeah, it was it took a 654 00:32:55,760 --> 00:32:59,000 Speaker 12: long time to actually get to get anywhere. For some 655 00:32:59,040 --> 00:33:01,760 Speaker 12: of the residents BIP i'd have said to get out 656 00:33:01,760 --> 00:33:04,719 Speaker 12: of their trucks and walk just because of the you know, 657 00:33:04,760 --> 00:33:09,720 Speaker 12: the damage it was left by the wake of the 658 00:33:09,800 --> 00:33:12,360 Speaker 12: tornado going through, trees down and power lines. 659 00:33:12,160 --> 00:33:12,840 Speaker 22: All over the place. 660 00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:15,120 Speaker 3: Speaking of power lines, what do you know about people 661 00:33:15,160 --> 00:33:18,240 Speaker 3: cutting the cutting the power lines on their own driveways? 662 00:33:19,600 --> 00:33:22,240 Speaker 12: Look what we I had to drive yourself, I mean 663 00:33:22,320 --> 00:33:26,280 Speaker 12: I didn't. That wasn't obvious to me. You know north 664 00:33:26,360 --> 00:33:30,120 Speaker 12: power where there were going in the Yesiday afternoon. So 665 00:33:30,280 --> 00:33:34,400 Speaker 12: I'm not one hundred percent sure, but there was you know, 666 00:33:34,480 --> 00:33:37,800 Speaker 12: it was all I can tell you. There were power 667 00:33:37,840 --> 00:33:38,840 Speaker 12: lines everywhere. 668 00:33:39,640 --> 00:33:41,520 Speaker 3: Sounds like it we party, thank you for that. We Party. 669 00:33:41,560 --> 00:33:44,440 Speaker 3: Henwould fire an emergency Northland. It is ten outer seven. 670 00:33:44,440 --> 00:33:45,640 Speaker 1: Ryan Bridge, Big Dame. 671 00:33:45,720 --> 00:33:48,880 Speaker 3: Parliament back in business today. The first question time won't 672 00:33:48,880 --> 00:33:51,480 Speaker 3: be to tomorrow, but top of the agenda is oral 673 00:33:51,520 --> 00:33:54,600 Speaker 3: submissions on the Treaty Principals Bill. It is the start 674 00:33:54,640 --> 00:33:57,960 Speaker 3: of a full week process. David Seymour is kicking things 675 00:33:57,960 --> 00:34:00,920 Speaker 3: off the set this morning. Peter Done as the political 676 00:34:00,920 --> 00:34:02,920 Speaker 3: commentator with us from a Leader of the United Future 677 00:34:03,240 --> 00:34:07,480 Speaker 3: pet Good morning, But what Ryan so are we expecting 678 00:34:07,520 --> 00:34:09,200 Speaker 3: fireworks today? What's going to happen? 679 00:34:09,800 --> 00:34:12,160 Speaker 21: Oh, look, I think from the likely list of submitters, 680 00:34:12,160 --> 00:34:14,919 Speaker 21: it's going to be pretty predictable the positions that they'll take. 681 00:34:15,320 --> 00:34:17,479 Speaker 21: I think the question that's going to sort of dog 682 00:34:17,520 --> 00:34:20,400 Speaker 21: this whole process will be just how it is handled, 683 00:34:20,600 --> 00:34:23,359 Speaker 21: because there will be strong views expressed, and just how 684 00:34:23,360 --> 00:34:26,640 Speaker 21: the committee deals with those as it works through the process. 685 00:34:26,680 --> 00:34:27,680 Speaker 21: Over the next few weeks. 686 00:34:27,760 --> 00:34:30,760 Speaker 3: We've got today Tea mocks in there, Andrew Little Hobson's pledged, 687 00:34:30,840 --> 00:34:33,400 Speaker 3: David seam or Dennis O'Reilly form a Black Power member. 688 00:34:34,280 --> 00:34:36,680 Speaker 3: Do they have they've got ten minutes to talk? Is 689 00:34:36,719 --> 00:34:38,480 Speaker 3: there then time for questions? 690 00:34:39,080 --> 00:34:41,960 Speaker 21: Well, ideally there should be, but the timetable left sets 691 00:34:42,000 --> 00:34:45,319 Speaker 21: pretty tough signs expecting there's probably only going to be 692 00:34:45,320 --> 00:34:49,319 Speaker 21: about fifteen to twenty minutes per submission, which means the 693 00:34:49,360 --> 00:34:51,600 Speaker 21: ten minutes to talk and maybe only ten five ten 694 00:34:51,640 --> 00:34:55,080 Speaker 21: minutes for questions. If I was a witness and being smart, 695 00:34:55,120 --> 00:34:58,399 Speaker 21: I think I've limited my verbal presentation to about five 696 00:34:58,440 --> 00:35:00,440 Speaker 21: minutes for our more time for questioning. But it's going 697 00:35:00,480 --> 00:35:02,959 Speaker 21: to be a very tight process all the way through. 698 00:35:03,640 --> 00:35:05,799 Speaker 3: Who's allowed in the room to watch. 699 00:35:06,440 --> 00:35:08,920 Speaker 21: Well, as I understand that it's being held in public. 700 00:35:08,920 --> 00:35:12,600 Speaker 21: All select committees normally meet in public, so basically whoever 701 00:35:12,640 --> 00:35:16,000 Speaker 21: can fit will be allowed in the room. Now, that 702 00:35:16,040 --> 00:35:18,640 Speaker 21: could be interesting what tends to happen in these things 703 00:35:18,640 --> 00:35:22,359 Speaker 21: as groups of supporters arrive for particular submissions and then 704 00:35:22,440 --> 00:35:24,920 Speaker 21: depart once those have been heard. But there could be 705 00:35:24,960 --> 00:35:27,440 Speaker 21: some people who want to stay the entire distance, and 706 00:35:27,920 --> 00:35:30,719 Speaker 21: I think there'll just be some usual logistical problems of 707 00:35:30,800 --> 00:35:31,680 Speaker 21: fitting them all in. 708 00:35:31,719 --> 00:35:33,360 Speaker 3: Lux And of course wants nothing to do with this. 709 00:35:33,880 --> 00:35:35,759 Speaker 3: How does he play this? He's got post, gave this 710 00:35:35,840 --> 00:35:38,719 Speaker 3: afternoon in parliament, be in the house tomorrow presumably, how 711 00:35:38,719 --> 00:35:39,480 Speaker 3: does he handle it? 712 00:35:40,160 --> 00:35:40,319 Speaker 17: Well? 713 00:35:40,360 --> 00:35:42,359 Speaker 21: I think he's got to carry on doing what he's doing, 714 00:35:42,360 --> 00:35:44,239 Speaker 21: and that is trying and keep some distance from it. 715 00:35:44,600 --> 00:35:46,960 Speaker 21: The problem here is that he's got an issue that 716 00:35:47,000 --> 00:35:49,720 Speaker 21: there's not of his making, but he's committed to seeing 717 00:35:49,760 --> 00:35:51,759 Speaker 21: through to a certain stage which is going to take 718 00:35:51,840 --> 00:35:54,160 Speaker 21: some time yet, and yet he bears all the flak 719 00:35:54,560 --> 00:35:57,040 Speaker 21: from the negativity associated with it. So he's in a 720 00:35:57,040 --> 00:36:00,680 Speaker 21: no win position. But having said that, like all the 721 00:36:00,719 --> 00:36:03,640 Speaker 21: other parties have backed themselves into corners on their respective 722 00:36:03,680 --> 00:36:06,480 Speaker 21: positions before, in the case of actor or against in 723 00:36:06,520 --> 00:36:08,680 Speaker 21: the case of everyone else, and I don't think any 724 00:36:08,680 --> 00:36:10,799 Speaker 21: of them can really afford to change their position over 725 00:36:10,880 --> 00:36:11,720 Speaker 21: the next few months. 726 00:36:11,800 --> 00:36:14,640 Speaker 3: Peter, thank you so much for that. Peter dunnpolitical commentator. 727 00:36:14,640 --> 00:36:17,680 Speaker 3: It's all kicking off the Justice Select Committee in Wellington 728 00:36:17,680 --> 00:36:21,400 Speaker 3: today thirteen minutes after seven Ryan, did you see the 729 00:36:21,400 --> 00:36:24,200 Speaker 3: story of the weekend? So police have arrested thirteen people 730 00:36:24,280 --> 00:36:27,600 Speaker 3: and managed to return forty five trolleys and to do 731 00:36:27,800 --> 00:36:30,520 Speaker 3: this is from supermarkets. So people have been taking the trolleys, 732 00:36:30,960 --> 00:36:34,399 Speaker 3: apparently homeless people taking the trolleys and then using them 733 00:36:34,440 --> 00:36:38,120 Speaker 3: to put their bits and pieces in and also ramming 734 00:36:38,400 --> 00:36:41,160 Speaker 3: members of the public or being showing intimidation to members 735 00:36:41,200 --> 00:36:44,560 Speaker 3: of the public with their trolleys. Now, I found it 736 00:36:44,600 --> 00:36:47,120 Speaker 3: really interesting what the police response was to this, because 737 00:36:47,239 --> 00:36:49,160 Speaker 3: can you, first of all, just take yourself back to 738 00:36:49,440 --> 00:36:52,759 Speaker 3: I don't know, just post COVID laborers and power. Can 739 00:36:52,800 --> 00:36:56,360 Speaker 3: you imagine the police doing this anyway while being homeless 740 00:36:56,400 --> 00:36:58,799 Speaker 3: is not a crime. This is the police statement in 741 00:36:58,840 --> 00:37:02,719 Speaker 3: and of itself. Police have recently received complaints in regards 742 00:37:02,719 --> 00:37:05,799 Speaker 3: to homeless people in possession of trolleys, intimidating members of 743 00:37:05,840 --> 00:37:08,240 Speaker 3: the public and workers as they walk through the CBD. 744 00:37:08,840 --> 00:37:11,920 Speaker 3: Any anti social or unlawful behavior will not be tolerated. 745 00:37:12,800 --> 00:37:16,440 Speaker 3: So they've gone and arrested homeless people for stealing trolleys. 746 00:37:17,360 --> 00:37:19,240 Speaker 17: I want to get there. 747 00:37:23,480 --> 00:37:28,040 Speaker 3: This is a very different, very different type of person 748 00:37:28,080 --> 00:37:30,560 Speaker 3: with a trolley. That was a so called Karen with 749 00:37:30,600 --> 00:37:33,600 Speaker 3: a trolley over in the UK. But I say good 750 00:37:33,600 --> 00:37:36,440 Speaker 3: on the cops here, especially the local police, who are 751 00:37:36,480 --> 00:37:39,799 Speaker 3: doing their job and actually enforcing the law. There is 752 00:37:39,840 --> 00:37:42,960 Speaker 3: a slightly concerning line in this press release from the 753 00:37:42,960 --> 00:37:45,800 Speaker 3: police on it, though, and it talks about the fact 754 00:37:45,840 --> 00:37:49,520 Speaker 3: that police have a responsibility to help find a home 755 00:37:49,560 --> 00:37:53,359 Speaker 3: for the homeless. No they don't. That is not their job. 756 00:37:53,920 --> 00:37:56,239 Speaker 3: And this is what Brian Roach was talking about. Who's 757 00:37:56,320 --> 00:37:59,200 Speaker 3: the former business exec. He's the new head of our 758 00:37:59,239 --> 00:38:02,160 Speaker 3: public service mission. He was talking about this mission creep. 759 00:38:02,640 --> 00:38:05,840 Speaker 3: You know, every public service feels like they owe everybody 760 00:38:05,920 --> 00:38:09,880 Speaker 3: everything and in doing so, achieve nothing. This is an 761 00:38:09,920 --> 00:38:12,719 Speaker 3: example of that. Just stick to your knitting, do what 762 00:38:12,719 --> 00:38:16,840 Speaker 3: you're supposed to do and force the law. Arrest people 763 00:38:17,360 --> 00:38:20,160 Speaker 3: and someone else will deal with that problem because that'll 764 00:38:20,200 --> 00:38:23,799 Speaker 3: be their job. Quarter past seven The Like. 765 00:38:23,840 --> 00:38:29,279 Speaker 2: Asking Breakfast Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio powered by News TALKSB. 766 00:38:29,600 --> 00:38:33,320 Speaker 3: Seven to seventeen News TALKSB. So Yanick Sinner has taken 767 00:38:33,320 --> 00:38:36,320 Speaker 3: at the Italian, defending his first ever Grand Slam title. 768 00:38:36,360 --> 00:38:39,360 Speaker 3: This in Melbourne overnight on Saturday evening. It was Madison 769 00:38:39,440 --> 00:38:44,120 Speaker 3: Keys upsetting Ariana Sebelenka to claim her first Grand Slam title. 770 00:38:45,000 --> 00:38:48,239 Speaker 3: David was sorry. David Worsley is with us this morning. Dave, 771 00:38:48,280 --> 00:38:51,160 Speaker 3: good morning, good morning, right, yeah, good to have you on. 772 00:38:51,239 --> 00:38:52,480 Speaker 3: So what happened last night. 773 00:38:53,520 --> 00:38:56,920 Speaker 22: Well, pretty dramatic in a sense that dramatic that we 774 00:38:57,040 --> 00:39:01,120 Speaker 22: saw Yanick Sinner when his third Grand Slam overall and 775 00:39:01,280 --> 00:39:05,520 Speaker 22: to think the second seed alexandre Verev to set very close. 776 00:39:05,640 --> 00:39:09,520 Speaker 22: But then it was really you saw Cinner just up 777 00:39:09,520 --> 00:39:12,040 Speaker 22: his level and Cera have just struggled to keep up. 778 00:39:12,080 --> 00:39:14,520 Speaker 22: But it was a It was a great final in 779 00:39:14,560 --> 00:39:17,480 Speaker 22: the sense of the hitting was just so powerful, the 780 00:39:18,480 --> 00:39:21,120 Speaker 22: way they played each other around the court, and the 781 00:39:21,160 --> 00:39:24,319 Speaker 22: way that just had an answer to everything. So we 782 00:39:24,400 --> 00:39:28,919 Speaker 22: are seeing potentially a great player here in Janick ciner As. 783 00:39:28,920 --> 00:39:31,239 Speaker 22: He took his well second Grand Slam in a row 784 00:39:31,320 --> 00:39:34,360 Speaker 22: after winning US Open last year, and of course the 785 00:39:34,400 --> 00:39:38,040 Speaker 22: Australian opened early last year as well, and the Italian 786 00:39:38,160 --> 00:39:41,480 Speaker 22: is just looking looking like he's going to be adding 787 00:39:41,680 --> 00:39:44,840 Speaker 22: a lot of Grand Slam titles to his tally. So 788 00:39:45,000 --> 00:39:46,640 Speaker 22: that that was last night. 789 00:39:46,680 --> 00:39:46,920 Speaker 12: It was. 790 00:39:47,320 --> 00:39:51,640 Speaker 22: It was a good final, but Alexander vera third time 791 00:39:51,680 --> 00:39:53,600 Speaker 22: he's been runner up in a Grand Slam now. 792 00:39:53,600 --> 00:39:56,520 Speaker 3: And spare I thought quite quite an honest assessment from 793 00:39:56,640 --> 00:39:59,080 Speaker 3: him post match saying basically, Sinner's better. 794 00:40:00,400 --> 00:40:02,880 Speaker 22: Yeah, yeah, and that was the most honest thing he 795 00:40:02,920 --> 00:40:07,040 Speaker 22: could say. It was that, yes, Sinnat is just too good. 796 00:40:07,760 --> 00:40:11,279 Speaker 22: Al in the court there the devastation for Zeev. He 797 00:40:11,400 --> 00:40:14,239 Speaker 22: was about to talk in front of everybody and he 798 00:40:14,280 --> 00:40:18,600 Speaker 22: had his shield, not the trophy, and he struggled. You 799 00:40:18,640 --> 00:40:20,880 Speaker 22: could see the emotion coming out, and eventually he was 800 00:40:20,920 --> 00:40:24,359 Speaker 22: able to say something and basically it was Younix Cinna 801 00:40:24,520 --> 00:40:27,560 Speaker 22: was too good tonight. Hopefully I'll be able to actually 802 00:40:27,600 --> 00:40:31,640 Speaker 22: win that trophy in the future, but tonight definitely too good. 803 00:40:33,120 --> 00:40:35,720 Speaker 3: The anti doping issue that's sort of been plaguing Senna 804 00:40:35,800 --> 00:40:39,920 Speaker 3: could come back again. Does it have the potential to 805 00:40:39,960 --> 00:40:42,200 Speaker 3: affect his French Open and whether he could even get 806 00:40:42,239 --> 00:40:42,719 Speaker 3: on the court. 807 00:40:44,239 --> 00:40:48,360 Speaker 22: Yes, the French Open in particular because Wada is having 808 00:40:48,800 --> 00:40:50,919 Speaker 22: I guess I could say having another go at him 809 00:40:51,480 --> 00:40:55,480 Speaker 22: and protesting about negligence rather than the actual fact that 810 00:40:55,560 --> 00:40:59,560 Speaker 22: he had something in the system, albeit a very minor something. 811 00:41:00,080 --> 00:41:02,640 Speaker 22: So they're going to try to put negligence on this one, 812 00:41:03,040 --> 00:41:07,560 Speaker 22: and likely they could come through and get a ban 813 00:41:07,840 --> 00:41:11,440 Speaker 22: on Sinner. Well, this is the predictions anyway. Albeit it 814 00:41:11,480 --> 00:41:14,880 Speaker 22: could be a retrospective band, which is a band without 815 00:41:14,880 --> 00:41:18,600 Speaker 22: having a band basically, So what it could be, for instance, 816 00:41:19,120 --> 00:41:22,360 Speaker 22: is that he gets a month that is not allowed 817 00:41:22,360 --> 00:41:25,319 Speaker 22: to play on the tour instead of potentially six months, 818 00:41:25,360 --> 00:41:28,160 Speaker 22: and they'll say, well, because it's taken so long, we'll 819 00:41:28,200 --> 00:41:30,319 Speaker 22: say that you've actually served part of this band even 820 00:41:30,320 --> 00:41:33,239 Speaker 22: though you haven't, and will mean that you can take 821 00:41:33,840 --> 00:41:36,040 Speaker 22: a month off and you won't be able to play, 822 00:41:36,080 --> 00:41:40,440 Speaker 22: say the French Open. So that's all the delicate things 823 00:41:40,480 --> 00:41:44,920 Speaker 22: that happen around the drugs, non drugs, doping, etc. And 824 00:41:45,239 --> 00:41:48,240 Speaker 22: that's the protection that we'll probably see coming through because 825 00:41:48,239 --> 00:41:51,279 Speaker 22: what are out to get something because they are very 826 00:41:51,280 --> 00:41:54,080 Speaker 22: annoyed that they didn't get him initially. 827 00:41:54,600 --> 00:41:56,360 Speaker 3: All right, Dave, thank you so much for that update. 828 00:41:56,360 --> 00:41:58,480 Speaker 3: I guess he'll just save the win while he's got it. Dave, 829 00:41:58,520 --> 00:42:01,640 Speaker 3: Worsley keyw Tennis Journal, Melbourne. It is twenty one after 830 00:42:01,680 --> 00:42:04,920 Speaker 3: seven coming up next, Why this year shaping up to 831 00:42:04,960 --> 00:42:07,240 Speaker 3: be a great one for political debate? 832 00:42:09,320 --> 00:42:13,480 Speaker 2: The Mike Asking Breakfast Full Show podcast on Aheart Radio 833 00:42:13,800 --> 00:42:14,760 Speaker 2: powered by News. 834 00:42:14,680 --> 00:42:18,120 Speaker 3: Talks EV seven twenty three on your Monday Morning, twenty 835 00:42:18,160 --> 00:42:21,000 Speaker 3: twenty five is shaping up to be a fantastic year 836 00:42:21,280 --> 00:42:23,759 Speaker 3: for political debate in this country. In the space of 837 00:42:23,760 --> 00:42:28,000 Speaker 3: twenty seven days, we've already got more politicians debating more 838 00:42:28,120 --> 00:42:31,160 Speaker 3: serious and credible policies to change the course of our 839 00:42:31,200 --> 00:42:33,879 Speaker 3: country's future than we had in the entire six years 840 00:42:33,880 --> 00:42:36,880 Speaker 3: of the previous government. And if that sounds like a 841 00:42:36,960 --> 00:42:39,040 Speaker 3: cherry thing to say on a Monday morning, it's because 842 00:42:39,040 --> 00:42:40,840 Speaker 3: it is Monday morning. And who wants to listen to 843 00:42:40,920 --> 00:42:44,319 Speaker 3: Wingjing on a Monday. If it was Tuesday, I would 844 00:42:44,360 --> 00:42:47,680 Speaker 3: just tell you the cold, hard, miserable truth. The latest 845 00:42:47,760 --> 00:42:50,960 Speaker 3: update from HSBC Senior economist Paul Bloxham. This is the 846 00:42:51,000 --> 00:42:55,440 Speaker 3: guy who spoke about our rockstar economy. New Zealand's economy 847 00:42:55,480 --> 00:43:00,319 Speaker 3: had the largest contraction in GDP in twenty twenty four. Yes, 848 00:43:00,640 --> 00:43:03,640 Speaker 3: we took the biggest hit in the developed world last year. 849 00:43:04,000 --> 00:43:06,040 Speaker 3: We all know this bad news. We felt it. It 850 00:43:06,080 --> 00:43:09,400 Speaker 3: was money printing, high spending government inflation, then aggressive interest 851 00:43:09,480 --> 00:43:11,760 Speaker 3: rate hikes and then lights out, a year of pain. 852 00:43:12,640 --> 00:43:15,200 Speaker 3: But that was then, and this is now the good 853 00:43:15,239 --> 00:43:17,600 Speaker 3: news so far in twenty twenty five, at least for 854 00:43:18,040 --> 00:43:21,320 Speaker 3: from where I'm sitting. The arguments about tax and spend, 855 00:43:21,520 --> 00:43:26,319 Speaker 3: borrow and spend, spend more get more there Over, we're 856 00:43:26,320 --> 00:43:30,280 Speaker 3: now having genuine debates about the mix of state owned assets, 857 00:43:30,280 --> 00:43:32,200 Speaker 3: for example, that we own, why the hell do we 858 00:43:32,239 --> 00:43:34,720 Speaker 3: own them? Especially the ones making a loss. I've mentioned 859 00:43:34,760 --> 00:43:37,520 Speaker 3: Land Corp for a while now, but there are many others. 860 00:43:38,200 --> 00:43:42,040 Speaker 3: Luxen on this program last week open to the idea 861 00:43:42,200 --> 00:43:46,239 Speaker 3: of faster depreciation on machine assets purchased by businesses. This 862 00:43:46,320 --> 00:43:50,840 Speaker 3: would increase productivity, it would increase wages, it would increase growth, 863 00:43:50,920 --> 00:43:53,400 Speaker 3: all things that we desperately need. We're looking at PPPs 864 00:43:53,400 --> 00:43:57,720 Speaker 3: for infrastructure, cutting, red tape and regulation, loosening foreign investment rules. 865 00:43:57,800 --> 00:44:00,440 Speaker 3: What about tax breaks for multinationals if we really want 866 00:44:00,440 --> 00:44:04,080 Speaker 3: to be like Ireland, Because if we don't, the departure 867 00:44:04,120 --> 00:44:06,880 Speaker 3: a lounge at Auckland International Airport will only get more full. 868 00:44:07,560 --> 00:44:11,440 Speaker 3: Young people will only see opportunity elsewhere, and we will 869 00:44:11,480 --> 00:44:14,120 Speaker 3: become a backwater retirement village that no one with no 870 00:44:14,160 --> 00:44:15,799 Speaker 3: one left working to pay for the things that we 871 00:44:15,840 --> 00:44:19,600 Speaker 3: want to need, like healthcare. The biggest obstacle in the 872 00:44:19,640 --> 00:44:24,040 Speaker 3: way of government throwing dead weight overboard, taking unpopular but 873 00:44:24,200 --> 00:44:27,320 Speaker 3: necessary decisions to improve growth in making the Walker go 874 00:44:27,440 --> 00:44:30,799 Speaker 3: quicker is actually the composition of the government itself if 875 00:44:30,800 --> 00:44:32,759 Speaker 3: you think about it. And this is where we come in. 876 00:44:33,600 --> 00:44:36,680 Speaker 3: Nationals in the middle Libertarian act on one side, and 877 00:44:36,719 --> 00:44:39,839 Speaker 3: then you've got the economic nationalism of New Zealand first 878 00:44:39,840 --> 00:44:44,959 Speaker 3: on the other. These are hard times and surely would 879 00:44:45,000 --> 00:44:48,759 Speaker 3: call for one direction on the economy, not three. At 880 00:44:48,800 --> 00:44:52,719 Speaker 3: next year's election, keewis to need to pick a side, 881 00:44:52,800 --> 00:44:55,000 Speaker 3: and we need to do it in great numbers otherwise 882 00:44:55,680 --> 00:44:59,320 Speaker 3: we risk and are at risk of treading water muddling 883 00:44:59,360 --> 00:45:02,719 Speaker 3: through for an another three years are three years we 884 00:45:02,840 --> 00:45:07,800 Speaker 3: can ill afford to waste. Bryan Bridge, twenty six minutes 885 00:45:07,840 --> 00:45:11,360 Speaker 3: after seven on news Talks MB Diamonds. I'll tell you 886 00:45:11,400 --> 00:45:13,480 Speaker 3: about those when we come back as well. Because if 887 00:45:13,480 --> 00:45:16,120 Speaker 3: you're in the market, if you're about to propose to 888 00:45:16,200 --> 00:45:19,680 Speaker 3: your girlfriend or your boyfriend or whatever you might want, 889 00:45:19,719 --> 00:45:21,440 Speaker 3: hold off a couple of weeks before you buy it. 890 00:45:21,560 --> 00:45:25,239 Speaker 3: I'll tell you why, tag Maha. 891 00:45:25,640 --> 00:45:33,320 Speaker 14: Don't breaking love me too, my bo of this town 892 00:45:33,400 --> 00:45:38,439 Speaker 14: of westin You are there. 893 00:45:37,719 --> 00:45:45,400 Speaker 2: Alone, your source of breaking news, challenging opinion and honors. 894 00:45:45,480 --> 00:45:48,600 Speaker 1: Back Bryan Bridge on the Mike Hosking. 895 00:45:48,320 --> 00:45:52,200 Speaker 2: Breakfast with Bailey's Real Estate finding the buyers others can't 896 00:45:52,320 --> 00:45:53,080 Speaker 2: use togs. 897 00:45:52,800 --> 00:45:55,440 Speaker 3: Deadb twenty four minutes away from eight o'clock. Coming up 898 00:45:55,480 --> 00:45:58,200 Speaker 3: after eight, The commentary Box lots to talk about, including 899 00:45:58,239 --> 00:46:01,600 Speaker 3: the Australian Open over in Melbourne, a really weird story 900 00:46:01,640 --> 00:46:06,120 Speaker 3: also about Sebolenka, who lost in the women's final on Saturday, 901 00:46:06,239 --> 00:46:09,000 Speaker 3: really weird story about what she did with her trophy. 902 00:46:09,040 --> 00:46:12,040 Speaker 3: We'll talk to the commentary box about that. Diamonds, if 903 00:46:12,040 --> 00:46:14,680 Speaker 3: you're thinking of proposing to your boyfriend or your girlfriend 904 00:46:14,760 --> 00:46:18,640 Speaker 3: or whatever, never a better time. Apparently obviously make sure 905 00:46:18,840 --> 00:46:20,680 Speaker 3: you love them. That's the main reason you would want 906 00:46:20,719 --> 00:46:24,560 Speaker 3: to propose to someone, but also a bargain time if 907 00:46:24,560 --> 00:46:28,160 Speaker 3: you're in the market for a diamond, So natural diamonds 908 00:46:28,880 --> 00:46:32,399 Speaker 3: they are down twenty six percent on two years ago. 909 00:46:32,800 --> 00:46:37,160 Speaker 3: Lab grown diamonds down seventy four percent on twenty twenty. 910 00:46:37,920 --> 00:46:42,360 Speaker 3: Why inflation. Fewer weddings are happening because everyone went after COVID, 911 00:46:42,360 --> 00:46:44,600 Speaker 3: everyone went out and bought diamonds and got married, and 912 00:46:44,640 --> 00:46:48,080 Speaker 3: now that's kind of been pulled back. Also, the competition 913 00:46:48,120 --> 00:46:50,359 Speaker 3: from the lab grown diamonds is obviously affecting the price 914 00:46:50,360 --> 00:46:54,320 Speaker 3: of the real diamonds, and demand in China apparently as down. 915 00:46:54,960 --> 00:46:56,640 Speaker 3: So a few people getting married. All of these things 916 00:46:56,680 --> 00:46:59,400 Speaker 3: come together and to Bears, you know, this is the 917 00:47:00,120 --> 00:47:05,160 Speaker 3: biggest name in diamonds. They began last year with a stockpile, 918 00:47:05,840 --> 00:47:09,279 Speaker 3: a two billion dollar stockpile of diamonds. By the end 919 00:47:09,320 --> 00:47:12,399 Speaker 3: of last year they'd barely moved it. So they've cut 920 00:47:12,440 --> 00:47:14,800 Speaker 3: production in their minds by twenty percent as a result. 921 00:47:15,160 --> 00:47:16,759 Speaker 3: And the long and the short of all of that 922 00:47:16,840 --> 00:47:19,640 Speaker 3: for you is, if you're in the market now, it's 923 00:47:19,680 --> 00:47:27,160 Speaker 3: the time to buy twenty two to eight and you're 924 00:47:27,200 --> 00:47:30,279 Speaker 3: on news talks. A new University of Otago study, first 925 00:47:30,280 --> 00:47:34,080 Speaker 3: of it's kind study in New Zealand revealing worrying misconceptions 926 00:47:34,080 --> 00:47:38,800 Speaker 3: amongst our teenagers about vaping. Around fifteen percent of fourteen 927 00:47:38,800 --> 00:47:41,840 Speaker 3: to fifteen year olds of vape monthly, and that's despite 928 00:47:41,880 --> 00:47:44,920 Speaker 3: those who were interviewed being well aware of the risks. 929 00:47:45,320 --> 00:47:47,680 Speaker 3: Dr Jude Ballers with US University of Otago, Senior of 930 00:47:47,719 --> 00:47:51,080 Speaker 3: Search Fellow, Jude, good morning, Good morning. What are the 931 00:47:51,080 --> 00:47:53,520 Speaker 3: misconceptions that the teenagers who do vape have? 932 00:47:55,280 --> 00:47:55,440 Speaker 17: Well. 933 00:47:55,480 --> 00:47:57,799 Speaker 23: I do want to emphasize that the majority of young 934 00:47:57,800 --> 00:48:00,839 Speaker 23: people don't vape, and as you said, most young people 935 00:48:00,840 --> 00:48:04,640 Speaker 23: are quite clued up about the risks of vaping. But 936 00:48:04,719 --> 00:48:07,799 Speaker 23: we did find a widespread misconception not only among those 937 00:48:07,840 --> 00:48:11,520 Speaker 23: who ape, but also some who didn't, who thought that 938 00:48:11,920 --> 00:48:14,920 Speaker 23: use of vaping was going to help them with stress 939 00:48:14,920 --> 00:48:17,320 Speaker 23: and anxiety, and we're using it as a coping tool. 940 00:48:18,280 --> 00:48:22,080 Speaker 23: And that's concerning because there's overseas evidence that medium to 941 00:48:22,160 --> 00:48:26,080 Speaker 23: long term use of high doses of nicotine actually is 942 00:48:26,239 --> 00:48:28,160 Speaker 23: likely to make mental health problems worse. 943 00:48:29,840 --> 00:48:33,040 Speaker 3: That's an interesting one because if I mean, isn't their 944 00:48:33,160 --> 00:48:36,160 Speaker 3: self reporting the only way to tell whether it relieves 945 00:48:36,200 --> 00:48:38,000 Speaker 3: their stress or anxiety? I mean, if they say it 946 00:48:38,040 --> 00:48:40,120 Speaker 3: relieves their stress and anxiety, are they not right? 947 00:48:41,560 --> 00:48:41,840 Speaker 16: Sure? 948 00:48:41,840 --> 00:48:44,560 Speaker 23: They are right in the moment, certainly that russia of 949 00:48:44,640 --> 00:48:49,320 Speaker 23: dopamine can make you feel calm, and once you've become addicted, 950 00:48:49,480 --> 00:48:53,160 Speaker 23: of course, having a vape reduces the you know, the 951 00:48:53,239 --> 00:48:55,799 Speaker 23: agitation that you have when you feel like you really 952 00:48:55,840 --> 00:48:59,080 Speaker 23: need a vape, But it's the long term impacts that's 953 00:48:59,239 --> 00:49:02,799 Speaker 23: likely to be problematic. You know, just like drinking to 954 00:49:02,840 --> 00:49:06,239 Speaker 23: relieve stress might feel good in the moment, but you know, 955 00:49:06,400 --> 00:49:09,359 Speaker 23: it can get out of controlling, can become Actually, part 956 00:49:09,360 --> 00:49:10,399 Speaker 23: of the problem is. 957 00:49:10,400 --> 00:49:14,439 Speaker 3: Vaping as widespread with young people as smoking was when 958 00:49:14,480 --> 00:49:17,080 Speaker 3: smoking was that it's worse for you know, their parents. 959 00:49:19,600 --> 00:49:22,560 Speaker 23: It's similar, if not higher. So we've got really high 960 00:49:22,640 --> 00:49:25,560 Speaker 23: rates of use vaping in New Zealand, higher than Australia, 961 00:49:25,600 --> 00:49:29,120 Speaker 23: the US, England, and so although the rates have gone 962 00:49:29,160 --> 00:49:32,160 Speaker 23: down slightly in the last couple of years, it's still 963 00:49:32,160 --> 00:49:33,200 Speaker 23: a major issue here. 964 00:49:33,600 --> 00:49:35,960 Speaker 3: What did they say about their mates and vaping? If 965 00:49:35,960 --> 00:49:37,880 Speaker 3: you're you know, if you if your friends are vaping, 966 00:49:37,880 --> 00:49:40,120 Speaker 3: are you more likely to or is there that pre 967 00:49:40,200 --> 00:49:41,920 Speaker 3: pressure sort of not exist like it used to. 968 00:49:43,640 --> 00:49:46,000 Speaker 23: I think kind of both. So what we found is 969 00:49:46,040 --> 00:49:49,480 Speaker 23: that vaping kind of happened within peer groups, so either 970 00:49:49,760 --> 00:49:53,400 Speaker 23: everyone vaked or no one baked, typically, but there is 971 00:49:53,760 --> 00:49:56,840 Speaker 23: a subtle peer pressure to vape. And partly that's because 972 00:49:56,880 --> 00:50:01,359 Speaker 23: there's a perception that everybody vapes among people who say 973 00:50:01,680 --> 00:50:04,160 Speaker 23: I don't vape, my friends don't vape, but they still 974 00:50:04,200 --> 00:50:08,440 Speaker 23: had a sense that vaping was totally normalized in their 975 00:50:08,480 --> 00:50:09,040 Speaker 23: age group. 976 00:50:09,840 --> 00:50:11,640 Speaker 3: Are we talking about it too much? Then? Do we 977 00:50:11,640 --> 00:50:12,960 Speaker 3: need to just shut up about vaping? 978 00:50:14,480 --> 00:50:16,880 Speaker 23: I think that's not the issue. I think the issue 979 00:50:16,920 --> 00:50:20,400 Speaker 23: is it's so visible, it's so everywhere. And some of 980 00:50:20,400 --> 00:50:24,839 Speaker 23: the moves that the government have made to ban disposable 981 00:50:24,920 --> 00:50:28,239 Speaker 23: vapes and to make vates less visible in shops, I 982 00:50:28,239 --> 00:50:30,000 Speaker 23: think that's a good move in a step in the 983 00:50:30,040 --> 00:50:33,880 Speaker 23: right direction. But we do need a more comprehensive approach, 984 00:50:34,000 --> 00:50:37,040 Speaker 23: in particularly one that addresses the fact that vap stores 985 00:50:37,080 --> 00:50:40,640 Speaker 23: are everywhere. Most suburbs have got at least two or 986 00:50:40,680 --> 00:50:43,919 Speaker 23: three vaate stores, and they're in young people's face every day. 987 00:50:44,120 --> 00:50:46,440 Speaker 3: Yeah. I mean they're not supposed to get them from there, though, 988 00:50:46,480 --> 00:50:49,040 Speaker 3: are they. That's the point that they're meant to be 989 00:50:49,160 --> 00:50:51,000 Speaker 3: rat But I mean, clearly they're not. 990 00:50:52,760 --> 00:50:55,840 Speaker 23: It's not working, is it. I mean it's only supposed 991 00:50:55,840 --> 00:50:58,200 Speaker 23: to be those stores that sell the frugi flavors, but 992 00:50:58,280 --> 00:51:00,919 Speaker 23: we know that those Fridgie flavor or what young people 993 00:51:00,960 --> 00:51:03,880 Speaker 23: are using, so they're certainly getting them somehow. 994 00:51:04,120 --> 00:51:06,360 Speaker 3: All right, Dr jud Ball appreciate your time. University of 995 00:51:06,360 --> 00:51:09,120 Speaker 3: Otago Senior Research Fellow. It is eighteen minutes away from 996 00:51:09,160 --> 00:51:13,239 Speaker 3: eight to The big question for me is whether or 997 00:51:13,320 --> 00:51:17,399 Speaker 3: not our kids are healthier now than their parents were 998 00:51:17,560 --> 00:51:19,719 Speaker 3: at that age. I think it's a really interesting question 999 00:51:19,800 --> 00:51:21,960 Speaker 3: to ask because if you look at it, you know, 1000 00:51:21,960 --> 00:51:25,360 Speaker 3: they're probably adding a bit more processed food. They're probably 1001 00:51:25,360 --> 00:51:28,120 Speaker 3: doing less physical exercise than their parents were when they 1002 00:51:28,120 --> 00:51:31,000 Speaker 3: were at that age. They've probably got more mental health 1003 00:51:31,000 --> 00:51:33,640 Speaker 3: problems than their parents did at that age. But then 1004 00:51:33,640 --> 00:51:36,640 Speaker 3: they're smoking less. I mean, they're not smoking cigarettes. They 1005 00:51:36,680 --> 00:51:40,480 Speaker 3: might be vaping, but that's slightly better for you. They're 1006 00:51:40,520 --> 00:51:43,600 Speaker 3: not drinking as much booze. We're always told. So, is 1007 00:51:43,640 --> 00:51:49,080 Speaker 3: your average teenager right now healthier than their parents when 1008 00:51:49,120 --> 00:51:50,120 Speaker 3: they were teenagers? 1009 00:51:50,160 --> 00:51:51,800 Speaker 10: Are they still not having sex as well? 1010 00:51:52,080 --> 00:51:53,759 Speaker 3: They're still not having sex, so they're not I mean, 1011 00:51:53,760 --> 00:51:58,200 Speaker 3: there's no teen pregnancies, so that's changed. Not that that 1012 00:51:58,239 --> 00:52:01,160 Speaker 3: makes you unhealthy, but I mean obviously has a big 1013 00:52:01,200 --> 00:52:02,319 Speaker 3: impact on your life, doesn't it. 1014 00:52:03,440 --> 00:52:03,640 Speaker 11: Yeah? 1015 00:52:03,760 --> 00:52:04,680 Speaker 10: Do I don't know. 1016 00:52:04,760 --> 00:52:09,319 Speaker 3: Interesting, I think it's give or take. I think it's 1017 00:52:09,360 --> 00:52:12,400 Speaker 3: an interesting question to us, like the researchers that do 1018 00:52:12,480 --> 00:52:14,520 Speaker 3: all of this stuff. Do they ever look at that? 1019 00:52:15,320 --> 00:52:18,080 Speaker 3: You know, I know that as a species we are, 1020 00:52:18,120 --> 00:52:20,480 Speaker 3: for the first time in the Western world, our life 1021 00:52:20,520 --> 00:52:23,040 Speaker 3: expectancy is starting to come down because of all the 1022 00:52:23,080 --> 00:52:25,000 Speaker 3: fast food and everything that we're itting, We're getting more 1023 00:52:25,000 --> 00:52:27,560 Speaker 3: colon cancer and stuff like that. So for the first 1024 00:52:27,560 --> 00:52:31,000 Speaker 3: time in modern history, our life expectancy is actually decreasing 1025 00:52:31,040 --> 00:52:35,080 Speaker 3: in the Western world. But when it comes to teenagers, 1026 00:52:35,840 --> 00:52:39,160 Speaker 3: are they healthier? Nine two ninety two. It is seventeen 1027 00:52:39,200 --> 00:52:40,279 Speaker 3: to eight News Talks d. 1028 00:52:40,320 --> 00:52:45,600 Speaker 2: B, the Vike Asking Breakfast Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio 1029 00:52:45,840 --> 00:52:47,200 Speaker 2: powered by News Talks. 1030 00:52:47,120 --> 00:52:50,160 Speaker 3: B fourteen to eight. You might have seen in the news. 1031 00:52:50,200 --> 00:52:51,719 Speaker 3: In fact, you would have heard in our news at 1032 00:52:51,719 --> 00:52:54,200 Speaker 3: the top of the hour that Boyd Swinburne, University of 1033 00:52:54,239 --> 00:52:57,480 Speaker 3: Auckland's School of Population Health. This is Boyd Swinburne, who 1034 00:52:57,680 --> 00:53:01,319 Speaker 3: you often hear talking about wanting free dental care for 1035 00:53:01,440 --> 00:53:04,800 Speaker 3: our young people, who's also into doubling the number of 1036 00:53:04,880 --> 00:53:07,120 Speaker 3: kids who are getting free lunch in schools. At the moment, 1037 00:53:08,000 --> 00:53:10,120 Speaker 3: he has come out with a couple of his colleagues 1038 00:53:10,160 --> 00:53:13,680 Speaker 3: and said that they've done a study they reckon that 1039 00:53:13,719 --> 00:53:17,040 Speaker 3: the learning gap this is for those who are being 1040 00:53:17,160 --> 00:53:19,399 Speaker 3: well fed students who have been well fed versus those 1041 00:53:19,400 --> 00:53:23,120 Speaker 3: who are hungry. It equated to a learning gap equivalent 1042 00:53:23,520 --> 00:53:28,160 Speaker 3: for hungry students trailing two to four years behind those 1043 00:53:28,200 --> 00:53:30,839 Speaker 3: who are being well fed in subjects like maths and 1044 00:53:30,960 --> 00:53:33,080 Speaker 3: reading by the age of fifteen. So by the time 1045 00:53:33,120 --> 00:53:36,320 Speaker 3: you turn fifteen, if you have not had a good, 1046 00:53:36,760 --> 00:53:39,560 Speaker 3: you know, well balanced and nutritious meal in your stomach 1047 00:53:39,640 --> 00:53:43,120 Speaker 3: every day, then you will be on average two to 1048 00:53:43,239 --> 00:53:47,719 Speaker 3: four years behind those who have. And the argument here is, well, 1049 00:53:47,760 --> 00:53:50,319 Speaker 3: therefore you should have free lunch in schools and you know, 1050 00:53:50,400 --> 00:53:52,279 Speaker 3: double the free lunch and schools and all that kind 1051 00:53:52,320 --> 00:53:58,279 Speaker 3: of stuff. Surely it's not just about the food that's 1052 00:53:58,320 --> 00:54:01,440 Speaker 3: the problem. You know that, Yes, there are families for 1053 00:54:01,520 --> 00:54:06,560 Speaker 3: whom food and especially nutritious food is too expensive. So 1054 00:54:07,280 --> 00:54:10,800 Speaker 3: sending your kid to school without food is obviously not ideal. 1055 00:54:11,080 --> 00:54:14,439 Speaker 3: It's it's not something you want to do or want 1056 00:54:14,480 --> 00:54:17,759 Speaker 3: to happen. It's something you're trying desperately to avoid, but 1057 00:54:18,080 --> 00:54:20,840 Speaker 3: because of your financial situation, you know you can't and 1058 00:54:20,880 --> 00:54:23,400 Speaker 3: they have to go to school like that. For others, 1059 00:54:23,440 --> 00:54:26,520 Speaker 3: I'm sure feeding your kids is not a priority, as 1060 00:54:27,239 --> 00:54:29,480 Speaker 3: your kids aren't a priority to you. You know, there 1061 00:54:29,480 --> 00:54:31,840 Speaker 3: will be some people who will send their kids to 1062 00:54:31,840 --> 00:54:36,560 Speaker 3: school starving and don't really care, don't haven't given much 1063 00:54:36,600 --> 00:54:39,399 Speaker 3: thought to that fact. And if that's the case, then 1064 00:54:39,640 --> 00:54:42,759 Speaker 3: following up on homework and all those other sorts of 1065 00:54:42,800 --> 00:54:44,839 Speaker 3: things is hardly going to be a priority as well. 1066 00:54:44,880 --> 00:54:46,879 Speaker 3: So how much of it is down to the fact 1067 00:54:46,920 --> 00:54:48,960 Speaker 3: that the kid might be, you know, a bit hungry 1068 00:54:48,960 --> 00:54:53,800 Speaker 3: at lunch versus all of the other potential social issues 1069 00:54:53,800 --> 00:54:56,120 Speaker 3: that might go along with that. Nine two nine two 1070 00:54:56,160 --> 00:54:57,640 Speaker 3: the number to text with like your views on that 1071 00:54:57,680 --> 00:55:00,759 Speaker 3: this morning? Anyway? That's that's sort of the n nuts 1072 00:55:00,760 --> 00:55:03,480 Speaker 3: and bolts of it, and the outcome they want is 1073 00:55:03,640 --> 00:55:06,840 Speaker 3: an increase in the free lunch in schools. Interesting story 1074 00:55:06,840 --> 00:55:09,880 Speaker 3: out of the UK because I hate carrying a driver's 1075 00:55:09,880 --> 00:55:12,920 Speaker 3: license around because it's annoying. I mean, who carries cards 1076 00:55:13,160 --> 00:55:16,200 Speaker 3: anywhere these days? But in the UK they're going to 1077 00:55:16,200 --> 00:55:18,400 Speaker 3: do away with that. They're starting a trial. This is 1078 00:55:18,440 --> 00:55:22,040 Speaker 3: the government for an all inclusive app so that all 1079 00:55:22,080 --> 00:55:24,920 Speaker 3: of your government stuff will be in one place, including 1080 00:55:24,920 --> 00:55:27,640 Speaker 3: your driver's license. If you've got a veterans card, that's 1081 00:55:27,680 --> 00:55:30,160 Speaker 3: going to be on there as well, a digital driver's 1082 00:55:30,200 --> 00:55:33,680 Speaker 3: license and know you'll scan your eyes or do your 1083 00:55:33,760 --> 00:55:36,160 Speaker 3: retina or whatever it does these days for protection. But 1084 00:55:36,200 --> 00:55:38,799 Speaker 3: you'll be able to do all sorts of things on 1085 00:55:38,800 --> 00:55:41,120 Speaker 3: this app. Not to show the cops your license when 1086 00:55:41,120 --> 00:55:45,360 Speaker 3: you're pulled over, but apply for childcare, you know, report 1087 00:55:45,400 --> 00:55:48,520 Speaker 3: a loss or stolen passport, all sorts of different stuff. 1088 00:55:48,560 --> 00:55:50,839 Speaker 3: So I think that's a great idea, and I think 1089 00:55:50,840 --> 00:55:53,000 Speaker 3: we should do it here because it will save us 1090 00:55:53,000 --> 00:55:55,320 Speaker 3: all a lot of time and energy. How many different 1091 00:55:55,360 --> 00:55:57,920 Speaker 3: websites do you have to go to to deal with 1092 00:55:57,960 --> 00:56:01,440 Speaker 3: the government in New Zealand, seriously, to pay your tax, 1093 00:56:02,000 --> 00:56:04,680 Speaker 3: to apply for this, to apply for that, and then 1094 00:56:04,719 --> 00:56:08,000 Speaker 3: you add on the council stuff. I mean you just 1095 00:56:08,440 --> 00:56:12,040 Speaker 3: there are a million tabs on your browser. Imagine one 1096 00:56:12,120 --> 00:56:14,320 Speaker 3: place where you could go and get all of that. 1097 00:56:14,640 --> 00:56:18,719 Speaker 10: To all the tinfoil hat wearers, you're handing your identity 1098 00:56:18,719 --> 00:56:20,200 Speaker 10: over to the government, Well they. 1099 00:56:20,120 --> 00:56:24,000 Speaker 3: Can wear their hats and go elsewhere. Have your hundred tabs, 1100 00:56:24,160 --> 00:56:26,600 Speaker 3: wear your hats. I will go and use the one app. 1101 00:56:26,600 --> 00:56:27,399 Speaker 3: Thank you very much. 1102 00:56:28,280 --> 00:56:31,920 Speaker 2: Ten to eight Bryan Bridge on the MIC, hosting Breakfast 1103 00:56:32,000 --> 00:56:34,560 Speaker 2: with the Range Rover of the Line News togs Head. 1104 00:56:34,440 --> 00:56:37,280 Speaker 3: Be seven to eight miked be back with you tomorrow. 1105 00:56:37,480 --> 00:56:40,000 Speaker 3: The enclosure of the Desert Road has been pretty sweet 1106 00:56:40,000 --> 00:56:43,880 Speaker 3: for Orkuni, with two months worth of road maintenance underway 1107 00:56:44,000 --> 00:56:46,239 Speaker 3: and still to come. Businesses on the Deed Tour are 1108 00:56:46,280 --> 00:56:49,520 Speaker 3: pumping with the extra traffic. The famous chocolate the Clear 1109 00:56:49,640 --> 00:56:51,880 Speaker 3: Shop if you ever been there, it's really good, reportedly 1110 00:56:52,400 --> 00:56:56,359 Speaker 3: selling eleven hundred of them a day. Carl Christensen is 1111 00:56:56,400 --> 00:57:01,200 Speaker 3: with the Mountain Rocks Owakuni. He's the owner. Cal Welcome 1112 00:57:01,239 --> 00:57:02,919 Speaker 3: to the show. Good to have you on here. When 1113 00:57:03,040 --> 00:57:04,680 Speaker 3: was the last time you guys were this busy? 1114 00:57:05,400 --> 00:57:09,759 Speaker 13: Probably twenty thirteen and then straight up to lockdown. I 1115 00:57:09,760 --> 00:57:11,799 Speaker 13: guess when everyone went mad when they were released from 1116 00:57:11,800 --> 00:57:13,120 Speaker 13: the jungles up from the jails. 1117 00:57:13,120 --> 00:57:15,640 Speaker 3: I mean, how busy are you? 1118 00:57:17,120 --> 00:57:22,880 Speaker 13: Well, yeah, we're probably as busy as busiest winter. Yeah, 1119 00:57:22,920 --> 00:57:27,480 Speaker 13: sort of situation, but steady. It's it's kind of you know, 1120 00:57:28,240 --> 00:57:31,880 Speaker 13: all week all week long, so it's just steady. As 1121 00:57:31,920 --> 00:57:35,880 Speaker 13: you know, with the traffic. It's a captured market, so 1122 00:57:35,920 --> 00:57:40,680 Speaker 13: we've got this flow of traffic nose tails through town 1123 00:57:40,800 --> 00:57:46,000 Speaker 13: most of the time, and yeah, it's just blurn. It's away. 1124 00:57:46,040 --> 00:57:50,280 Speaker 13: Really we expected you know, maybe a thirty yeah, twenty 1125 00:57:50,280 --> 00:57:52,720 Speaker 13: five to thirty percent increase in sales, but it's been 1126 00:57:53,200 --> 00:57:58,240 Speaker 13: more like a sixty to seventy five increase. There's been 1127 00:57:58,280 --> 00:58:00,400 Speaker 13: a real boom, especially after what we've been through this year. 1128 00:58:01,640 --> 00:58:03,280 Speaker 3: Do you have enough staff? Because a lot of people 1129 00:58:03,320 --> 00:58:05,720 Speaker 3: said that they were surprised that the road was going 1130 00:58:05,760 --> 00:58:08,280 Speaker 3: to be closed for so long? Were you surprised? Are 1131 00:58:08,320 --> 00:58:09,640 Speaker 3: you guys get up for this? 1132 00:58:10,720 --> 00:58:11,160 Speaker 18: Well? 1133 00:58:11,560 --> 00:58:14,680 Speaker 13: I think you know, as we spoke earlier in the 1134 00:58:14,760 --> 00:58:20,160 Speaker 13: year about staffing shortages, we're still not open probably nights anymore. 1135 00:58:19,880 --> 00:58:23,880 Speaker 13: We're exceeded our hours to seven seven pm on Thursday, 1136 00:58:23,920 --> 00:58:27,320 Speaker 13: Friday and Saturday. But yeah, we're still very short staffed 1137 00:58:27,320 --> 00:58:30,640 Speaker 13: on those skilled positions i e. Chefs for risters, so 1138 00:58:30,840 --> 00:58:32,960 Speaker 13: a lot of those positions have dried up, so we're 1139 00:58:32,960 --> 00:58:36,160 Speaker 13: still pretty short that way, but ours, we've just limited 1140 00:58:36,160 --> 00:58:38,960 Speaker 13: them to manage the staff we have and we're just lucky. 1141 00:58:39,000 --> 00:58:39,840 Speaker 13: We've got great staff. 1142 00:58:40,000 --> 00:58:42,400 Speaker 3: We've got issues with the ski that, you know, the 1143 00:58:42,440 --> 00:58:47,000 Speaker 3: mountain opening, we've got the chateau being shuttered. Basically, are 1144 00:58:47,000 --> 00:58:49,280 Speaker 3: you are you sort of feeling good right now? But 1145 00:58:49,440 --> 00:58:51,680 Speaker 3: knowing that there's a hard road down, you know, down 1146 00:58:51,680 --> 00:58:53,040 Speaker 3: the lone Oh. 1147 00:58:52,880 --> 00:58:54,800 Speaker 13: We we know that this is this is just an 1148 00:58:54,840 --> 00:58:57,840 Speaker 13: interim sort of stay of execution if you like them. 1149 00:58:58,000 --> 00:59:00,680 Speaker 13: But yes, it's great. Well, the opportunity for us is 1150 00:59:00,720 --> 00:59:03,919 Speaker 13: to showcase ourselves to those people who haven't been here before, 1151 00:59:03,960 --> 00:59:06,240 Speaker 13: because look, I'm speaking to as many as I can, 1152 00:59:06,320 --> 00:59:10,160 Speaker 13: you know, in between making coffee and and a lot 1153 00:59:10,200 --> 00:59:12,880 Speaker 13: of them haven't been this way. It's surprising so many 1154 00:59:12,880 --> 00:59:15,480 Speaker 13: new zylenders that have never been off State Highway one 1155 00:59:15,520 --> 00:59:18,760 Speaker 13: when it comes to Woo. So it's a real challenge 1156 00:59:18,760 --> 00:59:21,080 Speaker 13: for us to try and capture those people. Say to them, 1157 00:59:21,160 --> 00:59:23,040 Speaker 13: this is this is an alternative if you if you're 1158 00:59:23,120 --> 00:59:25,680 Speaker 13: traveling to Aukland, you don't have to travel State Hiway 1159 00:59:25,680 --> 00:59:28,480 Speaker 13: one all the time. So it's an opportunity, I guess 1160 00:59:28,480 --> 00:59:31,920 Speaker 13: for us to try and get that. Avenges and spirit 1161 00:59:31,960 --> 00:59:34,280 Speaker 13: and the Keiweds come the other way, and I think 1162 00:59:34,320 --> 00:59:36,439 Speaker 13: that's the big bonus. I think they're seeing little things 1163 00:59:36,440 --> 00:59:38,960 Speaker 13: here that they enjoy. They like what they see, they 1164 00:59:38,960 --> 00:59:41,480 Speaker 13: see we've got things to do, so we're going to 1165 00:59:41,480 --> 00:59:43,400 Speaker 13: promote ourselves. So we've got that eight week window to 1166 00:59:43,400 --> 00:59:44,240 Speaker 13: promote ourselves. 1167 00:59:44,320 --> 00:59:47,959 Speaker 3: And cow people are loving joy scones, they love them. 1168 00:59:47,920 --> 00:59:53,040 Speaker 13: They're delicious. She's actually a gem We're very lucky. Yeah, 1169 00:59:53,160 --> 00:59:54,280 Speaker 13: she makes gons. 1170 00:59:54,480 --> 00:59:55,760 Speaker 16: What did you call it for? 1171 00:59:55,960 --> 00:59:56,520 Speaker 3: What did you call it? 1172 00:59:56,640 --> 00:59:57,120 Speaker 22: Delicious? 1173 00:59:57,360 --> 01:00:00,040 Speaker 3: Joy delicious, that's what we call it. 1174 01:00:00,080 --> 01:00:00,640 Speaker 21: You are delicious. 1175 01:00:01,280 --> 01:00:04,120 Speaker 3: That's Carl, Carl, Thank you for that, Carl Christensen, The 1176 01:00:04,240 --> 01:00:07,760 Speaker 3: Mountain Rocks and Oconey go and get one of Joy's scones. 1177 01:00:07,800 --> 01:00:11,840 Speaker 3: They sound delicious. The Combox coming up after eight, The. 1178 01:00:11,880 --> 01:00:14,560 Speaker 1: News and the news makers. 1179 01:00:14,760 --> 01:00:19,760 Speaker 2: Ryan Bridge on the mic Husking Breakfast with a Vida, Retirement, Communities, 1180 01:00:20,000 --> 01:00:21,920 Speaker 2: Life your Way, news talks, head be. 1181 01:00:23,400 --> 01:00:23,800 Speaker 15: Sprung. 1182 01:00:25,880 --> 01:00:29,240 Speaker 1: It is wrong, No rum come. 1183 01:00:29,840 --> 01:00:33,640 Speaker 10: They cannot be examinated, and christ judge this afternoon. 1184 01:00:36,360 --> 01:00:38,360 Speaker 1: Plenty of half and plenty of part. 1185 01:00:39,200 --> 01:00:42,240 Speaker 5: A couple of decisions which Mike warrant further examination, but 1186 01:00:42,320 --> 01:00:43,720 Speaker 5: these you full time score. 1187 01:00:43,760 --> 01:00:46,680 Speaker 10: The one at Phoenix Film She paw Coast fare in 1188 01:00:46,760 --> 01:00:47,040 Speaker 10: his hill. 1189 01:00:49,600 --> 01:00:58,800 Speaker 5: You are a Grand Slam champion. What incredible tennis and 1190 01:00:58,920 --> 01:01:02,240 Speaker 5: there we go. Pick are confirmed for the visitors. All 1191 01:01:02,360 --> 01:01:05,880 Speaker 5: plant march on back to the top of the A League. 1192 01:01:05,920 --> 01:01:06,160 Speaker 18: They go. 1193 01:01:07,240 --> 01:01:11,160 Speaker 5: Thanks for that late late straight from Nada Barado. 1194 01:01:12,240 --> 01:01:14,680 Speaker 3: They have done it again in stoppage time. 1195 01:01:16,360 --> 01:01:24,800 Speaker 1: Yeah, second and was quite unstop. 1196 01:01:26,280 --> 01:01:29,840 Speaker 2: The Monday Morning Commentary Box on the Mike Husking Breakfast 1197 01:01:29,920 --> 01:01:33,880 Speaker 2: with Spears Finance, supporting Kiwi businesses with finance solutions for 1198 01:01:33,920 --> 01:01:35,000 Speaker 2: over fifty years. 1199 01:01:35,720 --> 01:01:38,480 Speaker 3: Yeah, big weekend for sport. Jason pin Andrew several with 1200 01:01:38,560 --> 01:01:42,040 Speaker 3: us this morning. Good morning r This tarp of the 1201 01:01:42,080 --> 01:01:47,320 Speaker 3: tennis Sinner defending his Grand Slam title will come to 1202 01:01:47,400 --> 01:01:49,480 Speaker 3: the women in a second. But what a night for 1203 01:01:49,560 --> 01:01:52,400 Speaker 3: Sinner last night? Piney incredible. 1204 01:01:52,480 --> 01:01:54,760 Speaker 16: Yeah, Look, he was favorite going in. I think a 1205 01:01:54,760 --> 01:01:57,920 Speaker 16: lot of people hope that Alexander z Vera would finally 1206 01:01:58,040 --> 01:02:00,800 Speaker 16: get the monkey off his back. Iss and Keys did 1207 01:02:00,800 --> 01:02:04,400 Speaker 16: the previous night. But Sinner, what's that? Three straight hard 1208 01:02:04,520 --> 01:02:08,720 Speaker 16: caught Grand Slam victories. He's been world number one for 1209 01:02:09,280 --> 01:02:14,080 Speaker 16: several months. That's twenty one matches without defeat. He just 1210 01:02:14,120 --> 01:02:19,080 Speaker 16: seemed imperious all tournament, really, and try as Verev did, 1211 01:02:19,280 --> 01:02:21,640 Speaker 16: and as good a player as he is. I think 1212 01:02:21,640 --> 01:02:25,160 Speaker 16: it was just always going to be Sinner. He's quite humble, 1213 01:02:25,200 --> 01:02:27,840 Speaker 16: isn't He's got other issues going on in his life. 1214 01:02:27,840 --> 01:02:31,040 Speaker 16: But I think he was a reasonably popular winner at 1215 01:02:31,080 --> 01:02:31,880 Speaker 16: Melbourne last night. 1216 01:02:31,960 --> 01:02:33,600 Speaker 3: Ye, lot of emotions. 1217 01:02:34,560 --> 01:02:37,680 Speaker 18: No, he is just me Ryan and Sinner incredibly boring. 1218 01:02:41,440 --> 01:02:43,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, you're right. I mean he's not there's no emotion, 1219 01:02:43,800 --> 01:02:44,560 Speaker 3: it's it's. 1220 01:02:44,600 --> 01:02:47,120 Speaker 18: I mean, good on him. You know, he's a fantastic 1221 01:02:47,160 --> 01:02:52,560 Speaker 18: tennis plan year. He's got these these steroid drug investigations 1222 01:02:52,600 --> 01:02:54,520 Speaker 18: hanging over him. I think there's a hearing in April. 1223 01:02:55,040 --> 01:02:57,760 Speaker 18: Not a great look, but let's fat and see what 1224 01:02:57,800 --> 01:03:01,000 Speaker 18: happens there. But he played some tenta tennis the last 1225 01:03:01,000 --> 01:03:02,959 Speaker 18: couple of weeks. I think in the fourth round match 1226 01:03:02,960 --> 01:03:05,800 Speaker 18: he was almost gone with heat stroke or dizzy spells, 1227 01:03:05,840 --> 01:03:08,560 Speaker 18: and then he had a couple of injuries. So he 1228 01:03:08,680 --> 01:03:12,600 Speaker 18: has fought through and battled through the last week or so. 1229 01:03:12,840 --> 01:03:16,400 Speaker 18: But there's just not a lot of emotion, not a 1230 01:03:16,440 --> 01:03:20,960 Speaker 18: lot of color when it comes to Yannick Sinner World 1231 01:03:21,040 --> 01:03:23,720 Speaker 18: number one. He could probably walk down most streets, main 1232 01:03:23,760 --> 01:03:25,680 Speaker 18: streets around the world. No one would know who the 1233 01:03:25,680 --> 01:03:28,520 Speaker 18: hell he is, and that's an issue for tennis. But 1234 01:03:29,480 --> 01:03:31,439 Speaker 18: you know, he's beaten the opponents put up in front 1235 01:03:31,440 --> 01:03:33,520 Speaker 18: of him and he's now one couple of Ossie Open, 1236 01:03:33,640 --> 01:03:35,120 Speaker 18: So good on us both. 1237 01:03:35,200 --> 01:03:38,360 Speaker 3: Yeah, and there's enough. If I've learned anything from watching 1238 01:03:38,560 --> 01:03:41,160 Speaker 3: the Australian Open in Melbourne is that there are enough 1239 01:03:41,320 --> 01:03:45,720 Speaker 3: hot heads and people chipping in from the sidelines to 1240 01:03:45,760 --> 01:03:48,240 Speaker 3: make the whole spectacle interesting that he can probably get 1241 01:03:48,280 --> 01:03:48,760 Speaker 3: away with that. 1242 01:03:50,240 --> 01:03:52,920 Speaker 18: Yeah, And and I think he needs one or two 1243 01:03:52,960 --> 01:04:02,520 Speaker 18: other players to apart from Sazverev, to form those those combative, 1244 01:04:02,760 --> 01:04:06,200 Speaker 18: sort of great historic showdowns, you know that we saw 1245 01:04:06,280 --> 01:04:09,840 Speaker 18: between the dal and Federer and Djokovic fed And that's 1246 01:04:09,880 --> 01:04:12,800 Speaker 18: what tennis needs. I don't know if anyone else is 1247 01:04:12,840 --> 01:04:17,120 Speaker 18: going to get close in the immediate future to Sinner, 1248 01:04:17,320 --> 01:04:20,280 Speaker 18: unfortunately for the game, but that's what tennis is lacking 1249 01:04:20,280 --> 01:04:21,800 Speaker 18: as well, both men's and women's. 1250 01:04:22,480 --> 01:04:25,640 Speaker 3: Yeah. Pinally the because I was reading about Sinner last 1251 01:04:25,720 --> 01:04:30,080 Speaker 3: night after he had won that he is doesn't drink booze, 1252 01:04:30,240 --> 01:04:32,400 Speaker 3: never been into boosts. In fact, he's never even been 1253 01:04:32,440 --> 01:04:34,440 Speaker 3: in a bar or a club. He said that. I mean, 1254 01:04:34,440 --> 01:04:37,360 Speaker 3: that's how focused the guy is. And yet you've got 1255 01:04:37,440 --> 01:04:40,560 Speaker 3: this this weird doping scandal that's been following him around. 1256 01:04:40,560 --> 01:04:43,240 Speaker 3: But the players, you know, his contemporaries don't seem to 1257 01:04:43,240 --> 01:04:45,200 Speaker 3: think it's it's a big issue. Do you think this 1258 01:04:45,240 --> 01:04:46,680 Speaker 3: will all just go away or what? 1259 01:04:46,680 --> 01:04:49,880 Speaker 16: What? I don't know. And that's clearly the reason the 1260 01:04:49,880 --> 01:04:51,280 Speaker 16: three of us have never made it to the top 1261 01:04:51,320 --> 01:04:53,760 Speaker 16: of tennis. I've seen a couple of a couple of 1262 01:04:53,840 --> 01:04:54,360 Speaker 16: insides of. 1263 01:04:54,360 --> 01:04:55,600 Speaker 12: Stars over. 1264 01:04:58,160 --> 01:05:01,200 Speaker 18: Maybe, so maybe mal when last night or tonight he 1265 01:05:01,280 --> 01:05:03,840 Speaker 18: needs to go to a bloody barrel pup and live 1266 01:05:03,880 --> 01:05:06,480 Speaker 18: a little bit, maybe celebrated it. 1267 01:05:06,600 --> 01:05:08,560 Speaker 16: You go home and ever played a broccoli or something. 1268 01:05:08,560 --> 01:05:08,960 Speaker 18: I don't know. 1269 01:05:09,560 --> 01:05:14,320 Speaker 16: Look, yeah, the doping issue that's hanging over him, it 1270 01:05:14,360 --> 01:05:16,720 Speaker 16: doesn't seem to be affecting him in any way. And 1271 01:05:17,040 --> 01:05:19,480 Speaker 16: maybe he's just got this ability to be so tunnel 1272 01:05:19,520 --> 01:05:22,080 Speaker 16: vision when it comes to playing tennis that these things, 1273 01:05:22,360 --> 01:05:24,920 Speaker 16: you know, don't affect him. I think it would affect 1274 01:05:24,920 --> 01:05:27,280 Speaker 16: a lot of people. Look, I don't really know. It 1275 01:05:27,360 --> 01:05:30,840 Speaker 16: seems as though he's he's I mean, he seems confident 1276 01:05:30,840 --> 01:05:34,080 Speaker 16: that he's done nothing wrong. Others have been fairly outspoken, 1277 01:05:34,120 --> 01:05:36,960 Speaker 16: the likes of Nick Kurios about him. If you're looking 1278 01:05:36,960 --> 01:05:38,680 Speaker 16: for a rivalry going forward, I think it's got to 1279 01:05:38,680 --> 01:05:42,440 Speaker 16: come from Carlos al Karez, although he he you know himself. 1280 01:05:43,480 --> 01:05:46,160 Speaker 16: You know, Look, I thought he was going to go 1281 01:05:46,240 --> 01:05:47,840 Speaker 16: all the way I thought al Karez was going to 1282 01:05:48,200 --> 01:05:50,280 Speaker 16: I was going to get there, but beaten by Jokovic 1283 01:05:50,280 --> 01:05:54,080 Speaker 16: obviously in the quarter finals. So yeah, so right, that 1284 01:05:54,320 --> 01:05:56,840 Speaker 16: tennis is built on rival He is going back to 1285 01:05:56,880 --> 01:06:01,440 Speaker 16: you know the Borg you know, Macenroe, Conor's days right 1286 01:06:01,480 --> 01:06:04,720 Speaker 16: the way through the Big four we've had recently. Yeah, 1287 01:06:04,800 --> 01:06:06,360 Speaker 16: I don't know what the future looks like as far 1288 01:06:06,400 --> 01:06:08,160 Speaker 16: as those tennis rivalries are concerned. 1289 01:06:08,520 --> 01:06:10,920 Speaker 3: Interesting one, all right, Andrew Sevil Jason Pine with us 1290 01:06:11,000 --> 01:06:13,560 Speaker 3: on the commentary Box Back in a second, The. 1291 01:06:13,680 --> 01:06:17,920 Speaker 2: Mic Hosking Breakfast Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio, cow it 1292 01:06:18,040 --> 01:06:18,680 Speaker 2: By News. 1293 01:06:18,520 --> 01:06:22,240 Speaker 3: Talks EDB quarter past eight News TALKSB on your Monday Morning. 1294 01:06:22,720 --> 01:06:26,280 Speaker 2: The Monday Morning Commentary Box on the Mic Hosking Breakfast 1295 01:06:26,360 --> 01:06:30,440 Speaker 2: with Spears Finance supporting Kiwi businesses with finance solutions for 1296 01:06:30,480 --> 01:06:31,640 Speaker 2: over fifty years. 1297 01:06:31,840 --> 01:06:34,320 Speaker 3: Andrew Sevell and Jason Pine with us. Piney will start 1298 01:06:34,360 --> 01:06:36,960 Speaker 3: with you on the Auckland FC. They've had another win 1299 01:06:37,200 --> 01:06:38,560 Speaker 3: and it was right at the end. 1300 01:06:39,320 --> 01:06:42,560 Speaker 16: Incredible this team. How often I've got late goals to 1301 01:06:43,720 --> 01:06:46,640 Speaker 16: get points, to win matches, to draw matches. You know 1302 01:06:46,680 --> 01:06:50,000 Speaker 16: midweek they got a ninety ninth minute equalizer against Adelaide 1303 01:06:50,040 --> 01:06:52,640 Speaker 16: last night mil all going into the ninety fifth minute 1304 01:06:52,680 --> 01:06:55,120 Speaker 16: and Nada Monono scores a goal that gets from the 1305 01:06:55,120 --> 01:06:57,240 Speaker 16: one nil win and back to the top of the table. 1306 01:06:57,320 --> 01:07:00,760 Speaker 16: It's an incredible story. This and Awakland f C. The 1307 01:07:00,840 --> 01:07:04,480 Speaker 16: juggernaut just rolls on. You know, I think people wondered 1308 01:07:04,480 --> 01:07:06,919 Speaker 16: after the really good start they had whether it would 1309 01:07:06,920 --> 01:07:08,880 Speaker 16: be something that was a flash in the pan and 1310 01:07:08,880 --> 01:07:10,920 Speaker 16: they might come back to the pack. Not a bit 1311 01:07:10,960 --> 01:07:12,920 Speaker 16: of it. I mean we've passed a halfway mark now, 1312 01:07:12,960 --> 01:07:15,439 Speaker 16: the top of the table, looking every inch, a team 1313 01:07:15,840 --> 01:07:18,120 Speaker 16: that could go deep, deep into this competition and back 1314 01:07:18,120 --> 01:07:21,920 Speaker 16: at home Saint MacArthur, so another big crowd in coming there. 1315 01:07:21,760 --> 01:07:24,280 Speaker 18: No doubt and pining these sorts of results. Is it 1316 01:07:24,280 --> 01:07:27,880 Speaker 18: suggests the team is really tight knit and obviously doesn't 1317 01:07:27,920 --> 01:07:31,280 Speaker 18: give up if they're willing to push hard and keep 1318 01:07:31,320 --> 01:07:34,640 Speaker 18: going and score these late, late, late goals. Yes, I 1319 01:07:34,640 --> 01:07:37,160 Speaker 18: think it's quite a remarkable feat for a new team. 1320 01:07:37,240 --> 01:07:41,040 Speaker 18: Isn't it to be this close and this this strong together? 1321 01:07:41,320 --> 01:07:41,760 Speaker 22: Yeah? 1322 01:07:41,880 --> 01:07:44,480 Speaker 16: Yeah, winning helps obviously, doesn't it. You know, when you're 1323 01:07:44,480 --> 01:07:46,360 Speaker 16: when you're when things are going well, it's easy to 1324 01:07:46,360 --> 01:07:48,840 Speaker 16: be mates with one another. I think cracks appear when 1325 01:07:48,880 --> 01:07:51,200 Speaker 16: things aren't going well. But you're so right said, you know, 1326 01:07:51,240 --> 01:07:54,160 Speaker 16: it's a there's a there's a culture there of whenever 1327 01:07:54,280 --> 01:07:56,200 Speaker 16: we never give up. We always move forward. They even 1328 01:07:56,280 --> 01:07:59,120 Speaker 16: use those sorts of mantras the team together. So Steve 1329 01:07:59,200 --> 01:08:02,760 Speaker 16: Corek has got something, got something going away there, and 1330 01:08:02,840 --> 01:08:04,560 Speaker 16: ye along, Mad continued. 1331 01:08:04,600 --> 01:08:06,480 Speaker 18: I I sort of set last night. Is that half 1332 01:08:06,640 --> 01:08:08,360 Speaker 18: the half of the goals I've scored. I think they've 1333 01:08:08,360 --> 01:08:10,479 Speaker 18: scored twenty odd goals and the season, half the goals 1334 01:08:10,520 --> 01:08:12,280 Speaker 18: I've scored have come in the last ten or fifteen 1335 01:08:12,320 --> 01:08:16,640 Speaker 18: minutes of games, which, yeah, is out of the box. 1336 01:08:16,360 --> 01:08:19,599 Speaker 3: Savan not giving up but taking a break, Sophie Devine, 1337 01:08:19,680 --> 01:08:22,320 Speaker 3: let's talk about this, the White Ferns captain taking a 1338 01:08:22,320 --> 01:08:25,440 Speaker 3: break from cricket, returning home immediately and going to prioritize 1339 01:08:25,479 --> 01:08:26,440 Speaker 3: her well being. 1340 01:08:27,880 --> 01:08:30,639 Speaker 18: Which is a fair enough call. I think she did 1341 01:08:30,640 --> 01:08:32,800 Speaker 18: it three or four years ago. She's a star of 1342 01:08:32,840 --> 01:08:37,519 Speaker 18: the woman's game. She's under the spotlight even more in 1343 01:08:37,600 --> 01:08:44,000 Speaker 18: these times than previously. Plays a lot of cricket, busy, 1344 01:08:44,040 --> 01:08:46,760 Speaker 18: busy schedule here in Australia. I think she was due 1345 01:08:46,760 --> 01:08:51,800 Speaker 18: to play in India, so clearly wants to take time away, 1346 01:08:51,920 --> 01:08:54,280 Speaker 18: needs to get right. So her call good on it. 1347 01:08:54,520 --> 01:08:57,360 Speaker 3: Yeah, all right, let's move on these sixty meters sprint 1348 01:08:57,400 --> 01:09:02,320 Speaker 3: This is and christ Sprinter to ten Felton, who has 1349 01:09:02,600 --> 01:09:05,639 Speaker 3: broken our record, our thirty year national sixty meter sprint 1350 01:09:05,680 --> 01:09:09,280 Speaker 3: record in Canberra. I didn't know Pioney that that sixty 1351 01:09:09,280 --> 01:09:10,280 Speaker 3: meter sprint was a thing. 1352 01:09:10,600 --> 01:09:13,479 Speaker 18: Well, why all of a sudden are we running sixty meetings? 1353 01:09:13,960 --> 01:09:16,200 Speaker 18: No one can can, No one be bothered running one 1354 01:09:16,280 --> 01:09:17,320 Speaker 18: hundred meters anymore. 1355 01:09:17,720 --> 01:09:18,559 Speaker 3: That's no sense. 1356 01:09:18,880 --> 01:09:22,479 Speaker 18: Every type of sport has a shortened version. We don't need. 1357 01:09:22,680 --> 01:09:25,880 Speaker 18: I know, I know, indoor championships they run sixty right 1358 01:09:25,920 --> 01:09:29,680 Speaker 18: because it's because the track's much smaller. Yeah, when you're 1359 01:09:29,840 --> 01:09:32,040 Speaker 18: do you really need to run sixty when you're outside, 1360 01:09:32,080 --> 01:09:33,800 Speaker 18: don't it? Maybe they didn't have enough time? 1361 01:09:34,520 --> 01:09:34,720 Speaker 24: Yeah? 1362 01:09:34,840 --> 01:09:39,960 Speaker 16: Is it the T twenty of sprinting. Yeah, but he's 1363 01:09:39,960 --> 01:09:43,200 Speaker 16: obviously quick, Town Welton, you know he and what your 1364 01:09:43,240 --> 01:09:45,160 Speaker 16: hope obviously is that he can and he can he 1365 01:09:45,200 --> 01:09:47,400 Speaker 16: can run one hundred meterres pretty quickly. We you know, 1366 01:09:47,479 --> 01:09:50,400 Speaker 16: we get another Zoe ob situation here where where we 1367 01:09:50,439 --> 01:09:53,799 Speaker 16: have another sprinter who is doing, you know, good things 1368 01:09:54,040 --> 01:09:57,519 Speaker 16: at big events. He's a he's an interesting character, Town Weldon. 1369 01:09:57,680 --> 01:09:59,439 Speaker 16: I think he did a bit of modeling for a while. 1370 01:10:00,760 --> 01:10:04,000 Speaker 16: Heaven all well exactly insides of bars and. 1371 01:10:05,960 --> 01:10:07,720 Speaker 18: But all he needs to do now is there the 1372 01:10:07,800 --> 01:10:09,559 Speaker 18: extra forty on and he'll be well. 1373 01:10:11,000 --> 01:10:14,040 Speaker 3: From a spectator's point of view, it's not exactly riveting 1374 01:10:14,120 --> 01:10:16,320 Speaker 3: viewing because it's it's literally over before you know, you 1375 01:10:16,320 --> 01:10:18,600 Speaker 3: could blink and miss it, you know, in six and 1376 01:10:18,640 --> 01:10:20,799 Speaker 3: a half seconds. So it's not the best to watch. 1377 01:10:20,880 --> 01:10:23,679 Speaker 3: But I mean he's doing well anyway. Uh, the NFL, 1378 01:10:23,720 --> 01:10:25,360 Speaker 3: this would be the big news story, the big sports 1379 01:10:25,360 --> 01:10:28,360 Speaker 3: story of course, the playoffs today. Who are you picking? 1380 01:10:28,439 --> 01:10:33,000 Speaker 18: Sep I like the Philadelphia Eagle always have. And then 1381 01:10:33,000 --> 01:10:36,360 Speaker 18: you've got this Kansas City Chiefs Buffalo Bills, this massive 1382 01:10:36,400 --> 01:10:41,160 Speaker 18: matchup in the other conference. Everyone. The interesting thing is 1383 01:10:41,200 --> 01:10:43,680 Speaker 18: the Chiefs used to be will became America's team, and 1384 01:10:43,720 --> 01:10:46,120 Speaker 18: everybody hates them because I think they get a good 1385 01:10:46,200 --> 01:10:49,679 Speaker 18: run from reefs and officials. And you've got Patrick Mahomes, 1386 01:10:49,680 --> 01:10:53,920 Speaker 18: You've got Travis Kelcey, You've got what's what's your name, 1387 01:10:55,080 --> 01:11:00,720 Speaker 18: Taylor swt Taylor Swift, Yeah, sorry, moment, So she'll be 1388 01:11:00,800 --> 01:11:03,360 Speaker 18: on camera a lot in the crowd, I'd imagine. But no, 1389 01:11:03,479 --> 01:11:06,960 Speaker 18: it's I love this time of year because NFL playoffs 1390 01:11:06,960 --> 01:11:10,000 Speaker 18: it's great sporting theater is always drama and Yeah, it's 1391 01:11:10,439 --> 01:11:12,559 Speaker 18: it's a it's an intriguing time in that in that 1392 01:11:13,000 --> 01:11:18,160 Speaker 18: in that massive, the massive proficion world of NFL. 1393 01:11:19,560 --> 01:11:20,600 Speaker 3: Piny, you have views on this. 1394 01:11:21,600 --> 01:11:24,200 Speaker 16: I like the Commanders simply because I went and watched 1395 01:11:24,200 --> 01:11:26,640 Speaker 16: them play last year, so I go, I've john an 1396 01:11:26,640 --> 01:11:29,320 Speaker 16: affinity with the Washington Commanders. I don't think they'll win, 1397 01:11:29,840 --> 01:11:32,160 Speaker 16: and I think the chief will probably win another Super Bowl. 1398 01:11:32,360 --> 01:11:34,880 Speaker 3: All right, brilliant guys, Thanks so much, Andrew several Jason 1399 01:11:34,880 --> 01:11:37,200 Speaker 3: Pine with us for your Monday morning. Just gone twenty 1400 01:11:37,240 --> 01:11:40,240 Speaker 3: after eight, somebody has texted Ryan, we no longer have 1401 01:11:40,320 --> 01:11:44,920 Speaker 3: the attention span for one hundred meter sprints. That's not true, 1402 01:11:44,960 --> 01:11:47,240 Speaker 3: by the way. I mean, honestly, how long does your 1403 01:11:47,320 --> 01:11:49,320 Speaker 3: attention span need to be? How long do they do 1404 01:11:49,439 --> 01:11:51,800 Speaker 3: one hundred meters in like nine seconds or something just 1405 01:11:51,840 --> 01:11:55,479 Speaker 3: over nine seconds? Come on, We're not that pathetic yet. 1406 01:11:55,640 --> 01:11:56,759 Speaker 3: Twenty one after eight. 1407 01:11:58,160 --> 01:12:01,720 Speaker 2: Ryan Bridge on the make Tsking Breakfast with Bailey's Real 1408 01:12:01,840 --> 01:12:04,280 Speaker 2: Estate News Talks EDB News Talk. 1409 01:12:04,120 --> 01:12:06,280 Speaker 3: Said b twenty four minutes after eight, the news that's 1410 01:12:06,320 --> 01:12:09,160 Speaker 3: just coming out from the United States. Actually, you might 1411 01:12:09,200 --> 01:12:13,240 Speaker 3: have seen over the weekend that the president of Columbia, 1412 01:12:13,320 --> 01:12:17,479 Speaker 3: this is Gustavo Petro. He refused to allow some flights 1413 01:12:17,479 --> 01:12:20,040 Speaker 3: from the US deportation flights to land in his country, 1414 01:12:20,080 --> 01:12:22,200 Speaker 3: and they had some illegal immigrants who were trying to 1415 01:12:22,200 --> 01:12:24,679 Speaker 3: get into the United States. He refused to let those 1416 01:12:24,720 --> 01:12:27,760 Speaker 3: planes land in his country. Right, Trump has come out 1417 01:12:28,040 --> 01:12:31,559 Speaker 3: and said, I was just informed that two repatriation flights 1418 01:12:31,600 --> 01:12:34,040 Speaker 3: from the US, so the large number of illegal criminals 1419 01:12:34,040 --> 01:12:36,800 Speaker 3: were not allowed to land in Columbia. This order was 1420 01:12:36,840 --> 01:12:41,000 Speaker 3: given by Columbia's socialist president, Gustavo Petro, who was already 1421 01:12:41,080 --> 01:12:43,920 Speaker 3: very unpopular amongst his people. This is Trump being Trump, 1422 01:12:44,520 --> 01:12:48,080 Speaker 3: but he's actually done something about it very quickly. So 1423 01:12:48,400 --> 01:12:52,679 Speaker 3: what he's instituted is an emergency twenty five percent tariff 1424 01:12:52,760 --> 01:12:56,200 Speaker 3: on all goods coming into the United States from Columbia. 1425 01:12:56,360 --> 01:12:59,160 Speaker 3: In one week, the twenty five percent tariff will be 1426 01:12:59,240 --> 01:13:04,559 Speaker 3: raised to fifty percent, a travel ban immediately affecting visa 1427 01:13:05,080 --> 01:13:08,400 Speaker 3: with visa recavation revocations. I should say on the Colombian 1428 01:13:08,439 --> 01:13:11,519 Speaker 3: government officials, its allies, and its supporters. That's the way 1429 01:13:11,560 --> 01:13:14,759 Speaker 3: Trump put us puts it. Also visa sanctions on all 1430 01:13:14,800 --> 01:13:19,639 Speaker 3: party members, family members, and supporters of the Colombian government. 1431 01:13:20,800 --> 01:13:23,240 Speaker 3: Now that's happened in the last I don't know what 1432 01:13:23,479 --> 01:13:26,479 Speaker 3: half an hour hour and in the last few minutes 1433 01:13:26,560 --> 01:13:31,439 Speaker 3: already we have the socialist president responding. So Colombian President 1434 01:13:31,479 --> 01:13:35,600 Speaker 3: Gustavo Petro is offering his presidential plane to help repatriate 1435 01:13:35,680 --> 01:13:39,160 Speaker 3: deportees from the US. So not only has he reversed 1436 01:13:39,200 --> 01:13:44,240 Speaker 3: his decision at the weekend not to allow illegal Colombian 1437 01:13:44,520 --> 01:13:48,639 Speaker 3: migrants back into his country, he's now offering his own 1438 01:13:48,640 --> 01:13:53,080 Speaker 3: aircraft to do the work for him. Whoops, whoopsie, Interesting, 1439 01:13:53,160 --> 01:13:54,920 Speaker 3: isn't it. What can change? All you need is just 1440 01:13:55,439 --> 01:14:01,000 Speaker 3: a strong arm threat. It's slightly related story because it's well, 1441 01:14:01,000 --> 01:14:05,280 Speaker 3: it's cartel adjacent the story at the weekend. There's a guy, 1442 01:14:05,560 --> 01:14:10,400 Speaker 3: a criminal mastermind apparently by the name of Grihalbo. Now 1443 01:14:10,439 --> 01:14:14,040 Speaker 3: he was done for exporting cocaine out of Costa Rica 1444 01:14:14,600 --> 01:14:16,519 Speaker 3: and the DEA in America has been trying to get 1445 01:14:16,560 --> 01:14:18,439 Speaker 3: him for ages, but he's been in Costa Rica and 1446 01:14:18,479 --> 01:14:21,120 Speaker 3: they don't extradite it, right, So they've been when is 1447 01:14:21,160 --> 01:14:22,560 Speaker 3: this guy going to go on holiday? When is he 1448 01:14:22,600 --> 01:14:24,680 Speaker 3: going to go traveling? Because we need to get him, 1449 01:14:24,720 --> 01:14:25,880 Speaker 3: and we need to get him when he's at the 1450 01:14:25,920 --> 01:14:29,559 Speaker 3: airport he's going into a friendly country. They didn't have 1451 01:14:29,680 --> 01:14:32,160 Speaker 3: to wait long and they didn't have to look hard 1452 01:14:32,240 --> 01:14:36,439 Speaker 3: because his glamorous wife is Stefani and McDonald Rodriguez, who's 1453 01:14:36,479 --> 01:14:41,759 Speaker 3: thirty two years old, was posting photos of their trip 1454 01:14:41,800 --> 01:14:47,040 Speaker 3: around the world on her Instagram alongside him. I mean, honestly, 1455 01:14:47,120 --> 01:14:49,760 Speaker 3: how stupid do you have to be? I don't know. 1456 01:14:49,800 --> 01:14:51,599 Speaker 3: Maybe he didn't know. It doesn't seem like a very 1457 01:14:51,600 --> 01:14:53,960 Speaker 3: smart thing to do. Maybe he doesn't have a round 1458 01:14:54,000 --> 01:14:58,160 Speaker 3: for her brains obviously doesn't follow her twenty seven after 1459 01:14:58,200 --> 01:14:59,200 Speaker 3: eight years to said. 1460 01:14:59,040 --> 01:15:11,880 Speaker 15: The the only report you need to start your day, 1461 01:15:12,439 --> 01:15:15,400 Speaker 15: Ryan Bridge on the my casking breakfast. 1462 01:15:15,120 --> 01:15:19,960 Speaker 2: With the range rover Villa designed to intrigue and use TOGSDADB. 1463 01:15:19,760 --> 01:15:21,880 Speaker 3: Good morning twenty three to nine. Micha will be back 1464 01:15:21,920 --> 01:15:24,840 Speaker 3: with you tomorrow. We spoke last week about the tourism 1465 01:15:24,960 --> 01:15:27,280 Speaker 3: numbers and the fact that New Zealand is one of 1466 01:15:27,320 --> 01:15:30,160 Speaker 3: the few countries who relies on tourism to the extent 1467 01:15:30,200 --> 01:15:33,120 Speaker 3: that we do not to be back to pre COVID levels. 1468 01:15:33,840 --> 01:15:36,160 Speaker 3: Australia is back to pre COVID levels. In fact, they're 1469 01:15:36,160 --> 01:15:42,479 Speaker 3: exceeding now one hundred worldwide. They're ninety nine percent of 1470 01:15:42,560 --> 01:15:44,599 Speaker 3: pre COVID levels, so you pretty much say we're back 1471 01:15:44,600 --> 01:15:47,519 Speaker 3: to COVID levels pre COVID levels around the world. France 1472 01:15:47,640 --> 01:15:50,639 Speaker 3: took out the top spot, remember for most visited country, 1473 01:15:50,680 --> 01:15:55,200 Speaker 3: with one hundred million, but their main museum in Paris 1474 01:15:55,240 --> 01:15:59,519 Speaker 3: that live the most visited museum in the world, actually 1475 01:15:59,560 --> 01:16:02,920 Speaker 3: has some maintenance issues. And I thought this was just us, 1476 01:16:03,000 --> 01:16:04,920 Speaker 3: you know, this was like a Kiwi thing where you 1477 01:16:04,960 --> 01:16:07,400 Speaker 3: invited the tourists to come and then you don't provide 1478 01:16:07,439 --> 01:16:10,720 Speaker 3: the facilities for them. But the French apparently are not 1479 01:16:10,840 --> 01:16:14,800 Speaker 3: doing very well. The temperature inside varies so much at 1480 01:16:14,840 --> 01:16:18,120 Speaker 3: starting to damage some of the artworks, which isn't great 1481 01:16:18,160 --> 01:16:21,280 Speaker 3: for a museum that's sort of business. Number one, it's 1482 01:16:21,400 --> 01:16:23,960 Speaker 3: damp in some areas. A report has found that it's 1483 01:16:24,120 --> 01:16:28,040 Speaker 3: leaky in some areas, that there is mold in some areas. Basically, 1484 01:16:28,040 --> 01:16:31,679 Speaker 3: it's a big, damp, leaky, mold dump. You live in Paris, 1485 01:16:31,760 --> 01:16:34,680 Speaker 3: so don't go there, Mona. Lisa won't be smiling for long. 1486 01:16:34,720 --> 01:16:38,599 Speaker 3: I wouldn't imagine eight point seven million visitors last year, 1487 01:16:39,960 --> 01:16:42,439 Speaker 3: and I was thinking about that's that's a lot of people. 1488 01:16:42,840 --> 01:16:45,880 Speaker 3: Four million people before COVID came to New Zealand every year, 1489 01:16:46,040 --> 01:16:49,360 Speaker 3: so they get double. But then there're round lots of 1490 01:16:49,360 --> 01:16:52,280 Speaker 3: populated countries. We're along way from the rest of the world. 1491 01:16:52,320 --> 01:16:54,320 Speaker 3: I think four millions are pretty good number for us, 1492 01:16:55,080 --> 01:16:56,840 Speaker 3: and not that we're back there. Of course, we're sixteen 1493 01:16:56,880 --> 01:16:59,559 Speaker 3: percent down on that number, but there you go. Twenty 1494 01:16:59,560 --> 01:17:00,400 Speaker 3: two to nine. 1495 01:17:00,840 --> 01:17:04,719 Speaker 19: International correspondence with ends and Eye Insurance, Peace of mind 1496 01:17:04,760 --> 01:17:05,839 Speaker 19: for New Zealand business. 1497 01:17:06,680 --> 01:17:09,400 Speaker 3: Steve Fie to our Australia correspondent, responding, Steve, good. 1498 01:17:09,280 --> 01:17:11,760 Speaker 18: Morning, I did my bit. 1499 01:17:11,800 --> 01:17:13,519 Speaker 24: I spent two weeks in the North Island of New 1500 01:17:13,640 --> 01:17:17,559 Speaker 24: Zealand and had an absolutely fantastic time during the summer break. 1501 01:17:17,680 --> 01:17:21,200 Speaker 3: Brilliant, very glad to hear it. This poll the majority 1502 01:17:21,200 --> 01:17:23,960 Speaker 3: of OSSI's think the opposition's got it for the election. 1503 01:17:25,080 --> 01:17:27,559 Speaker 24: Yeah, and the election could be anytime between now and May. 1504 01:17:27,760 --> 01:17:29,760 Speaker 24: Although when you look at these numbers you'd think that 1505 01:17:29,800 --> 01:17:32,280 Speaker 24: the Prime Minister Antony Alberanez, has been having a pretty 1506 01:17:32,320 --> 01:17:34,559 Speaker 24: rough trot of it lately, is going to go as 1507 01:17:34,640 --> 01:17:36,639 Speaker 24: late as possible hope that he can get an interest 1508 01:17:36,680 --> 01:17:39,320 Speaker 24: rate cut out of the Reserve Bank. Their first meeting 1509 01:17:39,400 --> 01:17:42,280 Speaker 24: due next week. If he gets that he might go quickly, 1510 01:17:42,320 --> 01:17:45,360 Speaker 24: but on these numbers he would want to stay there 1511 01:17:45,360 --> 01:17:48,080 Speaker 24: as long as he could. The Coalition now leads two 1512 01:17:48,120 --> 01:17:51,960 Speaker 24: party preferred the government fifty one to forty nine. But 1513 01:17:52,040 --> 01:17:55,080 Speaker 24: the number that everyone's picked up on today is that 1514 01:17:55,200 --> 01:17:58,839 Speaker 24: fifty three percent of Australians who were asked this question, 1515 01:17:59,080 --> 01:18:02,799 Speaker 24: and this polling took for one week of January, fifty 1516 01:18:02,800 --> 01:18:05,679 Speaker 24: three percent of Australians expect Coalition to win the next election. 1517 01:18:05,800 --> 01:18:09,400 Speaker 24: Now that's a huge turnaround three to forty seven percent 1518 01:18:09,439 --> 01:18:12,639 Speaker 24: for Labor. If you'd ask that question at any time 1519 01:18:12,720 --> 01:18:16,040 Speaker 24: last year, probably either get a response that there's going 1520 01:18:16,080 --> 01:18:18,320 Speaker 24: to be a hung parliament and the minority government or 1521 01:18:18,360 --> 01:18:21,160 Speaker 24: that Labor would win. Doesn't mean they're over the line. 1522 01:18:21,320 --> 01:18:23,760 Speaker 24: Lots of things can happen between now and then. But 1523 01:18:23,920 --> 01:18:29,000 Speaker 24: Labour's primary vote ryan is down another two points to 1524 01:18:29,160 --> 01:18:32,040 Speaker 24: thirty one. That's the worst since they were elected two 1525 01:18:32,040 --> 01:18:35,240 Speaker 24: and a half years a bit ago. Coalition's sitting on 1526 01:18:35,360 --> 01:18:38,559 Speaker 24: thirty nine. Peter Dutt's got a lot of work still 1527 01:18:38,600 --> 01:18:40,040 Speaker 24: to do. I mean he's got to win a lot 1528 01:18:40,040 --> 01:18:42,799 Speaker 24: of seats. The majority that Labor has is pretty handy 1529 01:18:43,280 --> 01:18:46,040 Speaker 24: and so it'll all come down now to the promises. 1530 01:18:46,080 --> 01:18:48,400 Speaker 24: But what I can tell you Ryan is that this 1531 01:18:48,520 --> 01:18:53,160 Speaker 24: election will there will be big differences in policy between 1532 01:18:53,200 --> 01:18:56,880 Speaker 24: the government and the opposition. In the past, we've had 1533 01:18:56,880 --> 01:19:00,519 Speaker 24: lots of elections where policies were pretty similar. Not this time. 1534 01:19:00,520 --> 01:19:01,559 Speaker 24: It's going to be very different. 1535 01:19:01,840 --> 01:19:05,040 Speaker 3: Yeah, you've got lots of things, lots of differences between 1536 01:19:05,040 --> 01:19:08,920 Speaker 3: them too. Right, let's talk about Australia Day. Happy Australia 1537 01:19:08,960 --> 01:19:10,680 Speaker 3: Day for yesterday. By the way, how will the how 1538 01:19:10,720 --> 01:19:11,720 Speaker 3: do the protests turn out? 1539 01:19:13,040 --> 01:19:17,679 Speaker 24: Well, no violence, but a lot of people and if again, 1540 01:19:17,720 --> 01:19:21,320 Speaker 24: if you look at poll's majority of Australian support having 1541 01:19:21,400 --> 01:19:23,560 Speaker 24: our National Day on the twenty sixth of January. But 1542 01:19:24,240 --> 01:19:27,920 Speaker 24: there will always be protests, particularly from the Indigenous movement. 1543 01:19:27,960 --> 01:19:31,360 Speaker 24: They were out enforced, particularly in Melbourne. That was the biggest. 1544 01:19:31,640 --> 01:19:35,439 Speaker 24: They're expecting thirty thousand, there's probably around twenty five thousand people. 1545 01:19:35,760 --> 01:19:38,000 Speaker 24: I think what disappoints a lot of Australians is that 1546 01:19:38,560 --> 01:19:42,840 Speaker 24: the pro Palestinian protests, which we've had every Sunday in 1547 01:19:42,920 --> 01:19:48,439 Speaker 24: Melbourne since October seventh, twenty twenty three, well they've joined 1548 01:19:48,520 --> 01:19:52,320 Speaker 24: up now with the anti Australian Day protests. So that's 1549 01:19:52,600 --> 01:19:56,000 Speaker 24: what swells the numbers. But then you see some pretty 1550 01:19:56,640 --> 01:20:01,240 Speaker 24: speeches that were provocative. Isn't the politest way I can 1551 01:20:01,320 --> 01:20:05,439 Speaker 24: put it. One of the spokespeople came out and said 1552 01:20:05,640 --> 01:20:09,640 Speaker 24: Australia is a racist nation, a colonial nation. They have 1553 01:20:09,720 --> 01:20:12,280 Speaker 24: the remnants of representation of that and we will not 1554 01:20:12,360 --> 01:20:16,519 Speaker 24: allow them to win. It was a pretty fiery speech 1555 01:20:16,560 --> 01:20:20,559 Speaker 24: from a woman called Namoud Sammak liken the fight for 1556 01:20:20,600 --> 01:20:24,160 Speaker 24: treaty for Aboriginal people in Australia to the ceasefire in Palestine. 1557 01:20:24,320 --> 01:20:26,679 Speaker 24: How they can join these two things together is completely 1558 01:20:26,720 --> 01:20:30,040 Speaker 24: beyond me. And she said she would not allow Opposition 1559 01:20:30,120 --> 01:20:33,599 Speaker 24: leader Peter Dutton to win it next election. Well, we've 1560 01:20:33,640 --> 01:20:36,000 Speaker 24: just talked about a poll that says he probably will. 1561 01:20:36,360 --> 01:20:38,519 Speaker 24: But these people will never be happy. And you can't 1562 01:20:38,600 --> 01:20:40,759 Speaker 24: change the date because whenever you have the date, someone's 1563 01:20:40,800 --> 01:20:41,840 Speaker 24: going to prochaice against it. 1564 01:20:42,080 --> 01:20:45,160 Speaker 3: Yeah, right, good news. On the other hand for the 1565 01:20:45,240 --> 01:20:47,080 Speaker 3: Australian of the year. What's going on here? 1566 01:20:47,920 --> 01:20:50,320 Speaker 24: Well for me also, this is a little bit personal 1567 01:20:50,360 --> 01:20:53,400 Speaker 24: because I lost a friend in the last year to 1568 01:20:53,479 --> 01:20:57,679 Speaker 24: motor your own disease, and he was diagnosed at the 1569 01:20:57,720 --> 01:21:00,880 Speaker 24: beginning of the beginning of last year. Late on twenty three, 1570 01:21:00,960 --> 01:21:04,479 Speaker 24: he lasted twelve months and has passed away. Really good, 1571 01:21:04,479 --> 01:21:06,800 Speaker 24: made of mind. The Australian of the Year is a 1572 01:21:06,840 --> 01:21:09,960 Speaker 24: former Australian footballer by the name of Neil Danahert. Now 1573 01:21:10,000 --> 01:21:14,679 Speaker 24: he's raised in excess of twenty seven million dollars toward 1574 01:21:14,760 --> 01:21:19,120 Speaker 24: research intomoting your own disease. And Neil has been suffering 1575 01:21:19,120 --> 01:21:22,880 Speaker 24: from this for thirteen years. So what I can't get 1576 01:21:22,920 --> 01:21:24,760 Speaker 24: my head around really is how someone can last just 1577 01:21:24,840 --> 01:21:29,000 Speaker 24: twelve months someone else thirteen years. Neil no longer has 1578 01:21:29,120 --> 01:21:32,800 Speaker 24: the ability to speak, but he has a computer that 1579 01:21:32,880 --> 01:21:36,599 Speaker 24: can incredible into it. I can't believe have his words 1580 01:21:36,680 --> 01:21:40,000 Speaker 24: expressed by someone else because of his thought patterns that 1581 01:21:40,040 --> 01:21:43,880 Speaker 24: go through this computer. So he's been made Australian of 1582 01:21:43,880 --> 01:21:47,160 Speaker 24: the Year. His family's around him. His daughter is the 1583 01:21:47,240 --> 01:21:50,880 Speaker 24: main fundraiser and they'll spend the next twelve months urging 1584 01:21:50,880 --> 01:21:54,479 Speaker 24: Australians to think about people with MND and try and 1585 01:21:54,560 --> 01:21:56,040 Speaker 24: raise more money for it. Yeah. 1586 01:21:56,200 --> 01:21:58,240 Speaker 3: Oh, that's great news to hear about that, And I'm 1587 01:21:58,280 --> 01:21:59,759 Speaker 3: sorry to hear about your mate. 1588 01:22:00,400 --> 01:22:01,200 Speaker 24: Yeah, it's dridful. 1589 01:22:01,360 --> 01:22:03,559 Speaker 3: Yeah. Hey, just on the other there was with the 1590 01:22:03,640 --> 01:22:06,640 Speaker 3: Australian of the Year. Who was that woman that she 1591 01:22:06,680 --> 01:22:09,000 Speaker 3: wore a T shirt? Was an anti Murdock T shirt 1592 01:22:09,040 --> 01:22:12,240 Speaker 3: to her meeting with Albanezi. Did you see that? 1593 01:22:12,880 --> 01:22:13,080 Speaker 16: Yes? 1594 01:22:13,120 --> 01:22:13,439 Speaker 3: I did. 1595 01:22:13,479 --> 01:22:16,760 Speaker 24: That was a morning tea. That's a former Australian of 1596 01:22:16,800 --> 01:22:20,240 Speaker 24: the Year and she has been a very vocal criticism 1597 01:22:20,640 --> 01:22:23,760 Speaker 24: of the Murdoch press. She had f Murdoch on the 1598 01:22:23,840 --> 01:22:26,720 Speaker 24: front of a T shirt. How anybody would let her 1599 01:22:27,200 --> 01:22:29,840 Speaker 24: go into a meeting wearing that is completely beyond me. 1600 01:22:29,880 --> 01:22:33,160 Speaker 24: And for the Prime Minister to stand there with a 1601 01:22:33,160 --> 01:22:36,439 Speaker 24: grin on his face was just beyond belief. I just 1602 01:22:36,439 --> 01:22:37,800 Speaker 24: couldn't believe it was allowed to happen. 1603 01:22:37,920 --> 01:22:39,960 Speaker 3: Yeah, I thought the same thing, and the article was 1604 01:22:40,000 --> 01:22:42,040 Speaker 3: sort of making out, Oh well he didn't know. I mean, 1605 01:22:42,080 --> 01:22:45,600 Speaker 3: come on, it's in of course, you know, if securities 1606 01:22:45,680 --> 01:22:47,639 Speaker 3: are better dirt, he's come in the building. I mean 1607 01:22:48,000 --> 01:22:51,600 Speaker 3: you know he had to know. Yeah, Steve, thank you 1608 01:22:51,600 --> 01:22:54,280 Speaker 3: for that. Steve Price, our Australia correspondent with us. It 1609 01:22:54,360 --> 01:22:58,120 Speaker 3: is sixteen away from nine News Talks e B The Like. 1610 01:22:58,200 --> 01:23:03,799 Speaker 2: Asking Breakfast Full Show podcast on iHeartRadio powered by NEWSTALKSB. 1611 01:23:03,520 --> 01:23:06,759 Speaker 3: Thirteen away from nine News Talks, HEB it sounds alarming. 1612 01:23:06,760 --> 01:23:08,760 Speaker 3: And there's a giant iceberg. Have you heard about this? 1613 01:23:08,880 --> 01:23:12,840 Speaker 3: That's broken off from Antarctica. It's heading north and it 1614 01:23:12,920 --> 01:23:15,719 Speaker 3: is two hundred and eighty kilometers away from South Georgia, 1615 01:23:15,760 --> 01:23:20,519 Speaker 3: which is the British British territory where they've how do 1616 01:23:20,600 --> 01:23:25,040 Speaker 3: I describe it, Concerned but not alarmed about this happening, 1617 01:23:25,040 --> 01:23:28,280 Speaker 3: about this hurtling towards them. It's happened before and usually 1618 01:23:28,360 --> 01:23:30,360 Speaker 3: they break up. But the real concern is for the 1619 01:23:30,360 --> 01:23:33,519 Speaker 3: penguins and the seals, because when the iceberg, which by 1620 01:23:33,560 --> 01:23:36,240 Speaker 3: the way, is taller than the sky Tower and bigger 1621 01:23:36,280 --> 01:23:39,839 Speaker 3: than Dunedin very old, broke off back in the eighties, 1622 01:23:39,880 --> 01:23:42,320 Speaker 3: apparently has just been wandering around waiting. Can you just 1623 01:23:42,720 --> 01:23:46,880 Speaker 3: convert that into the ruby five hundred square meters? I 1624 01:23:46,880 --> 01:23:51,880 Speaker 3: can't do rugby fields? What about Olympic swimming pools Dunedin? Okay, 1625 01:23:51,880 --> 01:23:54,799 Speaker 3: it's quite simple. You've seen it on a map, you know, Dunedin. 1626 01:23:54,960 --> 01:23:57,799 Speaker 3: You've got knocked in the middle again in the middle 1627 01:23:58,600 --> 01:24:00,760 Speaker 3: and the size of the height of this skytower, we 1628 01:24:00,840 --> 01:24:04,840 Speaker 3: can all relate to that. Anyway, it's heading towards South Georgia. 1629 01:24:04,920 --> 01:24:08,479 Speaker 3: But don't be alarmed it's gonna hit obviously at some point, 1630 01:24:09,000 --> 01:24:10,200 Speaker 3: but will break up and. 1631 01:24:10,200 --> 01:24:13,479 Speaker 10: Just surely with the climate crisis it will melt by then. 1632 01:24:14,000 --> 01:24:16,880 Speaker 3: No, it's big enough that it will survive, and the 1633 01:24:16,920 --> 01:24:19,200 Speaker 3: water is cool enough that it will survive. It is shrinking. 1634 01:24:19,520 --> 01:24:21,920 Speaker 3: It was three thy nine hundred square kilo it is 1635 01:24:21,920 --> 01:24:24,120 Speaker 3: now it's three thousand and five hundred square kilometers. 1636 01:24:24,320 --> 01:24:27,320 Speaker 10: What are you worried about? I mean, going by all 1637 01:24:27,360 --> 01:24:29,559 Speaker 10: the bluebird chips heads that I've ever seen, those penguins 1638 01:24:29,600 --> 01:24:31,360 Speaker 10: althow just jump on it and slide around on it 1639 01:24:31,360 --> 01:24:32,080 Speaker 10: and have a great time. 1640 01:24:32,200 --> 01:24:34,599 Speaker 3: No, the penguins will be crushed by it. 1641 01:24:35,160 --> 01:24:36,200 Speaker 10: Oh it doesn't sound fun. 1642 01:24:36,320 --> 01:24:37,759 Speaker 3: No, this is what the penguins. 1643 01:24:37,760 --> 01:24:40,639 Speaker 10: But the bang is the word. 1644 01:24:43,040 --> 01:24:47,240 Speaker 3: So it comes in bits, break off, crush, fall off, 1645 01:24:47,240 --> 01:24:50,080 Speaker 3: and crush and kill the penguins or block them from 1646 01:24:50,120 --> 01:24:53,080 Speaker 3: their feeding grounds, which is primarily more the problem. So 1647 01:24:53,120 --> 01:24:56,080 Speaker 3: there you go. Don't go to South Georgia if you're 1648 01:24:56,120 --> 01:24:58,559 Speaker 3: a penguin. Probably fine for us as tourists to go 1649 01:24:58,560 --> 01:25:03,120 Speaker 3: and watch this thing happen. Trump, we've spoken about Colombia. 1650 01:25:03,439 --> 01:25:06,360 Speaker 3: His tariff seemed to be working. He's got a free 1651 01:25:06,400 --> 01:25:10,000 Speaker 3: plane out of the president there to go and help 1652 01:25:10,040 --> 01:25:13,439 Speaker 3: with his deportations of his illegal immigrants. So that's all 1653 01:25:13,439 --> 01:25:15,920 Speaker 3: turned around from in the last twenty four hours. But 1654 01:25:16,120 --> 01:25:19,639 Speaker 3: really interesting also what's going on with Panama, because there 1655 01:25:19,720 --> 01:25:22,519 Speaker 3: was a treaty signed. This is way back in nineteen 1656 01:25:22,560 --> 01:25:25,879 Speaker 3: seventy seven, a treaty signed between the US and Panama 1657 01:25:26,720 --> 01:25:29,200 Speaker 3: but also between a whole bunch of other countries about 1658 01:25:29,240 --> 01:25:32,000 Speaker 3: the Panama Canal, trying to make sure that it stays neutral. 1659 01:25:32,840 --> 01:25:35,200 Speaker 3: And obviously Trump's now saying, well, I'm going to do 1660 01:25:35,240 --> 01:25:38,160 Speaker 3: this and do that with Panama. And now the Russians 1661 01:25:38,160 --> 01:25:40,920 Speaker 3: are kicking off, and you think, well, I mean, obviously 1662 01:25:40,960 --> 01:25:43,400 Speaker 3: they've got a stake in it because everyone's trying to 1663 01:25:43,400 --> 01:25:45,200 Speaker 3: get through the Panama Canal because that's where we get 1664 01:25:45,240 --> 01:25:48,639 Speaker 3: all of our goods through. But Russia actually signed that 1665 01:25:48,720 --> 01:25:51,320 Speaker 3: treaty originally was one of the signatories of the twenty 1666 01:25:51,360 --> 01:25:53,960 Speaker 3: countries who signed the Protocol agreement agreeing that it was 1667 01:25:54,000 --> 01:25:57,320 Speaker 3: stay neutral. So they are now kicking off about Panama, 1668 01:25:58,560 --> 01:26:00,439 Speaker 3: which I guess is just to say that Trump is 1669 01:26:01,720 --> 01:26:04,439 Speaker 3: causing ripples around the world, which is I guess what 1670 01:26:04,520 --> 01:26:06,000 Speaker 3: Trump is wanting to do, isn't it. 1671 01:26:06,320 --> 01:26:08,479 Speaker 10: Five hundred Raby Fields by the way. 1672 01:26:08,560 --> 01:26:13,880 Speaker 3: Oh, thank god, that's big. It's very strange to needing this. Well, yeah, 1673 01:26:13,920 --> 01:26:16,960 Speaker 3: I mean see that. Yeah, five hundred rugby fields. You 1674 01:26:17,040 --> 01:26:19,280 Speaker 3: immediately know how big that is. No, you don't, because 1675 01:26:19,280 --> 01:26:21,760 Speaker 3: you're struggling to picture what five hundred rugby fields look like. 1676 01:26:21,840 --> 01:26:24,880 Speaker 10: So how many ryans on top of each other as 1677 01:26:24,920 --> 01:26:25,800 Speaker 10: the sky towers with? 1678 01:26:27,200 --> 01:26:28,759 Speaker 3: All right, it's nine to nine. 1679 01:26:29,680 --> 01:26:34,720 Speaker 2: Ryan Bread on the mic Hosking Breakfast with Vida, Retirement 1680 01:26:34,720 --> 01:26:36,599 Speaker 2: Communities News, togs Head bes. 1681 01:26:36,600 --> 01:26:38,880 Speaker 3: Seven to nine high Ryan. This is on the kids 1682 01:26:38,880 --> 01:26:41,320 Speaker 3: in the school lunches. Baked beans you can buy for 1683 01:26:41,360 --> 01:26:44,600 Speaker 3: a dollar fifteen full of protein. River Mill bred is 1684 01:26:44,720 --> 01:26:47,800 Speaker 3: two dollars full of protein and carbs. I could go on, 1685 01:26:48,000 --> 01:26:52,679 Speaker 3: says Jacqueline. Some hungry kids in Africa excel without cell 1686 01:26:52,720 --> 01:26:56,040 Speaker 3: phones or cotton wool. It comes down to a desire 1687 01:26:56,080 --> 01:27:00,360 Speaker 3: to succeed, learn to count, read and spell. Now there's 1688 01:27:00,360 --> 01:27:03,479 Speaker 3: an idea just saying six to. 1689 01:27:03,479 --> 01:27:09,000 Speaker 2: Nine trending now with Swarehouse the Real House of Frequencies. 1690 01:27:09,240 --> 01:27:11,519 Speaker 3: There's no denying that Bob Dylan is a music icon. 1691 01:27:11,600 --> 01:27:14,760 Speaker 3: Everybody knows this. He's considered one of the greatest songwriters 1692 01:27:14,800 --> 01:27:17,400 Speaker 3: of all time, selling one hundred and twenty five million 1693 01:27:17,520 --> 01:27:21,000 Speaker 3: records over his sixty year career, and that's the reason 1694 01:27:21,240 --> 01:27:23,840 Speaker 3: a number of movies have been made about him. The 1695 01:27:23,960 --> 01:27:26,960 Speaker 3: latest one is called A Complete Unknown, which has just 1696 01:27:27,040 --> 01:27:29,519 Speaker 3: been released in New Zealand, and the actor who plays 1697 01:27:29,600 --> 01:27:32,679 Speaker 3: Dylan went on SNL to perform Live, Have a Listen, 1698 01:27:51,760 --> 01:27:54,320 Speaker 3: And of course he does the talkie talkie songs because 1699 01:27:54,360 --> 01:27:56,479 Speaker 3: it was always more about the poetry than the singing. 1700 01:28:16,360 --> 01:28:19,320 Speaker 3: It's pretty good for an actor. I mean, you don't 1701 01:28:19,320 --> 01:28:22,000 Speaker 3: normally think that actors are triple threats, and not often 1702 01:28:22,000 --> 01:28:25,720 Speaker 3: triple threats, but he can obviously sing and apparently his 1703 01:28:25,760 --> 01:28:28,920 Speaker 3: performance has been praised by all the critics for this 1704 01:28:28,960 --> 01:28:31,080 Speaker 3: new Bob Dylan movie. So it's out of cinemas now, 1705 01:28:31,160 --> 01:28:33,240 Speaker 3: Complete Unknown for anyone who wants to go and see that. 1706 01:28:33,400 --> 01:28:35,479 Speaker 10: And you can ride sandworms as well. 1707 01:28:35,640 --> 01:28:38,480 Speaker 3: He can ride sand worms, and he can ride Kardashians. 1708 01:28:38,640 --> 01:28:43,360 Speaker 3: Because it's probably the wrong turn of phrase, but what's 1709 01:28:43,520 --> 01:28:48,200 Speaker 3: not Kim Kardashian. Then there's Courtney. It's not Kendall, it's 1710 01:28:49,200 --> 01:28:52,759 Speaker 3: Kylie Kardashian. Who's the rich one. She's got the Kylie Jenner. 1711 01:28:52,760 --> 01:28:55,560 Speaker 3: Actually she's got the makeup brand. So she's worth the 1712 01:28:55,600 --> 01:28:58,160 Speaker 3: billion dollars. In fact, she was the first of that 1713 01:28:58,280 --> 01:29:02,280 Speaker 3: lot to be a billionaire, and now Kim has followed suit. 1714 01:29:02,760 --> 01:29:05,559 Speaker 3: So there you go. Very rich family, very big booties, 1715 01:29:06,360 --> 01:29:10,240 Speaker 3: very big breasts, all of them, the Kardashians. Anyway, that's 1716 01:29:10,240 --> 01:29:13,719 Speaker 3: it for me. I am back on drive tomorrow afternoon 1717 01:29:13,720 --> 01:29:15,559 Speaker 3: for the next three months. Thank you very much for 1718 01:29:15,600 --> 01:29:17,800 Speaker 3: all of you who have listened in, have tuned in, 1719 01:29:18,040 --> 01:29:22,519 Speaker 3: have texted, emailed and really appreciated it. Mike is back 1720 01:29:22,560 --> 01:29:25,519 Speaker 3: with you tomorrow. I will see you next time. Have 1721 01:29:25,560 --> 01:29:26,080 Speaker 3: a great day. 1722 01:29:54,720 --> 01:29:56,679 Speaker 15: Is my tell you the Truth. 1723 01:30:10,000 --> 01:30:12,880 Speaker 2: For more from the Mic Asking Breakfast, listen live to 1724 01:30:13,000 --> 01:30:16,080 Speaker 2: News Talks at B from six am weekdays, or follow 1725 01:30:16,120 --> 01:30:17,680 Speaker 2: the podcast on iHeartRadio.